Former Trump adviser Roger Stone claimed on Wednesday that North Korea had interfered in the U.S. presidential election. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump continued to assert that fraudulent activity was prevalent during the November election.

Stone, who has previously spoken of his respect for some members of the QAnon conspiracy theory movement, was sentenced to 40 months in prison for lying to investigators in connection with the Mueller probe into Russian election meddling during Trump’s 2016 campaign. Trump commuted Stone’s sentence in July.

With the Electoral College expected to meet on December 14, Trump has intensified his claims of widespread election fraud. Democrat President-elect Joe Biden was widely projected to be the winner of the election despite Trump’s protestations. During an interview on The Alex Jones Show, Stone said he had received further proof of election fraud.

“I just learned of absolute incontrovertible evidence of North Korean boats delivering ballots through a harbor in Maine, the state of Maine,” Stone said. “If this checks out, if law enforcement looked into that and it turned out to be true, it would be proof of foreign involvement in the election.”

Newsweek reached out to the Maine Bureau of Corporations, Elections and Commissions for comment.

Stone told Jones that he prayed daily for Trump to be “strengthened” in his fight against “an epically corrupt deep state that has no problem in what appears to be the cyber-manipulation of the votes of the American people.”

Roger Stone, former adviser to President Donald Trump, said Wednesday that he had knowledge of “incontrovertible evidence” of election fraud.
Mark Wilson/Getty

In a July interview, Stone praised some members of the QAnon movement as “great patriots.” Many of the theories espoused by QAnon adherents revolve around Trump leading a covert battle against Democrats, some members of the business community and individuals in the entertainment industry. According to the theory, those individuals are involved in pedophilia, human trafficking and satanic worship.

While Trump has declined to distance himself from the QAnon movement, his claims that Democrats conspired to win the election have continued. On Wednesday, Trump released a 46-minute long video on his Twitter feed detailing his allegations of election fraud.

“The Democrats had this election rigged right from the beginning,” Trump said, citing claims of voting machine manipulation, improper mail-in ballots and insufficient signature checks.

Trump has alleged that many of the mail-in ballots, which skewed Democratic, were illegally counted. Those ballots allegedly helped swing the election in Biden’s favor. “If we are right about the fraud,” Trump said, “Joe Biden can’t be president. We’re talking about hundreds of thousands of votes.”

Trump’s legal team has filed litigation in some battleground states contesting the election process. However, many of those lawsuits have been dismissed by judges.

“What a disaster this election was,” Trump said. “A total catastrophe, but we’re going to show it, and hopefully the courts—in particular, the Supreme Court of the United States—will see it and respectfully, hopefully, they will do what’s right for our country.”

According to the Associated Press, Biden was projected to win the election with 51.3 percent of the popular vote to Trump’s 47 percent. Biden received 306 electoral votes, more than the 270 electoral votes required to be officially declared president. Although some litigation on behalf of Trump is still ongoing, states have until December 8 to certify their election results before the Electoral College convenes on December 14.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/roger-stone-says-north-korean-boats-delivered-ballots-through-maine-harbor-trump-boosts-fraud-1551937

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    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/03/politics/republicans-trump-rally-georgia-senate-runoff/index.html

    “While we made a new offer to Leader McConnell and Leader McCarthy on Monday, in the spirit of compromise we believe the bipartisan framework introduced by senators yesterday should be used as the basis for immediate bipartisan, bicameral negotiations,” Pelosi and Schumer said in a joint statement referring to their counterparts, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

    “Of course, we and others will offer improvements, but the need to act is immediate and we believe that with good-faith negotiations we could come to an agreement,” they added. “In light of the urgency of meeting the needs of the American people and the hope that the vaccine presents, it’s time for Leader McConnell to sit down with Democrats to finally begin a true, bipartisan effort to meet the needs of the country.”

    Their move comes just days before lawmakers are set to break for the holidays and after President-elect Joe Biden called on Congress to pass “immediate relief.”

    Introduced this week by a bipartisan group of Senate and House lawmakers, the proposal – at roughly $908 billion – is still almost a trillion dollars less than what Pelosi and Democrats had been calling for, and more than what Republican leaders have said they’re willing to sign off on.

    The framework of the bipartisan relief bill includes $288 billion in small business aid, $160 billion in state and local government relief, and $180 billion to fund a $300 per week supplemental unemployment benefit through March.

    It also provides $16 billion for vaccine distribution, testing and contact tracing, funnels $82 billion into education, and provides $45 billion for transportation. It also allocates funds for rental assistance, child care and broadband.

    The proposal does not include another direct payment to most Americans. It also would offer temporary federal protection from coronavirus-related lawsuits, even though Democrats largely oppose a broad liability shield.

    It is unclear when the proposal will be ready for a vote on the House or Senate floor, or if Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell would even commit to calling it up for a vote.

    “We just don’t have time to waste time,” McConnell told reporters Tuesday in response to the bipartisan proposal.

    Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, told reporters that the bipartisan group would meet virtually later Wednesday to continue to flesh out details of the compromise bill. Romney said the group is “keenly aware” of the limited time they have to get this legislation considered and noted that he and other members intend to stay in town to work through the weekend and be available for negotiations. Romney indicated more members have joined the group but declined to say who those members were.

    Some Republicans welcomed Pelosi and Schumer’s support for the bipartisan proposal.

    “That’s definitely progress. It’s a move in the right direction and I think hopefully it’ll be helpful in us getting a deal done,” Senate Majority Whip John Thune said.

    This latest development from Pelosi and Schumer comes as the top House Democrat Steny Hoyer said Wednesday that he wants the chamber to finish its legislative work for the year by next Friday so that members have enough time to get home and quarantine ahead of the Christmas holiday, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to ravage the country.

    “I want to send members home, if possible, no later than the 11th,” the Maryland Democrat told reporters Wednesday. “The reason for that is if need be, they’ll get that time to quarantine before Christmas and to reintegrate with their families if they need to quarantine for any reason.”

    But Congress has a hefty to-do list before both chambers head home for the rest of the year, including approving a must-pass spending bill before a shutdown deadline of next Friday, passing a defense policy bill that the president has threatened to veto, and providing additional coronavirus relief that would assist ailing Americans and boost a crippled economy.

    The No. 2 House Democrat said he is actively in discussions with McConnell, who Hoyer said has a mutual understanding that coronavirus-related relief must be passed before the holidays.

    Hoyer said he hopes to reach a final agreement on a spending bill that could include additional coronavirus relief by the weekend, setting it up for votes on the floor by Wednesday and Thursday of next week.

    “I know that sounds very optimistic,” Hoyer said, adding that he does not want to keep members past next week.

    “There’s no magic in another week and [McConnell] agreed to that,” Hoyer said.

    Democratic and Republican leaders had previously shot down the idea of combining the massive omnibus spending bill with any sort of coronavirus relief – saying the two issues need to be dealt with separately – but as the pandemic rages on with stark numbers of those infected and dying, and millions of people without employment and economic relief, this could be lawmakers’ last chance at getting legislation that addresses both spending matters across the finish line before the end of the year.

    While Hoyer acknowledged that both Republican and Democratic leaders want to pass coronavirus relief before they go home, he admitted that there’s no agreement yet on what exactly they will pass.

    “I’ve talked to Senator McConnell. He believes we need to do something before we leave. I believe we ought to do something before we leave. The Speaker believes that, Schumer believes that, Mnuchin believes that. So, you do have agreement that we must get legislation done. We don’t have an agreement on exactly what that legislation will be,” Hoyer said.

    The back and forth comes amid concerns about the toll of the coronavirus on the U.S. economy as crucial pandemic relief programs are due to shut down by the end of the year.

    Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, which provides an additional 13 weeks of unemployment insurance and the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance Program, which aids self-employed or part-time workers, are set to expire Dec. 31.

    The nationwide eviction moratorium will expire at the end of the year, as well as the student loan forbearance program, which President Donald Trump implemented by executive order.

    Tax credits for required paid sick leave and for family sick leave for self-employed individuals will also expire.

    The Paycheck Protection Program to assist small business owners stopped taking applications in August. And the boosted $600 in federal unemployment insurance ran out in late July.

    McConnell has put forth his own proposal that addresses small business loans, education and Covid-19 vaccine distribution. It also protects businesses from virus-related lawsuits.

    Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin told reporters Wednesday that Trump would sign McConnell’s proposal.

    “The president will sign the McConnell proposal he put forward yesterday, and we look forward to making progress on that,” Mnuchin said.

    ABC News’ Trish Turner and Allison Pecorin contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/pelosi-schumer-back-bipartisan-908b-pandemic-relief-proposal/story?id=74507784

    The video, which a White House official said was recorded last week, was the in-person embodiment of Mr. Trump’s staccato tweets over the past three weeks: one falsehood after another about voting irregularities in swing states, attacks on state officials and signature verifications, and false accusations against Democrats.

    The president’s rambling assertions in the video were drastically undercut on Tuesday, when Attorney General William P. Barr told The Associated Press that despite inquiries by the Justice Department and the F.B.I., “to date, we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.”

    The same day, a Republican election official in Georgia blamed him for inciting violence and a wave of death threats.

    “Mr. President, you have not condemned these actions or this language,” said Gabriel Sterling, a voting systems manager in Georgia. “Stop inspiring people to commit potential acts of violence.”

    At the end of the video, Mr. Trump improbably described himself as the defender of America’s election system, saying he had been told that the single most important accomplishment of his presidency would be protecting the integrity of the voting system.

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/02/us/politics/trump-election-video.html

    All residents within the city of Los Angeles should continue to remain in their homes and follow the city’s “safer-at-home” order, which mirrors guidance from L.A. County, according to the mayor’s office.

    A public order posted on the mayor’s website Wednesday detailed many of the restrictions, including a ban on some travel with a variety of exemptions.

    Email and text alerts from the city’s NotifyLA System also went out Wednesday, although the mayor’s deputy press secretary, Harrison Wollman, said the guidance has been in place for days.

    “The city uploaded the most recent version of its safer-at-home order today to match the county’s current order that was enacted earlier this week,” Wollman said. “The two orders are identical, and the process of publishing the official document on our website is a formality that occurs each time the order is revised.”

    The order, first issued in March, was revised one other time, in June.

    The city of Los Angeles sent out a text alert on Dec. 2, 2020.

    Many residents were notified with an email and text alert from the city’s NotifyLA System Wednesday night. A spokesman for the mayor’s office said although the NotifyLA System alerts were accurate, they did not include any new restrictions.

    Non-exempt businesses in the city have been ordered to cease operations that require in-person attendance of staff. There is a broad list of exceptions for various businesses and workers deemed essential or exempt.

    People may lawfully leave their residences only to engage in defined essential activities.

    Those experiencing homelessness are exempt from the requirement to stay inside.

    Mirroring the county’s order, all public and private gatherings with people from more than one household are prohibited, except for outdoor faith-based services and protests.

    Failure to comply with the new health order will constitute a misdemeanor subject to fines and imprisonment, according to the document. The mayor urged the Los Angeles Police Department and the city attorney to “vigorously enforce this.”

    “My message couldn’t be simpler,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said in a briefing earlier Wednesday. “It’s time to hunker down. It’s time to cancel everything. And if it isn’t essential, don’t do it.”

    The new order comes after Los Angeles County reported a total of 2,439 people hospitalized for the virus Wednesday, more than on any other day during the pandemic.

    Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/local-news/residents-in-city-of-los-angeles-ordered-to-remain-in-their-homes-amid-covid-19-surge/

    (CNN)Ivanka Trump, the President’s daughter and adviser, sat for a deposition Tuesday with investigators from the Washington, DC, attorney general’s office as part of its lawsuit alleging the misuse of inaugural funds, according to a court filing.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/02/politics/ivanka-trump-deposition/index.html

    Trump toyed with firing Barr’s predecessor, Jeff Sessions, almost from the moment Mueller was appointed in May 2017 — furious that his first attorney general had recused himself from the Russia case. He ultimately did not do so until November of the following year. Similarly, Trump did not fire Mueller, though Mueller’s investigation revealed that he came close to doing so. And Trump allowed Rod J. Rosenstein, Sessions’s deputy who oversaw the Mueller investigation, essentially to leave on his own.

    Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/trump-barr-election-fraud/2020/12/02/5717626c-34e2-11eb-a997-1f4c53d2a747_story.html

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday made a plea for Joe Biden to stay tough on China once the Democrat moves into the White House in the new year.

    “I hope the incoming Biden administration can look at Trump’s trade war objectively, because in many ways, really, it worked,” the “Mad Money” host said. “We made real progress on getting China to finally play by the rules and it would be a shame to throw it all away.”

    Cramer made the comments in reaction to a New York Times opinion piece that came out earlier Wednesday, in which President-elect Biden gave some insight into his U.S.-China strategy.

    Biden told columnist Thomas Friedman that the best China strategy is to get America’s allies “on the same page,” and that he would prioritize rekindling relations with U.S. allies early on.

    Cramer, however, said he was uncertain about Biden’s ability to do that after President Donald Trump drew the U.S. into a trade war with China beginning in summer 2018. It will be a big challenge for the Democrat after he is inaugurated on Jan. 20.

    “That sounds good in theory, but I don’t know how you get our allies on the same page at this point,” Cramer said.

    The trade war was helping the U.S. gain leverage on China, leading to a partial trade deal that was inked at the beginning of 2020, until the coronavirus pandemic stunted that progress, Cramer said.

    “The lesson of Trump’s trade policy is that taking a hard line gets results. All those tariffs made it easier to negotiate real concessions,” he said. “I think we would’ve done even better if the president had been less openly disrespectful and our policy had been more consistent.”

    Trump’s 25% tariffs remain in place on about half of the imports from China, whose economy is only second in size to the U.S. Biden has committed, at least for the time being, to leaving those taxes on Chinese imports in place as well as the Phase 1 trade deal that the Trump administration negotiated with China, a deal Cramer supports.

    Cramer questioned America’s ability to pull allies into a campaign to crack down on unfavorable trade practices by the Chinese government. American leaders have accused China of stealing intellectual property, dumping low-quality products in the country, providing unwarranted subsidies to corporations and forcing what’s known as tech transfers in order for American companies to do business there.

    Reigning in China is a tall task that only the U.S. can afford, given that China is the European Union’s largest trade partner, Cramer said.

    U.S. allies are “making a lot of money trading with the Chinese and it doesn’t hurt that the Communist Party’s throwing money all over the globe with its One Belt One Road initiative,” he continued. “They’re giving out better bribes than our government’s willing to pay. I’d love to be proven wrong about this, but I’m not holding my breath.”

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/02/cramers-china-trade-advice-to-biden-taking-a-hard-line-gets-results.html

    “Lane No. 1, at this point, is the president comes to his senses,” Mr. Smith said in an interview. “Lane No. 2 is we get as strong a vote as possible and we override.”

    “I think we get a two-thirds vote in the House and the Senate and we get it done,” he added.

    Kayleigh McEnany, the White House press secretary, said on Wednesday that the president “is serious” about the veto.

    “The president will always defend our military, ensure that we get adequate defense funding, as he’s gotten $2.9 trillion so far,” Ms. McEnany said, “but he is going to put the pressure on Congress to step up on this.”

    At least one Republican, Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, who sits on the Armed Services Committee and opposed the base-renaming amendment, deriding it as “woke fundamentalism,” said he would vote against the final bill.

    Using the abbreviation for the bill, the National Defense Authorization Act, Mr. Hawley wrote on Twitter: “The NDAA does NOT contain any reform to Section 230 but DOES contain Elizabeth Warren’s social engineering amendment to unilaterally rename bases & war memorials w/ no public input or process.”

    But Mr. Smith said that after initially digging in over the base-renaming language amid a national outcry for racial justice, Mr. Trump appeared to have lost interest in the issue.

    “He got distracted, and the basic strength of the other side of the argument won the day,” Mr. Smith said. “It’s also possible that the president and the people around him realized this was not a fight that they wanted to have.”

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/02/us/politics/defense-bill-trump-veto.html

    President Trump appointed Christopher Wray, a Republican who served in President George W. Bush’s administration, to succeed James Comey as F.B.I. director.Credit…Anna Moneymaker/The New York Times

    President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. has no plans to remove Christopher Wray, the F.B.I. director installed by President Trump if he is still in the job when the new administration comes in, according to a senior adviser to Mr. Biden with knowledge of the process.

    The official, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said Mr. Biden’s team was “not removing the F.B.I. director unless Trump fired him” — signaling a return to pre-Trump norms of continuity at a core domestic law enforcement agency that is supposed to operate without political meddling.

    Another key position on Mr. Biden’s national security team, director of the C.I.A., is also expected to be filled soon, with David S. Cohen, a former deputy C.I.A. director, emerging as the leading choice, according to people familiar with the process.

    Mr. Biden has made no final decision on Mr. Cohen, and his selection depends in part on the mix of people he wants to lead the Pentagon and other agencies.

    No formal announcement is expected on the C.I.A. until at least next week.

    Aides to Mr. Biden did not comment publicly on either position.

    Mr. Biden’s decision to leave Mr. Wray in place would be a return to the norms around F.B.I. directors, who are confirmed by the Senate and are supposed to have 10-year terms, and are rarely fired. Dismissing them requires an explanation about why such an extraordinary measure would be taken.

    But Mr. Trump fired James B. Comey, who was appointed by President Barack Obama, in May 2017, roiling Washington and triggering the appointment of the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, to investigate possible conspiracy between the Trump campaign and Russian officials in 2016.

    Mr. Trump appointed Mr. Wray, a Republican who served in President George W. Bush’s administration, to succeed Mr. Comey. But the president soured on Mr. Wray soon after he assumed the job, complaining that he wasn’t moving fast enough to rid the bureau of officials installed by Mr. Comey.

    The president’s anger at Mr. Wray has grown since then, reaching new heights during the summer, when he wanted to dismiss Mr. Wray once documents related to the case of the former national security adviser, Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, were declassified by other officials. Mr. Trump believed that Mr. Wray had delayed declassifying documents related to the Russia investigation.

    At the time, as Mr. Trump railed about firing Mr. Wray, Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, intervened by reaching out to Attorney General William P. Barr, who came to the White House to dissuade Mr. Trump from taking such action.

    But Mr. Trump’s view of Mr. Wray never improved, and he told advisers before the election that Mr. Wray would be dismissed soon after, but he has yet to dismiss him.

    There is little such drama surrounding Mr. Biden’s search for a C.I.A. director.

    Mr. Biden has always thought highly of Mr. Cohen, and Avril D. Haines, Mr. Biden’s choice to serve as director of national intelligence, supports the potential appointment, top Biden aides said.

    Mr. Cohen, who succeeded Ms. Haines as the deputy C.I.A. chief, worked closely with her on the National Security Council’s “deputies committee” — composed of the No. 2 leaders of national security departments and agencies — during the Obama administration. Ensuring an easy partnership between Ms. Haines and the C.I.A. director is a priority of the new administration, according to people who have spoken with transition officials,

    Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/live/2020/12/02/us/joe-biden-trump

    Despite President Trump’s threat to veto the annual defense bill, key lawmakers, including Sen. Jim Inhofe, signaled they would move forward anyway.

    Anna Moneymaker/AP


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    Anna Moneymaker/AP

    Despite President Trump’s threat to veto the annual defense bill, key lawmakers, including Sen. Jim Inhofe, signaled they would move forward anyway.

    Anna Moneymaker/AP

    A bipartisan group of lawmakers, including key Republican leaders, are balking at President Trump’s latest threat to veto the annual defense bill, barreling ahead with plans to finalize their plan.

    On Tuesday, Trump threatened to veto the critical policy bill if it doesn’t include a move to repeal a legal protection for social media companies.

    But on Wednesday, there was no sign of budging among critical lawmakers who are involved in crafting a final version of the bill.

    “I feel just as passionate about that as he does. The only difference of opinion that we have is, I don’t want it on this bill,” said Oklahoma Republican Sen. Jim Inhofe, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee and a key architect of the legislation.

    The massive annual bill sets policy for the Pentagon and military service members — one that, because of its size and importance, passes overwhelmingly nearly every year. It includes everything from plans on boosting troop levels and equipment to pay increases.

    Inhofe said while the defense bill has some language related to Section 230 of the 1996 Communications Decency Act — the target of Trump’s ire — it doesn’t repeal it as the president demands. And Inhofe said he told Trump that directly.

    “We just had an honest disagreement,” Inhofe said of a recent conversation.

    Trump tweeted late Tuesday that Section 230, which provides the legal protection for technology companies over content from third parties and users, was “a serious threat to our National Security & Election Integrity.”

    Senate Majority Whip John Thune, R-S.D., said such a repeal should involve the correct committee of jurisdiction, the Senate Commerce Committee, and not Armed Services.

    “There’s a normal legislative path for doing Section 230, and a number of good ideas about how to reform it, that would be my preference,” Thune told Capitol Hill reporters.

    In a joint statement, Washington Democratic Rep. Adam Smith, the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, and Texas Rep. Mac Thornberry, the panel’s top ranking Republican, noted too much is at stake with the legislation to derail efforts now.

    They noted they had toiled through 2,200 provisions of the plan to reach an agreement, which addresses hazardous duty pay for servicemembers, military housing improvements and $8.4 billion in construction projects.

    The House passed its version of the defense bill in July by a vote of 295 to 125.

    “For 59 straight years, the NDAA has passed because Members of Congress and Presidents of both parties have set aside their own policy objectives and partisan preferences and put the needs of our military personnel and America’s security first,” they said. “The time has come to do that again.”

    This isn’t the first time Trump has threatened to veto the defense bill. In June, he said he would veto the bill if it still contained a provision to rename military installations named for figures from the Confederacy. That effort is contained in both the Senate and House versions of the bill.

    Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who spearheaded that effort, says it remains in the bill. Trump previously targeted Warren specifically in his first veto threat.

    She also blasted Trump’s new attack on the measure, which is known as the National Defense Authorization Act.

    “He’s not vetoing over Section 230,” Warren told reporters. “He’s just trying to use the NDAA as a way to punish companies that he thinks are not pushing his propaganda.”

    Thune also noted that Senate approved the defense bill with a large majority of the chamber with Warren’s provision intact. So he expects a repeat of that support once the bill is finalized.

    The Senate approved the measure in July by a vote of 86 to 14.

    “My assumption is it would have broad bipartisan support as long as it didn’t mess with that issue in some way,” Thune said.

    However, Trump remains a wildcard on whether he would sign off on plan, which could now reject his two veto demands made in recent months.

    Inhofe conceded he isn’t clear if Trump will back off the threats and sign the bill, or if lawmakers will have a veto-proof majority to override a possible veto.

    “I don’t know that,” Inhofe said.

    Inhofe’s counterpart on the Armed Services Committee, Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, the panel’s top ranking Democrat, also notes Congress has run out of time to even debate a Section 230 repeal within the defense bill. Members from both chambers began their conference talks several weeks ago.

    “It’s just too late to begin to do thorough legislation on a complex topic like this. And we have to get the bill done,” Reed told reporters.

    Inhofe wasn’t alone in his confusion on the defense bill’s ultimate fate this year.

    If approved this month, it would mark the 60th consecutive year of passage. If not, it would break a streak that would mark a tough political failure for lawmakers.

    However, some say they could also restart talks under the new administration for President-elect Biden next month if the bill fails under the Trump administration.

    “We would essentially have to come back and the new Congress, begin from scratch,” Reed said, noting it could perhaps be done “quickly.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/12/02/941509563/lawmakers-barrel-ahead-on-defense-bill-plans-balking-at-trump-veto-threat

    Pro-Trump attorneys Sidney Powell and L. Lin Wood urged Georgians not to participate in a runoff vote that will determine control of the Senate in January until state officials address unsubstantiated claims that President-elect Joe Biden won the White House through voter fraud.

    Powell and Wood are not working for the Trump campaign in an official capacity but have waged legal battles on his behalf. Speaking to the president’s supporters at a press conference in Atlanta, Powell said state residents should not vote until Georgia overhauls its procedures and ends the use of Dominion voting machines.

    GEORGIA SECRETARY OF STATE SLAMS ‘DYSFUNCTION’ IN FULTON COUNTY RECOUNT

    “I would encourage all Georgians to make it known that you will not vote at all until your vote is secure – and I mean that regardless of party,” Powell said. “We can’t live in a republic, a free republic unless we know our votes are legal and secure. So we must have voter ID and we probably must go back to paper ballots that are signed and have your thumbprint on them. We certainly should be able to find a system that can count them, even if it has to be done by hand.”

    The Trump campaign distanced itself from Powell last month after she repeatedly alleged voter fraud took place in several states without providing any evidence to support her claims. Powell has alleged that Dominion’s electric voting machines switched votes from Trump to Biden – a charge that election officials flatly denied.

    Wood took aim at Republicans Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue during the press conference, calling on the Georgia Senate candidates to speak out on Trump’s behalf. The attorney is known for his defense of Richard Jewell, the security guard falsely accused and later exonerated in the Centennial Olympic Park bombing case in 1996.

    Wood called on Georgia’s Republican Gov. Brian Kemp to call a special session of the state legislature to investigate election fraud.

    “This is Georgia – we ain’t dumb. We’re not going to go vote on January 5th on another machine made by China. You’re not going to fool Georgians again. If Kelly Loeffler wants your vote, if David Perdue wants your vote, they’ve got to earn it,” Wood said. “They’ve got to demand publicly, repeatedly, consistently: Brian Kemp, call a special session of the Georgia State Legislature. And if they do not do it…they have not earned your vote.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Top Republicans, including Trump himself, have expressed concern that his supporters in Georgia could withhold support for Loeffler and Perdue in the crucial runoff election. Trump is set to appear at a rally on their behalf on Saturday.

    A group of 16 former Georgia GOP leaders, including Loeffler’s Senate predecessor, Johnny Isakson, called on Republicans to ignore calls to participate in a boycott.

    “[W]ithout every vote cast for President Trump and all our Republican candidates on November 3 also being cast in the U.S. Senate runoffs, the trajectory of our State and Nation will be irreparably altered on January 5th,” the GOP leaders said.

    Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/pro-trump-attorneys-sidney-powell-lin-wood-urge-georgians-not-vote-senate-runoffs-without-changes

    Democratic House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., was set to speak to McConnell on Wednesday about a pandemic relief measure. Earlier, the No. 2 House Democrat told reporters he hopes the parties can strike a deal by the end of the weekend and pass it by next week.

    That would require a quick compromise amid lingering disputes over key issues. McConnell signaled Tuesday that he wants to tie aid to a government funding bill Congress needs to pass by Dec. 11.

    In a possible sign that Democrats could agree to link coronavirus provisions to a spending measure, Hoyer said Wednesday that he wants to finish legislative business in the House by the same date.

    “The need is great, it is immediate, it is urgent and I think we certainly have the capacity to act,” he said. “By the way, Sen. McConnell agrees on that.”

    The renewed efforts to strike a deal follow a monthslong logjam over relief. Both parties have called to pass aid legislation before the end of 2020, but have fundamentally different views about what they need to do to boost the economy and health-care system.

    Protections for unemployed Americans, renters and federal student loan borrowers will expire at the end of the year as the U.S. outbreak worsens and states and cities tighten restrictions.

    Rank-and-file lawmakers put forward the aid proposal Tuesday. McConnell then rejected it and offered his own, smaller plan that he said had President Donald Trump‘s support.

    Pelosi and Schumer did not offer their unequivocal endorsement of the proposal. They said that “we and others will offer improvements, but the need to act is immediate and we believe that with good-faith negotiations we could come to an agreement.”

    Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin spoke Tuesday for the first time since late October. The California Democrat said Mnuchin told her he would review both the bipartisan proposal and an unspecified offer that the top congressional Democrats made to GOP leaders on Monday.

    Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/02/congressional-leaders-.html

    The number of Californians hospitalized with the coronavirus surged to a record high for a fourth straight day — soaring above 8,000 amid continued concerns that a sustained spike in patients may eventually swamp the state’s healthcare system.

    Though the 8,517 hospitalizations seen Tuesday are unprecedented, officials caution that it likely doesn’t represent the ceiling of the latest COVID-19 surge, as the figure largely excludes anyone who was only recently infected, including over the Thanksgiving weekend.

    “We do have a choice to make, each one of us: Do we want to be part of the solution to this horrifying surge, or do we want to be the problem?” Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said during a briefing Wednesday. “Because where you fall in this effort now has a life-or-death consequence, possibly for people you know and love, but certainly for people across the county who are loved by others.”

    Gov. Gavin Newsom sounded the alarm on the state of the state’s hospitals earlier this week. Unless things change, he said, California could exceed its existing intensive care unit capacity by mid-December, a possibility he warned could require dramatic action to keep from becoming reality.

    California averages 14,120 COVID cases a day with more than 8,200 hospitalized, both records, as state and local officials weigh lockdown measures.

    More Coverage

    Though ICU numbers have not yet reached the heights seen during the last COVID-19 surge over the summer, they are fast approaching those levels.

    As of Tuesday — the most recent day for which state data are available — there were 2,006 COVID-19 patients in intensive care. That’s up roughly 75% from two weeks ago.

    The state’s all-time record is 2,058, set on July 21.

    Though hospitals have plans in place to expand their capacity should need arise, their ability to do so is limited. ICUs present a particular challenge because they typically need specialized space, equipment and staff.

    “What matters is a hospital’s practical ability to take care of the patients that come in the door, and that requires not just a bed but, more importantly, it requires people, it requires staff, it requires supplies and equipment,” Dr. Christina Ghaly, L.A. County’s director of health services, said during a briefing.

    With the number of patients rising rapidly, officials said they are increasingly concerned that demand could outpace the available supply — particularly in ICUs.

    “Unless there has been and continues to be changes in community transmission, we do anticipate that we will have a shortage of ICU beds over the next four weeks,” Ghaly said of L.A. County. “Hospitals will have to take substantive action to meet the need for hospital and, particularly, for ICU level of care.”

    Contact tracers tell people they’ve tested positive for the coronavirus or warn they’ve been exposed to it. The conversations are confidential and sometimes surprisingly intimate.

    Despite the distressing statistics, the prospect of even more restrictions — which Newsom said could include some form of new stay-at-home order for areas in the strictest purple tier of the state’s coronavirus reopening road map — will be a tough sell for pandemic-battered businesses and rule-weary Californians.

    L.A. County, for instance, has already run into opposition for recent steps it’s taken.

    Most objectionable for many has been the renewed suspension of outdoor dining at restaurants — which officials said will help tamp down transmission by reducing lengthy interactions between largely unmasked patrons.

    Critics, however, have derided the move as wholly unjustified by any kind of data and a capricious broadside against an already reeling industry.

    Pasadena, which has its own city health department, has decided not to follow the county’s lead. The Beverly Hills City Council voted unanimously to oppose the outdoor dining ban Tuesday, and asked staff to research the idea of forming an independent public health department that would allow the city to set its own rules.

    The South Bay Cities Council of Governments, a joint powers authority of 16 cities and parts of the county, recently sent a letter to Newsom asking that he “reconsider allowing significantly large areas that are less impacted by COVID cases and hospitalizations to have more local control over the restrictions on businesses in their area.”

    “It is time to replace the ‘one-size-fits-all policies’ with an ability to adopt local restrictions in designated areas,” the letter states.

    It’s not just restaurants that have emerged as a political flashpoint. On the first day that card clubs in L.A. County were forced to close due to rising coronavirus cases, representatives for the casinos and the cities where they operate urged officials to allow them to reopen, citing the financial strain.

    The card clubs were originally closed in March but were allowed to reopen only in outdoor settings in early October. The casinos were ordered to close again Monday.

    “Shutting down our casinos is like shutting down our cities,” City of Commerce Mayor Ivan Altamirano said during a news conference at the Commerce Casino.

    Altamirano joined Bell Gardens Mayor Alejandra Cortez and Hawaiian Gardens City Manager Ernie Hernandez to appeal to county officials, noting that the casinos generate up to 75% of general fund revenue in those working-class cities.

    Cortez said her city has already lost up to $9 million in tax revenue due to the closing of the Bicycle Hotel and Casino since the start of the pandemic and has been forced to lay off staff and cut employees’ salaries.

    “Our residents can’t afford further cuts,” she said.

    Ferrer said that, given the efficacy of some basic infection prevention measures like widespread masking and physical distancing, that the county’s latest regulations attempt to “limit places where people were intermingling with others that weren’t in their households, to limit the capacity at those places so there wouldn’t be a lot of crowding.”

    “That’s very different than what we did months ago when we actually closed all of nonessential retail, all of nonessential business because we didn’t really have the tools we have now,” she said. “The problem with the tools we have now, in all honesty, is that people have to then use them.”

    As debate swirls over how best to contain COVID-19, the pandemic is continuing its statewide rampage.

    Over the last week, California has averaged 14,119 new coronavirus cases per day — a 55.6% increase from two weeks ago, according to data compiled by The Times.

    State health officials estimate that 12% of those who test positive are hospitalized two to three weeks later, meaning the past week’s unprecedented case load could trigger a wave of new hospitalizations.

    L.A. County already has more than 2,400 coronavirus patients in its hospitals, and Ferrer said that figure is likely to get worse before it gets better.

    Coronavirus cases and hospitalizations have hit unprecedented levels in California, and officials expect conditions to deteriorate rapidly in the coming weeks.

    More Coverage

    Santa Clara County officials also warned Wednesday that the region’s system of hospitals is at risk of exceeding capacity. As of Tuesday, intensive care units were at 93% capacity at hospitals that traditionally serve the agricultural southern part of the county, like Gilroy; and East San Jose, which is heavily Latino and has been hit hard by the pandemic.

    None of those hospitals — including Regional Medical Center of San Jose, Kaiser Santa Clara, and the county-run Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, O’Connor Hospital and St. Louise Regional Hospital — had more than five ICU beds available Tuesday.

    “What this means is that the hospitals in our hardest-hit communities have the fewest beds available for those in need,” Dr. Jennifer Tong, associate chief medical officer at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, said at a news conference Wednesday.

    ICU occupancy for other hospitals in the county was at 84%.

    Officials are working to redistribute patients as needed, Tong said, “but these numbers are gravely concerning. We want you and your loved ones to get the care that you need at our hospitals if you become seriously ill.

    “We each must do our part to slow the spread of transmission and protect our hospital capacity, thereby protecting those who live and work here,” she said.

    The CDC is set to shorten the recommended length of quarantine for anyone exposed to a person who is positive for COVID-19.

    It’s important to remember, Ferrer said this week, that the metrics measuring the pandemic aren’t mere figures on a spreadsheet, they’re real people: Neighbors, friends, siblings, parents and other relatives.

    More than 19,300 Californians — including roughly 7,700 residents of L.A. County — have died from COVID-19 throughout the pandemic, and officials say they’re concerned that fatalities could rise in the near future, much as new infections and hospitalizations have.

    Aside from abiding by public health restrictions, experts say residents can help protect themselves from the coronavirus by wearing masks in public, regularly washing their hands and staying home when they’re sick; as well as keeping physical distance from, and avoiding gatherings with, those they do not live with.

    “We’re seeing terrifying increases in numbers in L.A. County that can only be turned around if everyone, businesses and individuals, carefully use the tools we have to slow the spread,” Ferrer said.

    Times staff writers Hayley Smith and Jaclyn Cosgrove contributed to this report.

    Source Article from https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2020-12-02/coronavirus-hospitalizations-surge-to-unprecedented-heights

    (CNN)Ivanka Trump, the President’s daughter and adviser, sat for a deposition Tuesday with investigators from the Washington, DC, attorney general’s office as part of its lawsuit alleging the misuse of inaugural funds, according to a court filing.

    Source Article from https://www.cnn.com/2020/12/02/politics/ivanka-trump-deposition/index.html

    President Trump is being urged to preemptively pardon some of those closest to him, including son Donald Jr.

    John Bazemore/AP


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    John Bazemore/AP

    President Trump is being urged to preemptively pardon some of those closest to him, including son Donald Jr.

    John Bazemore/AP

    President Trump is being urged to use his remaining time in office to grant preemptive pardons to people close to him, including family members and maybe even himself.

    Sean Hannity, whose Fox News program is closely followed by Trump, said on his radio show this week that the president, “out the door, needs to pardon his whole family and himself because they want this witch hunt to go on in perpetuity, they’re so full of rage and insanity against the president.”

    Hannity likely was referring to the prospect for a post-presidential prosecution of Trump, who faces serious potential legal issues once he is out of office and no longer enjoys the privilege of not being indicted by federal prosecutors.

    President-elect Joe Biden has said he’d let professionals within the Justice Department assess whether a case is merited against Trump, and that decision — which would be unprecedented — is one of the toughest facing the department in the new administration.

    A presidential preemptive pardon sounds unusual but it has been done before, most famously when President Gerald Ford pardoned Richard Nixon, who resigned because of the Watergate scandal in 1973 but had not actually been charged with any crimes.

    “A preemptive pardon is a presidential pardon granted before any formal legal process has begun,” American University professor Jeffrey Crouch tells NPR.

    Read the text of Ford’s pardon of Nixon here.

    In an email, Crouch, author of The Presidential Pardon Power, says “someone must have committed a federal offense, but as soon as that happens, the president can grant them clemency. He does not need to wait until the alleged offender is charged, stands trial, and so on.”

    Continues Crouch: “These pardons are not common, but they do happen occasionally.”

    Accordingly, Trump could “pardon his children, his aides, his supporters, and so on for federal offenses and be on firm legal ground,” Crouch says. “The really unclear scenario would be if he attempted to pardon himself.”

    The man in the mirror

    Trump has asserted he has the power to pardon himself but has said he didn’t need to use it because he hasn’t done anything wrong. Not only might his denial about any lawbreaking be complicated by events following his departure from office, the merits of a self-pardon are controversial and have never been tested in court.

    And although the potential legal problems facing Trump are thought to be well understood, at least in principle, it’s not clear what if any criminal offenses Trump’s children might be charged with.

    Donald Trump, Jr. was investigated by special counsel Robert Mueller for his contacts with Russians during the 2016 Trump campaign but no charges were brought. Ivanka Trump, her husband Jared Kushner and the president’s younger son Eric have been the subjects of allegations of various kinds, but none that so far have risen to the level of a potential prosecution.

    Trump could also be considering a pardon for attorney Rudy Giuliani, according to one report.

    How pardons work

    Specialists point out that even if the public may not be aware of all the actions involving the prospective recipients of potential pardons, there’s an important distinction:

    A president can protect someone from being prosecuted for something they’ve already done, even if it doesn’t come to the attention of prosecutors later — but not protect someone from being prosecuted for something they haven’t yet done, or from being prosecuted by state or local authorities.

    Bernadette Meyler, a professor at Stanford Law School, says the precedents in these cases go back to the earliest days of the Republic, when President Washington used his pardon powers to grant amnesty to some of the conspirators in the Whiskey Rebellion.

    “The Supreme Court interpreted the pardon power to include amnesty in cases like United States v Klein,” she says. “So what Trump would probably do is something like Ford’s pardon of Nixon, which described a period of time and immunized Nixon against prosecution for activities undertaken during that time.”

    But that wouldn’t be a lifetime Get Out Of Jail Free card.

    Meyler, author of Theaters of Pardoning, notes that “such pardons could not cover future events.”

    The Department of Justice’s Office of the Pardon Attorney notes this: “It would be highly unusual” for a president to issue preemptive pardons.

    But it also says “there have been a few cases where people who had not been charged with a crime were pardoned, including President Gerald Ford’s pardon of President Richard Nixon after Watergate, President Jimmy Carter’s pardon of Vietnam draft dodgers and President George H.W. Bush’s pardon of [onetime Defense Secretary] Caspar Weinberger. President Donald J. Trump pardoned Joseph Arpaio after he was charged and convicted, but prior to sentencing.”

    Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2020/12/02/941290291/talk-of-preemptive-pardons-by-trump-raises-questions-what-can-he-do

    Donald Trump’s longtime ally Roger Stone has accused Bill Barr of being a “block for the deep state,” after the attorney general shot down claims Trump lost the election due to widespread voter fraud.

    In a video posted to right-wing social media site Parler, Stone accused Barr of being implicated in a conspiracy theory that there is a secret layer of government featuring unofficial individuals and advisers that influence key decisions and policies.

    Trump has frequently suggested the existence of a “deep state” working against him, including recently claiming the Food and Drug Administration is trying to sabotage him by delaying a potential COVID-19 vaccine. The belief that Trump has been fighting a secret war against the deep state is also a key component of the QAnon movement.

    “We have a two-tiered justice system and Bill Barr’s job is to block for the deep state,” Stone said.

    The 68-year-old also suggested that there is “overwhelming and compelling” evidence of voter fraud in the election, despite Barr saying the Justice Department has not found any which would lead to a “different outcome in the election.”

    In the clip, Stone also described Barr’s appointment of John Durham to act as special counsel investigating the FBI’s probe of Russian interference in the 2016 election as “quite clever.”

    “Mr. Durham has taken three years to produce nothing whatsoever. We have overwhelming evidence of both treason and crime. And now Mr. Durham’s job is to bury all of it after the election. Bill Barr, you get what you expected.”

    Trump frequently accused Robert Mueller‘s investigation into alleged Russia collusion as being a “witch hunt,” aimed to undermine his election victory over Hillary Clinton.

    Stone was one of the more high-profile indictments that stemmed from the investigation. He was originally sentenced to between seven and nine years in jail after being convicted for obstruction, witness tampering and making false statements to Congress, before Barr himself intervened to help get it reduced to 40 months.

    Trump commuted the sentence in July just days before Stone was due to report to prison.

    Elsewhere, Fox News’ Lou Dobbsalso suggested that Barr has been “compromised” by the deep state by suggesting there has been no evidence of voter fraud.

    “For the attorney general of the United States to make that statement he is either a liar or a fool or both. He may be…perhaps compromised,” Dobbs said.

    “He may be simply unprincipled, or he may be personally distraught or ill. But in no way can he honestly stand up before the American people and say that the FBI has with any integrity or intensity investigated voter fraud in this country and then say it did not amount to anything.”

    The Justice Department has been contacted for comment.

    Roger Stone makes an appearance outside his house holding up a double peace sign on July 12, 2020 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Stone has accused Bill Barr as being a “block for the deep state” after he dismissed Trump’s claims that he lost the election because of widespread voter fraud.
    Johnny Louis/Getty

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    Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/roger-stone-bill-barr-deep-state-trump-1551733