MSNBC panel on parallels between Trump documents and Clinton email investigation
As a US congressional committee prepares to investigate Donald Trump’s handling of administration documents after 15 boxes of records were transferred from his Florida resort, the former president is insisting he was “under no obligation” to hand over any materials – despite laws requiring him to do exactly that.
US Rep Carolyn Maloney, chair for the House of Representatives Oversight Committee, said that she was “deeply concerned” as the documents “appear to have been removed from the White House in violation of the Presidential Records Act.”
The news of the document haul, which appears to have contained sensitive or even top secret papers, has sent many experts pondering the chances that Mr Trump could face legal sanction for mishandling documents.
On Friday, the former president lashed out at the House select committee investigating the attack on the US Capitol as “out of control” while reviving baseless voter fraud narratives and attacking journalist Maggie Haberman over reporting from a forthcoming book about his term in office. Then, on Saturday morning, he described his presidency to Fox News as a “romantic period.”
“Our country was thriving. We were just beating everybody,” the former president said.
Mr Trump’s former communications director Alyssa Farah, meanwhile, has said her onetime boss is “terrified” about the book’s revelations into his character and behaviour, including that the former president flushed documents down toilets and remains in touch with North Korea’s Kim Jong-un.
Welcome to The Independent’s Friday’s coverage of Donald Trump and the White House
Ex-Trump comms chief says former president ‘terrified’ of new book
Ex-White House communications director Alyssa Farah said on Thursday that her former boss is “terrified” of the potential revelations that could come from an upcoming book on his presidency and campaigns.
“I still talk to some folks in Trumpworld, the ones who have not engaged in criminality,” Ms Farah told co-hosts of The View on Thursday. “The former president is terrified of Maggie Haberman’s book. This is the first big anecdote, but there is quite a bit more to come.”
The book authored by The New York Times’s Maggie Haberman is set to be published in October. Haberman won the Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for her coverage of the Trump White House.
Read Joe Bowden’s full report.
Former Trump comms chief says ex-president ‘terrified’ of Maggie Haberman’s book
Veteran NYT reporter had nearly unmatched access to former president for years
‘Toilet water-gate’: Jimmy Kimmel takes dig at Trump for flushing documents
Jimmy Kimmel mocked former president Donald Trump on Thursday over recent accusations that his White House staff found clogged toilets as he reportedly tried to flush documents.
“I know that sounds like just a crude joke, but you know how Trump had a habit of tearing up the documents at the White House?” Kimmel said beginning his monologue
He went to introduce guest Arnold Schwarzenegger, again taking a dig by saying, former California governor “the host of Celebrity Apprentice who did not clog up the White House toilet.”
“Today Mar-a-Cloggo put out a statement that said, ‘Also, another fake story that I flushed papers and documents down a White House toilet is categorically untrue, and simply made up by a reporter in order to get publicity for a mostly fictitious book,” he said.
Trump’s political future may be threatened by Mar-a-Lago docs, experts say
The Independent’s Andrew Feinberg writes how Mr Trump’s own explanation could prove especially damning for him.
Trump’s freedom could be at risk over documents found at Mar-a-Lago
Former president may have broken the law by taking 15 boxes of documents to Florida with him – and his own explanation could prove especially damning, writes Andrew Feinberg
Texas: 40% mail ballots rejected under stricter voting law
About 40 per cent of the mail-in ballots received by elections officials in Harris County — a Democratic stronghold that includes Houston and more than 2.4 million voters — were rejected.
The officials of the county said it was because the ballots had missing information or signatures which are now required under the Texas voting law passed in August.
More than 1,300 ballots flagged were mandatory identification such as voter ID or Social Security numbers, while others were missing signatures, said Leah Shah, a spokesperson for the Harris County Elections Administrator’s office.
“As we get closer to the deadline to return mail ballots, we just want to make sure that everyone understands that these new requirements to include identification are important,” Ms Shah said.
“Take a close look at the envelope and make sure you are filling them out, and when in doubt fill them both out or give us a call so we can help walk them through. It is confusing and challenging, and we are here to help.”
The law requires counties to notify the voters in case of rejections of their ballot to give voters another chance to correct it before Election day.
Virginia district AG forced to resign over damning Jan 6 posts
Monique Miles, deputy attorney general in Virginia, was forced to resign on Thursday after she faced backlash for her resurfaced Facebook post where she called January 6 rioters “patriots”.
“News Flash: Patriots have stormed the Capitol. No surprise. The deep state has awoken the sleeping giant,” Ms Miles wrote on the day of the riot, according to The Washington Post.
“Patriots are not taking this lying down. We are awake, ready, and will fight for our rights by any means necessary.”
The Virginia attorney general’s office denounced the Facebook post by Ms Miles but said they were not aware of the comments she made.
Kim Jong-un was ‘very important’ to Trump
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un was “very important” to Donald Trump and the former president had pictures of him in his office, New York Times journalist Maggie Haberman said in an interview with CNN.
The journalist, who has an upcoming book that has some explosive revelation about Mr Trump, said that while what the former president “says and what’s actually happening are not always in concert,” he “has been telling people that he has maintained some kind of correspondence or discussion with Kim Jong-un”.
She remarked that it is not “necessarily unusual” for an ex-president of the country to have contact with other leaders but Mr Trump’s relationship with Mr Kim seems strange.
“Those letters, you know, from Kim Jong-un, that The Washington Post in terrific reporting, reported on the fact that he had taken with him to the White House, the original copies, he would wave them around, as I understand, he would wave them around in the White House and he would wave them around at Mar-a-Lago,” she said.
“He would have them in his boxes, and he would take them out and show them to people.”
Biden doing ‘deep dive’ on Supreme Court candidates
Joe Biden said he is doing a “deep dive” on “about four people” as he is set to nominate a successor for retiring Justice Stephen Breyer on the US Supreme Court.
“I’ve taken about four people and done the deep dive on them, meaning thorough background checks, to see if there’s anything in the background that would make them not qualified,” Mr Biden told NBC News’ Lester Holt in an interview on Thursday.
The president did not mention the names of the candidates but said the White House shortlisted nominees “are incredibly well qualified and documented”.
“I’m not looking to make an ideological choice here,” he said, adding that he was looking someone very similar to Mr Breyer, “with an open mind, who understands how the Constitution, interprets it in a way that is consistent with the mainstream interpretation of the Constitution”.
Former RNC chair mocks Trump by eating paper live on air
Michael Steele, former Republican National Committee chair, ridiculed Donald Trump by shoving paper in his mouth over the former president’s latest scandal involving the flushing of White House documents.
“Well, first, could you pass the salt?” Mr Steele, who appeared on MSNBC said after host Joy Reid questioned him over the controversy before putting a piece of paper in his mouth.
“Yummy, yummy. Pass the salt, please,” Mr Steele said as he imitated Mr Trump’s voice.
It came as an upcoming book by a New York Times journalist that would reveal Mr Trump reportedly destroyed White House documents by flushing them in the toilet in violation of the Presidential Records Act.
Trump’s calls records missing in data obtained by 6 Jan panel
White House calls logs received by the House panel investigating the 6 January insurrection at the Capitol do not have records of calls made by Donald Trump, two sources familiar with the probe said.
The records also do not have data of the calls made directly to the president on 6 January as he watched the violence unfold on television.
The missing data has apparently presented a new challenge to investigators to create the most comprehensive record yet of the attack in which Mr Trump was allegedly an instigating factor.
The committee is also receiving more evidence from the National Archives and other sources.
Source Article from https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-polls-today-durham-investigation-latest-b2014188.html
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