Editors’ Blog
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03.08.19 | 3:28 pm
How Netanyahu Reaped the Whirlwind
US President Donald Trump (R) meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on September 26, 2018 in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly. (Photo by Nicholas Kamm / AFP)        (Photo credit should read NICHOLAS KAMM/AFP/Getty Images)

I’ve been working on a post about the Omar controversy. It’s taken a bit longer than I anticipated. But I just got this note from TPM Reader TB which captures one of the key elements of the controversy, to my mind. Many readers have a hard time really seeing anti-Semitism, recognizing it as real and complex issue in our society, when it runs into conflict with their ordinary sense of who the good guys and the bad guys are in our politics. It can be relegated to a footnote, a secondary concern, when the ‘real’ issue appears to be racism or Islamophobia. And those are very real issues. But it is just as true that the Israeli right and its supporters in the US (who are overwhelmingly evangelical Christians) have reaped the whirlwind by making the Netanyahu government’s meddling in US politics so frequent and expected. It is not only wrong on the merits. It is insanely shortsighted for Israel. It also endangers American Jews.

Here’s TPM Reader TBRead More

03.08.19 | 1:23 pm
Trump Cans Another Staffer Who Couldn’t Make People Love Him
In this April 24, 2017 photo, Fox News co-president Bill Shine, right, leaves a New York restaurant with Rupert Murdoch, second from right, the executive chairman of 21st Century Fox. The turmoil at Fox News Channel has claimed another victim. The network said Monday, May 1, that Shine, a longtime lieutenant of ousted Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, is out. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Bill Shine is leaving the White House and joining the 2020 Trump reelection campaign, an operation that has as much as anything served as a slush fund to keep fired Trumpers on the organizational payroll and in check. Maybe we’ll find out there’s some comical or horrifying scandal that triggered this move – find out in six months. But there may be a more straightforward explanation.

Read More

03.08.19 | 11:50 am
A Few Choice Pieces

Wanted to flag for your attention Allegra Kirkland’s second installment on the implosion of the National Socialist Movement (NSM), a decades old descendent of the American Nazi Party that has imploded to the degree that its leader says he got bamboozled into signing over leadership of the party to a black activist. Also be sure to read Tierney Sneed’s backgrounder on why Judge Ellis (P) gave Paul Manafort less than four years and finally signs Dems are looking for new connections (P) between Russia and the Trump entourage.

03.07.19 | 8:19 pm
The Manafort Sentence

I don’t know if anyone anticipated Paul Manafort receiving such a vast downward revision from the sentencing guidelines – just under four years when federal sentencing guidelines leaned toward more than twenty (19-24 years). But if there was a judge who was going to wrench the scales in Manafort’s favor it was going to be Judge Ellis. During the trial Ellis made no effort to hide his sympathy for Manafort and hostility toward the government’s case. He attacked the government’s lawyering. He attacked the government’s case. He questioned the existence of the Special Counsel’s office itself. It came up again and again. Ellis was even compelled on to rule against his own manifest partiality in at least one instance. Read More

03.07.19 | 6:48 pm
Anti-Semitism Resolution Turns Into General GOP Self-Own

I’m working on a piece with some more thoughts about the Rep. Omar (D-MN) controversy. For now, on the vote: I thought jumping to passing a resolution was always a mistake, an overreaction, too reactive. In the event, it was unobjectionable enough that every Democrat and almost every Republican voted for it. Even though I thought doing any kind of resolution was a mistake, I also thought the whole “Dems in disarray” narrative was overblown. Certainly it’s a distraction from what they want to be focused on. But these things happens. Then they’re done. Then three days later it’s like it never happened. Read More

03.07.19 | 3:31 pm
Awaiting Manafort Sentencing

Paul Manafort’s sentencing hearing in Virginia should be getting underway. TPM’s Tierney Sneed and Caitlin MacNeal are present. No electronic devices allowed in the courthouse, so we’ll be doing our best with analog coverage. They have quarters for the payphone. More soon.

03.07.19 | 1:56 pm
Low Energy

I agree with David that this lawsuit must irk Trump. But I had a somewhat different reaction. Just under $2 million dollars seems almost quaint for the Trump Era. It has like a vaguely Austin Powers feel to it. Trumpers seem to sue for at least $100 million, just on principle, just following Trump’s lead.

Cohen seems like a man out of time. Maybe he has really turned a corner.

03.07.19 | 1:10 pm
This Must Incense Trump

We’re now learning that the Trump Organization/Trump campaign paid $1.7 million in legal bills for Michael Cohen before he flipped, at least according to Cohen.

03.07.19 | 12:24 pm
That Won’t Work

[When I first wrote this post I thought the law literally barred Trump from issuing these pardons. It doesn’t actually do that. It requires the DOJ to give Congress evidence against the pardoned individual and at least implicitly on how a particular pardon would affect or insulate the President and associates from legal jeopardy. That’s significantly different and not as clear cut. But I still think the law is likely unconstitutional because it forces the executive to take actions which at least complicate and in practice put obstacles in the way of this power. Post follows as I wrote it in the first instance.]

Adam Schiff wants to pass a law that would prevent the President from issuing pardons that protect him, his family or associates from legal jeopardy. Read More

03.07.19 | 8:54 am
Fox Hosting a Democratic Debate is Silly
Sara Bareilles signs copies of "Sounds Like Me: My Life (So Far) In Song" at Barnes & Noble, 5th Avenue on October 6, 2015 in New York City. *** Local Caption *** Sara Bareilles

I’ve seen a lot of journalists complaining that the DNC is somehow showing fear, or unwillingness to take tough questions or even some hostility to press freedom by rejecting a 2020 primary debate with Fox News. This is silly. Some non-journalists seem to be confused about the difference between access and debate sponsorship. But journalists know this difference. So they’re being silly. Read More