Neither here nor there in the big scheme of things. But I thought some of you might find this interesting. On Friday I encouraged TPM Readers to reach out to their members of Congress to find out their current position on the release of the Mueller Report. Here’s the post. Here’s the DIY running tally I was doing through the early afternoon. I’ve suspended that effort for the moment the Second Barr Letter has changed the state of play significantly. I explain where I think we are here. But as part of that effort I used a new part of our system to send a note (an email) to all 29,265 TPM members to let you know what we were doing because I thought time was of the essence and it was a particularly important moment. Read More
When I was away my main goal was to relax and bury myself in books. In particular I returned to a long time interest: the origins of the business of movable type printing and its transformative effect not only on the way people consumed information and also the way they formed their collective identity – an amorphous thing that is highly tied to communities of people both consuming the same information and being collectively aware that they are exposed to or consuming the same information. I have long been interested in this period – the late 15th and early 16th centuries – because a cluster of epochally consequential events happen over no more than two or three generations. The significance of some are more clear than others. But over time they will interweave into and catalyze each other, magnifying the significance of each by their interactions.
Consider some key examples. (In some cases I use approximate dates when the precise event is murky, amorphous or incremental.) Read More
Simple point on the day’s events. The only legitimate way this concludes is for Congress or some subsection of Congress to get the complete and un-redacted Mueller Report. Full stop. Precedent is on the side of this approach. The Congress also have various models to accommodate. It can be released only to the committees of jurisdiction. It can be released only to the Gang of Eight, though that strikes me as far too restrictive. It can of course be released to the entire Congress, which seems most reasonable. What redactions are included in the publicly released Mueller Report is something reasonable people can disagree over. But as long as the substance of the redactions remain secret from the Congress the whole thing is illegitimate. If the redactions of the public version are reasonable we need members of the opposition party to confirm that that is the case. We need leadership of both chambers to confirm that. This is shaping up to give Bill Barr broad latitude to hide all the details that President Trump wants kept secret.
We’re still trying to make sense of this letter. It’s ambiguous on a few key points. But there’s one highly relevant thing that seems clear. Attorney General Barr plans to give the extensively redacted version of the Report to Congress too. So Jerry Nadler, Adam Schiff, Nancy Pelosi et al., will only get to see a version of the report that has been extensively redacted under four broad categories. Read More
Here’s the letter where Barr lays out his timeline. Read More
[This post will be updated and re-timestamped through the day.]
Our situation now seems pretty clear. The administration plan is this: Release the Barr Letter and use it as a cudgel to claim bogus exoneration and threaten revenge against the President’s perceived enemies while Bill Barr tries to run down the clock until January 2021.
Okay, we’re starting to put together the beginnings of a tally, which you can see below. Letters after a Reps name are the initials of the TPM Readers who spoke to their offices. Gist so far is that pretty few are changing their position explicitly. But the key is that most GOP Reps are still saying they support releasing the report but then getting squishy about when. This of course can mean in six months or two years. So these are clearly trying to give room for Barr to pursue his run out the clock until January 2021. Read More
Members of the House get creative in these situations. TPM Reader JR called Rep. Rodney Davis’s office to see if he still supported the immediate release of the full Mueller Report. Davis’s office refused to answer whether Davis had changed his position because there’s no second resolution, which of course makes no sense. Read More
TPM Reader RS called Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner and it looks like Jim’s going a bit wobbly on his resolution vote. RS asked if Sensenbrenner still supported immediately release of the report to Congress.
I called Jim Sensenbrenner’s office. They simply pointed to his statement he made on March 24. The gentleman read me the statement over the phone and I said that doesn’t address the issue or releasing the report and he said “yes it does. He said he looks forward to reading the entire report and that the top line summary is a vindication.”
You can call your Rep too.
Fascinating little nugget. As we’ve noted at various points, the results of the counter-intelligence part of probe is if anything more important that the criminal part of it. It goes into potential compromise or what influence Russia might have over the President or members of his entourage. Politico reporters went to ask House Republicans today what they expected from that part of the report, which the FBI says it is ready to brief Congress on. Turns out they’re not really interested weirdly enough! Read More