Trump Peppered Acting AG With Near-Daily Calls For Bogus 2020 Election Probes

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things.

Abuse Of Power

Your regular reminder that we still don’t know so much about how President Trump abused the powers of his office to overturn the 2020 election. The latest revelation comes via the Washington Post:

  • Trump called Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen on a near-daily basis to pressure the Justice Department to act on wild claims about voter and election fraud.
  • Rosen kept the calls close to the vest, but notes of some of the calls were kept by Rosen aide Richard Donoghue.
  • The calls began soon after Rosen replaced Bill Barr as attorney general and ended after the Jan. 6 attack.
  • “Trump was absolutely obsessed about it,” one source told the Post.
  • Rosen was “generally noncommittal” on the calls.
  • Testimony from Rosen and Donoghue and Donoghue’s notes will be of high interest to congressional investigators.

Progressive Reps Go Hard At Sinema

Rapid and searing reaction from progressive members to Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (D-AZ) throwing cold water on the size of the $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill in the Senate:

  • AOC: “Good luck tanking your own party’s investment on childcare, climate action, and infrastructure while presuming you’ll survive a 3 vote House margin — especially after choosing to exclude members of color from negotiations and calling that a ‘bipartisan accomplishment.”
  • Rashida Tlaib: “Sinema seems not to care that her own state is flooding, the west is burning, and infrastructure around the country is crumbling. Sinema is more interested in gaining GOP friends and blocking much needed resources, than fighting for her residents’ future.”
  • A new six-figure ad campaign in Arizona by an outside progressive group is targeting Sinema.
  • For her part, Sinema is basking in the bipartisan afterglow of the Senate deal, with Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) blowing her kisses in an op-ed.

Must Read

“St. Louis County Health Director: I Was Assaulted, Called ‘Brown C——’ After Mask Plea”  

What The What?

Rep. Mo Brooks (R-AL) wore body armor to the Jan. 6 rally on the Ellipse.

Bipartisan Feel-Goodism

Not to be too cynical, but much of the point of bipartisan dealmaking is to be able to congratulate oneself on the bipartisanship, which is to say that the notion of bipartisanship is itself a currency. And it still plays in op-ed pages, political reporting, and on cable news.

  • Sen. Brian Schatz (D-HI): “[Biden’s] a creature of the Senate and there’s something to be said for that. Maybe professional politicians are actually good at politics.”
  • Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg: “Maybe I’m an ironic person to say it, but it turns out that decade’s worth of expertise and relationships and pattern recognition are really helpful to getting a big result like this done. This was a team that was not distracted, the president was not thrown by the different kind of drama of the day, or the shiny objects.”
  • Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-NY): “I think the president is demonstrating that he has the ability to make this town work, in part, with his Democratic allies on the Hill, and that is what our country needs, a functioning government with responsible adults delivering real results on important issues.”
  • Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA): “This has taken a long time, longer than any of us expected. I think the country is yearning to see Congress actually function.”
  • Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA): am amazed that there are some who oppose this, just because they think that if you ever get anything done somehow it’s a sign of weakness.”

Not Dead Yet

Talks on a voting rights bill in the Senate continued with a meeting in Schumer’s office Wednesday.

  • DOJ warns states on bogus election audits and on rolling back opportunities to vote.

‘Right Of Return’

Santa Monica launches pilot project to prioritize affordable housing for minority families and their descendants who displaced by mid-century urban renewal projects.

Pandemic As Giant Social Science Experiment

COVID aid is having historically dramatic effects on U.S. poverty, according to a new study commissioned by the NYT:

  • The overall number of poor Americans is expected to be cut by nearly in half from 2018 levels.
  • The poverty rate has plummeted to the lowest on record.

Manufactured Outrage?

A supposed social justice group that stoked right-wing outrage by demanding affluent Dallas families not send their kids to Ivys may be a astroturfing hoax. But it sure did work. The fake outrage made it all the way to Tucker Carlson’s show this week.

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Where Things Stand: It Was Hard To Spit Out, But Jim Jordan Confirmed He Spoke To Trump On Jan 6

Amid a stream of words delivered in his typical auctioneer fashion, Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) confirmed Wednesday afternoon that he did, in fact, talk to Trump on Jan. 6.

When exactly that conversation happened — before the insurrection, during the attack, after the fact, when Congress was certifying President Joe Biden’s win — couldn’t tell ya.

Continue reading “Where Things Stand: It Was Hard To Spit Out, But Jim Jordan Confirmed He Spoke To Trump On Jan 6”

DOJ Fires Fresh Warning Shot At States Curtailing Voting Rights Or Considering MAGA Audits

As new voter restrictions and bogus post-election “audits” sweep across the country, the Department of Justice sent a shot across the bow Wednesday, issuing two documents laying out federal law on election records and voting rights. 

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The Number of People With IRAs Worth $5 Million Or More Has Tripled, Congress Says

This story first appeared at ProPublica. ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

The number of multimillion-dollar individual retirement accounts has soared in the past decade, as more wealthy Americans use the tax-advantaged vehicles to shield fortunes from income taxes, according to new data released by Congress today.

The data reveals for the first time the staggering amount of money socked away in tax-free mega Roth accounts: more than $15 billion held by just 156 Americans.

The new data also shows that the number of Americans with traditional and Roth IRAs worth over $5 million tripled, to more than 28,000, between 2011 and 2019.

The data was requested by Senate Finance Chairman Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and House Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal, D-Mass., following ProPublica’s story last month exploring the rise of mega Roth IRAs. The story, based on confidential IRS data obtained by ProPublica, revealed that tech mogul Peter Thiel has the largest known Roth IRA, worth $5 billion as of 2019.

In a Senate Finance hearing on retirement on Wednesday, Wyden said such massive accounts underscore the country’s inequalities. “Individuals at the very top — at the very, very top — are able to game the rules to get ahead and basically abuse taxpayer-subsidized accounts with pricey accountants and lawyers,” Wyden said. “This increases the already existing retirement inequality between retirement haves and have-nots to an extreme level.”

Roth IRAs were established in 1997 to incentivize middle-class Americans to save for retirement. Congress imposed strict limits, including a cap on how much can be contributed to the accounts each year, which today stands at $6,000 for most Americans. The average Roth account was worth $39,108 at the end of 2018.

But a select set of the ultrawealthy have managed to get around limits set by Congress and transformed the vehicle into a powerful onshore tax shelter. One way they’ve done that is by buying nonpublic shares of companies with extremely low valuations. That allows them to tuck a huge volume of shares into a retirement account. Congressional investigators have previously found that the IRS has struggled to enforce rules around these investments, including whether the valuations are legitimate.

Once money is deposited into a Roth account, any proceeds from investment gains are tax free. So, for example, a Roth owner who sells a successful tech investment for a $1 million profit gets to keep all of the money, saving a potential $200,000 in federal taxes. The savings can then be reinvested, tax free, as long as the Roth holder waits till he or she is at least 59 and a half before withdrawing the money. Owners of traditional IRAs, by contrast, enjoy tax-free growth but must pay income tax on withdrawals. The Roth is considered the more powerful tax-avoidance tool for the wealthy.

The latest numbers come from analysts at Congress’ nonpartisan Joint Committee on Taxation. They update a widely cited study from the Government Accountability Office that released figures on large IRAs in 2011.

The new figures show that, as of 2019, nearly 3,000 taxpayers held Roth IRAs worth at least $5 million. (The total of more than 28,000 people holding IRAs of that size includes both traditional and Roth IRAs.) The aggregate value of those Roth IRAs was more than $40 billion.

Both Wyden and Neal said in statements that the new figures show the need for reform. Neal said that “IRAs are intended to help Americans achieve long-term financial security, not to enable those who already have extraordinary wealth to avoid paying their fair share in taxes and deepen existing inequalities in our nation.” Neal said earlier this month, in the wake of the ProPublica article, that the Ways and Means Committee would draft a bill to “stop IRAs from being exploited.”

For his part, Wyden said, “As the Finance Committee continues to develop proposals to make the tax code more fair, closing these loopholes will be a top priority.” Wyden first proposed an overhaul of IRA rules to prevent the accounts from being used as large tax shelters several years ago. One reform that is being discussed would prohibit investors from putting assets that are not available to ordinary Americans, such as shares of startup companies, into retirement accounts.

Wyden and Neal’s push for reforms comes as Congress is considering bipartisan retirement legislation. The bills are being pitched as helping ordinary Americans save for retirement, including by proposing to automatically enroll workers in employer-sponsored retirement plans. But they also include perks for the retirement and financial industries, such as relaxing rules in ways that are seen as a boon for insurers. And buried deep inside the two complex bills are provisions that could make it harder for the IRS to crack down on the ultrawealthy who dodge tax rules.

 

Public Face Of AZ Audit Plans To Quit Because Auditors Won’t Let Him See What They’re Up To

UPDATE: On Friday July 30, Senate President Karen Fann (R) and Ken Bennett put out a joint statement indicating that they had reached an agreement and that Bennett would continue to serve as the Senate’s liaison to the audit after all.

 

The face of the Arizona Senate’s “audit” of Maricopa County’s 2020 election results says he is stepping down, claiming he’s been shut out of the process and that he won’t put a rubber stamp on a report whose underlying data he hasn’t seen. 

Continue reading “Public Face Of AZ Audit Plans To Quit Because Auditors Won’t Let Him See What They’re Up To”

Twitter Suspends Several Accounts Promoting MAGA Audits, Including AZ Audit’s Official Page

Twitter has suspended several accounts related to politicized “audits” of 2020 election results around the country, including the official account of the audit in Arizona.

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Out of Patience with the CDC? Grow the F Up

I will get to some points about the CDC’s updated masking policy in a moment. But first a few points about the CDC’s decision-making generally. I thought the earlier decision to end the masking guidance for the vaccinated was a mistake. I think the CDC was trying to balance the evolving science with immense public pressure to offer what amounts to a reward for vaccination, to declare the pandemic over or show the benefits of vaccination.

But after yesterday’s updated policy or reversal I kept seeing comments on Twitter, headlines in OpEds and comments from people on TV saying, “That’s it!” “That’s the final nail in the coffin of the CDC’s credibility!” Or ‘the experts’ or Fauci or whoever else. “First it was no masks! Now masks are back! Which is it??!?!!?”

Really people need to get the f*#$ over themselves.

Continue reading “Out of Patience with the CDC? Grow the F Up”