6 Unanswered Questions About Trump’s Arlington Cemetery Fiasco

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

What We Still Don’t Know

  1. What does the Trump campaign video show? The Trump campaign initially said it was “prepared to release footage” it had of the incident that would show what happened, but a day later it said it was “weighing its options” and to date it hasn’t released the relevant footage.
  2. Who are the two Trump campaign staffers who had a verbal and physical altercation with the cemetery official? The identity of the campaign staffers who verbally abused and aggressively brushed by the cemetery official have still not been made public, and their exact roles with the campaign remain unclear.
  3. What does the report filed by the cemetery official say? The Army has closed the case because the cemetery official didn’t want to press charges for fear of retaliation from MAGA world, but not before the cemetery official involved filed a report with the police department at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall.
  4. Who else witnessed the incident and what did they see? As the photo above suggests, there were numerous other people in attendance before and after the incident, including Utah Gov. Spencer Cox (R), families of the fallen, campaign staffers, and Secret Service. We have limited accounts from them of what transpired.
  5. What did the Secret Service do, if anything, about the incident? Trump was under Secret Service protection at the time of the incident but it’s unclear what, if anything, agents witnessed, whether they intervened, or how the agency handles a difficult situation like this.
  6. What was the content of the official warnings to the Trump campaign ahead of time not to turn the cemetery ceremony into a campaign event? The Army says it was clear in advance with participants about the prohibitions against political activities on cemetery grounds, but we haven’t seen those warnings, what exactly they said, or what form they took.

Latest Developments In Arlington National Cemetery Incident

Over the past 24 hours:

  • The Army released an unusual statement defending the cemetery official involved in the physical altercation with the Trump campaign staffer while trying to enforce the rules and regulations for the national shrine.
  • Senate Democrats began to rouse themselves to look into the matter. The Senate Armed Service Committee is the committee of jurisdiction.
  • House Democrats also expressed an interest in investigating the matter, with some members calling for the release of the report filed by the cemetery worker. Both chambers are on August recess.

Trump Prosecution Watch

  • In an interview with CBS News, a remarkably candid Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson spoke about the Supreme Court’s egregious presidential immunity decision: “I was concerned about a system that appeared to provide immunity for one individual under one set of circumstances, when we have a criminal justice system that had ordinarily treated everyone the same.” 
  • Donald Trump has launched another long-shot effort to move the New York hush money case to federal court in order to avoid sentencing following his conviction in the case.

Suboptimal

NYT: “As Speaker Nancy Pelosi was evacuated from the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, while the complex was under attack, her motorcade passed by a pipe bomb at the Democratic National Committee headquarters that law enforcement had yet to render safe, according to video and analysis released this week by House Republicans.”

The Election Story Nobody Wants to Talk About

Rick Perlstein interviews David Neiwert about the threat of political violence by right-wing extremists as we head into the 2024 election (plus a generous shoutout to TPM).

Abortion Watch

  • Having it both ways: Trump suggested Thursday that he would vote for the Florida ballot initiative that would ease the state’s six-week abortion ban, but his campaign quickly put out a statement declaring that Trump had not yet taken a position on the ballot measure.
  • Be skeptical: Trump said Thursday, without offering much in the way of detail, that he if elected he would require private insurers and the government to cover the costs of IVF.

Quote Of The Day

I did not have Medicare for All for IVF on my bingo card for policy proposals from Donald Trump.

Larry Levitt, a healthcare expert at the Kaiser Family Foundation

2024 Ephemera

  • WSJ poll: Harris leads Trump 48%-47%, a flip from the last WSJ survey in July, when Trump led by 2 percentage points. It’s the first time that Biden or Harris has led Trump in the WSJ poll since April 2023.
  • In the new Democratic ticket’s first joint interview, Harris said she would appoint a Republican to her cabinet.
  • NYT: Donors Quietly Push Harris to Drop Tax on Ultrawealthy

Thune Busted For Playing Both Sides Of The Fence

Politico’s Playbook catches Sen. John Thune (R-SD) taking center stage at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for a home-state water project that received $152 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which Thune voted against.

For Your Radar …

A federal judge in Texas who is a favorite of conservative legal movers and shakers, including Republican attorneys general who frequently shop for venue in his court, has denied Media Matters’ motion to dismiss Elon Musk’s lawsuit against it in a thin opinion that clears the way for the case to go trial in April.

UVa Suspends ‘Woke’ Tours After Conservative Alum Complain

NYT: “The University of Virginia said on Thursday that it had suspended a longstanding campus tour service, but said the move was unrelated to complaints that the tours cast a negative historical spotlight on the school, particularly its relationship to slavery.”

Have A Great Holiday Weekend!

Some Louisiana roots music to get you in the spirit:

Morning Memo will be back Tuesday.

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The Times Strikes Again

Wes Moore, Governor of Maryland, is one of the Democrats’ big, rising stars. And yesterday the Times delivered an ominous headline about a Bronze Star “he claimed but never received.” The subhed of the article reads: “For years, the Maryland governor has faced questions about whether he had wrongfully said he had a Bronze Star. He insisted no. But an old document proves otherwise.”

Sounds bad, as they say. The feature photo shows Moore looking toward the sky with a mix of contrition and shame. So the article tells us that Moore has long “faced questions” and now the Times has finally found the document that proves Moore’s wrongdoing. That document turns out to be his application for a White House fellowship in 2006 where he said he had received the Bronze Star and combat action badge. But there’s no record of him ever receiving the Bronze Star. Moore spoke to the Times and said it was an honest mistake which he regretted. According to Moore his superior officer told him to include it because he was already submitting the paperwork for the award. “He thought that I earned it and he was already going through the paperwork to process it.”

You have to get all the way down to paragraph fourteen, as TPM reader AG helpfully pointed out to me, until you get this.

Continue reading “The Times Strikes Again”

Trump’s Violent Misogyny Doesn’t Break Through

Truth Social, Donald Trump’s (failing) social media site, is the playground for his id. 

He regularly amplifies QAnon conspiracy theories, vents with his signature random capitalization about witch hunts and rigged elections and boosts thinly veiled calls to recreate the Jan. 6 insurrection. 

Continue reading “Trump’s Violent Misogyny Doesn’t Break Through”

Listen To This: Ready For North Carolina To Break Our Hearts Again

A new episode of The Josh Marshall Podcast is live! This week, Kate and Josh talk about North Carolina’s rating change, Trump’s campaign brawling with an Arlington Cemetery employee and the upcoming Harris-Walz interview.

You can listen to the new episode of The Josh Marshall Podcast here.

Georgia County Installs ‘Panic Buttons’ For Poll Workers As Concerns Grow Over New Rules

Against the backdrop of the Georgia State Election Board implementing new rules that have the potential to sow seeds of doubt in the state’s election system, a Georgia county — that’s already been plagued by dangerous election misinformation and threats since 2020 — recently approved the implementation of “panic buttons” to protect poll workers. 

Continue reading “Georgia County Installs ‘Panic Buttons’ For Poll Workers As Concerns Grow Over New Rules”

Trump’s No Stranger to Felonies

Very good points from TPM Reader RS

I respect the cemetery employee’s unfortunately-at-this-point-entirely-reasonable decision not to “press charges” in light of the potential for retaliation.  But let’s not sugarcoat it: assaulting a federal employee in the performance of her duties is a felony (18 USC 111), full stop.  

Continue reading “Trump’s No Stranger to Felonies”

Army: Thousands of Events Are Held at Arlington. Only Trump Caused an Incident.

The Army issued an extremely rare rebuke of the Trump campaign on Thursday, saying that it was warned not to turn a visit to Arlington National Cemetery into a political event.

Continue reading “Army: Thousands of Events Are Held at Arlington. Only Trump Caused an Incident.”

Cemetery Staffer Declines To Press Charges For Fear Of Retaliation

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

The Thuggery Continues …

The fascist overtones from the Arlington National Cemetery incident are unmistakeable: a presidential campaign run like a gang, with enforcers shoving aside a public servant enforcing the rules and a mob of millions of supporters with a track record of doxxing, harassing, intimidating, and threatening anyone who gets in their candidate’s way, all the while being egged on by the candidate himself.

You can’t blame the cemetery official for declining to press charges rather than put herself in the line of fire for continued and unending abuse. She didn’t sign up for that. She’s already been baselessly accused by the Trump campaign of having a “mental health episode,” being “despicable” and a “disgrace,” and not deserving to have her job. That all happened within the first 48 hours of the apparent confrontation at the national shrine to fallen service members.

But what about the Army? It oversees Arlington National Cemetery and is a victim of Trump’s bullying, too, so I hesitate to blame it for its predicament. But some of the reporting suggests the staffer on the ground was effectively if inadvertently set up by higher-ups who themselves wanted to avoid a confrontation with Trump. According to the WaPo:

Pentagon officials were deeply concerned about the former president turning the visit into a campaign stop, but they also didn’t want to block him from coming, according to Defense Department officials and internal messages reviewed by The Washington Post.

Officials said they wanted to respect the wishes of grieving family members who wanted Trump there, but at the same time were wary of Trump’s record of politicizing the military. So they laid out ground rules they hoped would wall off politics from the final resting place of those who paid the ultimate sacrifice for their nation.

Rather than mount a full-throated defense and take any kind of remedial action, the Army has closed the matter after the cemetery official declined to press charges. But the fecklessness doesn’t end there. This paragraph in the NYT is an all-timer for weak-kneed kowtowing to a bully:

Several Army officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss confidential aspects of the matter, on Wednesday sought to keep the politically charged issue from escalating. But at the same time, they defended the cemetery official and pushed back on attacks from the Trump campaign, with one official saying that the woman at the cemetery was just trying to do her job.

Officials purporting to defend their person on the ground by offering some “push back” on the Trump campaign attack, but doing so anonymously while trying to keep it from “escalating.” Escalating into what? You’ve already been run over, so that leaves the only obvious conclusion: The Army itself is trying to avoid being the target of MAGA attacks. This is untenable acquiescence to bullying.

Is that really going to be the end of the story? No consequences, no new measures to enjoin Trump from doing the same thing again at Arlington or another military cemetery, no price to pay for his thuggery. It’s a familiar pattern.

The erosion of any kind of strong, unified, national, countervailing force to Trump’s public bullying and nastiness only enables and emboldens the thuggery that is central to his appeal and that he has already notoriously used on Jan. 6 to try to retain power.

If you don’t think a Trump win in November will unleash a reign of thuggery against anyone who stands in his way – not just political foes but innocent bystanders and regular folks just doing their jobs – then I don’t know what else to tell you. He’s doing it right now, he’s promised to do it if he wins, and his minions are poised and eager to follow through.

He’s not a schoolyard bully. He’s a public menace, and if he wins back the White House, he will be a public menace with vast official powers and Supreme Court-sanctioned immunity.

Trump’s Digital Deluge

The former president went on a social media bender Wednesday morning:

In total, Trump’s digital deluge contained 50 posts, including 19 written by the former president and a slew of retruths. Much of the content was explicitly conspiratorial and authoritarian.

It included reposting a sexually denigrating meme about Kamala Harris.

Trump Prosecution Watch

  • Jan. 6 case: The grand jury that Special Counsel Jack Smith used to issue a superseding indictment this week against Donald Trump was new to the Trump case, but it was not newly formed. It was empaneled in 2023 and had issued indictments of other Jan. 6 riot defendants.
  • Arizona fake electors case: In a Monday hearing, a state judge in Arizona seemed open to the claim by the defendants in the fake electors case that they are the victims of political persecution. The defendants are seeking to have the case dismissed using the state’s unusual anti-SLAPP law, which is the only one in the country to include include protection from politically motivated criminal prosecutions. Trump is an unindicted co-conspirator in the case.

2024 Ephemera

  • The Harris-Walz ticket does its first joint interview with CNN’s Dana Bash. It will air at 9 p.m. ET today after being taped in Savannah, Georgia, where the Democratic duo is on a bus tour through the southern portion of the swing state.
  • Fox News poll: Kamala Harris has closed the gap Joe Biden faced against Donald Trump in the Sun Belt swing states. Among registered votes, Harris leads in Arizona by 1 point, in Nevada by 2 points, in Georgia by 2 points; Trump leads by 1 pt in North Carolina.

Funny Business In Nebraska

The Republican attorney general in Nebraska is stymying a new state law passed on a bipartisan basis to allow felons to resume voting as soon as their sentences are served. Attorney General Mike Hilgers has also called into question the constitutionality of the existing state law on the books since 2005 that allowed felons to vote two years after their sentences are completed.

SCOTUS Leaves Biden Student Debt Relief Plan On Hold

The Supreme Court declined to remove a temporary pause on the latest Biden administration program to eliminate student loan debt.

Still Just A Horrifying Case

AP: “A Democratic former Las Vegas-area politician is guilty of murder and has been sentenced to life in prison with parole eligibility at 20 years for the killing of a journalist who wrote articles critical of his conduct in office, a jury in Nevada ruled Wednesday.”

Palin Defamation Case Against NYT Reinstated

The U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals threw out a 2022 jury verdict in favor of the NYT and ordered a new trial on Sarah Palin’s defamation claims against the newspaper. Palin had sued the NYT over an editorial that falsely accused her campaign of inciting the 2011 shooting of then-Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-AZ).

The Worst Of The Worst

Your occasional reminder that this toxic, racist, eliminationist propaganda is being aired nationally by a major corporation all the damn time:

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Trump’s Arlington Cemetery Campaign Event

This story of the “incident” at Arlington National Cemetery has blown up pretty dramatically. In case you haven’t heard about it yet or aren’t up to date on the details, let me try to explain what we know.

Three days ago, the Trump campaign held a campaign event at Arlington National Cemetery. The idea was to lay a wreath honoring the 13 members of the U.S. military who were killed during the evacuation of Kabul in 2021 and film a political ad. They would distribute the video and attack Vice President Harris and President Biden for not “showing up” for their campaign event, which they sought to portray was an established memorial. As soon as the video circulated, military policy experts I know said right off the bat they were shocked that the campaign had been allowed to hold a campaign event on the grounds of the cemetery and circulate video of it. It isn’t just unseemly. It’s against the law. How were they allowed to do that?

That turned out to be a good and prescient question.

Continue reading “Trump’s Arlington Cemetery Campaign Event”

Trump Does A Familiar Dance With His Promise Of A SCOTUS Nominee Shortlist

Late summer 2024 has found Trump almost comically torn between two competing political demands. On one side, you have a conservative movement that has increasingly remade itself in his image, grafting radical, revanchist ideas for a new American “regime” onto Trump’s unique, very personal politics. This movement is given form by Project 2025, an initiative that is housed in the Heritage Foundation but which pulls in policy proposals and authors from across the ecosystem of right-wing think tanks. The Christian nationalists who hope for a national abortion ban and, in some cases, legislation that would put an end to many fertility treatments, also go in this bucket. JD Vance is a kind of spokesperson for this crowd.

Continue reading “Trump Does A Familiar Dance With His Promise Of A SCOTUS Nominee Shortlist”