Deep In A Hole, Rudy Giuliani Just Keeps On Digging

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

Rudy G Is His Own Worst Disaster

We’re two days into the trial of Rudy Giuliani for defaming Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, and it’s hard to imagine things going any worse for him.

For those who haven’t been following the case, here’s the key thing to know: Giuliani has already been found liable for defamation by U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell because he was such a scofflaw in failing to respond to discovery requests and even engage in the lawsuit at a basic level. So the judge entered a default judgment against him.

In that sense, Giuliani has already lost. The jury trial now is merely to determine damages and how much Giuliani will have to pay. The plaintiffs are seeking tens of millions of dollars from the former NYC mayor, who is a shell of his former self.

After the first day of trial, Giuliani walked outside of the courthouse and repeated some of the lies he’s told about Freeman and Moss, prompting the judge to damn near lose her mind when the trial resumed yesterday. “When the trial reconvened on Tuesday morning, an incredulous Howell said the comments ‘could support another defamation claim,” Kyle Cheney reported.

Giuliani’s attorney was defenseless in the face of his client’s self-destructive behavior.

After day 2 of the trial got underway, co-plaintiff Shaye Moss gave deeply compelling testimony about what Giuliani’s lies have done to her personal life and work life. She more than held her own on cross examination from Giuliani’s lawyer, and more than once she brought up Giuliani’s remarks on the courthouse steps the night before.

Then last evening, Giuliani pulled a similar stunt. In a rambling, incoherent rant he tried connecting plaintiff’s counsel with Hunter Biden and Burisma, and by that point I was expecting him to pull out the old GOP standby: B-E-N-G-H-A-Z-I. Give him time, the trial is still young.

Still Digesting Jack Smith’s SCOTUS Power Play

An interesting observation from Hugo Lowell about Special Counsel Jack Smith forcing Donald Trump before the Supreme Court more quickly than expected:

The problem for Trump is that his hands are tied. The former president would prefer the court to take up the case after the DC circuit rules because he’s eager to delay his impending trial as much as possible. But he can’t oppose the prosecutors’ request now and then make the same request in several months’ time.

Dems Could Learn A Thing Or Two From Jack Smith

Brian Beutler:

When was the last time you recall a Democratic leader responding, like Smith or like Republicans, to a new development with a confident power play? Or seizing an opportunity to test and expose the depths of the institutional right’s bad faith before God and everyone? 

Oh Damn

In a new interview, Atlanta District Fani Willis did a little flexing about whether she will handle the Trump trial in person:

“I don’t think anyone should ever be surprised if DA Willis enters a courtroom,” said Willis, adding that she is “a trial lawyer at my soul.”

Asked if she might make an appearance during the Trump trial, she responded, “I think it’s very possible.”

When Fani Willis starts talking about herself in the third person, look out.

Totally Normal … In A Mob Movie

CNN: Former Mar-a-Lago employee-turned-witness repeatedly contacted by Trump and associates before documents charges

The Long Twilight Struggle

Josh Marshall:

Rather than Team Democracy battling back against and defeating Team Authoritarianism, or vice versa, in a final confrontation or series of final confrontations, we’re seeing something different. We have a new model in which we no longer have parties of government of right and left but rather a civic democratic party and an authoritarian populist party. There’s a good chance they’ll be contesting elections for a while, even as the authoritarian populist party is trying in various ways to end them or radically change how free they are. …

[W]e now appear to be living in what will likely be an extended period in which national elections pit a civic democratic party against a right-wing populist authoritarian one.

It’s Bogus Biden Impeachment Day For House GOP

A vote to open a sham, evidence-free, revenge impeachment inquiry of President Biden is expected today in the House. Make no mistake: Hanging the yoke of impeachment around Biden just as the 2024 general election is getting underway is 100% part of Trump’s campaign strategy — and has its roots in the Ukraine-based first impeachment and the ongoing prosecution of Hunter Biden (who is expected not to show up for a closed-door interview with House investigators, also scheduled for today). It’s all connected in the most corrupt possible way.

Ukraine Is A Victim Of MAGA Politics

  • Key takeaways from Ukraine President Zelensky’s Tuesday trip to Washington
  • The White House has reportedly gotten more directly involved in Senate negotiations over Ukraine aid (which is to say in the border security package which is now linked with Ukraine aid).
  • Fiona Hill warns of the stakes: “[T]he bottom line is that we are at an inflection point, a juncture where it could very rapidly tip, in fact this month — December and January — into a losing proposition for Ukraine.”

Big Ooops

Former Trump fixer Michael Cohen’s attorney cited three non-existent cases in a motion seeking to end Cohen’s post-conviction court supervision, according to the judge:

On Tuesday, Judge Furman ordered Mr. Schwartz to provide the court with copies of the three decisions he had cited in the filing. If Mr. Schwartz could not do so within a week, Judge Furman said, the lawyer would have to produce a sworn declaration and a thorough explanation of “how the motion came to cite cases that do not exist and what role, if any, Mr. Cohen played in drafting or reviewing the motion before it was filed.”

The Latest Redistricting News

  • New York: An enormously significant court decision, the state’s high court ordered a redrawing of the congressional district map that helped vault Republicans to the House majority in 2022 — giving Democrats a chance to pickup anywhere from two to six additional House seats in 2024.
  • Texas: Over the objection of the three liberal justices, the Supreme Court let stand a district map for county commissioners in Galveston that federal courts have found to be a racial gerrymander.

The Cruelty Is The Point

TPM’s Kate Riga: In Sentencing Kate Cox To Suffer, The Texas Abortion Ban Is Working Just As Intended

COP Wraps Up With Tepid Agreement On Fossil Fuels

Not to rain on the parade, but while headlines are focused on the final agreement at COP being the first time fossil fuels have been explicitly targeted in a UN climate agreement, this is a watered-down version of the much sought-after fossil fuel “phaseout” language that the petrostates so vigorously opposed.

What Is Even Happening Anymore

Do you like Morning Memo? Let us know!

As They Admit There’s No Evidence, House Republicans Will Still Greenlight Impeachment Inquiry

There has been a wave of articles this afternoon surfacing remarks from Republicans, both members of Congress and senators alike, acknowledging publicly that House Republicans’ push for a vote to formally authorize an impeachment inquiry amounts to a political stunt.

Continue reading “As They Admit There’s No Evidence, House Republicans Will Still Greenlight Impeachment Inquiry”

Supreme Court Lets Map That Two Courts Found To Violate Voting Rights Act Stand

Conservative justices on the Supreme Court Tuesday let a Galveston County, Texas map — which both federal district and appellate courts have found to be a racial gerrymander — stand Tuesday without explaining their decision. 

The three liberals dissented. 

Continue reading “Supreme Court Lets Map That Two Courts Found To Violate Voting Rights Act Stand”

In Sentencing Kate Cox To Suffer, The Texas Abortion Ban Is Working Just As Intended

The case of Kate Cox, the 31-year-old mother of two in Texas who sued to end a nonviable pregnancy heaped with health risks to herself, has attracted nationwide horror for its sheer brutality. 

Her fetus, at best, might have a brief and painful life; in the process of giving birth, Cox could be seriously sickened and left unable to have more children in the future.  

Hers is not a singular tragedy, an unforeseeable aberration that left her in the cracks of a warm and generous Texas regime. The Texas abortion ban, no matter what anti-abortion activists and lawmakers say, was meant to prevent women like Cox from getting abortions as much as it was to ban young women from ending unwanted pregnancies early in the first trimester. 

Continue reading “In Sentencing Kate Cox To Suffer, The Texas Abortion Ban Is Working Just As Intended”

We May Be At This for a While

Frequently I will hear from TPM Readers who tell me that they fear and believe authoritarianism is on the rise both in the United States and abroad and, critically, that it is on the cusp of winning. This is an understandable fear and belief, and it may be right. But I do not think it is the most accurate assessment of the information before us. Rather than Team Democracy battling back against and defeating Team Authoritarianism, or vice versa, in a final confrontation or series of final confrontations, we’re seeing something different. We have a new model in which we no longer have parties of government of right and left but rather a civic democratic party and an authoritarian populist party. There’s a good chance they’ll be contesting elections for a while, even as the authoritarian populist party is trying in various ways to end them or radically change how free they are.

Continue reading “We May Be At This for a While”

Is West Virginia Okay?

I’m not sure what can be done about West Virginia, a sad thing since it’s a state born in refusal to commit treason on behalf of the Confederacy, a good thing. In any case, the headline of this article is that the West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner is the state’s top elections officer. He’s now running for governor. And in a recent debate for the GOP gubernatorial nomination he said the 2020 election was stolen and … well, it was stolen by the CIA, folks.

But it gets worse.

Continue reading “Is West Virginia Okay?”

Will The Supreme Court Engage In Mischief To Delay Trump’s Trial?

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

S** Is Getting Real

I didn’t see this one coming. Yesterday’s Morning Memo was focused on the threat of the March 2024 trial date slipping in the Jan. 6 case against Donald Trump, and Special Counsel Jack Smith’s struggle to prevent that from happening. But within hours, Smith had launched a entirely new salvo to try to hold that trial date against Trump’s grinding effort to slow the case down, run out the clock, win re-election to a split second term, and use the powers of the presidency to make the criminal cases against him go away.

Straight To The Supreme Court

Jack Smith’s gambit to speed things up was to ask the Supreme Court to take up immediately Trump’s outrageous claim that he is absolutely immune from criminal prosecution for acts undertaken while president (and additionally that his acquittal by the Senate in his second impeachment makes any subsequent prosecution a violation of the Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause).

Trump lost that argument at the district court, where Judge Tanya Chutkan rejected it as unprecedented, ahistorical, atextual, and illogical. Trump appealed her ruling to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals last week. But Smith doesn’t want to wait around for the time it would take the appeals court to hear arguments and render a decision and then have the case go the Supreme Court.

Citing U.S. v. Nixon, which is a strong legal and historical precedent, Smith wants to go straight to the Supreme Court now, saving time and seeking a definitive resolution to this line of attack on the prosecution from Trump.

A Dual-Track Approach

A quick reminder on the basic structure of the federal court system:

SUPREME COURT

|

CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS

|

DISTRICT COURT

Smith is proceeding on dual-track approach: He’s asking the DC Circuit Court of Appeals to expedite Trump’s appeal, and at the same time he’s trying to bypass the appeals court entirely by going directly to the Supreme Court.

Smith asked the Supreme Court to expedite his request that it take the case, and it quickly (a modestly good sign) granted Smith’s request for expedited consideration of whether it should take the case, giving Trump a deadline to respond of Dec. 20 at 4 p.m. ET. To be clear, it’s speeding up its consideration of whether to take the case; it hasn’t agreed to take it.

In the meantime, the DC Circuit Court of Appeals set briefing deadlines for considering Smith’s motion to expedite Trump’s appeal before it: Trump’s response is due by 10 a.m. ET Wednesday, and Smith’s reply is due by 10 a.m. ET Thursday.

We also learned that the appeals court panel hearing Trump’s appeal will be Judges J. Michelle Childs (Biden), Florence Y. Pan (Biden), and Karen LeCraft Henderson (Bush I).

What Will The Supreme Court Do?

Smith’s gambit sets up an enormously consequential decision by Supreme Court on matters of the greatest importance to the rule of law and, I don’t think this is an exaggeration, fundamental to our system of government: Is the president somehow above the law, unable to be prosecuted while in office and immune from prosecution after he leaves office?

I would urge you to read Smith’s filing with the Supreme Court (don’t be thrown off by the page count; it’s only 14 pages long once you take out the appendixes). It’s a tour de force of legal and historical argument and persuasion (so well written that I had to fast forward to the signature block to see who authored it, and was surprised to see that Michael Dreeben is now working with Smith).

The only right answer legally is that Trump, like every other president, is not above the law and not immune from prosecution, but remember that it’s not just the substance that matters here: It’s the timing, too.

Timing Is Everything

The Supreme Court has some options here, including:

  • GOOD: It can take the case now on an expedited basis and resolve this all quickly and definitively.
  • BAD: It can take the case now but on a slower time frame that jeopardizes the March trial date.
  • BAD: It can decline to take the case now and let it wind its way up through the DC Circuit.
  • GOOD-ish (it depends): It can decline to take the case after the DC Circuit rules and let the DC Circuit have the last word.
  • SNEAKY AF: It can take the case after the DC Circuit rules and then consider it either on an expedited basis or under normal pacing, but even if it rules in Smith’s favor either option could jeopardize the March trial date.

Obviously, if the Supreme Court rules that Trump has absolute immunity from criminal prosecution, the United States is in for a whole world of hurt.

But I’m hoping that you can see by me laying out the options before it, that the Supreme Court’s six-justice conservative majority has plenty of opportunity here to rule correctly but use the timing of its decision to wreak havoc on the prosecution and delay the trial past March and conceivably past the 2024 election.

So while I am tempted to dive deep into the historical and legal arguments Smith is making, because they are fascinating and rich with consequence, the timing element here is just as crucial and creates plenty of opportunity for SCOTUS mischief.

Quote Of The Day

The United States recognizes that this is an extraordinary request. This is an extraordinary case.

Special Counsel Jack Smith, asking the Supreme Court to take up Donald Trump’s immunity argument

Did Smith Unlock The Secrets Of Trump’s Cell Phone?

A new filing by Jack Smith in the Jan. 6 case about which expert witnesses he plans to call at trial contained a first peek at some of the prosecution’s evidence. One of the expert witnesses accessed data from Trump’s White House cell phone and, among other things, “identified the periods of time during which the defendant’s phone was unlocked and the Twitter application was open on January 6.” Do tell!

Rudy G Defamation Case Kicks Off In DC

A jury was seated and opening statements were heard in Day 1 of the defamation trial of Rudy Guiliani by Georgia election workers Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss. But maybe all you really need to know is that Giuliani repeated his lies about them outside the courthouse toward the end of the day, prompting a late-night filing by the plaintiffs:

Texas Abortion Case Comes To Ignominious End

The maddening case of Kate Cox, a 31-year-old Dallas woman with a nonviable pregnancy who was seeking an abortion under the narrow exceptions of the state’s abortion ban, came to a rough conclusion yesterday:

  • While Cox won at the trial court last week, the Texas Supreme Court had paused that victory while it considered the case on an uncertain, open-ended timeframe.
  • Faced with that uncertainty, and at more than 20 weeks pregnant, Cox sought an abortion out of state Monday, according to the Center for Reproductive Rights, which is representing her.
  • The all-Republican Texas Supreme Court later Monday overruled the trial court and declared that it had used the wrong standard in deciding that Cox qualified for the abortion ban exception.

In its ruling, the Texas Supreme Court did a lot of handwaving about how the abortion exceptions aren’t unworkable or unduly oppressive despite the facts and circumstances of this case plainly showing otherwise.

Hunter Biden Comes Out Swinging

The president’s son and his reconstituted legal team filed a slew of new motions to dismiss the federal gun charges against him currently pending in Delaware:

Look, most of these motions are stretches at best, but you might want to read the first one listed above because while it is very much from Hunter Biden’s point of view, the story it tells offers a needed reminder on how the underlying investigation emerged during a period when then-President Trump was already attacking Hunter Biden, pulls together how astounding the conduct of congressional Republicans has been, and juxtaposes their public pressure campaign on Special Counsel David Weiss with his ever-evolving prosecutorial decisions.

Of the motions to dismiss, the one with real teeth is the second one listed above, in which Biden plausibly argues that the diversion agreement he had originally entered into for the gun charges is binding, didn’t need court approval, and can’t be reneged on by now by Weiss.

George Santos Is In Plea Negotiations

Indicted former Rep. George Santos (R-NY) is in negotiations with prosecutors over a plea agreement to resolve the wide-ranging charges against him, according to a new filing Monday. Santos had said as much in an interview that aired over the weekend, but this is George Santos, so … additional confirmation is warranted:

Do you like Morning Memo? Let us know!

One Dem Is Giving House Republicans An Assist In Their Impeachment Subterfuge

House Republicans are expected to schedule a floor vote this week to officially authorize their wild goose chase of an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden. It could happen as early as Wednesday, The Messenger reports.

Continue reading “One Dem Is Giving House Republicans An Assist In Their Impeachment Subterfuge”

Trump Hopes To Use Outlandish Cyber Vote Switching Conspiracies As Part Of Defense

It was Election Day 2012, and even before the polls closed, Donald Trump had something he wanted his followers to know about the outcome of the election: A conspiracy was afoot to rob Republicans of victory.

Continue reading “Trump Hopes To Use Outlandish Cyber Vote Switching Conspiracies As Part Of Defense”

Texas Woman Forced To Flee State For Abortion While State Supreme Court Takes Its Time

A Texas woman who sued for the right to end her nonviable pregnancy has been forced to travel elsewhere for abortion care.

“This past week of legal limbo has been hellish for Kate,” Nancy Northup, president of the Center for Reproductive Rights, which is representing Kate Cox, said in a Monday statement. “Her health is on the line. She’s been in and out of the emergency room and she couldn’t wait any longer.”

Continue reading “Texas Woman Forced To Flee State For Abortion While State Supreme Court Takes Its Time”