Aileen Cannon Is At It Again

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

Around And Around We Go

After inexplicable delays, U.S District Judge Aileen Cannon finally began Thursday to consider the conflicts of interest that some of the defense attorneys have in the Mar-a-Lago documents case – and then abruptly cut short the second of two hearings, adding further delay in a matter that could have been resolved weeks ago.

The Trump-appointed Cannon admonished prosecutors from the bench, claiming they were raising new arguments at the hearing that they had not previously briefed. That seems like a spurious and inaccurate complaint given how extensively Special Counsel Jack Smith’s team had briefed the issues. It also leaves the misimpression that the conflicts of interest issue is entirely the responsibility of prosecutors to raise and address. In fact, the court has its own obligations and imperatives in this matter.

A quick rundown:

  • Cannon first took up the conflicts of co-defendant Carlos De Oliveira’s attorney John Irving. De Oliveira repeatedly waived any conflict Irving had from previously representing three witnesses in the case. Cannon ruled that Irving could remain in place.
  • In a hint of what was to come, Cannon told prosecutors that their ask for Irving not to be allowed to cross examine those witnesses was not something they’d argued in their filings. In this instance, Irving reportedly said he was fine not conducting those cross examinations at trial.
  • When Cannon took up the conflicts of co-defendant Walt Nauta’s attorney Stan Woodward, things really went off the rails. Woodward previously represented Yuscil Taveras, who has since changed his grand jury testimony and begun cooperating with prosecutors and is a crucial witness in their case.
  • Woodward protested that he couldn’t respond until prosecutors made clear exactly what they wanted the court to do, and Cannon flipped that back on prosecutors. “I do want to admonish the government for frankly wasting the court’s time,” she said, and kicked the can down the road to another hearing still to be scheduled.

Keep in mind that a “win” here for prosecutors doesn’t necessarily have to involve the conflicted attorneys being limited in what they can do. It can simply mean that all of the issues have been fairly and openly addressed by the court in way that precludes any of the defendants from raising these conflicts on appeal. In other words, they want to keep the defendants from having it both ways: disregarding the conflicts of interest now and then later complaining they were victimized by those conflicts.

Tick, tick, tick …

Menendez Hit With Superseding Indictment

Prosecutors tacked on a fourth count against Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ): conspiracy for a public official to act as a foreign agent.

In this case the allegation is that Menendez and two co-defendants conspired to have Menendez act as a foreign agent for Egypt and Egyptian officials in a way that would have required him to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.

Scalise Lasts Mere Hours As Speaker Nominee

Rep. Steve Scalise’s stunning withdrawal as candidate for speaker only hours after winning his party’s nomination thrust the House GOP into even greater turmoil and inched the country closer to a constitutional crisis in which one chamber of the legislature is unable to perform its most basic functions for an extended period of time.

  • Josh Marshall: The Deeper Meaning of Scalise’s One Day Speakership (No Really…)
  • Punchbowl: Scalise is out. Can Jordan win?
  • NYT: Scalise Withdraws as Speaker Candidate, Leaving G.O.P. in Chaos
  • WaPo: Steve Scalise drops speaker bid as House devolves into further turmoil

GOP Rep: House GOP Is A Threat To America

Israel Warns Gazans To Evacuate

UN pleads with Israel to rescind the order.

‘Absolutely Gobsmackingly Bananas’

Zeke Hausfather: I’m a Climate Scientist, and September’s Warmth Freaked Me Out a Little

Whoa, You Guys!

I was utterly overwhelmed by your comments and emails in response to yesterday’s Morning Memo about the accident. The community of Morning Memo readers and TPM supporters writ large rose up as one with kindness, support and empathy. I haven’t made it through all of the emails yet, let alone started responding, but let me offer a huge thank you now.

On top of all the thoughtful and caring responses, I was reminded again of the reach that TPM has. Readers who hail from the small port town where the accident occurred reached out to see if I was still there and needed assistance; readers in DC reached out offering to help out; and readers who knew others involved in the accident reached out to commiserate.

More broadly, readers who have suffered trauma in their own lives candidly shared their own experiences and the lessons they’d drawn from them. You struck common themes of resilience, taking it slow, giving yourself time, and not pushing too hard to race back. I’m making my way slowly through your outpouring of support and drawing strength from it.

So many of you insisted that Morning Memo could suffer in the short term if it meant me getting a chance to rest and recuperate that I felt like I had your permission to cut today’s installment a bit short. I appreciate those nudges toward self care.

My kids and I are so grateful for your support. It also helps to give shape and meaning to the work we all do at TPM. You have my eternal gratitude.

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The Deeper Meaning of Scalise’s One Day Speakership (No Really…)

Just moments ago news broke that Steve Scalise had withdrawn his bid to be Speaker of the House. This is a genuinely stunning development, even though I semi-predicted it earlier today. I said it half in jest. But we live in an age when half-jokes often come to pass rapidly.

I had a conversation this evening that allowed me to clarify some of my own thinking about these developments. After Scalise won the caucus Speakership vote you had a slow trickle of members saying “I’m still for Jim Jordan.” Then later you had news reports asking, “Can Steve Scalise get to 217?”

There’s a category, conceptual breakdown here that is kind of hiding in plain view. What do these members mean they’re still for Jim Jordan? He lost. It’s over. Scalise is the Republican Speaker candidate. End of story.

Continue reading “The Deeper Meaning of Scalise’s One Day Speakership (No Really…)”

With Other Authoritarian Schemes Cooking, Wisconsin GOP Backs Off Protasiewicz Impeachment

After receiving less-than-enthusiastic feedback from a former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice on proceeding with impeachment plans against Justice Janet Protasiewicz, it appears GOP state legislators are dropping the gambit for now.

Continue reading “With Other Authoritarian Schemes Cooking, Wisconsin GOP Backs Off Protasiewicz Impeachment”

The Warning Front

Haaretz just published a story adding to the warning question. It’s actually different. This article details what is described as a critical mass of what we would call “chatter” the night before the attacks. There were phone consultations at the highest levels of the army and intelligence services in southern Israel. But they decided that the signals they were picking up weren’t clear enough to raise an alert. By the next morning the attacks had already begun. This is different from the purported warnings from Egypt we’ve discussed. But it’s part of an emerging picture. It’s not clear yet whether it adds to those earlier stories or is simply, as often happens, a rush of ambiguous intelligence, just before an attack. I tried to give this a very basic summary because the piece is paywalled.

Scalise’s 20 hour Speakership

It would appear that Steve Scalise is recapitulating Kevin McCarthy’s nine-month out-of-control rollercoaster ride of a speakership in 24 hours. After a brief shining couple hours yesterday afternoon when it seemed like his speakership might actually become a thing, overnight we’ve seen a steady stream of House Republicans announcing either that they will not vote for Scalise or are at least not ready to vote for Scalise. This morning, deposed Speaker Kevin McCarthy stepped forward to express “concern” over his erstwhile frenemy-sorta ally’s travails. And by “concern” I mean, barely concealed gloating.

Continue reading “Scalise’s 20 hour Speakership”

A Note

If you haven’t already I want to encourage you to read today’s Morning Memo and the personal note from David at the head of it. It’s only for David to share these things. But I confess I felt a sense of unexpected relief when I saw that he did. I don’t want to and am not at liberty to say any more. The best way I can convey it is that a lot of stuff has happened in this organization over the last two years, difficult stuff. These are things happening in individual people’s and families’ lives. But speaking just for myself, I have sometimes felt a gulf between us or at least me and our TPM community in the wake of these different events, much as you might feel some estrangement from family or friends if you’re dealing with things you can’t discuss with them.

I should add just generally that most of these challenges have ended up better than we or members of our team could have anticipated. I am so immensely grateful for that. I am so proud of and nourished by the resilience and solidarity of this whole crew, this tiny but close-knit battalion of newsers.

Steve Scalise Gets His Turn In The House GOP Wringer

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

On A Personal Note

You may have noticed my absence this week. My two adult children and I were involved in a sailing accident Monday. My daughter, a member of the ship’s crew, was not physically injured. My son and I both broke our backs, but we’re up and moving around and are expected to make full recoveries. I’m not composed enough yet to write about the accident publicly, so I’ll just leave it there for now.

This was the second traumatic event to strike my immediate family in recent months. I haven’t written about it at TPM before now, but my son was home from college in January 2022 when he was struck by a car while walking across the street (in the crosswalk!) near our DC home. He suffered a severe brain injury and serious orthopedic injuries. He was in a coma for nearly a week and in the hospital for five weeks. He made an amazingly swift and full recovery, but the trauma of that incident had only recently begun to fade for me.

Monday’s incident was itself unfathomable, but it was stunning – mind-bending, really – to have it come so soon after our other recent shock.

Through hard experience, I’ve come to see trauma as almost a living, breathing organism with its own imperatives and demands, similar to the way grief or clinical depression can feel like a wild beast that has you in its jaws. So we’re going to take it slow for a while as we grapple anew with trauma’s unwelcome presence in our lives.

Easing Back Into The News

Doing this job requires nonstop immersion in the news, and it’s very difficult to do it well if you’re out of the loop, even for a short time. Even before the accident Monday, I had been mostly off the news grid for three days. You go into time away like that hoping you won’t miss too much and lose the thread or your own voice. Obviously it was a very bad time to be away.

I feel obliged to say that the scale and scope of the carnage in Israel and Gaza so completely overwhelm our capacity to comprehend that I hesitated to mention my accident half a world away. But I hope you’ll understand my need to explain my absence.

Even on a gurney in the ER, I was worrying in the back of my mind how I was ever going to catch up on the news out of the Middle East and fake it through my first couple of Morning Memos back. But yesterday it hit me: Don’t even try to fake it.

So I won’t.

With the help of colleagues, I’ve cobbled together a piecemeal Morning Memo below. I hope to be more firmly in the saddle tomorrow, and back to something close to normal next week. Thanks for understanding.

Big thanks to Nicole Lafond and my other colleagues for pitching in on yesterday’s Morning Memo – and for running TPM in my absence. We’re a small operation and having any one of us out of commission strains and stresses the rest of the team. To my colleagues: my apologies and my thanks for covering for me.

No Winners, Only Losers

Rep. Steve Scalise (R-LA) “won” the House GOP’s nomination as speaker and for his efforts he gets … nothing?

The conference hasn’t rallied to his side. He doesn’t yet have enough GOP votes to win a majority on the floor. Even if he pulls all of that off eventually, he’s stuck being speaker with a thin majority and apparently the ready availability of a motion to vacate hanging over his head.

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) “lost” but remains a central GOP figure, chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, and unburdened by the speakership.

Scalise Agonistes

Punchbowl: Scalise’s epic struggle to become speaker

WaPo: Republicans fail to coalesce around speaker choice, leaving House in limbo

Politico: Steve Scalise’s celebration on pause

LOL

Good Luck With That

New York Republicans put out a statement on Wednesday vowing to take action to expel Rep. George Santos (R-NY) in light of the new, wild allegations laid out against the lawmaker in the superseding indictment Tuesday night — at least, they will once the House gets back to functioning as a governing body. If and when that will ultimately happen remains … unclear. But it’d be a risky calculation for new members of the House Republican leadership who, if ever elected, will have to face from Day 1 the realities of their thin majority.

– Nicole Lafond

The George Santos Experience

For us corruption-ologists out there, George Santos is a fine specimen. Full of seemingly pointless lies, alleged grifting, outrageous attempts to cover it all up. A connoisseur’s dream. 

With the 10 new charges brought against Santos in a superseding indictment, we now have an even richer picture. Santos, prosecutors said, did much of his grifting both to keep up appearances as the rich man he falsely claimed to be, but also for a specific reason: to trick the GOP’s congressional elections operation into funding his campaign. 

That involved a series of comically brazen efforts to persuade the National Republican Congressional Committee that his campaign had raised $250,000 when, in fact, it had not. What it had actually done was take $50,000 which did not exist and which Santos allegedly labeled as having come from his relatives, and received tens of thousands of dollars which Santos allegedly bilked from donors by going nuts with their credit cards. It’s a wild story, one for the true Santos-heads out there. Read it here

– Josh Kovensky

Good Read

Be sure to read Kate Riga on yesterday’s Supreme Court oral arguments in a South Carolina redistricting case.

Will Trump Blame It All On His Lawyers? 

Prosecutors with Special Counsel Jack Smith’s office are trying early on to ensure that there are no surprises and, they say, no opportunities for Trump to delay or muddy the proceedings once the trial in his D.C. election interference case begins. 

They asked on Monday for Chutkan to lay out procedures around how to handle the jury, saying (correctly to anyone paying attention) that Trump uses social media to “intimidate” people. But the other request goes deeper in some ways. There, prosecutors asked the judge to order Trump’s attorneys to state formally what they’ve been saying on TV: whether they will argue in court that Trump was misled by his attorneys. 

This is important for reasons beyond mere predictability. If Trump does blame his coup attempt on his attorneys – an advice-of-counsel defense – that would allow prosecutors to obtain way more information from people who, until now, have been able to keep communications and records away from the government by claiming they were shielded by attorney-client privilege. 

Prosecutors said the number of witnesses who invoked that is upwards of 25, and it includes a Trump family member. Penetrating that shield could give prosecutors access to much more of what they know, and block Trump from delaying the case by throwing up the discovery issues there at the last minute. 

– Josh Kovensky

MTG Kicks, Crenshaw Trips

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