The state judge overseeing the Georgia RICO case against Trump et al. summoned some of the parties yesterday for a hearing today at 1 p.m. ET. It will be livestreamed here.
New Lawsuit Seeks To Enforce Disqualification Clause Against Trump In Colorado
A government watchdog group spearheaded the filing of a lawsuit Wednesday in Colorado invoking the 14th Amendment’s Disqualification Clause to bar Donald Trump from the 2024 ballot due to his actions on and around Jan. 6.
Continue reading “New Lawsuit Seeks To Enforce Disqualification Clause Against Trump In Colorado”Trump Was Warned FBI Could Raid MAL If He Rebuffed Subpoena
A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.
SCOOP!
In a bit of a reporting coup, ABC News has reviewed copies of the voice memo Trump lawyer Evan Corcoran made of his recollections of his representation of the former president that is now a central piece of evidence in the Mar-a-Lago case.
Some of the highlights from the ABC News report:
- “We’ve got a grand jury subpoena and the alternative is if you don’t comply with the grand jury subpoena you could be held in contempt,” Corcoran recalled telling Trump.
- Trump repeatedly suggested they not cooperate with investigators, Corcoran recalled.
- Corcoran told the former president: “Well, there’s a prospect that they could go to a judge and get a search warrant, and that they could arrive here.”
- Corcoran recalled he was told by a fellow Trump attorney that Trump himself would “go ballistic” over complying with the subpoena and “that there’s no way he’s going to agree to anything, and that he was going to deny that there were any more boxes at all.”
Historic Sentence In Proud Boys Case
Proud Boys leader Henry “Enrique” Tarrio was sentenced to 22 years in federal prison for his role in the effort to overturn the 2020 election. It was stiffest sentence handed out to any Jan. 6 defendant to date.
Georgia RICO Case Takes Center Stage Today
The state judge overseeing the Georgia RICO case against Trump et al. summoned some of the parties yesterday for a hearing today at 1 p.m. ET. We anticipate it will be televised. At issue: the motions by defendants Ken Chesebro and Sidney Powell to sever their cases from the other co-defendants’.
In setting the hearing on a tight schedule, State Judge Scott McAfee also asked District Attorney Fani Willis to provide a “good-faith estimate” of how long it would take to present at trial the state’s case in chief against all 19 defendants. He also wants estimates on the numbers of witnesses and exhibits she plans to use.
This will be an interesting early look at how McAfee will handle some of the procedural matters in a case full of them – and at Willis’ approach to trying the case.
Willis Firing Real Bullets
In a new filing, Fani Willis colorfully shot back at the arguments by three Georgia fake electors that they’re entitled to remove their cases to federal court because they were “federal officers.”
Pretending does not make it so, Willis argued: “Defendant’s argument is akin to claiming that a homemade badge could transform him into a genuine United States Marshal with all the powers afforded that position.”
Georgia RICO Miscellany
There are more procedural twists in the Georgia case than you can easily keep track of, so let me run through a few of the latest developments.
- All 19 defendants have now waived their arraignments and pleaded not guilty ahead of this week’s deadline to do so.
- John Eastman is now seeking to sever his case from the other defendants seeking speedy trials.
- Ken Chesebro filed a motion to dismiss the state case based on a convoluted argument under the Constitution’s Supremacy Clause.
- Sidney Powell is seeking to delay the Smartmatic defamation case against her for 90 days due to her being prosecuted in Georgia.
Who Will Flip On Trump?
- Politico: Trump’s co-defendants are already starting to turn against him
- WSJ: Who Among Donald Trump’s Georgia Co-Defendants Might Flip?
Scott Perry Phone Mystery
The DC Circuit Court of Appeals has handed down a sealed decision on Special Counsel Jack Smith’s access to the phone of Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA) as part of the Jan. 6 investigation. But the docket entry included a few clues. Namely, the decision reverses in part the lower court’s ruling giving investigators access to some of the phone’s contents. The appeal court ordered the lower court to “apply the correct standard” when it takes the matter back up, but the exact contours of the decision remain unknown at this time.
Notable
Special Counsel Jack Smith’s team continues to operate at break-neck speed.
When Donald Trump’s lawyers objected yesterday to a sealed filing in the Jan. 6 case, Smith’s team had an immediate and definitive response that suggested the still-sealed filing involves Trump’s out-of-court statements that threaten to “prejudice” the DC jury pool.
Meanwhile, CNN reports that Smith’s Jan. 6 probe continues to look at a possible financial fraud component:
Questions asked of two recent witnesses indicate Smith is focusing on how money raised off baseless claims of voter fraud was used to fund attempts to breach voting equipment in several states won by Joe Biden, according to multiple sources familiar with the ongoing investigation.
Letitia James Keeps Pounding On Trump
The New York attorney general is seeking $20,000 in sanctions against Trump for allegedly recycling the same old frivilous arguments that courts have already rejected.
Handy!
Just Security has compiled a calendar with all the dates of Trump’s legal and political perils.
Quote Of The Day
Indicted Rep. George Santos (R-NY), denying to TPM’s Hunter Walker that he’s in plea talks with federal prosecutors: “You’re a real hack of a reporter. Please do not contact me any longer or I will deem your unsolicited communication as harassment.”
McConnell Tries To Tamp Down Health Concerns
After a very unconvincing statement last week by the Capitol doctor, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell released a more detailed letter on his health, including ruling out a stroke and a seizure disorder.
Alabama May Be Playing With Fire
The GOP-controlled statehouse has refused to comply with a Supreme Court order to draw its congressional maps with two majority-Black districts. A three-judge panel nixed the new map yesterday, and Alabama immediately appealed to the Supreme Court again.
Great Work
Kudos to Bloomberg Law:
This Needs To Be On Your Radar
Wisconsin Republicans are already gunning to impeach newly elected state Supreme Court Justice Janet Protasiewicz before she has even heard her first case. Protasiewicz tilted the balance on the court in favor of more liberal justices, breaking the GOP stranglehold on the state Capitol.
Paxton Impeachment Trial Continues
The Texas attorney general pleaded not guilty on day 1 of his Senate trial in Austin. Impeachment managers are expected to be calling witnesses today. You can watch here.
Gabriel Amo Wins In Rhode Island
Gabriel Amo’s win in the Democratic primary all but clinches the House seat vacated by David Cicilline, setting Amo up to be the first Black member of the state’s congressional delegation.*
*Correction: I misidentified this seat as Rhode Island’s only one in Congress. Apologies to Rep. Seth Magaziner (D-RI) in the RI-2.
2024 Ephemera
- Former Rep. Mike Rogers (R-MI) announced his run for the open Senate seat in Michigan.
- Biden campaign names new top aides.
Ooooo ….
WaPo’s Will Sommer got ahold of a copy of a draft of a private internal audit of the conduct of Project Veritas’ founder James O’Keefe, conducted by an independent law firm.
The Long History Of Right-Wing Trolling
At the end of yesterday’s Morning Memo, I mused on exactly when white Americans started to cosplay identity politics as they understood it. In response, I was directed to this nicely-done 2021 piece by Rick Perlstein – “A Short History of Conservative Trolling” – that suggests it is not new at all, but has always been a component of reactionary right-wing politics.
Do you like Morning Memo? Let us know!
Alabama Will Try Its Redistricting Luck At The Supreme Court…Again
Alabama officials appealed Tuesday to the Supreme Court, seeking intervention so they can use a congressional map awfully similar to the one said Supreme Court knocked down less than three months ago.
Continue reading “Alabama Will Try Its Redistricting Luck At The Supreme Court…Again”Oklahoma Follows Florida’s Lead In Bringing PragerU’s Propaganda Videos To Classrooms
Not long after Florida adopted new curriculum standards for middle school-level Black history courses — which received bipartisan backlash for its instruction on the “benefits” of slavery — an animated video went viral online. The video, called “Leo & Layla Meet Frederick Douglass” featured a cartoon version of the abolitionist telling a pair of child time-travelers that slavery was a “compromise” between the Founding Fathers and the Southern colonies.
Continue reading “Oklahoma Follows Florida’s Lead In Bringing PragerU’s Propaganda Videos To Classrooms”Judge Knocks Down Map DeSantis Muscled Into Fruition
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) didn’t just have a hand in his state’s redistricting process this cycle.
He steamrolled even his fellow Republicans in the legislature, liberally wielding his veto pen and rejecting compromises, ultimately calling a special session to ensure that his maximal gerrymander would become the state’s congressional map.
He was rebuked Saturday when a circuit court judge in Florida knocked down his map, finding that it violates the state constitution’s non-diminishment clause, which prohibits reducing minority voters’ ability to vote for the candidate of their choice.
Continue reading “Judge Knocks Down Map DeSantis Muscled Into Fruition”Tennessee Three-er Gloria Johnson Officially Launches Challenge To Sen. Marsha Blackburn
Tennessee State Rep. Gloria Johnson of Knoxville (D) — a member of the trio dubbed the “Tennessee Three” — announced an official 2024 bid for the U.S. Senate on Tuesday.
Continue reading “Tennessee Three-er Gloria Johnson Officially Launches Challenge To Sen. Marsha Blackburn”The Texas Attorney General Is Supposed to Represent State Agencies. Ken Paxton Has Repeatedly Refused To.
This article was originally published at ProPublica, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates abuses of power. It was co-published with The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan local newsroom.
When Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton held a news conference in May decrying state lawmakers’ anticipated vote to impeach him, he framed the decision as not only a threat to his political career but as one that endangered the slew of lawsuits he’d filed against the Biden administration.
Continue reading “The Texas Attorney General Is Supposed to Represent State Agencies. Ken Paxton Has Repeatedly Refused To.”Sen. Whitehouse Asks Roberts To Do Something, Anything About Alito
In a Tuesday letter to Chief Justice John Roberts, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) accused Justice Samuel Alito of “obstructing a congressional investigation” and demanded that Roberts take some form of unspecified action.
Continue reading “Sen. Whitehouse Asks Roberts To Do Something, Anything About Alito”‘MAGA Shutdown’: Dems Make It Clear Whose Fault A Shutdown Will Be
The Senate is back in session later today after their August recess. And the House is scheduled to return next week. But Democrats have already hit the ground running to try to shield President Joe Biden’s White House from being blamed for a possible government shutdown.
Continue reading “‘MAGA Shutdown’: Dems Make It Clear Whose Fault A Shutdown Will Be “