It’s The Anniversary Of Jan. 6 And You Can Feel The Steady Drumbeat Of Investigations

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo.

Accountability Is Finally At Hand

As we mark the second anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, it can finally be said with high confidence that a credible, comprehensive criminal investigation of the conspiracy to subvert the 2020 election is fully underway.

Combined with the work of the House Jan. 6 committee, a degree of accountability for the coup attempt is at hand.

For a long time, months if not a year, it wasn’t at all clear we would get to this point.

The anniversary has prompted a flurry of new reporting on the ongoing investigations.

Let’s dive in.

Tantalizing Tidbits On Jack Smith’s Investigations

Bloomberg’s Zoe Tillman has some new reporting on the status of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s investigations, much of it based on anonymous sourcing. Some of the highlights:

  • “He’s set to make critical decisions about whether to bring charges, possibly in a matter of weeks, according to people familiar with the matter.”
  • “The special counsel’s office and Justice Department leaders realize that the historic investigations and the potential for politically explosive indictments and trials will collide with the 2024 presidential election calendar as the year goes on, according to people familiar.”
  • “Investigators are also going through deposition transcripts provided by the now-defunct congressional committee and will have to decide if they want to bring in any of those witnesses for more questioning or to testify before a grand jury. “

Smith Brings On New Attorneys

While Special Counsel Jack Smith has mostly kept intact the same prosecutors and investigators that were handling the investigations before his appointment, CNN reports he has brought on two new lawyers to the team:

He is adding two longtime associates who have specialized in public corruption cases, according to a person familiar with the matter: Raymond Hulser, the former chief of the DOJ’s public integrity section, and David Harbach, who conducted cases against former Sen. John Edwards and Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell.

Things That Make You Go Hmmm …

Politico senior legal affairs reporter Kyle Cheney has done a commendable job tracking some of the secret litigation surrounding the DC grand jury investigations into Jan. 6. This morning he has some intriguing new filings at the DC Circuit Court of Appeals that suggest a new round of fights over the grand juries’ work. This thread is worth a read:

Marking The Jan. 6 Anniversary

  • In a White House ceremony today, President Biden will award the Presidential Citizens Medal, the nation’s second highest civilian honor, to a dozen familiar figures who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 or fought off the Big Lie to defend the 2020 election results.
  • WaPo: Supporters raise millions to rebrand Jan. 6 rioters as ‘patriots’
  • The FBI has increased the reward from $100,000 to $500,000 for information that leads to the arrest of the person(s) responsible for placing pipe bombs near RNC and DNC headquarters the day before the Capitol attack. The case remains unsolved.
  • The biggest investigation in FBI history continues to grow.
  • The estate of Capitol police officer Brian Sicknick, who died of a series of strokes shortly after the Jan. 6 attack, has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against former President Trump and two Capitol rioters.

The Link Between Jan. 6 And The Speaker Fight

This hasn’t gotten nearly as much attention as it deserves, but some of the figurative insurrectionists within Kevin McCarthy’s conference were also the literal insurrectionists on Jan. 6. You know some of the names: Perry, Gosar, Gohmert. Politico has a good rundown on the crossover between the two.

What Hath Kevin McCarthy Wrought?

With Kevin McCarthy having lost 11 straight ballots for House speaker, we’re deep into uncharted waters, at least since the first half of the 19th century. The speaker fight has been an amazing window into radicalization of the modern Republican Party, but we’re still coming to grips with the implications of one chamber of Congress basically ceasing to exist while it tries to organize itself:

  • Michael C. Dorf: What the Constitution Has to Say About the Election of a Speaker of the House
  • WaPo: Does the House even exist right now?
  • AP: US House has no members
  • Politico: The natsec implications of the speaker fight
  • WaPo: Has McCarthy given up his House speaker powers before he’s even won?
  • Dennis Aftergut: The Chaotic House That SCOTUS Built

My Oh My Oh My Oh My

NATIONAL HARBOR, MD - FEBRUARY 28: Matt Schlapp (L), Chairman of the American Conservative Union, hosts a conversation with Laura Trump (not pictured), President Donald Trumps daughter in-law and member of his 2020 reelection campaign, and Brad Parscale (not pictured), campaign manager for Trump's 2020 reelection campaign, during the Conservative Political Action Conference 2020 (CPAC) hosted by the American Conservative Union on February 28, 2020 in National Harbor, MD. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Matt Schlapp
Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

CPAC honcho Matt Schlapp has been credibly accused of groping a male staffer for Herschel Walker’s Senate campaign back in October, the Daily Beast is reporting in a story out last night. Schlapp, through his attorney, is denying the allegation.

“Matt Schlapp of the CPAC grabbed my junk and pummeled it at length, and I’m sitting there thinking what the hell is going on, that this person is literally doing this to me,” the staffer said in a video he recorded shortly after the alleged incident.

The staffer, who remains unnamed in the story, credits the Walker campaign with handling the incident professionally.

Trump Ordered To Cough Up Names Of Private Investigators In MAL Case

Former President Trump must provide to prosecutors the names of the private investigators who conducted a search on his behalf for additional classified documents he may have retained post-presidency, the chief federal judge in Washington, D.C. has ordered.

5th Circuit Blocks Deposition of Jen Psaki

The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals has once again fired a warning shot across the bow of a federal district judge in Louisiana who has become a favored venue for Republican attorneys general challenging the Biden administration:

The order on Thursday afternoon from the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals is another not-so-veiled rebuke to District Court Judge Terry Doughty, who has been overseeing the suit the attorneys general of Missouri and Louisiana filed last year claiming that the administration’s pressure on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube was so intense that it amounted to censorship.

To summarize, the district judge was so out of line that even the uber-conservative 5th Circuit is having to reel him in.

‘Lovely One’

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is writing a memoir` for Random House. It is titled “Lovely One,” which is the English translation of Jackson’s given and middle names: Ketanji Onyika, suggested by an aunt who at the time was a Peace Corps worker in West Africa.

Huge News Though It Might Not Seem Like It

The FTC is boldly stepping into a huge area of employment law: noncompete clauses for employees. Historically disfavored by law as an unfair trade practice, the courts have carved out so many exceptions in recent decades that noncompete clauses have become ubiquitous. Now the FTC is proposing to ban them.

Latest On Dem Presidential Primary Schedule

President Biden’s preferred calendar for the 2024 presidential primary season is encountering some speed bumps in Georgia and New Hampshire.

Lava Waves!

Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano resumed erupting Thursday afternoon, following a period of quiescence since mid-December:

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Republicans Win Second Vote As Majority – To Adjourn. Again.

After a third day of voting and 11 rounds of roll call with no real change, the Republican Party still hasn’t managed to elect a speaker, MAGA-infused conservative hardliners are holding the House hostage and Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) is still trying to convince everyone that he can pull of some sort of deal.

Continue reading “Republicans Win Second Vote As Majority – To Adjourn. Again.”

George Santos Will Almost Certainly Be Sworn In—It’s Just A Question Of When

The neverending speakership-election debacle that’s left Congress in an unprecedented legal limbo has also stranded George Santos, the member-elect who fabricated several aspects of his resume, in his own void. Santos — and the other freshmen members of Congress — have not been sworn in, and won’t be until the ongoing feud within the Republican Party reaches a truce and members finally elect a House speaker.

TPM spoke with experts to find out whether the floor fight might affect his future. The consensus was that neither the scandal nor pending investigations are likely to stop Santos from being seated. 

Continue reading “George Santos Will Almost Certainly Be Sworn In—It’s Just A Question Of When”

Where Things Stand: There Is Still No Speaker

That is where things stand.

(In all seriousness we will be bringing back my daily Editors’ Blog post next week after our brains recover from the dumpster that is on fire on the House floor right now.)

In the meantime, Emine Yücel and I are covering all of today’s madness here.

🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃 🙃

Biden Will Award 12 Who Defended Capitol, Blocked Big Lie On Jan 6 Anniversary

The White House announced on Thursday that President Joe Biden will give several individuals who defended democracy after the 2020 election the Presidential Citizens Medal to mark the second anniversary of the January 6th attack on the Capitol.

Continue reading “Biden Will Award 12 Who Defended Capitol, Blocked Big Lie On Jan 6 Anniversary”

Trump Who?

There’s a dog not barking here that may be obvious but is worth mentioning. It’s not just that Donald Trump’s low-energy endorsement of Kevin McCarthy isn’t carrying the day. It’s that Trump’s name hasn’t really come up at all. Lauren Boebert, in her nominating speech, name-checked him to note how his endorsement of McCarthy was not swaying her. But that’s the exception that proves the rule. Not in the sense that she’s not taking Trump’s guidance but because she’s even discussing him. Trump’s wishes, feelings, threats, anger and really anything else about him are just completely absent from this entire drama. In a way that is the biggest story here.

It’s Messy and It’s Fine

I thought it was worth making a simple point. The spectacle of the last two days is an embarrassment. The House GOP and really the GOP generally has shown itself incapable of governing in the most basic sense. But I’ve heard some suggestions that this is sort of a lo-fi reenactment of the events of two years ago: more chaos, more craziness, more dysfunction. It’s worth pushing back a bit on that appraisal. This is democracy. If anything there is something a bit invigorating about seeing vote after vote where the outcome, immediate or eventual, isn’t at all clear. One vote, followed by various frenzied negotiation, another vote, followed by more.

Continue reading “It’s Messy and It’s Fine”

Congrats, There Is No House Of Representatives Right Now

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo.

Reaping What They’ve Sowed

No heroes. No good guys. No redeeming characters.

The House GOP internecine strife is, in the short term, more damaging to themselves than to the country, which makes it fun to watch, at least for a while.

But in the longer term, it doesn’t much matter who prevails in the speaker vote. Kevin McCarthy and the fractious members opposing him all embrace the same “tear it all down” impulses. They’re driven by the same destructive motives and play to the same base political instincts.

Watching them rip each other apart live on national TV offers a palliative schadenfreude. But it won’t last forever. In the meantime, there is essentially no House of Representatives: The members can’t be sworn in. Committees can’t form. Oversight can’t happen.

They’re already achieving destruction of a kind.

What Happened Yesterday?

If you weren’t able to follow along closely with us, the day pretty much went like this:

What’s Next?

When the House reconvenes at noon today, don’t be surprised if it adjourns again pretty quickly. Absent a deal of some kind, McCarthy and the Republicans appear reluctant to continue with the spectacle of losing floor votes.

But is there a deal yet? Not as of this morning.

Lots of rumor and conjecture.

The contours of all the deals floated since the fall election remain similar: McCarthy’s foes want maximum leverage over him to continue to foment chaos and weaken him. McCarthy keeps caving to those demands, but it fails to win him a deal.

Perhaps the best way to think about it is: The Freedom Caucus wants to do to McCarthy what McCarthy and the GOP conference want to do to Biden.

There’s no compelling protagonist here. Just a pack of antagonists looking to do damage.

Credit Where Due

The NYT, which has often struggled to capture the true nature of the modern Republican Party, comes close to getting it:

That ideology of destruction defies characterization by traditional political labels like moderate or conservative. Instead, the party has created its own complicated taxonomy of America First, MAGA and anti-Trump — descriptions that are more about political style and personal vendettas than policy disagreements.

‘I’m 6’2″ 275’ 

What’s Jack Smith Up To?

Very little overt investigative action from Special Counsel Jack Smith has been publicly visible so far. The main exception was a batch of subpoenas that went out in the fall to state and local election officials in the key jurisdictions Trump was focused on during the 2020 election aftermath. Now news outlets have gotten ahold of the responses to those subpoenas from two jurisdictions. No big new reveals:

The records do not include any communication from Trump himself and do not appear to show attempts to coerce county officials, as Trump tried to do in Georgia. But they do show how Trump’s lawyers for weeks positioned themselves for post-election legal challenges in the county. They alleged that thousands of ballots had been improperly cast and, weeks before the election, filed a public records request aimed at scrutinizing the process by which mail-in and absentee ballots were counted.

  • Milwaukee County, Wisconsin: CNN obtained the response.

Second Oath Keeper Trial Continues

The second of the two seditious conspiracy trials against Oath Keeper members continues in Washington, D.C., with testimony from a new witness that “the extremists hatched an explicit plan to enter the Capitol and stop the certification of Joe Biden’s presidential victory,” TPM alum Rachel Weiner reports.

Alaska Oath Keeper Won’t Lose State House Seat

After a weeklong trial, a state judge has rejected a complaint that an Oath Keeper was ineligible to serve in the state legislature under a provision of the state Constitution that bars people from holding public office if they belong to a group that seeks to overthrow the U.S. government by violence.

Incoming state Rep. David Eastman (R) “did not have a specific intent to further the Oath Keepers’ unprotected speech or conduct,” the judge ruled.

Feeling It

Sonia Sotomayor, on how she feels about the current direction of the Supreme Court:

  • “sense of despair”
  • “shell-shocked”
  • “deeply sad”

Rim Shot

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What Will The Evening Hold?

The House is set to come back into session at 8 p.m. ET. You can follow along with the TPM team here. But the House may not be in session for long. Kevin McCarthy told reporters he thought it was “best” not to vote again tonight because the results would be the same (he falls short of a majority) but that talks were continuing. Not a sure bet we’ll see a quick adjournment, but that definitely looks possible.

Continue reading “What Will The Evening Hold?”