A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo.
Curious
An investigation by the New Yorker discovered that former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows registered to vote in the 2020 election with an address of a mobile home in Scaly Mountain, North Carolina that he’s apparently never spent a night in.
The person who used to own the property told the New Yorker that she’d rented it out to Meadows’ wife for two months within the past two years, but she only spent a night or two there during that time. The ex-Trump official “never spent a night in there,” the former property owner said.
The guy who now owns the property said it was “really weird” of Meadows to list it as his place of residence. “That’s weird that he would do that,” the owner said.
Meadows voted absentee by mail in the 2020 election.
Russia Assault On Ukraine Continues As Civilians Try To Flee
Russia’s new proposed humanitarian corridors would funnel Ukrainian civilians trying to escape the war into Russia or Belarus.
The Washington Post: “Ukraine denounces proposed evacuation corridors to Russia, Belarus”
New York Times: “Negotiators prepare for 3rd round of talks as Kremlin offers evacuation path for Ukrainians to Russia.”
The Guardian: “As many as 5 million Ukrainians are expected to flee the country if Russia’s bombing of Ukraine continues, the EU’s top diplomat has just warned.”
CNN: “Russia has fired 600 missiles; 95% of amassed combat power now in Ukraine, senior US defense official says”
Armed Intruder Arrested At Joint Base Andrews Around Time Of Kamala Harris’ Arrival
Officials at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland announced early Monday that its security forces had arrested an armed person who was in a vehicle that failed to follow security personnel’s commands at a security checkpoint. The incident happened around the time Vice President Kamala Harris and four Cabinet members had arrived at the base en route back to Washington Sunday night.
Both that person and another individual tried to run away after the forces stopped their vehicle, according to the press release.
The base was shut down for most of the night while authorities searched for the second person, who got away and is no longer believed to on the base.
Harris and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff were safely flown off the base, according to a press pool report.
DeSantis Spokesperson Says Opponents Of ‘Don’t Say Gay’ Bill Are Pro-Pedophilia
Christina Pushaw, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ (R) spokesperson, is trying to whitewash the bill that would ban classroom discussions on LGBTQ+ topics as an “Anti-Grooming” bill.
Anyone who’s against the measure is “probably a groomer” or otherwise doesn’t “denounce the grooming of 4-8 year old children,” Pushaw tweeted on Friday.
Pushaw suggested without evidence on Sunday that an LGBTQ+ Florida lawmaker who had slammed her tweets about the bill was a groomer himself, saying that “A hit dog hollers.”
The bill is slated to be put to a votein the Florida Senate today, where it’s expected to pass and get sent over to DeSantis’ desk.
Texas Abortion Ban Not Doing Much To Actually Stop Abortion
This new New York Times report and its graph on Texas abortion rates after the state passed its six-week ban says it all:
“The law has not done anything to change people’s need for abortion care; it has shifted where people are getting their abortion.” https://t.co/rJPrC0EyB2
Utah Republicans’ bill banning trans girls from participating in school sports on women’s teams isn’t likely to pass if Gov. Spencer Cox (R) goes through with his promise to veto it. Cox expressed sympathy for trans student athletes on Friday, saying “I just want them to know that it’s gonna be okay” and that “[w]e’re gonna work through this.”
Georgia Trump Candidate Throws Fit Over Speaking Order At Event
Vernon Jones, a former Democrat-turned-Trumper who’s running for Congress in Georgia, stormed out of a Republican county event on Saturday because they changed the speaking order, robbing him of the second-place slot he’d apparently been promised.
It was a classic case of dirty “politricks,” Jones fumed before leaving.
Naturally, the event also included some form of 2020 election fraud trutherism. Clock the “Trump Won Georgia” poster in the background of the video:
Former Democrat Vernon Jones – now a Trump-backed candidate in Georgia’s 10th District — walks out of a Jackson County GOP event last night … because he was mad about the speaking order. #gapol#ga10pic.twitter.com/jl8S8gCl68
Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Sunday said Ukraine has a contingency plan in place in the event that the Ukrainian government no longer has President Volodymyr Zelensky at the helm as Russia continues to intensify its invasion of the country.
Days after the Jan. 6 Select Committee alleged that former President Trump and his allies “engaged in a criminal conspiracy to defraud the United States,” Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), who serves on the panel, urged the Justice Department to investigate Trump’s efforts to push the Big Lie of a “stolen” 2020 presidential election.
Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) on Sunday claimed he’s not sweating the backlash he and Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT) are facing after both GOP senators live-tweeted screenshots of a video call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, despite being asked not to post pictures of the meeting while it was happening.
Though it is generally out of view for those of us who don’t live in that world, the world’s militaries maintain a universe of think tanks and war colleges to study all aspects of war. Some of this work is conducted by men and women in uniform and hidden behind walls of classification and secrecy. But quite a lot of it, probably most, is done by civilian researchers and academics with a lot of it available to the public, if not widely read. Last week I mentioned following the Twitter feed of Michael Kofman, an expert on the Russian military at one of the top national security think tanks funded and run on behalf of the U.S. Navy and Marine corps. But there’s a whole world of such researchers working either adjacent to or on behalf of various national militaries. You can read a lot of what they write and many are following developments in Ukraine with their Twitter feeds.
Biden singled out wealthy oligarchs in his State of the Union address, promising to “seize your yachts, your luxury apartments, your private jets.” “We are coming for your ill-begotten gains,” he said. And in the U.K., two more rich Russians were added to the nine other oligarchs who have been personally sanctioned over the invasion.
Yet who are these oligarchs, and what is their relationship with Putin? And more importantly, will eroding their wealth do anything to end the war in Ukraine?
Oligarchs, in the Russian context, are the ultrawealthy business elites with disproportionate political power. They emerged in two distinct waves.
The first group emerged out of the privatization of the 1990s, particularly the all-cash sales of the largest state-owned enterprises after 1995. This process was marred by significant corruption, culminating in the infamous “loans for shares” scheme, which transferred stakes in 12 large natural resource companies from the government to select tycoons in exchange for loans intended to shore up the federal budget.
The government intentionally defaulted on its loans, allowing its creditors – the oligarchs-to-be – to auction off the stakes in giant companies such as Yukos, Lukoil and Norilsk Nickel, typically to themselves. In essence, then-President Boris Yeltsin’s administration appeared to enrich a small group of tycoons by selling off the most valuable parts of the Soviet economy at a hefty discount.
After Putin came to power in 2000, he facilitated the second wave of oligarchs via state contracts. Private suppliers in many sectors such as infrastructure, defense and health care would overcharge the government at prices many times the market rate, offering kickbacks to the state officials involved. Thus, Putin enriched a new legion of oligarchs who owed their enormous fortunes to him.
French authorities seized the yacht Amore Vero, which is linked to sanctioned Putin ally Igor Sechin, in the Mediterranean resort of La Ciotat. AP. Photo/Bishr Eltoni
Oligarchs lose their grip – keep their wealth
In the 1990s, the oligarchs had the upper hand with the Kremlin and could even dictate policy at times. Under Yeltsin, multiple oligarchs assumed formal positions in the government, and anecdotes abounded describing coffers of cash being carried into the Kremlin in exchange for political favors.
But since the 2000s Putin has been calling the shots. Essentially, Putin proposed a deal: The oligarchs would stay out of politics, and the Kremlin would stay out of their businesses and leave their often illegitimate gains alone.
Furthermore, popular disappointment with the privatization of the 1990s facilitated its partial rollback in the 2000s. Putin’s Kremlin applied political pressure on oligarchs in strategic industries like media and natural resources to sell controlling stakes back to the state. Putin also passed laws that gave preferential treatment to the so-called state corporations. These moves secured the Kremlin’s control over the economy – and over the oligarchs.
The second group includes leaders of Russia’s security services, the police and the military – known as “siloviki” – who have also leveraged their networks to amass extreme personal wealth. Some of these so-called “silovarchs” are former KGB, and now FSB, intelligence officers who had eyed the Yeltsin-era oligarchs’ power and wealth jealously and obtained both under Putin. The man reputed to be the informal leader of the siloviki is Igor Sechin, chairman of oil giant Rosneft, widely seen as the second-most powerful person in Russia.
Finally, the largest number of Russian oligarchs are outsiders without personal connections to Putin, the military or the FSB. Indeed, some current outsiders are the 1990s-era oligarchs. While Putin selectively crushed politically inconvenient or obstreperous oligarchs after coming to power, he did not seek to systematically “eliminate oligarchs as a class,” as he had promised during his initial election campaign. For example, oligarchs such as Vladimir Potanin and Oleg Deripaska, who accumulated their wealth in the 1990s, regularly feature in the lists of richest Russians today.
Some oligarchs appear to initiate such geopolitically significant transactions voluntarily to create rapport with the Kremlin. While it is difficult to establish direct causal links between what I dub the oligarchs’ “geopolitical volunteering” and their beneficiaries’ pro-Kremlin policies, there is strong anecdotal evidence that oligarchs’ financing facilitates the adoption of pro-Putin positions in countries outside Russia.
Furthermore, my research on the concealment of corporate political activity suggests that using ostensibly nonpolitical intermediaries such as private companies is a key strategy through which organizations like the Kremlin can hide their political activity.
Putin’s hostages
This brings us to the most important question on many people’s minds: As the sanctions decimate oligarchs’ wealth, could that prompt them to abandon Putin or change the course of the war?
I believe we will see increasingly vocal opposition to the war from the oligarchs. At the very least, their willingness to do the Kremlin’s dirty work by trying to influence Western politicians will likely subside significantly.
But there are two crucial limits to their influence and ability to affect Putin’s behavior.
For one thing, the oligarchs do not work well together. In Russia’s “piranhacapitalism,” these billionaires have mostly sought to outcompete their rivals for government largesse. Individual survival with a view to the Kremlin, not the defense of common interests such as sanctions’ removal, has been the oligarchs’ modus operandi. The Kremlin, for its part, has promised state support to sanctioned companies, especially in the banking sector.
More importantly, it is the guns, not the money, that speak loudest in the Kremlin today. As long as Putin retains his control over the siloviki – the current and former military and intelligence officers close to Putin – the other oligarchs, in my view, will remain hostages to his regime.
The generals are more likely to sway Putin than the oligarchs – and an economic collapse may be even more convincing still.
In a new article in Foreign Affairs, Liana Fix and Michael Kimmage explain how even if Russia loses its war in Ukraine, the international outlook that creates is a dark one. Far better than it winning. But still very dark. Looking to a post-Ukraine war world order, the authors write: “History has shown that it is immensely difficult to build a stable international order with a revanchist, humiliated power near its center, especially one of the size and weight of Russia.”
As conservatives come close to achieving their decades-long dream of a paralyzed Congress and weakened administrative state imbuing the right-wing Supreme Court with enormous power, there seems to be a contradiction with another tenet of their governmental philosophy.
Open-source intelligence, or OSINT, has changed the way journalists and analysts observe violent conflict. Using a variety of publicly-available sources, like satellite imagery, in-person footage and even public radio traffic, OSINT researchers work from afar to confirm the time, location, and nature of battlefield details such as troop movements, artillery impacts, and destroyed military equipment. Most importantly, they can do this without relying on intelligence released by governments, which can be selective and used to advance that government’s objectives.