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Trump In Charge: Wrecking Ball

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WaPo today

House panel was told Gaetz paid two women $10,000, in part for sex​

The House Ethics Committee is expected to vote on whether to release its investigation into the former congressman.


House Ethics Committee investigators probing sexual misconduct allegations against former congressman Matt Gaetz obtained records showing that he paid more than $10,000 to two women who testified before the committee, according to a person familiar with the investigation who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive material.

The records that were exhibited during closed-door testimony displayed 27 PayPal and Venmo payments disbursed between July 2017 and January 2019 totaling over $10,000 paid to the two witnesses, that person said. Some of the payments were for sex, the witnesses testified to the committee. ABC News first reported on the exhibits.

The details come as Vice President-elect JD Vance attempted to shore up Gaetz’s imperiled path to running the Justice Department and just before members of the House Ethics Committee were expected to gather Wednesday afternoon to decide whether to release their findings.

The investigation centers on whether Gaetz paid for sex with a 17-year-old at drug-fueled parties while he was serving in Congress. Gaetz, who denies the charges, resigned last week, shortly before the committee was expected to deliberate on whether to release the report. Several lawmakers have called for its release, but the House committee’s Republican members are under pressure from Trump’s allies, including Speaker Mike Johnson (Louisiana), not to make its findings public.

A spokesman for the Trump transition defended Gaetz. “The Justice Department received access to roughly every financial transaction Matt Gaetz ever undertook and came to the conclusion that he committed no crime,” said Alex Pfeiffer, a Trump transition spokesman, in a statement. “These leaks are meant to undermine the mandate from the people to reform the Justice Department,” he said.

Republican senators on the Judiciary Committee, which will process Gaetz’s nomination, met with the former congressman on Wednesday morning alongside the incoming vice president. Vance posted a warning to them on social media on Wednesday morning, saying that the lawmakers owe their majority to Trump’s electoral “coattails.” “He deserves a cabinet that is loyal to the agenda he was elected to implement,” Vance wrote.

The first meeting of the morning was with the outgoing top Republican of the committee, Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. Graham exited the meeting defiant, insisting that the confirmation process to confirm Gaetz is becoming “a lynch mob.”
“I’m not going to be part of a process that leaks information that shouldn’t be leaked. I’m not going to legitimize the process to destroy the man because people don’t like his politics,” Graham said. “He will be held to account in the confirmation process. He deserves a chance to make his argument why he should be attorney general.”

Some Republicans have expressed doubt that Gaetz could be confirmed as attorney general in part because of the allegations he faces — as well as the long list of Republican enemies he made when he orchestrated the ouster of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (California) last year. Senate Republicans, including the incoming chair of the Judiciary Committee, Sen. Chuck Grassley (Iowa), have said they want access to the House Ethics Committee report. If they do not obtain it, they said they plan to call witnesses to the probe to testify, suggesting the hearing could become a divisive spectacle.

“I think it’s an extremely difficult path. In fact, I just don’t see a path forward at this point,” said Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-Oklahoma), a Trump ally who has feuded with Gaetz in the past. “But he has a right to push as hard as he wants to, and if he wants a hearing on it, that’s between him and the president.”

But Gaetz, a combative MAGA warrior who has never shied away from the press, has told senators he wants the chance to make his case in public. “The hearing is an opportunity for him to under oath in front of everybody, to walk through it,” said Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri), after leaving a meeting with him. “So, I mean, it’s, that’s why I think it’s a great opportunity for him.”

Gaetz did not get into the specifics of the allegations he faces, senators said, but insisted they are false and reminded them that the Justice Department never charged him with a crime after investigating the matter.
“He expressed confidence that what is before the committee are a series of false accusations,” said Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah). Lee said Gaetz is making the case to Senate Republicans that he deserves a Senate confirmation hearing.
 
Looks like Trump is going on 3 sexual predators or their enablers in his cabinet.

Linda McMahon (and Vince) have been named in a lawsuit last month claiming they enabled former ringside announcer Mel Phillips Jr to sexually assault minors between the 19070s and 1990s.

 
Ok, I guess it looks like the top two qualifications for a cabinet post with Trump are being a TV star and and being a sex trafficker.
 
Several BBC personalities from the 70s would be interested if they weren't dead by now.
 

Here's how Donald Trump could try to install his controversial cabinet picks​

From recess appointments to more radical steps — his allies have ideas

Donald Trump has signalled his willingness to bypass the U.S. Senate if it refuses to confirm the cast of controversial characters he's picked for his cabinet. Even if his own Republican allies try blocking those nominees, which remains far from certain, he may have several paths around them.

Trump has already raised one possibility — recess appointments, which in essence mean plowing ahead while the Senate is on break.

Trump aide Stephen Miller confirmed to Fox News this week that recess appointments are being considered, adding Trump will "use all lawful, constitutional means" to fulfil his mandate.

But this Plan B comes with caveats and complications, is uncertain to work and could trigger a constitutional conflict.

At a minimum, Republicans would have to agree to a recess. If they don't, some of Trump's allies are talking about a Plan C — forcing Congress into a recess, a gambit critics call potentially unconstitutional, depending on how it's done.

And if all that fails there's a possible Plan D — a 1998 law that allows temporary appointments, although this too comes with conditions.

Less controversial candidates would normally have an easier route to confirmation, which requires a majority vote in the Senate, which is projected to be 53 per cent held by the Republicans once the still-lingering election counts are done.

This all portends months of drama ahead over choices that shocked official Washington, including some members of Trump's own party.

At the epicentre of this storm is former congressman Matt Gaetz. He was picked for attorney general while being investigated in Congress for alleged sex with a minor, payments for sex, illegal drug use and accepting improper gifts.

The bipartisan ethics committee working on that investigation failed to get a consensus Wednesday to release a draft report; however, it did vote to complete the final report, according to Punchbowl News, a congressional newsletter.

There's also the pick for defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, a veteran and Fox News host who opposes women in combat, dislikes the Geneva Conventions against torture, and once paid to settle a rape claim he calls untrue.

A number of Republicans have also expressed doubts about two ex-Democrats Trump wants to appoint: a critic of U.S. intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, to lead U.S. intelligence; and a vaccine-, pharma- and food-industry critic, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., to lead the health bureaucracy.

"My expectation is that most of these nominees get through," said David Lewis, an expert on presidential appointments at Vanderbilt University.

Lewis says he wouldn't be surprised if one or two ran into serious trouble, then either withdrew or got stuck in limbo.

The fundamental reality, he says, is that Republican senators face competing incentives. There's the institutional pressure to preserve the power of the Senate, which has a constitutional duty to scrutinize major presidential picks.

But their own political careers may rest with backing Trump. Fighting him has been a career-ending move for several Republicans.

"They are cross-pressured," Lewis said.

Splitting the difference​

These competing demands are evident in the vacillating public comments from several Republicans who detest Gaetz.

Like Sen. Markwayne Mullin of Oklahoma, who has made clear his disdain for Gaetz on a personal level, but is hedging on whether he'll vote to confirm him. Maybe, maybe not.

Some are splitting the difference another way: insisting the process must continue, and that there must be a nomination hearing in January, but without guaranteeing they'll vote to confirm Gaetz.

A number of senators who met with Gaetz this week emerged saying he deserves to at least tell his story in a hearing.

"This process will not be a rubber stamp nor will it be driven by a lynch mob," said Sen. Lindsey Graham, who urged colleagues to do a thorough vetting, but to keep an open mind.

And then, if his confirmation stalls?

Republicans are playing coy on whether they agree with the Plan B of recess appointments. Some like Sen. Rick Scott of Florida appear to wholeheartedly endorse it.

Others disagree.

Sen. Thom Tillis says recess appointments are fine for low-level officials. They've happened hundreds of times over the generations. But they're inappropriate for senior cabinet roles, he says.

"That should be absolutely off the table," the North Carolina senator told reporters Wednesday. "These positions are too important and carry too much weight internationally."

There are restrictions on recess appointments. The Supreme Court has said Congress must be on break for a minimum of 10 days, which rarely happens without a pro forma meeting interrupting the break.

The top Republican in the Senate, John Thune, sounded skeptical in an interview with local media in his home state of South Dakota.

Without ruling out the idea, he said going on recess requires an adjournment motion in both chambers, which could be amended and dragged out ad nauseum by Democrats.

That has Trump allies talking about a Plan C: forcing Congress to shut down. The Constitution allows the president to do this when the chambers disagree on adjournment, a remnant of the prorogation power in the British system.

"It's an awful and anti-constitutional idea," according to Ed Whelan, a legal analyst who writes for the conservative but Trump-skeptical National Review.

He also called it an abuse of the rules.

But that plan would fall apart if both chambers of Congress oppose a recess, and a few Republicans are balking, the website Axios reported Wednesday.

Then, as a final backup, there's the 1998 Federal Vacancies Reform Act. A lawyer who tried helping Trump overturn the 2020 election says the president can use that.

Jeff Clark, who served in Trump's Justice Department, described this option in the podcast hosted by his ally Steve Bannon.

A candidate could be installed on a temporary basis for 300 days, provided they were not formally nominated after Trump takes office on Jan. 20.

Trump has "tools in his quiver," said Clark, who has been fighting disbarment for actions he took as Trump's acting assistant attorney general in 2020.

All these options have pros and cons. But as for the president shutting down the Senate?

"Then the wheels are coming off the bus," Sarah Binder, an expert on presidential-congressional relations at the Brookings Institution, told a liberal podcast hosted by The New Republic.

"We're sort of [on] the uncharted path here."

She said the key point is Republican lawmakers have power here — but only if they choose to use it.

They could, for instance, always re-gavel the Senate back into session, and reset the recess clock at zero days, thwarting Trump's plan.

It's a big "if."

"The No. 1 learning from the first Trump four years: The rules on the parchment can't defend themselves. Rules can't protect themselves," she said. "Lawmakers have to leap into action and make a choice…. Certainly standing up to Trump seems a challenge."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/trump-cabinet-confirmation-plans-1.7389038
 
Police report details sexual assault allegations against Pete Hegseth

A woman told police that she was sexually assaulted in 2017 by Pete Hegseth after he took her phone, blocked the door to a California hotel room and refused to let her leave, according to a detailed investigative report made public late on Wednesday.

Hegseth, a Fox News personality and Donald Trump’s nominee to be defense secretary, told police at the time that the encounter had been consensual and denied any wrongdoing, the report said.

News of the allegations surfaced last week when local officials released a brief statement confirming that a woman had accused Hegseth of sexual assault in October 2017 after he had spoken at a Republican women’s event in Monterey.

The 22-page police report was released in response to a public records request and offers the first detailed account of what the woman alleged to have transpired – one that is at odds with Hegseth’s version of events. The report cited police interviews with the alleged victim, a nurse who treated her, a hotel staffer, another woman at the event and Hegseth.

Investigators were first alerted to the alleged assault, the report said, by a nurse who called them after a patient requested a sexual assault exam. The patient told medical personnel she believed she was assaulted five days earlier but could not remember much about what had happened. She reported something may have been slipped into her drink before ending up in the hotel room where she said the assault occurred.

Police collected the unwashed dress and underwear she had worn that night, the report said.

The woman’s partner, who was staying at the hotel with her, told police that he was worried about her that night after she did not come back to their room. At 2am, he went to the hotel bar, but she was not there. She made it back a few hours later, apologizing that she “must have fallen asleep”. A few days later, she told him she had been sexually assaulted.

The woman, who helped organize the California Federation of Republican women gathering at which Hegseth spoke, told police that she had witnessed the TV anchor acting inappropriately throughout the night and saw him stroking multiple women’s thighs. She texted a friend that Hegseth was giving off a “creeper” vibe, according to the report.

After the event, the woman and others attended an afterparty in a hotel suite where she said she confronted Hegseth, telling him that she “did not appreciate how he treated women”, the report states.

A group of people, including Hegseth and the woman, decamped for the hotel’s bar. That’s when “things got fuzzy”, the woman told police.

She remembered having a drink at the bar with Hegseth and others, the police report states. She also told police that she argued with Hegseth near the hotel pool, an account that is supported by a hotel staffer who was sent to handle the disturbance and spoke to police, according to the report.

Soon, she told police, she was inside a hotel room with Hegseth, who took her phone and blocked the door with his body so that she could not leave, according to the report. She also told police she remembered “saying ‘no’ a lot”, the report said.

Her next memory was lying on a couch or bed with Hegseth hovering over her bare-chested, his dog tags dangling over her, the report states. Hegseth served in the national guard, rising to the rank of major.

After Hegseth finished, she recalled him asking if she was “OK”, the report states. She told police she did not recall how she got back to her own hotel room and had since suffered from nightmares and memory loss.

At the time of the alleged assault in 2017, Hegseth, now 44, was going through a divorce with his second wife, with whom he has three children. She filed for divorce after he had a child with a Fox News producer who is now his wife, according to court records and social media posts by Hegseth. His first marriage ended in 2009, also after infidelity by Hegseth, according to court records.

Hegseth said he attended an after party and drank beer but did not consume liquor, and acknowledged being “buzzed” but not drunk.

He said he met the woman at the hotel bar, and she led him by the arm back to his hotel room, which surprised him because he initially had no intention of having sex with her, the report said.

Hegseth told investigators that the sexual encounter that followed was consensual, adding that he explicitly asked more than once if she was comfortable. Hegseth said in the morning the woman “showed early signs of regret”, and he assured her that he would not tell anyone about the encounter.

Hegseth’s attorney said a payment was made to the woman as part of a confidential settlement a few years after the police investigation because Hegseth was concerned that she was prepared to file a lawsuit that he feared could have resulted in him being fired from Fox News, where he was a popular host. The attorney would not reveal the amount of the payment.
 
Anyone know whether Qanon has reacted to all this sex traficking and underage frollicking?

As Trump contemplates another run for the presidency and has become increasingly assertive in the Republican primary process during the midterm elections, his actions show that far from distancing himself from the political fringe, he is welcoming it.

He’s published dozens of recent Q-related posts, in contrast to 2020, when he claimed that while he didn’t know much about QAnon, he couldn’t disprove its conspiracy theory.

Pressed on QAnon theories that Trump allegedly is saving the nation from a satanic cult of child sex traffickers, he claimed ignorance but asked, “Is that supposed to be a bad thing?”
See, first we thought that his question was: Is saving the nation from a satanic cult of child sex traffickers supposed to be a bad thing?

Now we know that he actually was asking: Is child sex trafficking supposed to be a bad thing?
 
Apparently r/Conservative is in dismay. So are Muslims who voted for Donald.

The leopards are starting their feast.
 
Why is r/Conservative in dismay?
My guess is there are quite a lot of classic conservatives, so they don't like his cabinet picks.
 
Trump-47
The Revenge Tour


Maybe the Governor of New York can dangle a pardon over his head if he restores the SALT Tax deduction for New York?

 
Out of curiosity, why does your political system have such a huge delay between the election of a president and him taking power? Also, why are these decisions not made well in advance and presented as part of the campaign. I mean, if my president had the power to appoint all those people I'd want to know who his picks were before I voted. So what is the historical reasoning behind it?
 
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