Opinion | Donald Trump Is Bad for the Jews – The New York Times

Back to the question of what makes U.S. Jews politically different. Much of the answer is historical memory. Most of us, I think, know that whenever bigotry runs free, were likely to be among its victims.

The Trump administration is, beyond any reasonable doubt, an anti-democratic, white nationalist regime. And while it is not (yet) explicitly anti-Semitic, many of its allies are: Jews will not replace us chanted the very fine people carrying torches in Charlottesville, Va. You have to be willfully ignorant of the past not to know where all this leads. Indeed, its happening already: anti-Semitic incidents have soared (and my hate mail has gotten interesting).

Jews arent the only people who have figured this out. Many Asian-American voters used to support Republicans, but the group is now overwhelmingly Democratic. Indian-Americans, in particular, are like American Jews: a high-income, high-education group that votes Democratic by large margins, presumably because many of its members also realize where white nationalism will take us.

In all of this, Republicans not just Trump, but his whole party are reaping what they sowed. Their strategy for decades has been to win votes from working-class whites, despite an anti-worker agenda, by appealing to racial resentment. Trump has just made that racial appeal cruder and louder. And one has to admit that this strategy has been quite successful.

But it takes, well, chutzpah, a truly striking level of contempt for your audience, to foment hatred-laced identity politics, then turn to members of minority groups and say, in effect, Ignore the bigotry and look at the taxes youre saving!

And some of the audience deserves that contempt. As I said, people are pretty much the same whatever their background. There are wealthy Jews who are sufficiently shortsighted, ignorant or arrogant enough to imagine that they can continue to prosper under a white nationalist government.

But most of my ethnic group, I believe, understands that Trump is bad for the Jews, whatever tax bracket we happen to be in.

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Opinion | Donald Trump Is Bad for the Jews - The New York Times

Donald Trump, Tom Holland and an egg among most-tweeted-about in 2019 – New York Post

2019 was a banner year for the K-Pop band BTS, actor Tom Holland, and a brown egg at least on Twitter.

The social media network has released its annual Year on Twitter report, which features the most talked-about politicians, movies, actors and athletes in the Twitterverse for the year. While some of the results are unsurprising President Trump was the most-tweeted-about politician, followed by Barack Obama but others are downright odd.

The most retweeted tweet was from the World Record Egg, which beat out a BTS boyband member dancing and a tweet by user @Aman9919, labeled Watch at your Own Risk, which featured a group of college students being terrorized by a bird.

Meanwhile, the most-used emoji was the laugh-till-you-cry emoji (beating out the sobbing emoji). The most popular news-related hashtag was #NotreDame (which beat out #Venezuela, #Brexit and #HongKong) and Tom Holland was the most-tweeted-about actor most likely due to his role in the MCU-Sony Spider-Man deal as well as his star turn in Spider-Man: Far From Home (the fourth most-tweeted-about movie of the year).

The full list is below:

Most tweeted-about TV shows

Most tweeted-about movies

Most tweeted-about actors

Most tweeted-about musicians

Most tweeted-about sports teams

Most tweeted-about female athletes

Most tweeted-about male athletes

Most tweeted-about politicians

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Donald Trump, Tom Holland and an egg among most-tweeted-about in 2019 - New York Post

Echoes of the Clinton Legacy in Trumps Impeachment – National Review

Bill and Hillary Clinton arrive for the inauguration ceremonies of Donald Trump in front of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., January 20, 2017. (Rick Wilking/Reuters )

Making the click-through worthwhile: How the Clinton Foundation casts a shadow over impeachment and helps explain why Republicans feel so little pressure to turn against Trump; House Republicans gain a new member with a really unexpected voting record, speculating on the final vote in the House and an examination of the grand reversal of the parties from twenty years ago.

Republicans Look to Clinton When Evaluating Trump

Why do so many grassroots Republicans shrug at President Trumps efforts to strongarm Ukraine into investigating the Bidens? Because they believe, with some compelling evidence, that this is how the game is played that powerful figures in government blur their personal interest and the national interest all the time, with no consequence. The stories about the Clinton Foundation percolated and bubbled up for years but only at the height of the 2016 presidential campaign did most of official Washington notice, or even begin to object. The Clintons never believed the rules applied to them, and they shamelessly defied of previously agreed transparency and disclosure rules.

January 4, 2012, an emailfrom Doug Band to John Podesta: The investigation into [Chelsea Clinton] getting paid for campaigning, using foundation resources for her wedding and life for a decade, taxes on money from her parents . . . I hope that you will speak to her and end this.

December 2012: Huma Abedin is simultaneously employed in four different jobs official State Department employee, adviser to Teneo consulting, contractor to the Clinton Foundation, and privately-paid personal secretary to Hillary Clinton. This made it impossible for subsequent investigations and reviews to determine and verify what purpose and in what role Abedin was in when she met with associates relating to Clinton.

February 18, 2015: Many of the [Clinton Foundations] biggest donors are foreigners who are legally barred from giving to U.S. political candidates. A third of foundation donors who have given more than $1million are foreign governments or other entities based outside the United States, and foreign donors make up more than half of those who have given more than $5 million.

February 25, 2015: TheClinton Foundationaccepted millions of dollars from seven foreign governments during Hillary Rodham Clintons tenure as secretary of state, including one donation that violated its ethics agreement with the Obama administration. Foundation officials acknowledged they should have sought approval in 2010 from the State Department ethics office, as required by the agreement for new government donors, before accepting a $500,000 donation from the Algerian government.

April 23, 2015: As the Russians gradually assumed control of Uranium One in three separate transactions from 2009 to 2013, Canadian records show, a flow of cash made its way to the Clinton Foundation. Uranium Ones chairman used his family foundation to make four donations totaling $2.35 million. Those contributions were not publicly disclosed by the Clintons, despite an agreement Mrs. Clinton had struck with the Obama White House to publicly identify all donors.

April 30, 2015: The foundation also acknowledged this week it did not disclose 1,100 mostly foreign donors to the Clinton-Giustra Enterprise Partnership.

August 17, 2016: Hillary and Bill Clintons ties to two influential Lebanese-Nigerian businessmen are raising fresh questions about whether the State Department showed favoritism to Clinton Foundation donors.

August 20, 2016: The Clinton Foundation has accepted tens of millions of dollars from countries that the State Department before, during and after Mrs. Clintons time as secretary criticized for their records on sex discrimination and other human-rights issues. The countries include Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Brunei and Algeria. Saudi Arabia has been a particularly generous benefactor. The kingdom gave between $10 million and $25 million to the Clinton Foundation.

September 6, 2016: State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman gave the Clinton Foundation a pass on identifying foreign donors in its charitable filings making it impossible to know if it got any special favors while Hillary Clinton was secretary of state, according to a report Tuesday.

October 26, 2016: Bill Clinton is enjoying the private residence above his presidential library in Arkansas at the expense of taxpayers and his charity foundation a potential violation of nonprofit regulations. The 5,000-square-foot penthouse which sits atop the William J. Clinton Library in Little Rock is largely funded by the National Archives in Washington, which pours nearly $6 million into program and maintenance costs for the entire institution every year . . . Costs are also offset by a $7 million endowment from the Bill, Hillary & Chelsea Clinton Foundation.

November 4, 2016: The Clinton Foundation has confirmed it accepted a $1 million gift from Qatar while Hillary Clinton was U.S. secretary of state without informing the State Department, even though she had promised to let the agency review new or significantly increased support from foreign governments.

The Clintons insisted that the large donations from foreign governments and donors had nothing to do with influencing U.S. policy. However, once Hillary Clinton was defeated, donations dropped like a stone: The Clinton Foundations $30.7 million revenue last year is less than half the $62.9 million it raised in 2016 as Clinton was at the height of her presidential campaign. Each of the two years since Clintons loss in the 2016 election has seen the organizations revenue drop to record lows, raising less than any fiscal year in more than a decade a sharp contrast to the $249 million raised during Clintons first year as secretary of state.

Perhaps you think that losing the presidency is sufficient punishment for Hillary Clinton.

But many Americans believe the evidence indicates that the Clinton Foundation offered the worlds wealthy a secret way to buy access to the Secretary of State and potential future president, in hopes of influencing current or future U.S. foreign policy, and that sleazy deep-pocketed power brokers from all across the globe homed in on it like moths to a flame. Whats more, just about all Democratic legislators, the rest of the Obama administration, the foreign policy professionals and think-tank types and a big chunk of the media pretty much just accepted it. Maybe they didnt like it; maybe they occasionally offered on or off-the-record quotes about how the optics looked bad or some other wet-noodle tsk-tsk. But almost no one in official Washington looked at the Clinton Foundation and saw it as an unacceptable form of corruption.

All of it was legal, or legal enough, or in a gray area, and not something any prosecutor wanted to waste time on. (How many juries would convict Hillary Clinton?) No one got arrested, no one got charged with crimes, and Bill and Hillary Clinton got away with it, other than the admittedly significant consequence of losing the presidency that she wanted so badly.

In this light, Trump fans find it easy to shrug off all kinds of allegations from trying to bring the G7 to his own resort, to foreign governments staying in Trump hotels and then gushing on Twitter to suck up to the president, to big checks to Stormy Daniels, to having a bunch of shady felons working on the campaign, campaigns and party committees spending millions at Trump businesses, to allegations of using his personal foundation to promote his own interests . . . all the way to everything with Ukraine. Every Trump fan can easily fall back on, hey, its no worse than what the Clintons were doing, and nobody even bothered to investigate them. Trump wanted Ukraine to investigate Biden, while the Clintons just wanted cash.

Do two wrongs make a right? No, not at all, and I would prefer a world with institutions that rebuked conflicts of interest wherever they found them in the Republican Party and in the Democratic Party, in Chappaqua and Mar-a-Lago, in the Clinton Foundation and the Trump Organization. But as long as grassroots activists feel like one side has gotten off scot-free for unethical behavior, they will convince themselves what is good for the goose is good for the gander.

Theres just that lingering problem of whats actually good for the country.

Huge Supporter of Socialist Policies Switches Sides

Rep. Jeff Van Drew endorsed Cory Booker to be president, and he votes with the Trump administrations position a whopping seven percent of the time. He voted to overturn Trumps emergency declaration for border wall funding, to condemn Trumps statements about the Squad as racist, to create a path to citizenship for those who came to the U.S. illegally as children, to block the Trump administration from granting waivers to states regarding the Affordable Care Act, to restore Net Neutrality regulations, against a ban on transgenders serving in the military, to require the president to disclose his tax returns and for government funding bills that did not include wall funding. A month ago, the National Republican Congressional Committee called Van Drew a huge supporter of socialist policies.

And now hes a Republican, apparently almost entirely because he doesnt want to vote for impeachment. No doubt the president loves the symbolism of a Democrat switching sides and the NRCC loves the fact that they dont have to spend money to win back a top-tier swing district in 2020, but . . . how much did the GOP get with this flip?

How Many House Democrats Will Defect on the Impeachment Votes?

The impeachment vote is Wednesday; obviously Van Drew remains opposed and the other House Democrat who voted against starting the inquiry, Rep. Collin Peterson of Minnesota, told reporters Saturday he will vote against impeaching President Donald Trump. Peterson said he expects four or five other Democrats will do the same.

As of this writing, 60 House Democrats and one House Republican Tom Rooney have not stated publicly whether they will vote for the articles of impeachment.

If that comes to pass, it will be a small victory for President Trump and opponents of impeachment, but youll hear a lot about it. From the Democrats perspective, the impeachment hearings went about as well as they could have hoped but it will leave them with probably 228 or 227 votes to impeach, after 232 Democrats voted to start the inquiry. (Note that Elijah Cummings death and Katie Hills resignation leave two previously-Democratic seats open.) That handful of Democrats who voted for the inquiry but against impeachment think theyre saving their careers, but its easy to imagine that on Election Day 2020, the Republicans in their district are still mad as heck about the vote to start impeachment and at least a handful of Democrats will be still irked about letting the president off the hook.

As noted last week, if one of the aims of the impeachment hearings was to strengthen public support of impeachment, they failed. This morning, the FiveThirtyEight aggregation of public polling finds 47.6 percent support removal of the president, 46.2 percent do not about where its been, or perhaps a little tighter, for the past several weeks.

ADDENDUM: Over in the Article, I note that the parties have really switched sides on impeachment from 1998.

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Echoes of the Clinton Legacy in Trumps Impeachment - National Review

Donald Trump Wanted Another Roy Cohn. He Got Bill Barr. – The New York Times

President Trump famously asked, Wheres my Roy Cohn? Demanding a stand-in for his old personal lawyer and fixer, Mr. Trump has actually gotten something better with Bill Barr: a lawyer who like Cohn stops seemingly at nothing in his service to Mr. Trump and conveniently sits atop the nations Justice Department.

Mr. Barr has acted more like a henchman than the leader of an agency charged with exercising independent judgment. The disturbing message that sends does not end at our borders it extends to countries, like those in the former East Bloc, struggling to overcome an illiberal turn in the direction of autocracy.

When Mr. Trump sought to have President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine announce an investigation of his political opponent, he likely expected a positive response. After all, politicized prosecutions had been part of Ukraines corrupt political culture for years.

On Monday, when Michael Horowitz, inspector general for the Justice Department, released a report that affirmed the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election was justified, Mr. Barr immediately turned on his own agency in defense of the president.

The F.B.I. launched an intrusive investigation of a U.S. presidential campaign on the thinnest of suspicions that, in my view, were insufficient to justify the steps taken, he said.

Similarly, Mr. Barrs response to the report from Robert Mueller on Russian interference and Mr. Trumps purported presidential misconduct was to cast doubt on his own staff, questioning their work product as well as their ethics and legal reasoning. Even before he became attorney general, Mr. Barr questioned Mr. Muellers investigation of the president for obstruction of justice in a 19-page legal memo he volunteered to the administration.

And where he could have neutrally passed Mr. Muellers findings to Congress, he instead took the widely criticized and unusual step of making and announcing his own legal conclusions about Mr. Muellers obstruction inquiry. He followed up this Cohn-like behavior with testimony in the Senate, where he insinuated that the United States government spied on the Trump campaign. Mr. Barr apparently has decided that, like Cohn, he serves Donald Trump and not the Constitution or the United States, flouting his oath of office and corrupting the mission of the Justice Department.

In the past, the United States has, however imperfectly, advanced the rule of law and supported governments committed to an anti-corruption agenda. According to George Kent, a State Department official who testified in the House impeachment inquiry, Russia sees corruption as a tool to advance its interests. So when the United States fights a kleptocratic culture, it serves not only lofty humanitarian goals but also our national security. Mr. Zelensky ran a campaign and was elected on a platform that put fighting corruption at the forefront. He should have received extensive and unmitigated support in that effort.

In the former East Bloc countries, despite the hopes of many for a post-Soviet era where democracy would thrive, the parties and politicians in power have consolidated their control in a manner reminiscent of the Communist era.

Autocrats understand that supposedly independent institutions such as the courts and prosecutors are vital to locking in their power. In Romania, a crusading anti-corruption prosecutor who was investigating top government officials was fired at the same time as the government advanced legislation to cabin the ability of other prosecutors to pursue cases against political officials. Polands right-wing populist Law and Justice Party has attacked the independent judiciary and has sought to remove judges who do not follow the party line. Hungary has followed suit. Bulgarian politicians have persecuted civil society groups that have criticized their abandonment of the rule of law.

While several United States ambassadors have attempted to support anti-corruption efforts in the region, they have been continuously undercut by the White House. In addition to firing Marie Yovanovitch, who served as ambassador to Ukraine, in part because of her anti-corruption focus, Mr. Trump hosted Viktor Orban of Hungary in Washington over the objections of national security officials who did not want to elevate a corrupt leader with close ties to the Kremlin; furthermore, the president has tried to cut funding for anti-corruption programs.

Mr. Trumps focus on cultivating foreign leaders who can help his re-election has overwhelmed our national interests in the region. That is certainly a shame for the anti-corruption activists in former Communist countries who have depended on our help and leadership since the end of the Soviet era and who have seen their justice system turned to serve political ends.

But for Americans, we must worry that we face a similar domestic situation: a prosecutor who bends to the political needs of the president. Mr. Trump may no longer be able to call on Roy Cohn, but he now has a stronger ally in the United States top law-enforcement official, who thinks that if the president does it, it cant be wrong.

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Donald Trump Wanted Another Roy Cohn. He Got Bill Barr. - The New York Times

Trumps Hanukkah Party Featured a Pastor Who Said Jews Are Going to Hell – Vanity Fair

In a 2009 sermon, Jeffress expounded on his bigotry, saying: Not only do religions like Mormonism, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, not only do they lead people away from the true God, they lead people to an eternity of separation from God in hell. You know, Jesus was very clear. Hell is not only going to be populated by murderers and drug dealers and child abusers. Hell is going to be filled with good religious people who have rejected the truth of Christ.

For his part, Trump is obviously drawn to Jeffress thanks to the pastors ardent support. In September he claimed that impeaching Trump would lead to a Civil War-like fracture, and earlier this year he made it known that evangelicals who dont support the president are spineless morons.

More Great Stories From Vanity Fair

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Trumps Hanukkah Party Featured a Pastor Who Said Jews Are Going to Hell - Vanity Fair

Noah explains why he’s ‘actually proud of Donald Trump’ in Best of Late Night – USA TODAY

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OPINION

The comics analyze the articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump. Take a look, then vote for your favorite joke at usatoday.com/opinion. Eileen Rivers, USA TODAY Opinion

While it's certainly not good to become the fourth president in U.S. history to face articles of impeachment, there's a silver lining in all of this for President Donald Trump, at least according to late-night comic Trevor Noah. It's that he made it three years before the impeachment process jumped into full swing.

Take a look at today's Best of Late Night, above, to see Noah praise both Trump and an illegal driver. They have more in common than you'd think.

Crooner Harry Styles (filling in for late-night TV host James Corden) explains why the written articles of impeachment include scratch-and-sniff stickers and Seth Meyers becomes Rep. JimJordan sitting on a park bench in the middle of New York.

Trevor Noah(Photo: Brad Barket)

After you watch our favorite moments from last night's late-night lineup, vote for yours in the poll below.

Follow Eileen Rivers on Twitter @msdc14.

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/best-of-late-night/2019/12/11/trevor-noah-says-hes-actually-proud-donald-trump/4399130002/

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Noah explains why he's 'actually proud of Donald Trump' in Best of Late Night - USA TODAY

Fox News’ Chris Wallace Torches Donald Trump’s Attacks On The Press – HuffPost

Fox News anchor Chris Wallace has delivered a blistering assessment of President Donald Trumps repeated and sustained attacks on the press that report critically on him and his administration.

I believe that President Trump is engaged in the most direct sustained assault on freedom of the press in our history, the host of Fox News Sunday said at an event celebrating the First Amendmentat the Newseum media museum in Washington on Wednesday.

He has done everything he can to undercut the media, to try and delegitimize us, and I think his purpose is clear: to raise doubts when we report critically about him and his administration that we can be trusted, Wallace continued, per The Guardian.

Wallace also reportedly said this tweet from Trump in February 2017 said far more about him than it did about us.

Wallaces pointed criticism of Trump is in stark contrast to the praise his prime time colleagues on the widely watched conservative network including Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson and Laura Ingraham often shower on the president.

On Monday, Wallace rejected the claim that the case for the impeachment of Trump over the Ukraine scandal is narrow.

The allegation that President Trump conditioned support for a key foreign policy ally on political benefit to him, strikes me as not narrow but far broader than the Clinton impeachment, he said.

Wallace last month explained why he believed it would be a terrible idea for Trump to testify in the House impeachment inquiry with an analogy about Prince Andrew and his friendship with the late financier pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

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Fox News' Chris Wallace Torches Donald Trump's Attacks On The Press - HuffPost

Stocks rebound back to the highs of the day on report phase one deal is reached – CNBC

Stocks jumped on Thursday after Bloomberg News reported the U.S. reached a deal in principle with China on trade.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average traded 228 points higher, or 0.8%. The S&P 500 also gained 0.8% while the Nasdaq Compositetraded 0.6% higher. Thursday marked the first time since Nov. 27 that stocks hit record highs.At their session highs, the major averages were all up at least 1%.

Bloomberg's report also said U.S. negotiators had the terms of the so-called phase one deal ready for President Donald Trump.

Trump said in a tweet earlier in the dayboth sides were getting "VERY close to a BIG DEAL with China. They want it, and so do we!" The major indexes hit record highs following Trump's tweet.

CNBC confirmed reportsfrom earlier in the day that saidU.S. negotiators are offering to cancel new China tariffs and reduce existing levies on Chinese goods by up to 50% on $360 billion worth of imports. The latest trade news comes ahead of a key Sunday deadline.If an agreement is not reached by Sunday, additional U.S. levies on Chinese products will take effect.

Reports from Bloomberg News and The Wall Street Journal earlier in the week suggested that the U.S. could delay those additional tariffs. However, National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow said Tuesday the charges were "still on the table."

President Donald Trump

Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

Caterpillar shares jumped 1.1% on Thursday while Micron Technology advanced 2.8%. The VanEck Vectors Semiconductor ETF (SMH) and the iShares PHLX Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) both rose about 2% and hit all-time highs.

Bank stocks also got a lift as Treasury yields rose. The SPDR S&P Bank ETF (KBE) climbed 2% and hit a 52-week high. J.P. Morgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup all traded at least 1.4% higher. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield advanced to 1.892% while the 2-year rate traded at 1.67%.

Stocks started December on the wrong foot as worries around U.S.-China trade relations increased. In the first two sessions of the month, the Dow lost more than 500 points.

The world's two largest economies have imposed tariffs on billions of dollars' worth of one another's goods since the start of 2018, battering financial markets and souring business and consumer sentiment.

Still, the major averages are up sharply for the year. The S&P 500 and Dow have jumped 25.9% and 20%, respectively, year to date. The Nasdaq is up around 30%.

Next year, however, should be tougher on Wall Street, CalSTRS CIO Christopher Ailman said.

"It will be choppy," Ailman told CNBC's Brian Sullivan in an interview that aired Thursday. "This is going to be another election year. Remember 2016? That was a really hard year where the market slugged it out to generate a positive return. We may have that kind of year because of all the rhetoric we're going to hear."

Weekly jobless claims jumped last week by 49,000 to 252,000, the Labor Department said. That is their highest level since the week that ended Sept. 30, 2017.

The data comes after the Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday. The central bank also indicated it would likely not make any policy changes through at least 2020. The U.S. central bank's decision to keep borrowing costs unchanged was unanimous, following several dissents in recent meetings.

"This is as hardened a 'wait and see' stance as we have seen in many years, and is particularly striking since so many of the crucial macro issues are yet to be resolved," Michael Shaoul, chairman and CEO of Marketfield Asset Management, said in a note.

CNBC's Sam Meredith contributed to this report.

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Stocks rebound back to the highs of the day on report phase one deal is reached - CNBC

Judge rejects government’s motion to toss suit over missing Trump-Putin meeting notes – Politico

The order by McFadden, a Trump appointee, means that the lawsuit will be allowed to move forward and gives the government until Jan. 10 to say whether Pompeo complied with federal records law or show why he was not obligated to do so. Pompeo will then have until the middle of March to produce the State Departments record of evidence.

The Washington Post first reported in January that Trump had gone to extraordinary lengths to conceal the details of his meetings with Putin, seizing the notes of his interpreter after the leaders first meeting in 2017 and ordering the translator not to disclose details of the discussion. Furthermore, The Post reported that no detailed record of Trumps communications with Putin existed, prompting a flurry of document requests from Congress and outside groups.

Trump and Putin have met in person multiple times, including a handful of occasions where few, if any, other U.S. officials were present. The disclosure of a lack of records came in the midst of special counsel Robert Muellers investigation into the 2016 Trump campaigns ties to Russia.

The administration has done everything it can to hide what Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump discussed in Hamburg, Austin Evers, executive director at American Oversight, said in a statement in response to Wednesdays ruling. Todays ruling is an important step to ensuring the government complied with its legal obligations.

Democracy Forwards senior counsel also cheered the order. President Trump clearly wishes to shield his interactions with foreign leaders even from those within his administration. But the law doesnt allow Secretary Pompeo to turn a blind eye to those efforts, Nitin Shah said in a statement, calling the ruling a win for government transparency and accountability.

The State Department did not respond to a request for comment.

In its motion to dismiss earlier this fall, the State Department rejected the watchdog groups characterization of the interpreter notes subject to the Federal Records Act and argued that Pompeo, who was not yet secretary at the time of several of the Trump-Putin meetings, was not obligated to recover and preserve the interpreter notes Trump took possession of.

Trumps efforts to keep under wraps the details of his conversations with other world leaders have taken on a new light in the wake of the ongoing impeachment inquiry.

As outlined in an August whistleblower complaint, the White House took the unusual step of placing a rough transcript of the July phone call between Trump and his Ukrainian counterpart, which is at the heart of the probe, in a secure server meant only for highly classified documents.

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Judge rejects government's motion to toss suit over missing Trump-Putin meeting notes - Politico

Triggered by Donald Trump Jr. – The Atlantic

Its not news that our degraded politics has made truth elusive. Yet even seasoned Trump haters may be surprised at how elusive it has become for Don Jr. He recounts a well-worn story about the night of his birth.

When my mother first approached him with the idea of naming me Don Jr., he writes, my father is rumored to have said, We cant do that! What if hes a loser? Again, no idea whether my father ever really said this. Ive provided the italics for Don Jr., because the source of this often-repeated anecdote is a book called Raising Trump, which was written by his mom.

The alienation Don Jr. and his troops feel from the liberal culture that surrounds them forces them to a poignant furtiveness. They want us to know that while they live in the world that liberalism has made, they are not of it. Or so they believe. In reality they dart in and out, as convenience allows.

The liberal press is thoroughly corrupt, Don Jr. tells us, irredeemable, essentially useless except as a contrary indicator of actual fact. Meanwhile, he is careful to support a large number of his anecdotes and assertions with footnotesfootnotes that cite The Washington Post, Time magazine, USA Today, and other enemies of the people. (We modestly note that The Atlantic alone earns five footnotes.) So, too, Special Counsel Robert Muellers investigation, which was a Democratic sham from first day to last. Yet Don Jr. is adamant that any suggestions that he was involved in Russian collusion have been definitely disproved. Dont take his word for it, he says. Read the Mueller report.

Mueller, in Don Jr.s estimation, is a feeble old fool. He makes this pronouncement several sentences before he writes: I would actually like to think of this book as offering a reasoned antidote to all the hysterical bullshit thats flying around right now. That used to be called discourse.

Precisely when those good old days of discourse began, and when they came to an end, Don Jr. leaves unspecified, but a revealing, and by now legendary, moment in this regard came early on in his promotional tour for Triggered. He and his girlfriend, a former mid-list Fox News personality named Kimberly Guilfoyle, submitted to an interrogation with the hosts of ABCs The View. Trump held his own and managed to rassle the contest to a draw.

Conor Friedersdorf: Why the trolls booed at Don Jr.s event

We should stipulate that as an intellectual exercise, a guest turn on The View, confronting the combined exertions of Joy Behar, Whoopi Goldberg, and Meghan McCain, is not exactly a dissertation defense at the Sorbonne. We are not talking about a graduate seminar with Stephen Hawking. What young Trump proved was that he could easily meet the hosts on their own level, bearing the same contempt for them that they held for him. When they brought up unflattering episodes from his fathers life, he brought up unflattering episodes from theirs. When they interrupted him, he interrupted their interruptions. When they got loud, he got louder.

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Triggered by Donald Trump Jr. - The Atlantic

Donald Trump Is Bad for the Jews – The New York Times

Back to the question of what makes U.S. Jews politically different. Much of the answer is historical memory. Most of us, I think, know that whenever bigotry runs free, were likely to be among its victims.

The Trump administration is, beyond any reasonable doubt, an anti-democratic, white nationalist regime. And while it is not (yet) explicitly anti-Semitic, many of its allies are: Jews will not replace us chanted the very fine people carrying torches in Charlottesville, Va. You have to be willfully ignorant of the past not to know where all this leads. Indeed, its happening already: anti-Semitic incidents have soared (and my hate mail has gotten interesting).

Jews arent the only people who have figured this out. Many Asian-American voters used to support Republicans, but the group is now overwhelmingly Democratic. Indian-Americans, in particular, are like American Jews: a high-income, high-education group that votes Democratic by large margins, presumably because many of its members also realize where white nationalism will take us.

In all of this, Republicans not just Trump, but his whole party are reaping what they sowed. Their strategy for decades has been to win votes from working-class whites, despite an anti-worker agenda, by appealing to racial resentment. Trump has just made that racial appeal cruder and louder. And one has to admit that this strategy has been quite successful.

But it takes, well, chutzpah, a truly striking level of contempt for your audience, to foment hatred-laced identity politics, then turn to members of minority groups and say, in effect, Ignore the bigotry and look at the taxes youre saving!

And some of the audience deserves that contempt. As I said, people are pretty much the same whatever their background. There are wealthy Jews who are sufficiently shortsighted, ignorant or arrogant enough to imagine that they can continue to prosper under a white nationalist government.

But most of my ethnic group, I believe, understands that Trump is bad for the Jews, whatever tax bracket we happen to be in.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. Wed like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips. And heres our email: letters@nytimes.com.

Follow The New York Times Opinion section on Facebook, Twitter (@NYTopinion) and Instagram.

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Donald Trump Is Bad for the Jews - The New York Times

CNN’s Jeffrey Toobin on impeachment: ‘Donald Trump, in a way, has already won’ – Washington Examiner

CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin acknowledged that President Trump is landing some victories as the impeachment process continues in the House.

On Thursday, the House Judiciary Committee debated the two articles of impeachment filed against Trump. House Democrats believe Trump abused his power and obstructed justice in connection to his phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

During a recess, Toobin offered his analysis on the situation and revealed that Trump had several wins throughout the hearing. He noted that Republicans on the committee had successfully pivoted the conversation away from impeachment and toward Trumps defense, especially when it came to discussing Hunter Biden and possible corruption with Burisma Holdings.

What struck me about this hearing was how Donald Trump, in a way, has already won, said Toobin. How much did we hear about Hunter Biden? Over and over again, about Hunter Biden. Thats what the Republicans are talking about constantly.

He added, There are questions about Hunter Bidens behavior, and so, I mean, this incredible shift of emphasis.

Toobin claimed it would be difficult for journalists to focus on impeachment while covering the topics being discussed by Republicans. He explained, I just dont know what our responsibility is as journalists because its not the point, but this is the news. And this is whats there.

During the phone call that is now the cornerstone for impeachment, Trump asked Zelensky to look into Bidens high-paying board position at Burisma. Republicans have claimed he was justified in doing so because of Bidens controversial past.

[Read more: CNN's Jeffrey Toobin: Barr is 'a Fox News bot']

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CNN's Jeffrey Toobin on impeachment: 'Donald Trump, in a way, has already won' - Washington Examiner

‘Trump changed everything’: Big cities break hard left in Dem primary – POLITICO

But not all of the shift can be explained by newly elected Democrats. Michael Gianaris, the New York Senate deputy majority leader who represents western Queens, raised eyebrows in local political circles when he backed Sanders this year after endorsing Clinton in 2016.

The election of Donald Trump changed everything for a lot of us, he said. The best way to defeat a troublesome zealot like that is to make the strongest case for dramatic change, and I think Bernie Sanders does that.

In Philadelphia, Kenney, who began his political career as a moderate, has fully embraced the progressive agenda in recent years, making it unlikely that he would have endorsed a centrist. The left is so energized here that even Krasner, a progressive darling across the nation, faced backlash from Sanders supporters in the city after he sided with Warren.

Youre watching an election cycle in which presidential candidates have reason to want the endorsements of big-city progressive D.A.s because theyre having to answer questions at debates like, Do you think people who are actually incarcerated should vote?' said Krasner. Thats not even a question you would have heard eight years ago."

The lack of a dominant establishment frontrunner in the primary also means there is little political debt to pay off for some city officials and more room to support a progressive if they so wish. In 2016, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio backed Clinton, whose first Senate campaign he managed, though, to her teams chagrin, he couldnt help but speak positively about Sanders. De Blasio has yet to endorse a candidate after dropping out of the presidential race himself in September, but his heart is very much with Bernie and Warren, according to a former aide.

The shifting political climate has, to some degree, created a new class of powerbrokers. Before he announced that he was backing Warren, Krasner said six presidential contenders contacted him in person or over the phone. While she was courting the Working Families Party, Warren threw her weight behind a long-shot, left-wing Philadelphia council candidate, Kendra Brooks, who was bucking the entrenched local Democratic Party and running on the groups ticket. (Brooks won in November.) Sanders has visited the city to protest the closure of a hospital and attend a summit held by the Philadelphia AFL-CIO.

Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders have been very willing to involve themselves in local issues. Thats unusual, said Larry Ceisler, a longtime Philadelphia political observer working in public relations. In past elections, it was only the mayor who presidential candidates would call and say, How about an endorsement?

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot. | Scott Olson/Getty Images

Democratic operatives and elected officials in Philly said Warrens aides in particular have made an aggressive play for endorsements. They courted me more than any other campaign, said Isaiah Thomas, one of the soon-to-be council members backing Warren. They called me. They met with me. We talked about issues. They gave me the opportunities to communicate my opinion.

While there has been a steady shift to the left in many cities, moderate Democrats are far from dead in them: In Philadelphia, U.S. Reps. Dwight Evans and Brendan Boyle both gave nods to Joe Biden, who has close ties to Philadelphia. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who hasnt endorsed a presidential candidate yet, isnt typically swayed by the left wing of the Democratic Party as the progressives on the city council can attest. She has butted heads with them since she took office in a landslide earlier this year.

Mayor Lightfoot has proved to be the opposite of a politician who makes a move based on which way the wind blows, said Chicago-based campaign veteran and communications consultant Becky Carroll, who worked on Barack Obama and Al Gores campaigns.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, who backed Clinton in the 2016 primary and looked hard at a presidential bid himself in 2020, has not yet endorsed a candidate. In December, he flew to Iowa to participate in a forum he helped put together in which mayors interviewed some of the presidential contenders. He has personal relationships with several of them, according to his aides.

Hes a friend of Mayor Buttigiegs. He and Cory Booker were Rhodes Scholars together. Hes done a lot of things with Mayor Bloomberg, and has a great relationship with Vice President Biden, said Bill Carrick, a political consultant for Garcetti.

A Garcetti adviser said he has also met privately with Sanders had a really good meeting, in fact and Warren. The person said he will likely endorse a candidate before Super Tuesday, when California goes to the polls.

In this era, progressives are bullish on their chances of winning over more urban politicos like him and hopeful of putting an end to the practice of transactional presidential endorsements.

The reason big-city elected officials are backing progressives is because when you are in a large city, you realize the incredible need for massive government solutions, said Monica Klein, a New York City-based progressive consultant. You need a police department with 37,000 officers. You need a million tons of salt when it snows.

Shia Kapos contributed to this report.

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'Trump changed everything': Big cities break hard left in Dem primary - POLITICO

Pennsylvania And America Need 4 More Years Of President Donald Trump In The White House: VP Mike Pence Talks Reelection And Impeachment Inquiry During…

BEAVER COUNTY (KDKA) Vice President Mike Pence shared his feelings about the impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump during a visit to Beaver County.

Vice President Pence made a stop at VFW Post 128 in Rochester on Tuesday morning and was greeted by a crowd of 250 veterans.

The stop at the VFW came as the U.S. House of Representatives moves forward on articles of impeachment against Trump.

(Photo Credit: KDKA)

Whats happening in Washington, DC today is a disgrace, Pence said. Its nothing short of a partisan impeachment. But men and women of Pennsylvania, were still winning.

In 2016, the Trump-Pence ticket carried Beaver County by 18 1/2 points, and Vice President Pence wasted no time asking for continued support in 2020.

Im here for one reason and one reason only. Pennsylvania and America need four more years of President Donald Trump in the White House, Pence told the crowd.

From the VFW post, Pence started a bus tour to Hershey, where he joined President Trump at a rally on Tuesday night.

Pences first stop on the bus tour was an unannounced visit to a local restaurant.

Vice President Pence chatted with patrons and posed for pictures.

WATCH: KDKAs Jon Delano Reports On Vice President Mike Pences Visit To Beaver County.

I was very, very surprised. Hes a special man. He really is, said Virginia Mihalik of Raccoon after meeting Pence.

This visit of Vice President Pence to Kings Family Restaurant in Monaca was certainly a surprise, not only to the folks who were eating here, but even to the staff as well.

Kings server Heather Hinzman had a bit of a heads up.

Hinzman: Yesterday, I waited on two gentleman and they told me they were coming in with a party of about 20 people for tomorrow. But it was just for a group of people. They didnt tell me exactly who was coming, so we had a nice surprise today.

Delano: They didnt tell you it was the vice president and a bunch of reporters?

Hinzman: They did not. They told me it was a bunch of foreigners.

Hinzman said the gentleman apologized for lying to her, but she was not upset, saying she had a good chat with Pence.

The visit to the restaurant was a real surprise to most.

All of a sudden, I was blown away, seeing all these police officers, said Sindy Diaz of Greensburg.

Customers were taken by surprise when Pence starting working the tables.

When someone told us, I was, this cant be real . . . such an honor, noted Diaz.

WATCH: KDKAs Jon Delano Reports On Vice President Mike Pences Visit To Beaver County.

When Pence dropped by her table, Heather Cordial told him shes been in the Air Force Reserves for 21 years.

He gave me his Vice President coin, which is super awesome. He was such a nice, down to earth man, and I couldnt be happier to have met him and have his coin.

But before chatting up and taking selfies with the crowd at Kings, the vice president gave more formal remarks 10 minutes away at a VFW post in Rochester.

Noting Pennsylvanias importance for reelection, Pence recalled that every time a state win came in back in 2016, Trump hit Pence on the shoulder.

Seriously, hes going boom North Carolina great, good boom. But Im telling you when Pennsylvania came in, he almost knocked me over.

The Presidents frequent visits to this region including two in recent months to the Shell cracker plant and a Marcellus shale conference along with Pences visit, add up to this request.

Let your voice be heard.

All the good that is happening in Pennsylvania and across this country and how much more we can do with four more years with President Donald Trump in the White House, Pence said.

(Photo Credit: KDKA)

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Pennsylvania And America Need 4 More Years Of President Donald Trump In The White House: VP Mike Pence Talks Reelection And Impeachment Inquiry During...

Donald Trump Jr. Shares Bonkers Meme Of His Dad That Could Terrify The President – HuffPost

But his latest one could terrify the president.

President Donald Trumps eldest son on Monday posted a doctored picture of his dad shirtless, and with a shark on his shoulders to Instagram.

It was an attack on the impeachment inquiry into Trump over the Ukraine scandal. However, former porn star Stormy Daniels has claimed Trump (with who she reportedly had an affair) is terrified of sharks.

Haters will say its fake, read the caption on the edited snap.

Ive heard from the same reliable sources that the Democrats have used during their sham impeachment inquiry that this is in fact very real, wrote Trump Jr.

The image appears to have emanated from this 2003 WWE SummerSlam commercial starring wrestler Brock Lesnar:

Trump Jr. has previously shared a Pornhub-style meme of his father:

Trump as a Christmas ornament:

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Donald Trump Jr. Shares Bonkers Meme Of His Dad That Could Terrify The President - HuffPost

Why America needed Donald Trump | TheHill – The Hill

There is one good thing about President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump puts Kushner in charge of overseeing border wall construction: report Trump 2020 national spokesperson gives birth to daughter New McCarthy ad praising Trump includes Russian stock footage MORE going into 2020. It is that he is consistent. Consistency in some philosophies connotes reliability. His divisive and inflammatory rhetoric, bullying mockery of others during campaign rallies, combative foreign policy, his rejection of diplomacy, and his demand for unequivocal loyalty have seriously disturbed the political establishment. This is an establishment that, in the minds of Americans on both the right and the left, has become consumed by its own interests.

Despite the disappointment and feelings of grievances, Americans have come to expect a certain level of civility in political life. They expect prevarications and empty promises masked by the warm embrace of civility. Both civility and character have been political standards that Americans have used to judge the body of politics in this country.

These guiding principles have become the critical appropriation and embodiment of traditions that have shaped the character and shared meaning of a people in these United States. Political communication should be grounded in our personal narratives. Citizens do not emerge from a historical vacuum. They arise from particular traditions. As such, some are taught to speak authoritatively yet compassionately, and they take action responsibly with the aim of serving the collective good.

Trump clearly does not abide by these standards. He questions the very legitimacy and agency of tradition and its meaning in the United States. He is a creature unwedded to basic conservative or liberal doctrines and is unconcerned with orthodoxy. From his view and that of his supporters, Washington tradition has not worked, and it is that grievance toward the status quo that has given Trump sustenance today. The peculiarity of this phenomenon is not relegated to just the political right. Similar sentiments are growing on the left and have given rise to Senator Bernie SandersBernie SandersSaagar Enjeti: Bloomberg exposes 'true danger' of 'corporate media' Doctor calls for standardizing mental fitness tests for elected officials Warren: Bloomberg is betting he 'only needs bags and bags of money' to win election MORE, Senator Elizabeth WarrenElizabeth Ann WarrenWhy Democrats are not actually serious about uniting the nation Warren: Bloomberg is betting he 'only needs bags and bags of money' to win election Bloomberg campaign chief: Trump is winning 2020 election right now MORE, and other emerging progressive stars in the Democratic Party such as Representative Alexandria Ocasio Cortez.

Americans have far deeper issues than partisan divides. Though their grievances are disparate, they share one commonality in their dislike for all things closely aligned with the elite media, politicians, and business. This is one of the reasons for the cultish following of the president, who can do no wrong in the eyes of his worshippers. It does not bother them because Trump exposes the disguise of civility, just as Sanders and Warren do. They stick it to the man by castigating political elites.

As for African Americans and members of other racial minority groups, we have fared no better or worse under Trump than we have under previous administrations. We may have felt better under President Obama because of symbolic racial pride, but we agree that many expectations fell short. The economy did well under President Clinton, but we acknowledge the dangerous crime bill and tough law enforcement stances that decimated the black community. The point is simple in that feeling good or having pride in our national leader does not necessarily yield good results.

What Trump says and does, through his rhetoric and behavior, can be brutally honest. While it may wound the vanity of some, he has complete disregard for business as usual. We must ask ourselves if we would rather have a president who does not care about political civility and tells it like it is or a president who is polished and hides the truth. Whatever you think about Trump and his supporters, it appears there is a growing number of Americans on both sides seeking a leader who is a street fighter, someone who will voice their grievances on center stage.

Americans are accustomed to the former civil politician. They smile at you, look you in the eyes, and tell you what you want to hear to make us feel comfortable. Whether we are willing to admit it or not, everything about the status quo before Trump signaled comfort. We were living in a country devoid of disruptive change. The reality was that it was business as usual, but those dynamics have been changing under the leadership of Trump. Despite the disdain some have for him, a similar movement has taken place on the left. The country needed Trump to shake things up.

In the blockbuster hit The Dark Knight, the Joker said to district attorney Harvey Dent, Introduce a little anarchy. Upset the established order, and everything becomes chaos. I am an agent of chaos. And you know the thing about chaos? It is fair! Trump is indeed fair to Americans because his disruption brings a shared level of chaos to the elites on all sides.

Quardricos Driskell is an adjunct professor of legislative politics with the George Washington University Graduate School of Political Management. Shermichael Singleton is a Republican strategist and a political analyst.

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Why America needed Donald Trump | TheHill - The Hill

Trump denies sending Giuliani to Ukraine to pressure officials on investigations – USA TODAY

Here's the latest for Tuesday November 26th: US Capitol shut down over plane threat; Mall shooting injures two; Trump pardons turkeys. AP Domestic

WASHINGTON President Donald Trump on Tuesday denied sending his personal attorney Rudy Giuliani to Ukraine to dig up dirt on his opponents,or for any other reason.

"No, I didn't direct him," Trump told former Fox News hostBill OReilly in an online interview."No, but you have to understand, Rudy is a great corruption fighter."

Giuliani's efforts in Ukraine have come under scrutiny in the House Democratic impeachment inquiry.Federal investigators, meanwhile,are conducting an investigation into Giuliani's associates, two of whom were charged with campaign finance violations.

Trump repeatedly said he never directed his personal attorney to go to Ukraine.

Giuliani agreed.

"He never did and I never did," Giuliani told USA TODAY in response to Trump's remarks. "I never went to Ukraine and I was always seeking evidence to defend him against false charges in my role as his lawyer."

Giuliani said his effort started long before Biden was a candidate and while the special counsel investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election was still underway.

Whether Trump sent Giuliani to the country is not the center of the investigation, however. The summary of the president's July 25 phone call with Ukraine presidentVolodymyr Zelensky shows the president urged Kyiv officials to reach out to Giuliani about the investigations.

State Department officials have told lawmakers under oath as part of the impeachment inquiry that Giuliani and Gordon Sondland, the U.S. ambassador to the European Union, appeared to be running a diplomatic effort in Ukraine outside of the official channels.

Giuliani was also among the critics who appeared determined to undermine former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch.

Giuliani has acknowledged he was conducting an investigation into Ukraine to defend Trump.

"The investigation I conducted concerning 2016 Ukrainian collusion and corruption, was done solely as a defense attorney to defend my client against false charges, that kept changing as one after another were disproven," Giuliani posted on Twitter last month.

Despite speculation about whether Trump will continue to stick by his personal attorney, the president has so far generally defended him.

Giuliani raised eyebrows recently by saying he did not think Trump would turn on him during the investigation and that, even if Trumpdid, he has an "insurance policy." Giuliani later said he was joking and that his insurance was his case against Biden.

On Monday, Trump called Giuliani "a great guy" and the "best mayor" New York City ever had.

Giuliani has refused to provide information to House investigators about his dealings in Ukraine on Trump's behalf.

Giuliani hasdone business in Ukrainesince at least 2008.In June 2017, he delivered a speech called Global Challenge, the Role of the U.S. and the Place of Ukraine, according to a post on the website of the Pinchuk Foundation.

Fritze and Jackson cover the White House for USA TODAY. Follow them at @jfritze and @djusatoday.

Contributing:Kevin Johnson and Kevin McCoy

Donald J. Trumps path to White House was anything but traditional. While many of the other 43 presidents either previously served in elected positions or had careers in the military before taking office, Trump was a real estate mogul and reality TV star — here is a look at each presidents path to the Oval […](Photo: Pool / Getty Images)

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William Barr, Donald Trump, and the post-Christian culture wars – Vox.com

Republicans control the White House, the Senate, and the Supreme Court. They have 27 governorships and governing trifectas in 21 states. But many conservatives particularly Christian conservatives believe theyre being routed in the war that matters most: the post-Christian culture war. They see a diverse, secular left winning the future and preparing to eviscerate both Christian practice and traditional mores. And they see themselves as woefully unprepared to respond with the ruthlessness that the moment requires.

Enter Donald Trump. Whatever Trumps moral failings, hes a street fighter suited for an era of political combat. Christian conservatives believe rightly or wrongly that theyve been held back by their sense of righteousness, grace, and gentility, with disastrous results. Trump operates without restraint. He is the enemy they believe the secular deserve, and perhaps unfortunately, the champion they need. Understanding this dynamic is crucial to understanding the psychology that attracts establishment Republicans to Trump, and convinces them that his offense is their best defense.

If this sound exaggerated, consider two recent speeches given by Attorney General William Barr. Barr is a particularly important kind of figure in the Trump world. He previously served as attorney general under George H.W. Bush, and had settled into a comfortable twilight as a respected member of the Republican legal establishment. Its the support of establishment Republicans like Barr that gives Trump his political power and protects him from impeachment. But why would someone like Barr spend the end of his career serving a man like Trump?

Speaking at Notre Dame in October, Barr offered his answer. He argued that the conflict of the 20th century pitted democracy against fascism and communism a struggle democracy won, and handily. But in the 21st century, we face an entirely different kind of challenge, he warned. America was built atop the insight that free government was only suitable and sustainable for a religious people. But over the past 50 years religion has been under increasing attack, driven from the public square by the growing ascendancy of secularism and the doctrine of moral relativism.

This is a war Barr thinks progressives have been winning, and that conservatives fight in the face of long institutional odds.

Today we face something different that may mean that we cannot count on the pendulum swinging back. First is the force, fervor, and comprehensiveness of the assault on religion we are experiencing today. This is not decay; it is organized destruction. Secularists, and their allies among the progressives, have marshaled all the force of mass communications, popular culture, the entertainment industry, and academia in an unremitting assault on religion and traditional values.

Whatever political power conservatives hold, progressives occupy the cultural high ground, and they strike without mercy. Those who defy the [secular] creed risk a figurative burning at the stake, says Barr, social, educational, and professional ostracism and exclusion waged through lawsuits and savage social media campaigns.

In a November speech before the Federalist Society, Barr expanded on the advantage progressives hold. Its worth quoting his argument at length:

The fact of the matter is that, in waging a scorched earth, no-holds-barred war of Resistance against this Administration, it is the Left that is engaged in the systematic shredding of norms and the undermining of the rule of law. This highlights a basic disadvantage that conservatives have always had in contesting the political issues of the day. It was adverted to by the old, curmudgeonly Federalist, Fisher Ames, in an essay during the early years of the Republic.

In any age, the so-called progressives treat politics as their religion. Their holy mission is to use the coercive power of the State to remake man and society in their own image, according to an abstract ideal of perfection. Whatever means they use are therefore justified because, by definition, they are a virtuous people pursuing a deific end. They are willing to use any means necessary to gain momentary advantage in achieving their end, regardless of collateral consequences and the systemic implications. They never ask whether the actions they take could be justified as a general rule of conduct, equally applicable to all sides.

Conservatives, on the other hand, do not seek an earthly paradise. We are interested in preserving over the long run the proper balance of freedom and order necessary for healthy development of natural civil society and individual human flourishing. This means that we naturally test the propriety and wisdom of action under a rule of law standard. The essence of this standard is to ask what the overall impact on society over the long run if the action we are taking, or principle we are applying, in a given circumstance was universalized that is, would it be good for society over the long haul if this was done in all like circumstances?

For these reasons, conservatives tend to have more scruple over their political tactics and rarely feel that the ends justify the means. And this is as it should be, but there is no getting around the fact that this puts conservatives at a disadvantage when facing progressive holy war, especially when doing so under the weight of a hyper-partisan media.

I suspect many readers will, at this point, be vibrating with counterarguments. Many of those counterarguments probably begin with the words Merrick Garland. But hold them at bay for a second. Lets stay with the world as Barr sees it.

Robert Jones, president of the Public Religion Research Institute, estimates that when Barack Obama took office, 54 percent of the country was white and Christian; by the time he left office, that had fallen to 43 percent. This is largely because young Americans are less white, and less Christian, than older Americans. Almost 70 percent of American seniors are white Christians, compared to only 29 percent of young adults.

In 2018, Americans who claim no religion passed Catholics and evangelicals as the most popular response on the General Social Survey. That arguably overstates the trend: The GSS breaks Protestants into subcategories, and if you group them together, they remain the most populous religious group, at least for now. But the age cohorts here are stark. If you look at seniors, only about one in 10 seniors today claim no religious affiliation, Jones told me. But if you look at Americans under the age of 30, its 40 percent.

These are big, dramatic changes, and theyre leading Christians particularly older, white, conservative Christians to experience Americas changing demographics as a form of siege. In some cases, that experience is almost literal.

The political commentator Rod Dreher blogs for the American Conservative, where he offers a running catalog of moral affronts and liberal provocations. He doesnt simply see a society that has become secular and sexualized, but a progressive regime that insists Christians accept and even participate in the degeneracy or fall afoul of nondiscrimination laws and anti-bigotry norms.

I completely concede that religious conservatives, social conservatives, have lost the cultural war, he told me in a podcast conversation. The other side is just bouncing the rubble and it seems that they will not be satisfied until they grind my side into the dirt.

In 2017 Dreher published The Benedict Option, arguing that Christians should retreat into monastic communities where they can live their faith in peace and wait for a decadent culture to consume itself. We in the modern West are living under barbarism, though we do not recognize it, he writes. Our scientists, our judges, our princes, our scholars, and our scribesthey are at work demolishing the faith, the family, gender, even what it means to be human. Our barbarians have exchanged the animal pelts and spears of the past for designer suits and smartphones.

Other Christian conservatives counsel more energetic forms of engagement. The New York Posts Sohrab Ahmari forced a puzzling rupture in the conservative intelligentsia when he attacked another Christian conservative, David French, for being too polite in his politics. Progressives understand that culture war means discrediting their opponents and weakening or destroying their institutions, Ahmari wrote. Conservatives should approach the culture war with a similar realism.

It was never quite clear what Ahmaris more ruthless form of conflict required, but it began with a recognition that the condition of conservative Christianity was too desperate to countenance the niceties of liberal democracy.

But many Christian conservatives have come up with an answer both coarser and clearer than Ahmaris musings: Donald Trump. Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr. put it sharply:

This is the context not only for Barrs speeches and his service to Trump, but for much of the Republican Partys embrace of Trump. White evangelicals were the base of Trumps support in the 2016 GOP primary, and they voted for him in the general election in higher numbers than they voted for George W. Bush.

Its this apocalyptic psychology that motivates the strained defenses of even Trumps worst behavior. If the left can even destroy Trump, then what chance do conservatives have? Liberals can hypothesize all they want about why Republicans should prefer Mike Pence, but the reality is that if Republicans joined with Democrats to remove Trump from office, the left would annihilate Pence in the aftermath, and what Barr calls the scorched earth, no-holds-barred war of Resistance would grab hold of the full powers of the federal government and turn them against the right.

In his interview with my colleague Sean Illing, National Review editor Rich Lowry said that Trump, who he once opposed, has been steadfast on pro-life stuff, on conscience rights, on judges. The downside, Lowry admitted, is he doesnt respect the separation of powers in our government, he doesnt think constitutionally, and says and does things no president should do or say.

That seems like a pretty big downside! But, Lowry continued, at the end of the day, were asked to either favor Trump or root for Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders or Joe Biden or Mayor Pete, who oppose us on basically everything. So its a pretty simple calculation.

The irony of all this is that Christian conservatives are likely hastening the future they most fear. In our conversation, Jones told me about a 2006 survey of 16- to 29-year-olds by the Barna Group, an evangelical polling firm, that asked 16- to 29-year-olds for their top three associations with present-day Christianity. Being antigay was first, with 91 percent, followed by judgmental, with 87 percent, and hypocritical, with 85 percent. Christianity, the Barna Group concluded, has a branding problem.

It seems unlikely that that branding problem will be fixed by a tighter alliance with Trump, who polls at 31 percent among millennials and 29 percent among Generation Z. If young people are abandoning Christianity because it seems intolerant, judgmental, and hypocritical well, intolerant, judgmental, and hypocritical is the core of Trumps personal brand.

That said, I take William Barr at his word. I believe he looks out at the landscape of contemporary America and sees a country changing into something he doesnt recognize, that he believes Christianity is under an assault from which it may not recover and Trump, whatever his faults, is their last, best hope. And its the support of Republicans like Barr that ensures Trumps survival.

This form of Flight 93ism is more widespread on the right than liberals recognize, and it both authentically motivates some establishment Republicans to enthusiastically embrace Trump, and creates coalitional dynamics by which other Republicans feel they have no choice but to defend Trump against the left. Some protect Trump on the merits, others protect Trump as a form of anti-anti-Trumpism, and others protect Trump as a way of protecting their future careers. But all of them protect Trump as a way of protecting themselves, and a future they feel slipping away.

The fundamental question raised by the impeachment hearings isnt: What did Trump do? The hearings have added details and witnesses to the account first offered by the whistleblower and later confirmed by the White House call record, but the narrative stands largely unchanged.

Instead, the question raised is: Why is the Republican Party accepting, and even defending, what Trump did?

Barrs speeches, and the worldview they describe, are a big part of the answer.

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William Barr, Donald Trump, and the post-Christian culture wars - Vox.com

The Supreme Court halted a subpoena for Trump’s financial records. Here’s what happens next – CNBC

U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to greet Boyko Borissov, Bulgaria's prime minister, not pictured, at the South Portico of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, Nov. 25, 2019.

Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

President Donald Trump won a temporary victory at the Supreme Court this week, when a majority of the justices voted to temporarily halt a subpoena issued by Congress for his financial records.

That move was largely expected. In fact, the subpoena had already been halted by Chief Justice John Roberts in order to give the court time to consider the issue. The court's move on Monday evening extended that freeze with a vote from the full panel.

The subpoena was issued by the Democratic-led House Oversight Committee in April to Trump's longtime accounting firm Mazars USA, and seeks a wide variety of financial documents including both personal and business records.

Trump has bucked recent precedent by refusing to voluntarily disclose his financial records. He is the first president in more than four decades not to release his tax returns.

The real action happens next. In its order, the court gave the president until Dec. 5 to file his formal appeal, known as a petition. The fact that the panel asked for the president's filing so soon likely means that the court intends to rule on the matter in its current term, which ends in June.

The president's petition will ask the court to review a decision against him issued by a 2-1 vote of a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., in October.

The court is already weighing whether it will review a separate decision over the president's financial records issued by a federal appeals court in New York. The three-judge panel in that case ordered Mazars USA to turn over the president's financial records to the Manhattan district attorney.

Experts expect that the court will agree to take the cases, but it's not clear if the president will ultimately prevail. It takes four justices on the nine-member panel to agree to hear a case. The court currently has a 5-4 conservative majority, including two Trump appointees, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh.

If the court agrees to take the cases, it will likely hear oral arguments some time between February and April. The cases will join what is already a packed term of cases on issues involving guns, abortion, and the DACA program that protects 700,000 "Dreamers," which could focus attention on the court's new conservative majority during a contentious election year.

The court generally releases its most high-profile opinions in June. In May, Trump wrote in a post on Twitter that he hoped the fight for his tax returns would be "part of the 2020 Election." He's likely to get what he asked for.

The top court has never settled the specific legal questions at the heart of the two cases involving the president's financial records, according to Marty Lederman, a former Justice Department attorney.

It has not had the opportunity to do so. No president has ever asked the court to review a subpoena for his personal papers that predate his time in office, or for one issued by a state prosecutor targeting him in a criminal investigation.

But Lederman said he expects that the justices will ultimately rule against the president. In the two cases that most closely resemble Trump's appeals, involving Presidents Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton, the Supreme Court voted unanimously against the commander in chief.

The first case, U.S. v. Nixon, arose out of the Watergate scandal that ultimately doomed Nixon's presidency. The court rejected Nixon's claims of immunity on the basis of "executive privilege," and ordered him to deliver tape recordings as part of a court proceeding against some of his closest aides.

In the second, Clinton v. Jones, the court considered whether Clinton was immune to a sexual harassment suit brought against him while he was in office. The court rejected Clinton's claim of immunity, though it noted that there could exist exceptional circumstances in which such immunity could exist.

In both cases, justices voted against the president who appointed them, including three Nixon appointees and two Clinton appointees. Those Clinton appointees, Justices Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg, as well as Justice Clarence Thomas, who was on the court in Clinton v. Jones and was appointed by President George H.W. Bush, remain on the bench.

Ashwin Phatak, who serves as counsel at the Constitutional Accountability Center, a left-leaning think tank in Washington, said that some of the broader propositions from the Nixon and Clinton cases are relevant in Trump's battles.

"If the court rules in favor of the president, that would be a sea change in how people think about this issue of presidential immunity," he said.

But Elizabeth Slattery, a legal researcher at The Heritage Foundation who hosts the popular "SCOTUS 101" podcast, said that Trump is looking to distinguish the current case from those past rulings. The Heritage Foundation is a conservative think tank.

Slattery said that a point in the president's favor is the appearance that Congress is attempting to add a qualification to the presidency namely, the disclosure of personal financial information.

"Congress cannot expand or alter the qualifications for the office of the president," she said.

And, she said, congressional subpoenas are not the method that the Constitution provides for probing a sitting president.

"It all comes back to the fact that impeachment is the way that Congress can investigate, not through pseudo law enforcement tools," she said.

Ultimately, if the court takes the cases, the deciding vote could be Roberts, who is known to care about the court's reputation and, alongside Kavanaugh, occupies the panel's ideological center.

Trump has faced major challenges to his presidency at the end of each of the last two Supreme Court terms, and in each case, Roberts has written the court's 5-4 opinion.

In June of 2018, Roberts sided with the majority to uphold an iteration of the president's travel ban. But the next year, Roberts flipped sides in a case involving the Trump administration's attempt to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census, effectively killing the proposal.

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The Supreme Court halted a subpoena for Trump's financial records. Here's what happens next - CNBC

Kushner reportedly overseeing construction of Trump’s border wall – NBC News

President Donald Trump has tapped his son-in-law, White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, to oversee construction of the ballyhooed border wall the president has promoted since the onset of his presidential campaign, The Washington Post reported.

The move further expands Kushner's already large portfolio, which includes working on a Middle East peace deal, overhauling the legal immigration and criminal justice systems, pushing trade policy, modernizing the federal government and taking a lead role on Trump's 2020 reelection campaign.

The Post reported that Kushner leads biweekly West Wing meetings focused on the wall's progress, officials familiar with the matter said. Kushner is pushing both U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the Army Corps of Engineers to seize hundreds of parcels of private property so that the government has a chance to meet Trump's goal of building 450 miles of wall along the southern border by the end of next year, with aides telling the Post it is paramount to Trump that 400 of those miles be completed by Election Day.

Trump defended his border wall efforts in a Tuesday tweet, saying it's "wrong" to say the new wall is not being built when old barriers are being replaced. Since Trump took office, the vast majority of wall construction has been for replacement border fencing, not a new wall in places where it didn't exist previously.

Trump resorted to pulling funding from the Defense Department after Congress refused to appropriate money for the project. The Pentagon said in September that it would use $3.6 billion in military construction money to build the wall, in addition to previously making $2.5 billions of counter-drug money available.

Trump declared a national emergency at the border in February in a bid to circumvent Congress and fund wall construction. The border wall was one of Trump's earliest campaign promises during the 2016 election. He initially said it would be paid for by Mexico.

Allan Smith is a political reporter for NBC News.

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Kushner reportedly overseeing construction of Trump's border wall - NBC News