First lady Melania Trump loudly booed at opioid event on same day that President Trump donates salary to drug-fighting efforts – CNBC

First lady Melania Trump was greeted with resounding boos by students at an opioid awareness event in Baltimore on Tuesday, even as her husband, President Donald Trump, donated his salary for the third quarter of the year to combat the opioid crisis.

Melania Trump was loudly booed as she was introduced at the B'More Youth Summit on Opioid Awareness at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County by Jim Wahlberg, brother of the actors Mark and Donnie Wahlberg.

And the boos continued as she thanked Wahlberg for "the warm introduction," and began speaking to the audience, which was comprised primarily of middle school and high school students.

"I hope that the knowledge you gain here will help you tackle the tough decisions you may be faced with, so that you can live a healthy and drug-free life," she said at the event, wich was organized by the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Mark Walhberg Youth Foundation.

"Get involved and be a part of the solution."

The first lady's Be Best public awareness initiative is focused on promoting well-being and online safety for children, as well as combating opioid abuse.

The opioid crisis has been blamed for the majority of the 70,000 fatal overdoses of Americans in 2017.

Later Tuesday, Melania Trump, through White House spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham, issued a statement in response to the heckling at the event.

"We live in a democracy and everyone is entitled to their opinion, but the fact is we have a serious crisis in our country and I remain committed to educating children on the dangers and deadly consequences of drug abuse," said the first lady.

Baltimore was targeted by President Trump in July, when the president lashed out at Rep. Elijah Cummings, a Democrat whose district included parts of Baltimore city and Baltimore County.

Cummings' "district is a disgusting, rat and rodent infested mess," Trump tweeted at the time. "If he spent more time in Baltimore, maybe he could help clean up this very dangerous & filthy place."

Cummings has since died.

Kate Bennett, a CNN reporter and the author of a new biography about Melania Trump, said on Twitter that the audience's reaction to the first lady at the Baltimore event "was the worst booing she has received at a public event where she has given solo remarks."

President Trump in 2017 donated a quarter of his $400,000 annual salary toward efforts to stem the crisis. On Tuesday, the president repeated that donation for that effort.

The president since taking office has committed to donating his entire salary to various causes.

US First Lady Melania Trump arrives to address the B'More Youth Summit in Baltimore, Maryland, on November 26, 2019.

Nicholas Kamm | AFP | Getty Images

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First lady Melania Trump loudly booed at opioid event on same day that President Trump donates salary to drug-fighting efforts - CNBC

President Trump’s dictator-like administration is attacking the values America holds dear – NBC News

Were up against a crisis I never thought Id see in my lifetime: a dictator-like attack by President Donald Trump on everything this country stands for. As last weeks impeachment hearings made clear, our shared tolerance and respect for the truth, our sacred rule of law, our essential freedom of the press and our precious freedoms of speech all have been threatened by a single man.

Our shared tolerance and respect for the truth, our sacred rule of law, our essential freedom of the press and our precious freedoms of speech all have been threatened by a single man.

Its time for Trump to go along with those in Congress who have chosen party loyalty over their oath to solemnly affirm their support for the Constitution of the United States. And its up to us to make that happen, through the power of our votes.

When Trump was elected, though he was not my choice, I honestly thought it only fair to give the guy a chance. And like many others, I did. But almost instantly he began to disappoint and then alarm me. I dont think Im alone.

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Tonight it pains me to watch what is happening to our country. Growing up as a child during World War II, I watched a united America defend itself against the threat of fascism. I watched this again, during the Watergate crisis, when our democracy was threatened. And again, when terrorists turned our world upside down.

During those times of crises, Congress came together, and our leaders came together. Politicians from both sides rose to defend our founding principles and the values that make us a global leader and a philosophical beacon of hope for all those seeking their own freedoms.

What is happening, right now, is so deeply disturbing that instead of the United States of America, we are now defined as the Divided States of America. Leaders on both sides lack the fundamental courage to cross political aisles on behalf of what is good for the American people.

Were at a point in time where I reluctantly believe that we have much to lose it is a critical and unforgiving moment.

Were at a point in time where I reluctantly believe that we have much to lose it is a critical and unforgiving moment. This monarchy in disguise has been so exhausting and chaotic, its not in the least bit surprising so many citizens are disillusioned.

The vast majority of Americans are busy with real life; trying to make ends meet and deeply frustrated by how hard Washington makes it to do just that.

But this is it. There are only 11 months left before the presidential election; 11 months before we get our one real chance to right this ship and change the course of disaster that lies before us.

Lets rededicate ourselves to voting for truth, character and integrity in our representatives (no matter which side were on). Lets go back to being the leader the world so desperately needs. Lets return, quickly, to being simply ... Americans.

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Robert Redford is an actor, director, producer and activist.

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President Trump's dictator-like administration is attacking the values America holds dear - NBC News

Donald Trump Confessed, Again – Mother Jones

Republicans on the House Intelligence Committee, as recently as Thursday, have argued President Donald Trump did not direct a freeze on $400 million in US aid to Ukraine in exchange for the country announcing investigations that would help Trumps campaign in 2020. But Trump, as ever, is making his apologists look dumb. In a 53-minute phone call this morning to Fox & Friends, Trump pretty much confessed, again, to the actions for which he faces impeachment.

Theres tremendous corruption, Trump said during the call. Why should we be giving hundreds of millions of dollars to countries when theres this kind of corruption?

To be sure, the presidents defenders can note that Trump asserted here that he was worried about corruption. But moments earlier, Trump defined just what he meant by corruption. And its not actually corruption.

They have the server, right, from the DNC, Democratic National Committee, Trump said. The FBI went in and they told them, get out of here, were not giving it to you. They gave the server to CrowdStrike or whatever its called, which is a countrywhich is a company owned by a very wealthy Ukrainian. And I still want to see that server. You know, the FBIs never gotten that server. Thats a big part of this whole thing. Why did they give it to a Ukrainian company?

This is a nonsense conspiracy theory that even unctuous Fox hosts werent endorsing. Crowdstrike, based in California, is not owned by a wealthy Ukrainian. The DNC did not have one server. They had about 140. Crowdstrike imaged them and then gave the data to the FBI, not Ukraine. Trumps claim is part of a false argument that Ukraine, not Russia, meddled in the 2016 election. Russia, which US intelligence agencies have concluded interfered in the 2016 election, has promoted the lie that Ukraine was responsible. This is an apparent Kremlin effort to deflect blame from its own intelligence agents.

But putting that aside, Trumps words were revealing. Asked by host Steve Doocy: Are you sure? Trump bore down: Well, thats what the word is, the president said. Thats what I asked, actually in my phone call. (This refers to Trumps July 25 call with Ukraines President, Volodymyr Zelensky.)

I asked it very point-blank, because were looking for corruption, Trump continued. Theres tremendous corruption. Why should we be giving hundreds of millions of dollars to countries when theres this kind of corruption. If you look at my call, I said, you know, corruption.'

In fact, Trump did not once say the word corruption in the reconstructed transcript of his call with Zelensky that the White House released in September. Instead, Trump mentioned the same conspiracy theory. I would like you to find out what happened with this whole situation with Ukraine, Trump said. They say CrowdStrikeI guess you have one of your wealthy peopleThe server, they say Ukraine has it.

So when Trump referred on Fox and Friends to this kind of corruption what he actually meant was his conspiracy theory that a Ukrainian oligarch has the DNC server. Trump and his chief of staff, Mick Mulvaney, have made similar statements that seemed to confirm a quid pro quo involving aid to Ukraine. But as Business Insider notes, this was the first time that Trump explained that his supposed worry about corruption in Ukraine related to the server issue.

Trump is telling everyone that he froze military aid to Ukraine to get them to announce an investigation into Ukraines alleged involvement in the 2016 election. Congressional Republicans should listen to him.

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Donald Trump Confessed, Again - Mother Jones

Millions of Latinos are Trump supporters. Here’s what they’re thinking. – USA TODAY

Ruben Navarrette Jr., Opinion columnist Published 3:15 a.m. ET Nov. 26, 2019 | Updated 8:02 a.m. ET Nov. 26, 2019

Latino voters in California make up a large percentage of the electorate in the newly minted Super Tuesday behemoth. USA TODAY

Despite his harmful rhetoric, President Trump's policies and fierce attitude have attracted a certain subset of those in the Latino community.

San Diego Its like chickens for Colonel Sanders.Why would any self-respecting Latino vote to re-elect President Donald Trump, arguably the most anti-Latino chief executive in U.S. history?

Thats what my non-Latino friends want to know. I get that question all the time, often accompanied by a tilted head and a confused look.

In the 2020 election, Trump seems likely to get between 25%-30% of the Latino vote. A recent poll by Telemundo found that 1 in 4 American Latinos would vote to re-elect him.

In 2016, according to exit polls, Trump got 28% of the Latino vote.He did better than Sen. Bob Dole, who got 21% of the Latino vote in 1996, and Sen. Mitt Romney, who got 27% in 2012. But he couldnt match Sen. John McCain, who got 31% of the Latino vote in 2008, or President George W. Bush, who got 40% in 2004. Anything north of 30% is a decent showing for a Republican, and anything beyond 40% will make a GOP candidate virtually unbeatable.

Latino voters count for a lot. Three reasons: theyre a young populationthat is adding new voters at a staggering rate; Theyre well-represented in so-called battleground states such as Colorado, Nevadaand Florida; And close to two-thirds of Latinosare Mexicansor Mexican-Americans, whotend to be swing voters.

Latinos are now poised to be the largest racial orethnic minority group to be eligible to vote in a presidential election, according to the Pew Research Center.By 2020, an estimated 32 million Latinos will be eligible to vote, which is just slightly more than the 30 million voters who are African-Americans. According to Pew, Latinos are expected to be about 13.3% of the electorate in 2020.

Heres what you need to know about the Latino vote: there is no such thing. That is, Latinos arent monolithic and we dont vote as a bloc.

A rally in Dallas on Oct. 17, 2019.(Photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP via Getty Images)

Yet, Trump is likely to do better than expected with Latino voters.

Its not just because of a strong economy, low unemployment rates among Latinos, etc. Its also because many Latinos are willing to look past Trumps anti-Latino bigotry. After all, they tell themselves, the president is not talking about people like them.

The problem is that, when it comes to Latinos, Trump cant stop talking trash. Heres a look at his rant sheet.

As a candidate, Trumpdeclared that Mexico isnot sending their bestbut ridding itself of those who arebringing drugsbringing crime,labeled Mexican immigrants criminals and rapists, promised to deport bad hombres, praised the 1954mass deportation program called "Operation Wetback," promised a deportation force,and attacked the integrity of U.S. District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel a U.S.-born citizen of Mexican descent by questioning whether Curiel could fairly adjudicate a lawsuit against Trump University because, Hes a Mexican.

Dear progressives: Hispanics are not 'Latinx.' Stop trying to Anglicize our Spanish language.

As president, Trump pardoned Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio after the former lawman was found guilty of racially profiling Latinos and defying court orders, ended Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), "leaving"more than 700,000 young peoplepotentially subject to deportation, targeted birthright citizenship for the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants, embraced policies that would cutlegalimmigration in halfand separated thousands of refugee families to the point where nearly 70,000 immigrant children were held in U.S. custody at some point in the last year.

Even as he campaigns for re-election, Trump still cant seem to refrain from sticking his foot in this mouth when it comes to Latino voters.

He talks often about how the United States is facing an invasion from the south.Thats the same word that 21-year-old Patrick Crusius used in a racist manifestohe penned before walking into a Walmart in El Paso, Texason Aug 3 to, as he allegedly told police,kill as many Mexicans as possible.Crucius killed 22 people, many of them Mexicanand wounded 25others.

Several weeks ago, when Trump traveled to New Mexico to court conservative Latinos, he doted on CNN commentator Steve Cortes, a pro-Trump immigrant from Colombia who the president declared looks more like a WASP than I do.Trump put Cortes on the spot, asking him,Who do you like more,the country or the Hispanics?Cortes answered The country.

Most of the Latinos who back Trump are not so buffoonish about their support. But theyre no less devoted to their guy.

As a Mexican-American Never Trumper, I wanted to understand these people. Besides, as a journalist who is trained to talk to strangers, the idea of Latinos who support Trump sounded plenty strange to me.

So, I went out and interviewed a couple dozen Latinos for Trump.

What I found is that, in many cases, these folks are not really Latino at all. Theyre post-Latino. They see themselves as Americans. Theyre ambivalent about their heritage, relatives, ancestors. They dont take offense when Trump insults Mexican immigrants because even for Mexican-Americans they see the people hes talking about as another species.

It's time to take a stand: After El Paso shooting, Mexican Americans can no longer be ambivalent minority

Consider the views of Chris Salcedo, a conservative Mexican-American radio host in Texas who bills himself as a liberty loving Latino.

Ive always resented the hell out of liberals, in the press and out of the press, who have said that I, because of my Latino surname, have anything in common with someone who is breaking into my country without our permission, Salcedo told me. When the president cracks down on illegal border crossings and human trafficking, I do not believe hes attacking me because I also want to stop those same things.

I get it. But I also recognize a familiar song when I hear one. Other ethnic groups know this one by heart. The Irish, Italians andJewsall have people in their community who dont identify with their heritage or who think theyre better than others in their tribe, when theyre really just better off. These are the folks who were born on third basebut tell themselves they hit a triple.

Now some Latinos have found their way to Trump. Good for them. But make no mistake. In a larger sense, theyre lost.

Ruben Navarrette Jr., a member of the USA Today Board of Contributors, is a syndicated columnist with the Washington Post Writers Groupand host of the daily podcast, Navarrette Nation. Follow him on Twitter:@RubenNavarrette

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Millions of Latinos are Trump supporters. Here's what they're thinking. - USA TODAY

Can Anyone or Anything Dislodge Trump From the White House? – The New York Times

Bret: I understand his weakness with African-American voters but remain mystified by why he isnt polling better with the younger electorate. Even so: Wouldnt it be nice to have a president who makes you enjoy the English language every time he speaks?

Gail: Mayor Pete is certainly a good speaker, but hell be even better when he runs again a few years down the line. I dont think its a rejection if you just feel he could use a little more political experience outside of South Bend.

And speaking of mayors, are you still high on Mike Bloomberg? Talk about terrible poll numbers. How much do you think hed need to spend to turn things around? More or less than the national budget of Canada?

Bret: He is my first choice by far, whatever misgivings I might have about his micromanaging style. (We former Republicans have to stick together.) Im convinced he can trounce Trump in a general election, and he would have a winning message to the so-called exhausted majority that is sick of our hyper-ideological, polarized politics. And I wouldnt read too much into his poll numbers right now. Hes a candidate of the head, not the heart. He has the money to keep going all the way to the convention, which might prove very useful if, as I think is entirely possible, the Democrats wind up with a brokered convention between two or three uncertain or unpalatable front-runners.

Gail: Ah, yes, a brokered convention. The last one was so exciting. King George VI had just died, the hydrogen bomb was about to get its first test and people were talking about the great new picture Singin in the Rain.

We havent had one since 1952, Bret. But tell me what youre envisioning.

Bret: Imagine a scenario in which Buttigieg wins Iowa, Warren wins New Hampshire, Biden wins South Carolina and then goes on to win Super Tuesday, causing Bernie Sanders to drop out of the race. Some Sandernistas will go to Biden, but I suspect most of his supporters then shift to Warren. The rest of the field drops out for lack of funds except, of course, for Bloomberg. At that point, the Democratic Party takes a deep breath, clenches some posterior muscles and realizes the former mayor offers the best shot at dethroning Trump, who at that point will be celebrating his impeachment victory after an acquittal in the Senate.

Am I 100 percent insane, or just 95 percent?

Gail: Hesitant to dismiss any wild possibility in the current climate. But when crazy stuff happens, its always because of Donald Trump. On the Democratic side things are actually pretty boring considering that weve got a wide-open presidential race.

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Can Anyone or Anything Dislodge Trump From the White House? - The New York Times

Could Donald Jr. or Lara Trump Run for Office in New York, and Win? – The New York Times

In some Republican circles, the notion of President Trumps children running for political office is not only a parlor game its a matter of finding the right opportunity for the right Trump.

Could that opportunity exist in blue New York? And could it happen now?

Some state Republicans are eager to give it a try. With Representative Peter King, a Republican, not seeking re-election on Long Island next year, the circumstance may never be better for a younger Trump to run.

But which one?

Donald Trump Jr., the presidents elder son and the member of the family who is most naturally fluent in the language of the Republican base, has frequently been mentioned as a possible candidate for office.

He attracts a younger contingent of Republicans to events, organizers say, and has demonstrated his ability to raise big money for congressional candidates on Long Island.

Lara Trump, who is married to the presidents son Eric, is a senior adviser on the presidents re-election campaign; her potential for future office has also been mentioned by some close to the family.

Among Republican voters, Trump is still a magic name, Mr. King said in a telephone interview. Ive been with Don Jr. several times on Long Island. Was with Lara once at a fund-raising event. She handles herself very well. Shes good with people.

The buzz around a potential junior Trump candidacy heightened last week, when a poll surfaced in New York that showed Lara Trump winning by more than 30 points in a hypothetical Republican primary for Mr. Kings seat.

The poll, conducted this month and paid for by an influential conservative anti-tax group, the Club for Growth, was picked up by the right-wing site, Breitbart, and quickly gained steam.

Word spread rapidly about the poll, said John Jay LaValle, the former chair of the Suffolk County Republican Party and a Trump surrogate in 2016. I have not heard one person say a negative thing about it.

David McIntosh, the president of Club for Growth, acknowledged that Ms. Trump had nothing to do with the poll; he said the committees intent was to show Ms. Trump how popular she was in order to lure her into the open race.

Ms. Trump hails from North Carolina and now lives in Manhattan. She is not currently a candidate on Long Island, or anywhere else.

We often do that to test people who we think would be a good candidate, Mr. McIntosh said of including her in the survey, which the group said cost about $3,000.

Ms. Trump declared herself incredibly honored by the results of the poll but uninterested in running.

For now.

While I would never close the door on anything in the future, right now I am focused on winning a second term for President Trump, Ms. Trump said in a statement.

The poll might have been a lark. Or perhaps it was a way for Club for Growth, staunchly opposed to Mr. Trump in the 2016 election, to ingratiate itself to the president and his supporters. (The group is backing his re-election.)

Some local Republicans saw it as a bit of political score-settling in the way it showed Ms. Trump soundly besting the only other named candidate, Rick Lazio, a former Long Island congressman. Mr. McIntosh called the moderate Mr. Lazio a repeat loser, but added: I like Rick Lazio. Theres no personal animosity there.

Asked about the poll, Mr. Lazio said in an email that to the best of my knowledge I have never met Lara Trump, and added that he had no knowledge as to whether she has ever lived in, been employed in and has had a meaningful involvement with the people of the Second Congressional District.

Whatever the reason for the survey, it underscored the popularity of the Trumps, particularly on Long Island.

The children are popular among party activists in New York, so much so that Republican fund-raisers practically swoon over the idea of getting one of them to headline an event. Donald Trump Jr., has been particularly prolific and lucrative, making several trips this year to Long Island.

Theyve been extremely helpful to the local party, Mr. LaValle said of the presidents family. Theyre certainly a known commodity here.

They come frequently for social and political events, Mr. LaValle said, including on Thursday night, when Donald Trump Jr. headlined a fund-raiser for Representative Lee Zeldin, a Republican who represents eastern Suffolk County.

The event, at a St. James, N.Y., catering hall, drew more than 350 people and raised more than $200,000 for Mr. Zeldins re-election, according to his campaign.

Mr. Trump has repeatedly been floated by supporters as a potential future candidate for president, and, much less realistically, for New York City mayor, a tall order given the citys strong Democratic base and its intense dislike for the president.

Listen, I dont ever rule anything out, Mr. Trump said on CBS This Morning this month when asked about his political future. He declined to comment for this article.

A year earlier, he told The New York Times that he loved the intensity of campaigning, but admitted that he was less sure how much he would love aspects of the actual job.

The fund-raiser on Thursday appeared to be at least the third time that Mr. Trump helped raise money for Mr. Zeldin, who has risen to party prominence as a vocal defender of the president and his family.

Nobody, other than the president himself, brings more star power, excitement and energy than members of the Trump family, Nick Langworthy, the state Republican Party chairman, said in a statement. Its a special phenomenon that no other president has enjoyed, outside of maybe the Kennedys.

At the same time, the political window for Lara Trump or any other Trump relative to run in a place like Long Island may be closing. Democrats now outnumber Republicans among registered voters, making gains in both Nassau and Suffolk Counties.

And the Trump name is almost equally galvanizing among Democrats as it is magnetic among Republicans, and a local race involving one of them could draw big money from activist donors from both parties.

Theres real solid support and real solid opposition to the president, Mr. King said of his district. A tremendous amount of anti-Trump energy.

Ms. Trump could win, he said. At the very least it would be very competitive.

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Could Donald Jr. or Lara Trump Run for Office in New York, and Win? - The New York Times

For Trump, Impeachment Is a Show – The New York Times

The point is proven. The corruption has been established.

Its rather simple: Donald Trump abused his power as president to extort a foreign country into investigating a political rival.

There is no remaining doubt that this happened.

Furthermore, the conspiracy of people involved in the execution of this plan, as well as pursuing the debunked conspiracy theory that it was Ukraine that interfered in the 2016 election to help Hillary Clinton, rather than Russia interfering to help Trump, is also coming more into focus.

It is clear that Trump has committed impeachable offenses. (Some people around him may also have committed prosecutable crimes.) The only remaining question is whether some honorable Republicans might join Democrats in voting for whichever articles of impeachment might be drawn up in the House of Representatives.

At present, it appears that few or none would do so. That is a sad indictment of our country and of the Republican Party.

I have contended from the beginning that impeachment was important regardless of Republican support, regardless of the chances of conviction and removal in the Senate. Impeachment is important because our system of democracy is being tested. The Constitution is being tested. And, not moving to impeach would in a way enshrine abuse of power as a precedent.

And yet, it is still remarkable to see the way partisans are choosing to behave in this moment. It is still remarkable to see the disinformation coming from conservative media. It is still remarkable to see just how many fellow citizens have bought into deception.

This is one of the great successes (if that word can be used in this way) of the Trump presidency: He has succeeded in eroding truth and bending reality among those who support him. He has succeeded in commandeering conservatism and twisting it into something nearly unrecognizable.

And now, all of Trumps supporters and defenders are erecting a protective hedge around him. The cult of Trumpism cant be allowed to fall.

They are devoted to Trumps version of the truth and his version of reality. In it, he is a tough-talking tough guy who uses colorful language and sharp elbows to change things in their interest and in their favor. In this reality, he is unfairly and incessantly maligned by those obsessed with hating him as a person and for his supposed successes. In this reality, Trump is being bullied.

Also, nothing said about him is to be believed, no matter who says it and how much proof is presented. Conversely, believing him, a compulsive liar, happens by default.

For instance, poll results published last month by Monmouth University found that 67 percent of self-identified Republicans and Republican-leaning voters believe Trumps baseless claim that Joe Biden probably did pressure Ukrainian officials to keep them from investigating his sons business interests there, while just 16 percent said Trump made promises or put pressure on Ukraines president to investigate Biden, even though Trump had already admitted it and the partial transcript confirms it.

This is both confounding and frightening. How is a democracy supposed to survive when this many people deny a basic common set of facts? How does one engage in political debate with someone lost in a world of lies?

And of course, this is just as Trump wants it. He has spent his entire life bending the truth and flat-out lying. It was one thing when he did it as a private citizen, to puff up his chest and inflate his wealth. There were no real consequences for the country in the telling of those lies.

But now he has brought his lie loudly tactic to the White House, and he has realized that there is a section of America hungry for a show, willing to believe anything the carnival barker says and be thoroughly entertained by it.

Trump realized something that few people are willing to acknowledge: That politics is theater first. It is about appearance and performance to a disturbing degree. People want a story, a vision, a fascinating protagonist. Politics loves a star.

The derisive clich, Washington is Hollywood for ugly people, coined by Democratic strategist Paul Begala, has lasted so long because there is a grain of truth in it. Its simply another version of Hollywood, where great tales are packaged and sold, where great actors teach people to believe in ephemera.

Its just that the show in Washington controls the national budget and the national arsenal and affects real peoples real lives.

But, Trump knows that the impeachment inquiry can simply be seen as part of the show, and if he can put on a bigger, better show, he can survive it. Trump is not concerned about truth, protocol, tradition or the sanctity of the Constitution.

Trump cares about Trump. Trump cares about the Trump brand and the Trump show. Trump will reduce this country to rubble before he will submit to correction. And, hell portray our destruction as his greatest show.

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.

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For Trump, Impeachment Is a Show - The New York Times

What the Impeachment Hearings Look Like From Europe – The New York Times

HAMBURG, Germany A couple of years ago I took a vacation to Sicily. I had parked my car in a public lot when a local guy approached me to ask for money. I pointed to a sign that read free parking, so why did he think he could demand anything of me? He said that of course I was not obliged to pay him, but if I wanted to make sure my car was undamaged upon my return, Id better be friends with him and give him a couple of euro.

We had a deal.

I thought back to this episode when I watched the Trump impeachment hearings last week. To European eyes, what is on display there is more than just a controversy over whether Donald Trump abused his presidential powers. Rather, it looks like the defining battle between two ideas of America: America as a partner and America as a bully. The bigger question hanging over the entire impeachment question is whether a majority of Americans believe that coercing a country like Ukraine into cooperation for the sake of the Republican Party is acceptable foreign policy.

From everything we know, Mr. Trump put President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine in a damned-if-you-do damned-if-you-dont situation: Either you deliver political ammunition against the Democrats by publicly announcing investigations against the son of Joe Biden, or I will freeze our military assistance to you. To a country at war with Russia, this choice basically meant: become a pawn in my political campaign, or risk serious damage.

Only a slim majority of Americans endorse the proceedings which means that for tens of millions of Americans, Donald Trump did exactly what he is accused of doing, and theyre O.K. with it. Democrats believe it was an abuse of power; everyone else, it seems, believes President Trump was just trying to do a deal.

That view is not surprising. Since the end of the Cold War, America has gained little from the liberal world order on which it spent more dollars, blood and lives than any other nation. Free trade and democracy? They came back to haunt Americas industry when China and its state-subsidized manufacturers outcompeted everyone in the World Trade Organization, without opening its own markets.

A free and united Europe? The continent that America protected and supported for 70 years has profited nicely from integrating low-wage economies into the eurozone, which enabled cheap exports.

A rules-based international order? While the European Union would be happy to include Ukraine, a swing state between liberalism and authoritarianism, into its economic realm, the bloc does little to help defend its neighbor from Russias overwhelming military force. Instead, its up to the United States to deliver the anti-tank missiles. Bad deal, indeed.

And of course, such voters have a point. There are plenty of reasons America should demand more equitable burden sharing and reforms to international rule books, starting with the World Trade Organization.

But thats no excuse for dumping the fundamentals of American leadership in favor of a more transactional, debased form of nation-state influence peddling. The old principles (even if they have not always been honored) would still be worth applying, especially the idea that partnership as opposed to bullying for personal gain creates trust, a trust that creates further partnership, which sets in motion a virtuous circle of ever greater mutual respect and gain that is, ultimately, to everyones benefit.

Listening to Ambassador Bill Taylor at the hearings, a nonpartisan career diplomat last stationed in Kyiv, one of his principled statements seemed to have almost fallen out of time: If we believe that nations get to decide on their own economic, political and security alliances, we must support Ukraine in its fight against its bullying neighbor.

In other words, building a level playing field surely comes at a price for the one who provides the machinery. But it will pay off. Short-term costs can create long-term gains. Wealth is created by non-zero-sum exchanges, as economists say.

Maybe the loss of precisely this belief is what lies at the core of Trumpism: Why care about trust when you can exert coercive power? There is no foreign policy principle involved unless it is that the president, as the sole representative of America abroad, should be able to do whatever he wants. That is why, whatever you think about whether Mr. Trump abused his constitutional powers at home, he certainly violated a core principle of American leadership abroad.

Mr. Trumps Art of the Deal approach to the world is the opposite of what made America great. It replaces trust with suspicion and turns partners into skeptics. It is a global version of the Sicilian world order I encountered in that parking lot everyone, even the smallest con, using whatever they have to advance their interests. Is that what America wants? If not, it needs to put more trust in what used to be its greatest quality: creating trust.

Jochen Bittner is a co-head of the debate section for the weekly newspaper Die Zeit and a contributing opinion writer.

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.

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What the Impeachment Hearings Look Like From Europe - The New York Times

Donald Trump is unpopular in Britain. That’s why he’s being used to attack Boris Johnson – CNN International

Earlier this month, Trump took the unprecedented step of saying not only that he would prefer Boris Johnson's Conservatives to win, but controversially suggested that Johnson should do a pact with the rival Brexit Party, led by Johnson's rival, Nigel Farage.

Ever since the campaign got underway, Trump has been used as a weapon by many of Johnson's opponents -- most notably the main opposition Labour Party.

The claim itself is spurious. Johnson is a man who has just struck a deal with Europe and appears to have shifted significantly toward a friendly relationship with the European Union being his priority. The 500 million figure is easy to pull apart for anyone with access to a smartphone. And Johnson has repeatedly insisted that the NHS will not be on the table in any trade deal with the US.

True or not, it's a message that taps into a bias many voters will already have. "Labour has a structural advantage on the NHS," said Rob Ford, professor in politics at the University of Manchester. "The public simply trusts the Conservatives less than Labour and believes that the Conservatives are more likely to privatize parts of the NHS."

Making this election about the NHS helps Labour in more ways than simply hammering the Prime Minister. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has a confusing Brexit policy and doesn't cope well with questions on his plan. And as Ford explained, "Every voter who is talking about Boris selling the NHS to Trump is probably a voter who isn't talking about Boris getting Brexit done."

An indication of the perceived effectiveness of using Trump as an attack line can be seen in an analysis of paid-for Facebook ads from Labour and other groups that oppose Johnson.

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Donald Trump is unpopular in Britain. That's why he's being used to attack Boris Johnson - CNN International

Donald Trump and allies attack Democratic candidates over impeachment drive – USA TODAY

The impeachment inquiry into Trump and Ukraine revealed new information on Wednesday, and some heated exchanges during the hearings. Hannah Gaber, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON After a day of playing defense on impeachment,President Donald Trump and his allies spent Wednesday night attacking the Democratic presidential candidatesand their views including support for impeachment.

"Democrats Have Been Obsessed With Impeachment from Day 1," said a statement from the "rapid response" arm of Trump's re-election campaign, one of a string ofemails, tweets, and texts sent by the president's supporters during the Democratic debate.

At the end,Trump campaign spokeswomanKayleigh McEnany said the "2020 Democrats were short on solutions and heavy on their unhealthy obsession with taking down President Trump via an illegitimate coup."

In the middle of the proceedings, Trump himself tweeted out his version of the highlights from a critical impeachment hearing earlier in the day, testimony that he said exonerates him.

"That means it's all over," Trump said in the video.

Prior to the debate, Trump tweeted out a news story about poll numbers in Wisconsin.

During the debate in Atlanta, the Democratic candidates for Trump's job cited evidence that he abused power by asking another country, Ukraine, to investigate one of their colleagues, former Vice President Joe Biden.

Impeaching a U.S. president might not be the be-all-end-allfor their career. We explain why this is the case. Just the FAQs, USA TODAY

"We have to establish the principle no one is above the law," said Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass."We have a constitutional responsibility and we need to meet it."

Biden said he has learned one thing from the impeachment hearings: "Donald Trump doesn't want me to be the nominee. That's pretty clear."

Throughout the day and the evening,Trump and his supporters pushed back on testimony from a blockbuster impeachment witness. Ambassador Gordon Sondland said Trump appeared to support the idea of withholding military aid from Ukraine unless it agreed to investigate Biden and his son Hunter Biden, who had business interests in the country.

Trump said he did not know Sondland "very well," and cited the ambassador'stestimony that the president told him he did not want a "quid quo pro" from Ukraine over investigating the Bidens.

Trump's campaign stayed busy throughout the debate, emailing and tweeting responses to the various candidates while arguing that the Democratic Party as a whole is backing impeachment for political reasons.

"The Democrat candidates continue to push the Ukraine scam in a desperate attempt to impeach President Donald Trump before he wins reelection in 2020," said a statement from the Republican National Committee.

As for other issues,Trump and the Republicans said Democrats want to raise taxes, increase government regulations, open the nation's borders, promote unlimited abortion rights, and impose climate change controls that will cost U.S. jobs.

At one point, the campaign unit known as the"Trump War Room" tweeted out video of Democratic candidate Rep. Tulsi Gabbard criticizing some party colleagues. "Our Democratic Party, unfortunately, is not the party that is of, by and for the people," Gabbard said.

The Trump-ites paid particularattention to long-standing Democratic frontrunners Biden, Sen.Elizabeth Warren, and Sen. Bernie Sanders.

They also played up attacks on a new contender: South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, whose poll numbers have shot up in the early contest states of Iowa and New Hampshire.

"Crime is rising, schools are suffering, and police are demoralized in the city Pete Buttigieg has managed for nearly eight years," said an email from the Trump campaign.

For their part, the 2020 Democrats largely defined themselves in opposition to Trump.

"We can deal with Trump'scorruption, but we also have to stand up for the working families of this country," said Sanders, the Vermont senator.

Trump's presidency, particularly the impeachment drive, hovered over the debate.

"It may just be me, but maybe the impeachment hearings have left me sapped for this debate," tweeted David Axelrod, a political adviser to President Barack Obama. "Kind of low energy."

Hours before the event, during a tour of anApple manufacturing plant in Austin, Texas, Trump said hebelieves impeachment is an effort to defeat him in the 2020 election by Democrats who are angry over his 2016 victory.

"They are trying to take it away because they can't do it fairly," Trump said.

Read or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2019/11/20/donald-trump-and-allies-attack-democratic-candidates-over-impeachment/4243252002/

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Donald Trump and allies attack Democratic candidates over impeachment drive - USA TODAY

Trump Pushes South Korea and Japan to Go Nuclear by Demanding They Pay Billions More for US Troops – Daily Beast

SEOULPresident Donald Trumps demands for vast increases in South Korean and Japanese financial contributions to maintain U.S. bases and forces has triggered fears here that hes eager for massive troop withdrawals from the territory of these U.S. allies. And while the scale and the history are very different, the capricious way that Trump ordered U.S. forces pulled out of northeast Syria in October is seen as a cautionary example.

Although some U.S. troops reportedly are back in action in Syria, Trump created murderous confusion when he suddenly decided to pull about 1,000 of them out on Oct. 6, betraying longtime Kurdish allies beleaguered by the Turks, Syrians, Russians, and ISIS guerrillas. The overwhelming concern here is that the impetuous and ill-informed action in Syria was a rehearsal for much greater reductions in U.S. forces in northeast Asia. Trump has questioned the need for them, and their cost, for many years.

My Korean colleagues worry that the Syria withdrawal could also be applied to Korea, and potentially with similar very negative consequences, says Bruce Bennett, senior researcher at RAND Corp. Actions like the Syria withdrawal cause our allies to worry that they could be next, and that worry undermines the strength of our alliances.

The U.S. role in Korea was put to the test last week when James DeHart, chief U.S. negotiator on the bases, staged a precipitous walkout after two hours getting nowhere in a meeting here with South Koreas negotiator.

South Korea contributed approximately $900 million this year to the bases, up 8 percent from 2018. But Trump wants to up the price to Seoul by 400 percent to $5 billion, a figure he seems to have pulled out of thin air and that the Pentagon has had trouble justifying. (As MIT Prof. Vipin Narang told CNN in a memorable remark, Nothing says I love you like a shakedown.)

DeHart, Trumps negotiator, read a brief statement saying South Koreas counter-proposal to Trumps demand for raising the South Korean outlay was not responsive to our request for fair and equitable burden-sharing. Thus we cut short our participation in the talks in hopes the Koreans would put forward new proposals.

Maybe the Trump team thinks this is just the way things are done here on the peninsula. DeHarts remarks bear an uncanny resemblance to those of the North Korean negotiator who broke off talks in Stockholm last month with U.S. nuclear negotiator Stephen Biegun, claiming the U.S. had added nothing to the dialogue on the Norths nukes and missiles.

What will the rest of the world conclude about the value of an alliance with the U.S., and what will the world conclude about the need for national nuclear weapon programs?

Korea expert Bruce Bennett at RAND

Its not only the U.S. presence in South Korea thats imperiled; bases also are in doubt in Japan, where conservative Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is balking at Trumps demand for a $4 billion increase in its annual contribution.

Bruce Bennett at RAND raises the question of who has military superiority in the region if the U.S. breaks its historic alliances. North Korea has 1.1 million troops plus 30 to 60 nuclear warheads, he notes, while South Koreas armed forces, bereft of nukes, will be down to 365,000 by 2022.

If the North is in a position of dominance, Bennett asks, what will the rest of the world conclude about the value of an alliance with the U.S., and what will the world conclude about the need for national nuclear weapon programs? Such a move could well lead to the end of effective U.S. nuclear nonproliferation efforts."

During his 2016 presidential campaign, Trump seemed to embrace the idea that South Korea and Japan should have their own nuclear weapons to defend against North Korea. At some point, he told Anderson Cooper in a CNN town hall, we have to say, you know what, were better off if Japan protects itself against this maniac in North Korea, were better off, frankly, if South Korea is going to start to protect itself.... Wouldnt you rather in a certain sense have Japan have nuclear weapons when North Korea has nuclear weapons?... Wouldnt you rather have Japan, perhaps, theyre over there, theyre very close, theyre very fearful of North Korea.

[Trump] truly believes that 'free rider' stuff he's been saying since the 1980s.

Van Jackson, author of 'On the Brink: Trump, Kim, and the Threat of Nuclear War'

By law Trump cannot arbitrarily slash the number of U.S. troops in Korea, now about 28,500, to below 22,000 without talking to the South Koreans and proving the drawdown wont compromise the alliance or defense of the South. Trump, however, has said repeatedly that he believes South Korea and Japan can fend for themselves and American forces are no longer needed.

The danger is Trump means what he says, but his friend Kim Jong Un is not cutting him much slack. On Monday, nine years after North Korean artillery killed four South Koreans on an island in the Yellow Sea, the Norths state media reported Kim had presided over an artillery exercise on a nearby islandas menacing as the Norths recent short-range missile tests in view of its proximity to South Korean territory but apparently not much of a worry for POTUS.

Trump is unafraid to push to the wire and beyond on cost-sharing negotiations with Korea and Japan because he believes he has all the leverage, says Victor Cha at Georgetown University. If they dont want to pay, he will pull them out.

Cha, who served on the National Security Council during the presidency of George W. Bush, bases this conviction on what he sees as Trumps unappreciation of the benefits of having allies around the world. His outlook as a businessman, he observes, leads him to a monetization of foreign policy in general.

Trumps tough bargaining position throws into doubt the future of the delicate alliance relationships that the U.S. has had since the Korean War to ward off another North Korean assault on South Koreaand possible Chinese intervention, too. Backing up U.S. forces in Korea, the U.S. has 50,000 troops in Japan, including a Marine division on Okinawa, plus more air and naval forces on Guam.

What we need to do is to change the regime in North Korea. Thats why were here today.

Otto Warmbier's father, Fred Warmbier, addressing a rally in Seoul

He truly believes that free rider stuff hes been saying since the 1980s, says Van Jackson, author of On the Brink: Trump, Kim, and the Threat of Nuclear War. He thinks were being taken to the cleaners by our allies, he doesnt get the security value of alliances or forward military presence, and the only acceptable redress for his grievance is maximal rent-seeking.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper, on a recent visit here, said South Korea is a wealthy country and could and should pay more to help offset the cost of defense, but were not threatening our allies over this. Jackson, who now lectures at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand, says he would be willing to bet Trump pulls a troop withdrawal stunt sometime in the next year if South Korea doesnt make some huge concessions.

The issue arouses intense fears and debate among South Koreans. Not only conservatives but also middle-of-the-roaders who supported President Moon Jae-in in the Candlelight Revolution of 2016 and 2017 are increasingly disillusioned by his policy of appeasing North Koreas leader Kim Jong Un in the quest for reconciliation. And the concern intensifies as the American defensive shield appears to be threatened.

At a rally Saturday in central Seoul, several hundred thousand people waving American and South Korean flags shouted slogans denouncing Moon.

There, Fred and Cindy Warmbier, the parents of Otto Warmbier, who was jailed in North Korea nearly four years ago for stealing a poster near the end of a brief tourist trip to Pyongyang, described their sons torture before he was sent home to die in June 2017. We look forward to working with you to solve the problem of North Korea, said Fred Warmbier, whose words were translated over mega-loudspeakers to thunderous applause. What we need to do is to change the regime in North Korea. Thats why were here today.

In the crowd, Ahn Chang, who had been jailed for refusing to leave a government office while protesting Moons policies, worried about whatever Trump will do. I am very afraid he will pull out troops, says Ahn. Unlike typical U.S. presidents, hes against this whole Korean-American alliance. If he pulled out troops, we are left alone to fight.

Ahn believes South Korean leftists have fallen for North Korean propaganda and wont stand up against attack from the North. The leftists are brain-washed, he says. We are already losing because of the lies they were telling to the people.

Moons real stance, however, may be somewhat ambivalent. On Friday, his government announced it would not take the controversial step of withdrawing from its deal for exchanging military intelligence information with Japan, as it had threatened to do. A Moon spokesman said South Korea would remain committed to GSOMIA (an acronym pronounced Gee-soh-mee-ya, for General Security of Military Intelligence Agreement) for the sake of national interest.

But South Korea will continue to press Japan to do away with constraints on export of vital chemicals and other equipment imposed after Koreas supreme court ruled that Nippon Steel and others had to compensate Koreans forced to work for the Japanese as de facto slave labor in World War II.

The sense is that Moon and others would not be thrilled by a U.S. decision to cut down the number of U.S. troops while North Korea shows no signs of scaling back, much less giving up, its nuclear and missile program.In fact, some analysts believe Trump would hesitate for fear of the rising power of China, which supports North Korea.

We know Trump doesnt want to spend money for alliances, says Choi Jin-wook, former director of the Korea Institute of National Unification, but he cannot withdraw U.S. troops from South Korea and Japan because of China.

But, really, theres no telling what Trump really has in mind. He does not seem to care about the post-World War II consensus on the U.S.-built liberal world order, says Daniel Pinkston, a longtime Korea analyst and lecturer at Troy University. He and a large part of his coalition view the liberal world order as rigged or ripping off the U.S. They would would rather ruin it and be spoilers.

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Trump Pushes South Korea and Japan to Go Nuclear by Demanding They Pay Billions More for US Troops - Daily Beast

Trump says FBI tried to ‘overthrow the presidency’ – The Guardian

Donald Trump has long attacked as a hoax and a witch-hunt the FBIs investigation into ties between Russia and his 2016 presidential campaign.

On Friday night, he duly seized on news reports that an FBI lawyer is suspected of altering a document related to surveillance of former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page, alleging the FBI tried to overthrow the presidency.

The allegation is part of a justice department inspector general review of the FBIs Russia investigation, one of the most politically sensitive investigations in the history of the bureau which was ultimately taken over by special counsel Robert Mueller and resulted in charges against six Trump associates and more than two dozen Russians.

The justice department inspector general, Michael Horowitz, is expected to release his report on 9 December. Witnesses in the last two weeks have been invited in to see draft sections.

The report, centered in part on the use of a secret surveillance warrant to monitor the communications of a former Trump adviser, is likely to revive debate about an investigation that has shadowed Trumps presidency since the beginning.

It will be released amid a House impeachment inquiry into Trumps efforts to press Ukraines president to investigate Democratic rival Joe Biden at the same time military aid was being withheld.

Trump and his supporters are likely to seize on any findings of mistakes or bad judgment to support their claims of a biased investigation. Supporters of the FBI are likely to hold up as vindication any findings that the investigation was done by the book or free of political considerations.

The New York Times and the Washington Post have reported that the investigation is expected to find mistakes by lower-level officials within the FBI but will not accuse senior leaders of being motivated by political bias.

The allegation against the lawyer was first reported by CNN. The Post subsequently reported that the conduct of the FBI employee did not alter Horowitzs finding that the surveillance application of Page had a proper legal and factual basis, though the lawyer was forced out.

This was spying on my campaign something that has never been done in the history of our country, Trump told Fox & Friends on Friday. They tried to overthrow the presidency.

A person familiar with the case who was not authorized to discuss the matter by name and spoke to AP only on the condition of anonymity confirmed the allegation.

Spokespeople for the FBI and the inspector general declined to comment.

The FBI obtained a secret surveillance warrant in 2016 to monitor the communications of Page, who was never charged in the Russia investigation or accused of wrongdoing. The warrant, which was renewed several times and approved by different judges in 2016 and early 2017, has been one of the most contentious elements of the Russia investigation and was the subject of memos last year issued by Democrats and Republicans on the House intelligence committee.

Republicans have attacked the credibility of the warrant application since it cited information derived from a dossier of opposition research compiled by Christopher Steele, a former British spy whose work was financed by Democrats and the Hillary Clinton campaign.

They got my warrant a fraudulent warrant, I believe to spy on myself as a way of getting into the Trump campaign, Page said in an interview with Foxs Mornings with Maria. There has been a continued cover-up to this day. We still dont have the truth, but hopefully, well get that soon.

The FBI director, Chris Wray, has told Congress he did not consider the FBI surveillance to be spying and that he has no evidence the FBI illegally monitored Trumps campaign.

The attorney Ggeneral, William Barr, has said he believed spying did occur, but he also made clear at a Senate hearing earlier this year he had no specific evidence that any surveillance was illegal or improper. Barr has appointed the US attorney John Durham to investigate how intelligence was collected, and that investigation has since become criminal in nature, a person familiar with the matter has said.

Trump insists that members of the Obama administration at the highest levels were spying on his 2016 campaign.

Personally, I think it goes all the way I think this goes to the highest level, he said in the Fox interview. I hate to say it. I think its a disgrace. They thought I was going to win and they said, How can we stop him?

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Trump says FBI tried to 'overthrow the presidency' - The Guardian

Heres Why Michael Bloomberg Is 17 Times Richer Than Donald Trump – Forbes

Michael Bloomberg boasts a net worth 17 times greater than Donald Trump's.

Everyone knows there is a big gap between the rich and the poor in the United States, but theres also a big gap between the rich and rich. Take the current presidential race. Donald Trump is worth an estimated $3.1 billion. Lots of money compared to almost everyone else in the world. But a drop in the bucket for Trumps latest competitor, Michael Bloomberg, who is sitting on a $53 billion fortune of his own.

When managed properly, big fortuneslike any set of investmentscan grow exponentially. Bloomberg first landed on the Forbes 400 list of Americas richest people with a fortune of $350 million or more in 1992, after his Bloomberg terminals, with their data on global stocks, bonds and more, started populating Wall Street. At that time, Trump was fighting to save his empire after a debt-fueled buying spree brought him to the brink of collapse.

Trump mounted a comeback and returned to the Forbes 400 in 1996, with an estimated $450 million fortune. Bloomberg was worth roughly $1 billion by then, based on the value of his stake in his financial data business.

Over the ensuing 23 years, Trumps net worth compounded at an annual rate of 8.8%, outperforming the 6.7% return of the S&P 500 stock index over the same period. Most of Trumps gain came in the first year, from 1996 to 1997, when his fortune jumped from an estimated $450 million to $1.4 billion. Bloombergs growth was biggerand much more consistentcompounding at a rate of 18.8% a year.

Those outsized returns, the result of a booming business, explain how Bloomberg got so much richer than Trump, whoaside from high-profile forays into television and licensingmostly turned into a manager of aging real estate assets. Bloomberg LP swelled over the past several decades, adding a business and financial news reporting operation. In 2009 Bloomberg LP bought struggling BusinessWeek magazine from McGraw-Hill, reportedly for around $5 million plus assumption of nearly $32 million in debt. Today, Bloomberg LP has estimated revenues of $10 billion, and Michael Bloomberg owns 88% of the company.

Bloomberg LP has thrown off hefty profits, and Michael Bloomberg has funneled $8 billion to philanthropic and activist causes, including Johns Hopkins University and gun control efforts.

Besting someone in business takes a different set of skills than beating someone in an election. Over the next year, Bloomberg, a former three-term New York City mayor, will get a chance to see how he fares against Trump in politics. To back him up, hell have the kind of war chest Donald Trump could only dream of.

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Heres Why Michael Bloomberg Is 17 Times Richer Than Donald Trump - Forbes

Trump is lying about the new Apple factory – The Verge

In advance of Trumps factory tour today, I took a look at the strange relationship thats developed between Tim Cook and Donald Trump over the past three years. One of the things that popped up was one specific story that Trump would tell about Apple, in rally after rally and meeting after meeting. The idea was that Trump had somehow induced the company to build a new factory in the US, through some combination of tax cuts and trade policy, which was both very politically useful and also very much not true.

Today, perhaps not surprisingly, he told the lie again.

Were seeing the beginning of a very powerful and important plant, Trump said at the factory. Anybody that followed my campaign, I would always talk about Apple, that I want to see Apple building plants in the United States. And thats whats happening.

This is not true for a couple reasons one of them nitpicky and one of them a lot more serious. The nitpicky problem is that Apple isnt actually building a manufacturing plant. The company is building a new campus in Austin, but its miles away from the factory and the jobs are going to be very similar to the kind of white-collar design and engineering work that Apple does in Cupertino. Apple doesnt do its own manufacturing, and the plant Trump is standing in belongs to a contractor called Flex Ltd (formerly Flextronics).

But the bigger problem is that what Flex is doing isnt anything new. This particular factory has been manufacturing Mac Pros since 2013, when Cook first announced it would assemble them in the United States. Thats before Trump took office. So the idea that were seeing the beginning of something, or that Trump has done something during his presidency to bring about this particular instance of US manufacturing, just doesnt hold water.

Trump is talking as if Apple has created a brand-new factory in Texas to build Mac Pros. If all you saw was a five-second clip on the news, thats probably the impression you would get but it just isnt true.

People often get very worked up about whether a politician is technically lying when they say something that isnt true, or if theyve just stumbled into falsehood as if accidentally falling off a chair. But when you say the same false thing over and over again for a year and a half, its hard to call it anything else.

Speaking of which, Trump just aired the lie on Twitter as well:

You can see the video footage of Trumps tour for yourself below.

Things actually get worse if you keep watching. Later in the video, Trump takes back the mic for a quick aside on how his tariff policy has benefited the factory.

The nice part is, he doesnt have to worry about tariffs, Trump says. When you build it here, you dont have to worry about tariffs.

This is also not true.

In fact, Apple is currently paying tariffs on a number of Mac Pro parts, which must be imported from China to Texas before the final device can be assembled. (Ten of Apples requested tariff exemptions were issued earlier this year, but five others were denied, including taxes on the cooling system, charging cable, and various circuit boards.) Because Trumps current array of tariffs are levied on components but not finished devices, Apple actually doesnt pay tariffs on the iPhones and MacBooks that are assembled in China.

The net effect is a tax on electronics assembled in the US. Its more expensive to assemble Mac Pros in the US, not just because of labor and production costs, but explicitly because of the tariffs Trump has placed on intermediary goods. Apple even briefly flirted with moving Mac Pro production back to China, as a way of driving home the cost of those tariffs, although the company ultimately backed down.

The structure of those taxes could change in the future, and a tariff on phones and other electronics has already been formally proposed, although it keeps getting delayed. On the other hand, talks with China could be so productive that earlier rounds of tariffs are lifted completely. With that much uncertainty, its hard for anyone to be sure about the best way to arrange a supply chain.

But the result is an alarming level of falsehood even by Trump standards. He claimed to have brought Apple manufacturing to the United States while standing in a factory that had already been building Apple products for six years, and one that had nearly lost the gig not benefited because of Trumps trade policy.

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Trump is lying about the new Apple factory - The Verge

Make Any Document Dumber With This Font Based on Trump’s Handwriting – Hyperallergic

Do you have the best words? Then you need the best font, Tiny Hand by Mark Davis. (All images courtesy Mark Davis)

As impeachment rears its head, were all hoping the writing is on the wall for Donald Trump, but last week the nation was temporarily diverted by the writing on his notepad. Donald Trumps stupid handwriting, last the subject of ridicule in 2017 when he took an excessively long time to sign his first executive order, has since taken a backseat to the many other stupid things about him. But his oversized, childish script recently made an appearance as he attempted to rebut some incriminating testimony by Ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland in the House Intelligence Committees impeachment inquiry hearings.

Some internet pundits including the professionally hilarious Patton Oswalt observed that the Presidents basic-ass talking points were lyrical, triggering a spate of fantastic musical send-ups in the style of Morrisey, the Ramones, and every emo band ever. But many chose to focus on the truly odd proportions (and perhaps sinister implications) of the handwriting itself.

Luckily enough for anyone hoping to make their writing look dumber, designer Mark Davis has adapted the Presidents cartoonish handwriting into a custom font for Buzzfeed, dubbed Tiny Hand, which is available for free download. The font was originally created for a fake Trump memo in a satirical piece on Buzzfeed, and then Deputy Art Director Ben King went back to the well for some in-depth handwriting analysis in a second article.

Trumps notes, written to friends and enemies alike, were almost always written at an angle, scrawled on top of printouts of articles from the internet, wrote King. I was struck not only by the peculiar delivery of the notes, but also by the idiosyncratic way Trump writes the alphabet. At that moment it was clear to me as it surely must be to you, dear reader I had to make a font based on Donald Trumps handwriting.

The task fell to Davis, who cranked it out in about two days, according to a statement on the Tiny Hand portfolio on his website. That is incidentally the same amount of time the President spent learning to read and write.

Trumps handwriting is unusual, said Davis, in an email interview with Hyperallergic. He has a quite distinctive and unusual hand, I would almost relate it to the lettering we would associate with Walt Disneys signature. Some might even call it comical in its own right.

So download, and proudly make stupid banners, mock up stupid holiday cards, or best of all, send letters to Republican congresspeople, urging them to remove Trump from office using Trumps own stupid block script as a motivator.

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Make Any Document Dumber With This Font Based on Trump's Handwriting - Hyperallergic

Trump says US forces cornered IS leader in dead-end tunnel – The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi , the shadowy leader of the Islamic State group who presided over its global jihad and became arguably the worlds most wanted man, died after U.S. special operators cornered him during a raid in Syria, President Donald Trump said Sunday.

Last night, the United States brought the worlds No. 1 terrorist leader to justice, Trump announced at the White House, providing graphic details of al-Baghdadis final moments at the helm of the militant organization. Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is dead.

In a national address, Trump described the nighttime airborne raid in Syrias northwestern Idlib province, with American special operations forces flying over heavily militarized territory controlled by multiple nations and forces. No U.S. troops were killed in the operation, Trump said.

The death of al-Baghdadi was a milestone in the fight against IS, which brutalized swaths of Syria and Iraq and sought to direct a global campaign from a self-declared caliphate. A yearslong campaign by American and allied forces led to the recapture of the groups territorial holding, but its violent ideology has continued to inspire attacks.

As U.S. troops bore down on al-Baghdadi, he fled into a dead-end tunnel with three of his children, Trump said, and detonated a suicide vest, killing himself and the children. He was a sick and depraved man, and now hes gone, Trump said. He died like a dog, he died like a coward.

Al-Baghdadis identity was confirmed by a DNA test conducted onsite, Trump said.

Trump had teased a major announcement late Saturday, tweeting that Something very big has just happened! By the morning, he was thanking Russia, Turkey, Syria and Iraq, as well as Kurdish fighters in Syria for their support.

The operation marks a significant foreign policy success for Trump, coming at one of the lowest points in his presidency as he is mired in impeachment proceedings and facing widespread Republican condemnation for his Syria policy.

The recent pullback of U.S. troops he ordered from northeastern Syria raised a storm of bipartisan criticism in Washington that the militant group could regain strength after it had lost vast stretches of territory it had once controlled. Trump said the troop pullout had nothing to do with this.

Planning for the operation began weeks ago, Trump said, after the U.S. gained unspecified intelligence on al-Baghdadis whereabouts. Eight military helicopters flew for more than an hour over territory controlled by Russian and Syrian forces, Trump said, before landing under gunfire at the compound.

Trump vividly described the raid and took extensive questions from reporters for more than 45 minutes Sunday. He said U.S. forces breached the walls of the building because the doors were booby-trapped and chased al-Baghdadi into the tunnel, which partially collapsed after al-Baghdadi detonated the suicide vest. Many homes in Syria, which has been riven by civil war since 2011, have subterranean tunnels or shelters from the fighting.

Trump also revealed that U.S. forces spent roughly two hours on the ground collecting valuable intelligence. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Sunday that the U.S.-led Coalition launched at least one airstrike in western Aleppo aimed at Abu Hassan al-Muhajer, an aide to al=Baghdadi.

Trump said he watched the operation from the White House Situation room as it played out live as though you were watching a movie. Trump suggested he may order the release of the video so that the world knows al-Baghdadi did not die of a hero and spent his final moments crying, whimpering and screaming.

Trump approved the operation Saturday morning after receiving actionable intelligence, Vice President Mike Pence told CBS Face the Nation.

Trump had spent Friday night at Camp David and flew by helicopter Saturday morning to golf at his private Virginia club. He then returned to the White House.

Trump said he teased the announcement as soon as American forces landed safely in a third-country. An Iraqi security official confirmed the U.S. aircraft took off from the Al-Asad air base in western Iraq, where Trump visited American forces in December.

Trump said he did not follow convention in informing leaders on Capitol Hill, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., before the raid, saying he was fearful of leaks.

Pelosi said the House must be briefed on this raid, which the Russians but not top congressional leadership were notified of in advance, and on the administrations overall strategy in the region.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper said the mission was to capture or kill the IS leader. While Trump had initially said no Americans were injured, Esper said two service members suffered minor injuries but have already returned to duty. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said a military dog chasing al-Baghdadi was seriously wounded by an explosive blast.

In his address from the White House, Trump suggested that the killing of al-Baghdadi was more significant than the 2011 operation ordered by his predecessor, President Barack Obama, that killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, who was responsible for the 9/11 attacks. Trump later repeated a false claim that he predicted the threat posed by bin Laden in a book before the 2001 attacks.

He also praised Russia and the Syrian government American foes and defended his ban on entry to the U.S. from some Muslim-majority countries. He called European allies a tremendous disappointment for not repatriating foreign IS fighters.

Trumps national security adviser, Robert OBrien, said al-Baghdadis remains would be dealt with in accordance with Islamic law and buried at sea in the same way that bin Ladens were.

Praise for the military operation was swift, coming from American allies and even the presidents political opponents. In congratulating the U.S. forces and intelligence officials, but not Trump, former Vice President Joe Biden warned that IS remains a threat to the American people and our allies.

But one counterterrorism expert said al-Baghdadis death is not the end of IS.

Counterterrorism must be part of the strategy, but reducing the strategy to just special operations raids and drone targeting, as this administration seems to want to, guarantees a forever war, said Katherine Zimmerman of the American Enterprise Institute. She said extremists strength and staying power lies in the support they have locally among the disenfranchised and economically deprived populations.

Al-Baghdadis presence in the village a few kilometers from the Turkish border was surprising, even if some IS leaders are believed to have fled to Idlib after losing their last sliver of territory in Syria to U.S.-allied Kurdish forces in March.

Iraqi officials said Sunday they passed information that helped ascertain al-Baghdadis whereabouts to the U.S. from the wife of an Iraqi aide to al-Baghdadi, as well as al-Baghdadis brother-in-law, who was recently arrested by the Iraqis. The officials werent authorized to publicly discuss intelligence operations and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Al-Baghdadi had led IS for the last five years, presiding over its ascendancy as it cultivated a reputation for beheadings and attracted tens of thousands of followers to a sprawling and self-styled caliphate in Iraq and Syria. He remained among the few IS commanders still at large despite multiple claims in recent years about his death and even as his so-called caliphate dramatically shrank, with many supporters who joined the cause either imprisoned or jailed.

His exhortations were instrumental in inspiring attacks in the heart of Europe and in the United States. Shifting away from the airline hijackings and other mass-casualty attacks that came to define al-Qaida, al-Baghdadi and other IS leaders supported smaller-scale acts of violence that would be harder for law enforcement to prepare for and prevent.

They encouraged jihadists who could not travel to the caliphate to kill where they were, with whatever weapon they had at their disposal. In the U.S., multiple extremists have pledged their allegiance to al-Baghdadi on social media, including a woman who along with her husband committed a 2015 massacre at a holiday party in San Bernardino, California.

With a $25 million U.S. bounty on his head, al-Baghdadi was far less visible in recent years, releasing only sporadic audio recordings, including one just last month in which he called on members of the extremist group to do all they could to free IS detainees and women held in jails and camps.

The purported audio was his first public statement since last April, when he appeared in a video for the first time in five years. In that video, which included images of the extremist leader sitting in a white room with three others, al-Baghdadi praised Easter Day bombings that killed more than 250 people and called on militants to be a thorn against their enemies.

___

Associated Press writers Eric Tucker and Jill Colvin in Washington, Zeina Karam in Beirut, Qassim Abdul-Zahra in Baghdad and Zeynep Bilginsoy in Istanbul contributed to this report.

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Trump says US forces cornered IS leader in dead-end tunnel - The Associated Press

South still supports Trump, but base of disapproval is also steady – NBC News

JACKSON, Miss. The South is continuing to stick with President Donald Trump, though 47 percent disapprove of how hes handling his job, according to results from a new NBC News|SurveyMonkey poll.

That's a slight uptick from the 45 percent who disapproved of the president in the July poll. The new poll found that 52 percent approve of the president's work.

But support for impeachment in the region does not mirror that disapproval number. Only 44 percent said Trump should be impeached and removed from office, while 54 percent opposed it.

NBC News|SurveyMonkey polled voters and residents in 11 states across the South, but the data comes during a particularly interesting time for Mississippi, which is in the midst of a hotly contested governors race.

The president is expected to visit the state on Friday to help campaign for the Republican nominee, Tate Reeves, the state's lieutenant governor. Donald Trump Jr. also joined Reeves at several events over the weekend.

Reeves who has closely tied his campaign to Trump and his family has struggled against the Democratic nominee, state Attorney General Jim Hood, in a race that would be a layup for most Republicans in the deeply red state.

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Its particularly noteworthy as the current governor, Phil Bryant, a Republican, maintains an approval rating of 69 percent.

Nevertheless, polls throughout the race have shown Hood, the only statewide elected Democrat in Mississippi, remaining close to Reeves.

The new poll comes two weeks before the Nov. 5 election. Reeves has outspent his opponent $8.3 million to $3.1 million and holds a single-digit lead, 47 percent to Hoods 40 percent, well outside the nearly 2-percentage-point margin of error.

The Reeves campaign did not respond to requests for comment. The Hood campaign declined to comment.

Trumps presence could give Reeves a needed boost: Forty-one percent of Mississippians said the presidents endorsement would play an important factor in who they decide to vote for in November.

Reeves campaign is banking on that.

Theres no doubt that conservatives are rallying behind our efforts, Reeves said at a press event NBC News attended on Wednesday.

Obviously, President Trump [and] Vice President Pences involvement in our campaign is helpful. With respect to that, were honored to have the president coming to Mississippi in the next 10 days.

But Mississippians also hunger for policy answers at a time when the state has seen its economic growth sputter and stop at or below about 2 percent every year since the recession, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

As the state faces major questions on whether it should take federal assistance and expand Medicaid, how to fund necessary fixes to its faltering infrastructure and how to increase teacher pay and retain talent, 54 percent of Mississippians said those three issues should be the next governor's top priorities, and more than 60 percent said they would be willing to pay more taxes to support public schools and fund infrastructure improvements.

On Wednesday, however, Reeves insisted that taxes were not the answer but provided few proposed solutions himself.

We believe you know how to spend your money better than any government entity ever will, he said next to a sign that listed the cost of Hoods policy proposals, which includes expanding Medicaid, providing statewide pre-K and increasing teacher pay and education funding.

The NBC News|SurveyMonkey Southern Regional Poll was conducted online from Oct. 8 to Oct. 22, 2019. Results are among a regional sample of 9,050 adults aged 18 and over, including 7,905 registered voters. The regional sample includes respondents who live in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas or Virginia. The error estimate for registered voters is plus or minus 1.9 percentage points.

Phil McCausland is an NBC News reporter focused on the rural-urban divide.

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South still supports Trump, but base of disapproval is also steady - NBC News

Washington Post: Company with ties to Trump’s brother given government contract – CNN

The government contract from the US Marshals Service went to the company CertiPath, which has been owned since 2013 by a firm with ties to Trump's younger brother, Robert Trump, the Post reports.

An anonymous rival bidder filed a complaint with the Justice Department's office of the inspector general claiming that CertiPath did not disclose "one of the President's closest living relatives stood to benefit financially from the transaction," according to a copy of the July 22 complaint letter obtained by the Post.

CertiPath, based in Reston, Virginia,specializes in digital security and verifying online identities, the Post reports, and the contract was to provide security for federal courthouses and cell blocks.

The complaint reads, according to the Post: "The circumstances of this contract award, and what appear to be CertiPath's effortsto obscure Mr. Robert Trump's financial interest in the company even as it trades on the Trumpname, present the appearance of preferential treatment for those who are close to the President." The complaint was sent by the Washington law firm Venable on behalf of the client, the Post reports.

Venable lawyer Dismas N. Locaria, who signed the complaint letter, declined to disclose to the Post the name of his client. The Post left a phone message for Robert Trump through Trump Management that was not returned.

The president and founder of CertiPath, Jeff Nigriny, said in a statement to the Post that Robert Trump"is one investor in an entity which holds a minority interest in Certipath" and that"he is exclusively a passive investor, has no management role whatsoever, is not an officer or director, and his name has never been used or mentioned by CertiPath in any solicitation for a government contract, whether state or federal."

"Certipath has never used the Trump name in any way, and to do so would be completely inconsistent with our business practices and ethics," Nigriny added.

The contract has been awarded to CertiPath but so far no money has been paid out, the Post reports. Another company, NMR Consulting, also filed a protest against the bid with the Government Accountability Office on July 1, according to the newspaper. That protest led to a "stop work order" on the contract, Drew Wade, a spokesman for the US Marshals Service, told the Post.

"There's no money being spent with CertiPath until this issue is resolved," Wade told the Post.

Wade said the NMR complaint is about a separate issue and "has nothing to do with the president or his relationships," according to the Post. NMR did not respond to calls and emails from the Post seeking comment.

Wade told the Post the US Marshals Service had no knowledge of the allegations that a member of the President's family has a financial interest in CertiPath, and did not have knowledge of the complaint to the inspector general.

The inspector general has not initiated a review of the matter, the Post reports, citing a public listing of their reviews regarding the Marshals Service. A spokeswoman for the inspector general declined to comment further to the Post.

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Washington Post: Company with ties to Trump's brother given government contract - CNN

Was a Photo of Trump in the White House Situation Room Staged? – Snopes.com

U.S. President Donald Trumps announcement on the morning of Oct. 27, 2019, that a military operation in Syria had resulted in the death of Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi prompted many comparisons and contrasts with President Barack Obamas similar announcement several years earlier about the raid in Pakistan that had killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. In particular, attention focused on photographs taken of the two presidents with members of their national security teams in White House situation rooms while those operations were in progress:

As some critics noted, in the former photograph Trump is in the center of the photograph at the head of the table, everyone pictured is dressed neatly in suit and tie, the subjects are all looking into the camera and appear to be emotionally composed, and the table curiously contains a bunch of colorful ethernet cables that dont appear to be connect to anything. By contrast, in the latter photograph Obama is neither in the center of the pictured nor seated at the head of the table, most of the persons present (including Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, and members of Obamas national security team) are lacking suit coats and/or ties, no one pictured is looking at the camera, and the tension felt by those present in the room is palpable.

These differences led some critics to claim that Trumps situation room photograph had been staged, and that (just as had been falsely claimed of Obama several years earlier), Trump had actually been out golfing when the operation got underway. Particularly, Pete Souza, the official White House photographer who snapped the famous situation room photograph of Obama seen above, suggested that timestamps indicated the former photograph to have been taken well after the raid that led to al-Baghdadis death:

Many online commenters also seized on records and reports supposedly showing that Trump was on a golf outing until just after 3 p.m. on Oct. 26 and didnt arrive at the White House until 4:18 p.m., past the reported time the raid in Syria was taking place:

However, Souza later backed off his previous tweet, maintaining that he hadnt said the situation room photograph was staged, and that its timestamp meshed with Trumps broad statement about timing:

Moreover, these claims of a staged photograph are based on the premise that the raid in Syria was underway or had concluded by 3:30 p.m. EDT on Oct. 26, which doesnt appear to be the case. New Yorker reporter Ben Taub, for example, noted the first on-the-ground posts about a helicopter raid in Idlib started surfacing shortly after 11:00 p.m. local time in Syria. As well, a Time/AP news report described an attack carried out by a squadron of eight helicopters accompanied by a warplane in the Barisha area north of Idlib city, after midnight:

Idlib, Syria, was six hours ahead of Eastern time on the day the raid occurred, so if the operation was indeed unfolding between 11:00 p.m. and midnight in Syria, that would correspond to the interval from 5 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. in Washington, D.C., at a time when the situation room photographs metadata indicated it was snapped.

Were awaiting more precise information about the timing of various events that day, but the available evidence does not seem to support the notion that Trump was away from the White House during the entirety of the Syria operation, and that the photograph of him with his national security team in the White House Situation Room was therefore taken after its conclusion.

Whether the photograph was staged in the sense that its subjects were allegedly posing for the camera rather than being captured naturally and candidly is not something that can be determined from metadata and timing of events.

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Was a Photo of Trump in the White House Situation Room Staged? - Snopes.com

The Trump Administrations War on the Government Is an Autocratic Attempt – The New Yorker

On Friday morning, when I logged on to the Times Web site, two headlines were stacked on the left of the home page. The top one reported that the Justice Department had launched a criminal probe into its own investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election. The headline directly below announced that the Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos, had been found in contempt of court for continuingin direct contravention of judicial decisionsto collect student-loan payments from former students of defunct for-profit colleges. Those headlines were a tiny snapshot of the war between the Trump Administration and the American government as it used to be constituted.

In other news last week: the acting Ambassador to Ukraine, William B. Taylor, Jr., testified about waging a losing battle against Donald Trump and his people to pursue a foreign agenda consistent with government policy and practice. House Republicans stormed a closed impeachment-inquiry hearing in a bizarre direct action of Congress members against congressional practice. And Trumps personal attorney William Consovoy argued in court that his client is immune from any prosecutionincluding, hypothetically, for murdering someone in the middle of Fifth Avenueas long as he is President. These events provided a slightly larger snapshot of Trumps continued war on the government.

Trumpian news has a way of being shocking without being surprising. Most of what we have learned in the course of the last week, or in the month since the impeachment probe in Congress began, or in the more than thousand days since Trump was inaugurated, is consistent with his campaign rhetoricor, rather, his campaign rages against the government, the courts, and Washington. Every one of the events of last week is, in itself, staggering: an assault on the senses and the mental faculties. Together, they are more of the same.

The difficulty with absorbing the news lies, in part, in the words we use, which have a way of rendering the outrageous ordinary. The judge in the Department of Education case, Sallie Kim, a magistrate judge of the Federal District Court in San Francisco, for example, said, Im astounded, really; the Times prefaced this quotation with the statement, Magistrate Judge Kim made it clear this month that she believed the department had acted badly. The Washington Post story on DeVos omitted the more emotional aspects of the hearing, rendering it with the neutral, both-sides tone that a paper would use for a standard court hearingnot one in which a federal agency had blatantly disregarded judicial decisions sixteen thousand times, as Kim pointed out, citing the number of former students and parents affected by the Departments practices. Politico called the ruling an exceedingly rare judicial rebuke of a Cabinet secretary, still falling short of doing justice to the drama of a federal agency seizing the assets of people whom it had been ordered by the courts to leave in peace.

Even if we could find the words to describe the exceptional, almost barely imaginable nature of the weeks stories, that approach would not scale. How do we talk about a series of nearly inconceivable events that have become routine? How do we describe the confrontation of existing government institutions with a Presidential apparatus that wants to destroy them?

In the past few weeks, Ive had the good fortune of listening to a lecture by one of my favorite contemporary thinkers, Blint Magyar, and reading a draft of his latest book. Magyar is a Hungarian sociologist who was once a member of the post-Communist Hungarian government. As his country transformed into an autocracy, he became both a dissident and a student of the transformation. Magyar pioneered the term mafia state, which he has argued is a distinct approach to government. A lot of Magyars argument has to do with terminology. Quite simply, he says, if we use the wrong language, we cannot describe what we are seeing. If you use the language developed for describing fish, you cannot very well describe an elephant: words like gills, scales, and fins will not get you very far.

Magyar has noted that, after 1989, weacademics, journalists, and laypeopleapplied the language of liberal democracy to the societies emerging from the collapse of the Soviet Bloc. This happened both because we expected that they would become liberal democracies and because we had no other language. As a result, when some of these societies developed in unexpected ways, language impaired our ability to understand the process. We talked about, for example, whether they had a free press, or free and fair elections. But saying that they did not, as Magyar told me in an interview, is akin to saying that the elephant cannot swim or fly: it doesnt tell us much about what the elephant is. The same thing happens when we use the language of political disagreement, judicial procedure, or partisan discussion to describe something that breaks out of the system that such terminology was invented to describe. When we talk about shadow foreign policy when discussing Ukraine, for example, we misuse the term: a President, who is the chief foreign-policy official in the United States, cannot run a shadow foreign policy, by definition. What he can do, though, is destroy the institutions and traditions of foreign policy in the course of his war on government.

In his upcoming book, Magyar introduces the term autocratic attempt. It is the first of three stages of establishing autocracythe stage where it may still be reversible. (The next stage is autocratic breakthrough.) It is a useful term to borrow. In the past week, what we observed was a desperate battle between the autocratic attempt and the institutions defensive fight to reverse it. Magyar has analyzed the signs and circumstances of this process in post-Communist countries and has proposed a detailed taxonomy. How it happens here is uncharted territory. We have to invent a way of thinking and writing about it in real time.

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The Trump Administrations War on the Government Is an Autocratic Attempt - The New Yorker