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Daily Archives: May 23, 2017
Did Brennan Start Russia Investigation Because of Liberal Media Bias? – Breitbart News
Posted: May 23, 2017 at 11:20 pm
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Yet Democrats are thrilled by his testimony, because he said there were contacts between Russian officialsand someU.S. persons involved in the Trump campaign, and hence an FBI investigation was warranted.
Note that there is nothing new in what Brennan said. TheNew York Times reported on January 19 in a story timed to appear on Inauguration Day that the intelligence services had intercepted communications between several Trump associates and Russian officials. (The same story said there was no conclusive evidence of wrongdoing.) And last week, Reuters reported that there were 18 such contacts over seven months, less than three per month.
All that Brennan presented was his opinion. And it is not clear what prompted his opinion. He said he convened a group, including the FBI and NSA, toinvestigate possibleRussian attempts to affect the election in late July 2016.
What else happened in late July?
In late July, Donald Trump held a press conference at which he was pesteredabout Russia. After several minutes, he joked: Its just a total deflection, this whole thing with Russia By the way, they hacked they probably have her 33,000 e-mails. Russia, if youre listening, I hope youre able to find the 30,000 e-mails that are missing.
Trump was joking, but the media inflated his remarks into a serious attempt to invite foreign intervention in the election. Some Democrats even accused him of treason.
It is not unreasonable to wonder whether Brennan followed the liberalmedia down a Russian rabbit-hole, where the absence of evidence would not end his suspicions.
Joel B. Pollak is Senior Editor-at-Large at Breitbart News. He was named one of the most influential people in news media in 2016. He is the co-author ofHow Trump Won: The Inside Story of a Revolution, is available from Regnery. Follow him on Twitter at @joelpollak.
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Did Brennan Start Russia Investigation Because of Liberal Media Bias? - Breitbart News
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BC Liberals maintain minority government in recount, with ballots still to count – The Globe and Mail
Posted: at 11:20 pm
British Columbias Opposition New Democrats have increased their narrow lead in a riding that could deny the Liberals a fifth-consecutive majority government, but about half the absentee ballots in Courtenay-Comox have yet to be counted.
On election night, the New Democrats led in the riding with nine votes, a margin that see-sawed this week after a recount and with the addition of previously uncounted ballots. On Tuesday, Elections BC continued counting the almost 180,000 absentee ballots 2,077 of them in Courtenay-Comox. By the end of the day, the NDP had a 101-vote lead in the riding.
But another 1,000 absentee ballots must be counted on Wednesday.
At the end of the day on Tuesday, with the results still not complete, the Liberals remained ahead in 43 ridings one short of a majority while the NDP held 41 and the Greens three. If those numbers hold, the future of the government will depend on whether the third-place Greens decide to prop up the Liberals or throw their support to the New Democrats. The last ballots are expected to be counted in 14 ridings on Wednesday. If the margin of victory in Courtenay-Comox is less than about 58 votes, it would go to a judicial recount.
Amid the uncertainty of whether Premier Christy Clarks BC Liberal government will stand, a coalition of activists assembled in front of the B.C. Legislature buildings on Tuesday to urge the Greens and the NDP to make peace, and together end 16 years of Liberal rule.
Environmental organizations, opponents of the Site C dam, advocates for child care and for public health care, and a senior First Nations leader are hoping the final count will deny a majority to Ms. Clark.
With the final election results still unclear, the calls for co-operation remain speculative but a reminder to both the Greens and the NDP that many of their supporters see them as natural allies.
If no party has a strong majority after the final ballots are counted, the NDP and the Greens have a historic opportunity to make good on the important policies they both campaigned on but only if they work together, said Lyndsay Poaps, executive director of Leadnow, the umbrella organization that delivered a petition with 25,000 names calling for an alliance between the two parties.
At the end of the day on Tuesday, with the results still not complete, the Liberals remained ahead in 43 ridings one short of a majority while the NDP held 41 and the Greens three. If those numbers hold, the future of the government will depend on whether the third-place Greens decide to prop up the Liberals or throw their support to the New Democrats.
The last ballots are expected to be counted in 15 ridings on Wednesday, and if Courtenay-Comox remains close, it will go to a judicial recount.
While the outcome remains unclear, the Greens have been negotiating with the NDP, and also with the BC Liberals, to determine where they will deliver their support when the Legislature is recalled.
The expectations of the different groups who joined the rally at the Legislature calling for a Green-NDP alliance are broad.
Terry Dance-Bennink, from the Rolling Justice Bus, said she wants construction on the partly built Site C dam halted. Jen Kuhl, spokesperson for the BC Health Coalition, wants a stronger public health care system and a plan to combat child poverty. Katie Harrison, managing director of Force of Nature, said she expects a Green-NDP alliance to put B.C. on a path for a low carbon future. Sharon Gregson, spokesperson for $10 a Day Child Care Campaign, said the two parties can together resolve a crisis in child-care affordability.
Stewart Phillip, Grand Chief of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, said the opportunity for a change in government is tantalizingly close: As the final ballots are tallied, I pray that we will all be... celebrating the change that we have all worked so hard for over the last 16 years. I think we are on the brink of some pretty wonderful things here in the province of British Columbia.
Sven Biggs, a climate campaigner for Stand.earth, said only the Greens and the NDP together could stop Kinder Morgan from completing its oil pipeline expansion. Were hoping both parties will put aside their partisanship, any personal grudges they may hold over from the election, and come together and do whats right for British Columbians by finally protecting our coast.
Carole James, who is on the NDPs negotiating team, and newly elected MLA Sonia Furstenau, who is part of the Greens bargaining team, accepted the petitions for their parties. But as they stood side-by-side on the steps of the legislature, both declined to discuss whether an accord is possible.
The message that was given to us was that the people of British Columbia have spoken, they are looking for positive change, Ms. James said. But she would not say if the NDP would agree to the Greens demands for electoral reform without a referendum. We are in discussions.
Ms. Furstenau acknowledged the boxes of petitions contained a message from voters, but said: We are waiting for the outcome of the election before we really get into those kinds of specifics, and we are all anxiously waiting for those final ballots.
No ridings flipped between parties, but two tight races in Metro Vancouver were called early on Tuesday evening.
Former Global TV reporter and LNG lobbyist Jas Johal held on against NDP candidate Aman Singh, a civil rights lawyer, to win Richmond-Queensborough for the Liberals by 134 votes. That is about half the margin of 263 he tallied in the new riding on election night.
And in Coquitlam-Burke Mountain, Liberal candidate Joan Isaacs defeated NDP incumbent Jodie Wickens by 87 votes.
Two other Metro Vancouver races remain undecided with margins of less than 600 votes each: Maple Ridge-Mission (NDP lead by 369) and Vancouver-False Creek (Liberals lead by 406).
Follow us on Twitter: Mike Hager @MikePHager, Justine Hunter @justine_hunter
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PETER LUCAS: Liberal justice is no justice for murdered doctors … – Lowell Sun
Posted: at 11:20 pm
Attorney General Maura Healey should consider taking over the prosecution of Bampumim Teixeira, the alleged cutthroat killer of those two unfortunate South Boston doctors.
Otherwise he will be prosecuted by the same people who are responsible for allowing the convicted bank robber to walk the streets of Boston when he should have been deported.
That would be Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel F. Conley, who, in a plea-bargain deal, enabled Teixeira to resume his life on the streets and wreak havoc on the lives of two innocent people.
That deal was approved by Boston Municipal Court Judge Lisa Anne Grant, a soft-hearted liberal appointed by former Gov. Deval Patrick.
Grant reduced two unarmed bank robbery charges to larceny. She then sentenced Teixeira to nine months in jail, considering time served. The sentence was actually 364 days, one day short of one year, which could have triggered action to deport Teixeira.
One could argue that your average two-time American bank robber would have been sentenced to nine years, not nine months. It is another example of liberals bending the judicial system to bail out criminal immigrants, legal or otherwise. It's called immigrant privilege.
Teixeira was in the country since 2010 as a green-card holder which allowed him to live and work in the United States. There is no sign that he did much work, outside of an occasional security guard job, even at the secure 148-unit Macallen Building in South Boston.
That is where victims Richard Field, 49, and Lina Bolanos, 38, both doctors who were soon to be married, lived in a $1.9 million penthouse condo on the top floor of the building.
They were found May 5 with their hands tied and their throats slit. A message in their blood was scrawled on the wall. When the Boston cops arrived they confronted Teixeira, who they thought was armed, and shot and wounded him. A backpack with Bolanos' jewelry was found. Teixeira, who is thought to have had a master key to the condo, was charged with their murders. He was arraigned from his hospital bed.
The bottom line is that had Teixeira been deported to Guinea-Bassau, where he was born, or to Cape Verde, where he lived, two vibrant and well-loved people, Richard Field and Lina Bolanos, would be alive today.
Instead, in a deeply wrenching ceremony at Gate of Heaven Church in South Boston, friends carried out the couple's cremated remains in a pair of wooden boxes amid a crowd of sobbing and sorrowing relatives and friends.
It was a crime that did not have to happen, but did happen because of Conley and Grant.
And where do the relatives and friends of the two victims go for solace, recourse or accountability for the deaths of their loved ones? The answer is nowhere. There is no recourse.
Sure, the families can sue the building owners or the security company that employed Teixeira. And sure, Teixeira this time will get what is coming to him, although I would not count on it. But nothing will bring back Field and Bolani.
What about the judicial system? There, nobody is held accountable or responsible for the actions that protected Teixeira from deportation.
Liberals would have you believe that it was not their fault but the fault of the "system."
The Boston Globe even ran an editorial blaming the "system" for the murders. The headline read, "The failed system that cost the two doctors their lives," thus absolving Judge Grant and Conley of any responsibility for setting Teixeira free.
It was not the fault of the system. The system is fine. It was the fault of people in the system who manipulated the law to help Teixeira.
There is more to this story, but no one is talking.
A generation ago when police reporters worked out of the smoke-filled press room at Boston Police headquarters, questions surrounding this case would have been answered. But police reporters have gone the way of cigar smoke.
There is a public-service opening for Healey to take over the case and provide some accountability. It would restore people's dwindling confidence in the judicial system.
She has the legal authority to intervene, but she won't. It would upset the Globe and her liberal base. Healey may bill herself as the state's "chief law officer," or the state's "chief law enforcement officer," but you will never catch her at a crime scene.
Judge Grant, meanwhile, shrugs and says, "Next case."
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PETER LUCAS: Liberal justice is no justice for murdered doctors ... - Lowell Sun
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‘Supergirl’ Uses Superpowers to Further Liberal Agenda in Finale – NewsBusters (blog)
Posted: at 11:20 pm
NewsBusters (blog) | 'Supergirl' Uses Superpowers to Further Liberal Agenda in Finale NewsBusters (blog) The finale to The CW's Supergirl was thankfully focused more on action than politics despite what its title "Nevertheless, She Persisted" would have us believe. However, the final episode of the politically-charged second season still could not avoid a ... |
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'Supergirl' Uses Superpowers to Further Liberal Agenda in Finale - NewsBusters (blog)
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What right-wing populism? Polls reveal that it’s liberalism that’s surging. – Vox
Posted: at 11:20 pm
Outside contributors' opinions and analysis of the most important issues in politics, science, and culture.
For liberals, one of most disturbing things about the 2016 election was that it seemed to indicate a massive lurch to the right in a country they thought was getting more, not less, liberal. Many contemplated with varying degrees of seriousness whether they should simply leave a country which had suddenly become hostile territory.
That was a suspect view even at the time of Trumps election Clinton did, after all, get almost 3 million more votes than Donald Trump. But its even more suspect now, as public opinion polls have shown over and over since last November.
What these polls have revealed is, despite fears of surging right-wing populism, we are seeing surging liberalism instead. Consider the ultra-hot button issue of immigration. In April, the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll asked the public whether immigration helps the United States more than it hurts it, or immigration hurts the United States more than it helps it? The response: 60 percent said it helps more than it hurts, and just 32 percent said hurts more than it helps. That is the strongest positive evaluation this poll has ever gotten on this question.
In fact, as the chart below indicates, positive feelings about immigration have generally been rising since early 2016, including through Trumps election and beyond. And if you go back to 2005, when the question was first asked by NBC/WSJ, positive feelings today are way higher than they were back then. (In 2005, only 37 percent thought immigration helped more than it hurt.)
If populism means resentment of immigrants who are taking the jobs of native-born Americans, it is not to be found in these numbers. So lets look elsewhere. No proposal is more symbolic of Trumps pledge to combat illegal immigration, and generally place America first, than his pledge to build that famous wall along the Mexican border. Right after Trump got elected, the Quinnipiac University poll pegged support for building the wall at 42 percent. Since then it has dropped steadily, and is down to about 33 percent. (Sixty-four percent of respondents, meanwhile, were opposed.)
Nor are Americans rising up in their millions against trade with the rest of the world another signature populist Trump issue. On the contrary, support for trade has never been higher. Since 1993, Gallup has asked the public whether foreign trade is more of an economic opportunity or economic threat. A stunning 72 percent now say its more of an opportunity. As the chart show, this is far, far higher than that sentiment has ever been before.
Despite Trumps grandstanding on immigration and trade, he seems to be singularly ineffective in getting Americans to turn their backs on the rest of the world. Instead, we are seeing more openness than ever. Perhaps by putting things so extremely, Trump has simply reminded many Americans that engagement with the global economy is, on balance, a good thing and that trying to shut it down is a silly, pointless endeavor.
Nor has Trump convinced Americans that getting rid of the Affordable Care Act is a great idea. On that issue, Trump wasnt blazing a new populist path but rather signing onto a long-held Republican goal. But here again, hes only succeeded in making Americans more supportive of the legislation.
In the aftermath of Trumps election and the GOPs shambolic attempts to get rid of the ACA, this landmark piece of liberal legislation has finally achieved what it never had before: a net positive image in the eyes of the public. As for the proposed alternative, the Republican bill that passed the House, the American Health Care Act, has a stunningly low approval rating of 21 percent in the latest Quinnipiac poll. Nor does Trumps supposed base, white noncollege voters, embrace it: They approve it at the dismal rate of 25 percent.
Trump fails to understand, and liberals should always remember, one of the most enduring features of American public opinion. The dominant ideology in the United States is one that combines symbolic conservatism (honoring tradition, distrusting novelty, embracing the conservative label) with operational liberalism (wanting government to take more action in a wide variety of areas). As Christopher Ellis and James Stimson, two leading academic analysts of American ideology, note: Most Americans like most government programs. Most of the time, on average, we want government to do more and spend more. It is no accident that we have created the programs of the welfare state. They were created and are sustained by massive public support.
Thats why, now that the ACA has delivered concrete benefits for many people, it is so very hard to get rid of. Indeed, Trump greatest accomplishment so far may be in unleashing Americans inner operational liberal. In the NBC/WSJ poll, more people than ever 57 percent say they want a government that does more to solve problems and meet peoples needs; only 39 percent say that government does too many things best left to businesses and individuals. As the chart shows, that is the strongest pro-government response since this questions was first asked in 1995.
Were seeing this operational liberalism emerge in wide variety of areas. The phenomenon is nicely captured by a new Pew poll that asked the public whether they would like to see spending in the federal budget increased, decreased, or kept the same in 14 different areas. Compared to 2013, as the chart below shows, support for government spending is up in every area, with substantial increases in big-ticket areas like education, infrastructure, health care, and scientific research. This, of course, is pretty much the opposite of what Trumps vague but draconian budget proposal has called for.
How about the environment and climate change? Has Trump succeeded in pushing do-gooder enviros to the side, or in making the world safe again for coal? Not quite. The NBC/WSJ poll has the largest share of the American public ever saying that climate change is real and action needs to be taken: 67 percent. Since Trumps election, support has fallen to just 28 percent in the Quinnipiac poll on the question of whether Trump should remove specific regulations intended to combat climate change (a meager 33 percent even among white noncollege voters).
Taxes? Americans never like the idea of lowering taxes on the wealthy. Since Trumps election, they hate it even more. Now its down to just 18 percent in favor in the Quinnipiac poll, with a massive 77 percent opposed.
And theres more. Gallup reports that Americans views about the moral acceptability of a wide range of practices are now more liberal than theyve ever been. This includes birth control, divorce, premarital sex, and the death penalty. Same-sex marriage has become so uncontroversial that pollsters hardly bother to ask about it anymore.
None of this is to sugarcoat the current facts on the ground Trump in the White House and the Republicans in control of Congress and most states. But that owes much more to the peculiar nature of the Electoral College, gerrymandering, structural GOP advantages in Congress, and poor Democratic strategy than to the actual views of the American public.
I hate to break it to Americas liberals, but as Ive argued before there are considerable grounds for optimism about the American public and, by extension, the fate of the country. Now you may return to your regularly scheduled panic.
Ruy Teixeiras new book is The Optimistic Leftist: Why the 21st Century Will Be Better Than You Think. He is a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress.
The Big Idea is Voxs home for smart discussion of the most important issues and ideas in politics, science, and culture typically by outside contributors. If you have an idea for a piece, pitch us at thebigidea@vox.com.
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Liberal Pushing Identity Politics Slammed by FBN Host, GOP Guest – NewsBusters (blog)
Posted: at 11:20 pm
NewsBusters (blog) | Liberal Pushing Identity Politics Slammed by FBN Host, GOP Guest NewsBusters (blog) During Friday's edition of The Intelligence Report on the Fox Business Network, host Trish Regan and conservative guest Ned Ryun thoroughly schooled liberal panelist Pablo Manriquez regarding the use of identity politics when dealing with financial ... |
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Donald Trump’s budget: ‘2+2 = 7’ – CNN
Posted: at 11:20 pm
(CNN)President Donald Trump is in the middle of his 9-day foreign trip. But the big news here in Washington on Tuesday was the release of his budget blueprint -- the administration's wish list heading into the next fiscal year. It landed with a thud -- as Republicans largely avoided even talking about it and Democrats threw it in the trash. Literally. For some perspective on what's in the budget, what's not and whether it all matters, I reached out to the man who knows more about the budget than anyone: Qorvis MSL's Stan Collender. (Doubt me? Stan's Twitter handle is @thebudgetguy. I rest my case.) Our conversation, conducted via email and lightly edited for flow, is below.
Collender: This is not serious at all; it's just a Trump campaign document pretending to be a president's budget. Submitting a budget that is likely ... or even possibly ... going to be adopted and implemented by Congress apparently wasn't the administration's primary goal. Communicating to the ultra-hard right wing of the Republican Party -- the Trump base -- seems to be its only real purpose.
Cillizza: The early readout is that the budget is a win for the wealthy and a loss for the poor. Oversimplification? Why or why not?
Collender: Not an oversimplification at all. Big tax cuts for the wealthy combined with deep spending cuts for the poor and the middle class are the perfect way to describe this budget.
OMB Director Mick Mulvaney used different terms, of course, when talking about his opus, but there is no doubt what he was saying. If he and President Trump get their way, taxpayers (i.e. the wealthy and relatively wealthy) are no longer going to pay for things for non-taxpayers (i.e. the poor and working poor).
It's the Trump equivalent of "Let them eat cake."
Cillizza: How will this budget land among House Republicans?
Collender: Dead on arrival, dead before printing, dead before typesetting, etc. (Does anyone set type anymore?)
By the end of this week, Mulvaney will be the only Republican talking about this budget favorably. Other than the members of the House Freedom Caucus, House and Senate GOP'ers will either be criticizing or ignoring what Trump proposed.
I'm not sure everything Trump proposed will be acceptable to the Freedom Caucus either.
Cillizza: Name the best things for Republicans to sell to the public? Are there things in the budget that Democrats will -- or should -- like?
Collender: Republicans will cling to the proposed increase in the Pentagon budget like a scared child walking with him mother or father in a crowded shopping mall. They'll also applaud the budget showing a surplus at the end of 10 years even if that estimate is based on political and economic science fiction.
Democrats will like that they now have a handful of new issues with which to attack Trump and congressional Republicans in 2018.
Cillizza: Finish this sentence: "The single word that best describes Trump's budget is ____." Now, explain.
Collender: "Twilight Zone" (Yes, I know that's really two words). The Trump 2018 budget is based on such unreal scenarios of how the US economy will perform and what Congress will accept that the White House must be in an alternative universe where up is down, black is white and 2+2=7.
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Trump’s Budget Seeks Fraction of U.S.-Mexico Border-Wall Cost – Bloomberg
Posted: at 11:20 pm
by
May 23, 2017, 3:02 PM EDT
Republicans and Democrats welcomed what they see as a scaled-back vision of one of President Donald Trumps signature campaign promises: a big, beautiful wall on the 1,933-mile U.S.-Mexico border.
Trumps first full-year budget released Tuesday provides a $1.6 billion down payment for new and replacement sections of a wall. The president has estimated that completing the barrier would cost $8 billion to $12 billion, with many experts saying the actual cost would be far higher.
The Trump administration says the wall remains a presidential priority to keep undocumented immigrants out of the U.S. During the campaign, Trump said that Mexico would pay the bill, which that country has refused to do.
Representative Mark Meadows, a North Carolina Republican and chairman of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, called the fiscal year 2018 funding request a pragmatic decision by a White House that knows lawmakers -- particularly in the Senate -- would balk at paying the full cost.
Asking for $12 billion in a budget for a border wall is not going to be met with great receptivity in the Senate, Meadows said.
Graphic: Heres What We Know About Trumps Mexico Wall
Democrat Tom Carper of Delaware, a member of the Senate Homeland Security panel, said the president may be awakening to the idea that Congress controls the purse strings and that some Democratic support will be needed for his ideas. Theres bipartisan consensus for securing the border by using more fencing, technology to monitor illegal crossings and additional border patrol agents, he said.
There are some places along the U.S.-Mexico border where a wall makes some sense, Carper said. Most places it does not. And well take a look and see what they have in mind.
The $1.6 billion is included in Trumps request of $2.6 billion in new border infrastructure and immigration enforcement resources in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.
That includes $300 million to recruit and hire more immigration enforcement agents; $239 million for aircraft and other aviation assets to track border crossings; $202 million for equipment like radios, weapons and computers; and $197 million for radars, sensors and other surveillance technology.
The $1.6 billion for border wall construction and replacement would let the Border Patrol decide the best locations. The request would cover 32 miles of border wall construction, 28 miles of levee wall in the Rio Grande Valley, and 14 miles of a new border wall system to replace fencing south of San Diego, according to Department of Homeland Security documents.
White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney said Tuesday that Trump stands by his campaign promise for the wall.
We are absolutely dead serious about the wall, Mulvaney told reporters. The administration is pleased with border-security funds in this months 2017 spending bill and will press on to bolster resources at the border with Mexico, he said.
Still, Democrats and most Republicans remain opposed to the physical barrier advanced by Trump.
I thought the Mexicans were going to fund it, Representative Fred Upton, a Michigan Republican said when asked about the budget request. We need border security. Im not sure we need to spend billions for a physical wall.
Representative Louie Gohmert, a Texas Republican and member of the Freedom Caucus, said hes disappointed Trump didnt ask for more funding. He said hes concerned that too many of Trumps campaign promises arent being kept.
Were not moving forward with the things we said wed do, he said.
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Trump's Budget Seeks Fraction of U.S.-Mexico Border-Wall Cost - Bloomberg
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New record for Trump: lawsuits seeking public records soar – MyPalmBeachPost (blog)
Posted: at 11:20 pm
Perhaps in an attempt to find the truth behind what President Trump has decried as fake news, requests for government documents under the Freedom of Information Act have soared since he took office, according to an analysis released Tuesday by Syracuse University.
Donald Trump
The 63 public record lawsuits filed in April represented a 25-year high, said officials at The FOIA Project at the Newhouse School at the New York university said. Further, with 60 lawsuits filed already in May, it, too, is likely to be another record-setting month, they said.
Information sought includes records on Trumps executive orders and last months missile attack on Syria. Lawsuits have also been filed to get warrant applications for surveillance activities and internal agency communications about China. People and organizations are also seeking paperwork about actions taken by the new director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and border searches by the Department of Homeland Security.
If the pace continues, university officials said they expect more than 579 public records lawsuits will be filed before the fiscal year ends in Sept. 30. By comparison, 512 Freedom of Information Act lawsuits were filed during the last fiscal year of the Obama Administration.
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New record for Trump: lawsuits seeking public records soar - MyPalmBeachPost (blog)
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Even some Republicans say Trump’s steep budget cuts go too far – Chicago Tribune
Posted: at 11:20 pm
President Donald Trump's proposal to cut federal spending by more than $3.6 trillion over the next decade - including deep reductions for programs that help the poor - faced harsh criticism in Congress on Tuesday, where even many Republicans said the White House had gone too far.
While some fiscally conservative lawmakers, particularly in the House, found a lot to praise in Trump's plan to balance the budget within 10 years, most Republicans flatly rejected the White House proposal. The divide sets up a clash between House conservatives and a growing number of Senate Republicans who would rather work with Democrats on a spending deal than entertain Trump's deep cuts.
"This is kind of the game," said Senate Majority Whip John Cornyn, R-Texas. "We know that the president's budget won't pass as proposed."
Instead, Cornyn said he believes conversations are already underway about how Republicans can negotiate with Democrats to avoid across-the-board spending cuts that are scheduled to go into effect in October. Those talks could include broad spending increases for domestic and military programs that break from Trump's plan for deep cuts in education, housing, research and health care.
"I think that's the only way," Cornyn said of working with Democrats on spending. "It would be good to get that done so we can get the Appropriations Committee to get to work."
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said such spending talks would be inevitable.
"We'll have to negotiate the top line with Senate Democrats, we know that," McConnell told reporters Tuesday. "They will not be irrelevant in the process and at some point, here in the near future, those discussions will begin."
As Senate Republicans were discussing a bipartisan spending agreement, White House budget director Mick Mulvaney stood across town pitching Trump's proposal to dramatically alter the role of government in society, shrinking the federal workforce, scaling back anti-poverty programs and cutting spending on things like disease research and job training. The $4.094 trillion proposal for fiscal year 2018 includes $1 trillion in cuts over 10 years to anti-poverty programs including Medicaid, food assistance and health insurance for low-income children.
It would slightly increase spending on the military, immigration control and border security and provide an additional $200 billion for infrastructure projects over 10 years. It would also allocate $1.6 billion for the creation of a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico.
Budget experts questioned many of the economic assumptions that the White House put into its plan, saying it was preposterous to claim that massive tax cuts and spending reductions will lead to a surge in economic growth. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, for example, said that using normal economic projections, the White House's proposal would not eliminate the deficit and would allow U.S. debt to continue growing into the next decade.
"Rather than making unrealistic assumptions, the president must make the hard tax and spending choices needed to truly bring the national debt under control," it said.
The White House proposals represent a defiant blueprint for a government realignment that closely follows proposals made in recent years by some of the most conservative members of the House, a group that once included Mulvaney himself. Trump has alleged that safety net programs create a welfare state that pull people out of the workforce, and his budget would cull these programs back.
Mulvaney pointed specifically to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the modern version of food stamps. The White House plans to propose forcing states to pay a portion of the benefits in the program, which reached more than 44 million beneficiaries in 2016.
"We are not kicking anybody off of any program who really needs it," Mulvaney said. "We have plenty of money in this country to take care of the people who need help. . . . We don't have enough money to take care of . . . everybody who doesn't need help."
Mulvaney, who served in the House from 2011 until earlier this year, is a co-founder of the Freedom Caucus. Many of the provisions in Trump's first budget reflect long-standing priorities of the Republican Party's far right in cutting back federal spending to get the nation's long-term fiscal picture under control - largely by cutting entitlement programs that mainly benefit the poor.
Republicans are keenly interested in passing a budget this year because they hope to use that legislation to lay the groundwork for a GOP-friendly rewrite of the tax code. Many GOP members hope to attach the tax reform to the budget process in order to advantage of special Senate rules that would allow both the budget and tax rewrite to pass with 51 votes, rather than the 60 that are needed to pass most other legislation. That special treatment could be critical to the success of the GOP tax effort in the Senate, where Republicans control a slim 52-to-48 majority.
White House officials knew their budget proposal would be jarring and launch a political fight, but they think it is a necessary debate given a wing of the Republican Party that wants the government to shrink.
But the cuts were met with intense criticism even among the majority of GOP members who hailed Trump's desire to pare back spending, including many who worried about the size of some of the proposed cuts.
Rep. Mark Meadows (N.C.), chairman of the hard-line House Freedom Caucus, said he was encouraged by early reports of new curbs on food stamps, family welfare and other spending. But he said he draws the line on cuts to Meals on Wheels, a charity that Mulvaney earlier this year suggested was ineffective.
"I've delivered meals to a lot of people that perhaps it's their only hot meal of the day," Meadows said. "And so I'm sure there's going to be some give and take, but to throw out the entire budget just because you disagree with some of the principles would be inappropriate."
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said he backs Trump's proposal for a temporary burst of new defense spending, which White House officials say would allow them to add 56,400 service members in 2018. But he worries that Trump would finance those increases by cutting critical programs like the National Institutes of Health.
"My number one goal is to have a more balanced budget," said Graham, who also endorsed the idea of entering into spending talks with Democrats. "NIH is a national treasure, and it would be hurt, too."
Graham is part of a long-standing alliance between defense hawks who want increased military spending and Democrats who are willing to back military programs in exchange for more spending on domestic priorities. The two sides have forged several past agreements, including a two-year plan for increased spending that is set to expire at the end of September.
Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., said that formal spending discussions have not yet begun but he is prepared to work with GOP leaders when the time is right.
"The idea that we'll work on a bipartisan budget independent from the president's is ripe in the air," Schumer said.
But such a deal is sure to anger conservatives in the House, where many of the most hard-line members staunchly defended aspects of Trump's proposal.
Although Meadows said Meals on Wheels cuts might be "a bridge too far," he praised much of the rest of the Trump budget. "It probably is the most conservative budget that we've had under Republican or Democrat administrations in decades," he said.
Rep. Scott DesJarlais (Tenn.), a Freedom Caucus member, rejected the argument that Trump's budget represented a betrayal of some of his populist campaign promises, notably to protect Medicaid spending.
"If we don't do something to protect the program for the people who really need it, then they're not going to have access to that, so I think we can't continue to ignore these big-ticket items," he said. "If we're ever going to get our budget to balance and pay down our debt, we're going to have to make these tough choices and have these tough votes."
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Even some Republicans say Trump's steep budget cuts go too far - Chicago Tribune
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