[Even for President Donald Trump, the past 24 hours have been tumultuous.
There was the court ruling that kept his most sweeping policy
initiative (thus far) frozen. There was the ethical breach by a top
aide who promoted Trump’s daughter’s products. There was a report that
another top aide mischaracterized his contacts with the Russian
ambassador. There was a reversal on Trump’s stated plans for Taiwan
policy aimed at pleasing China. There was a report that Trump paused a
call with Vladimir Putin because he didn’t know what a major nuclear
arms treaty was. And there were Twitter attacks on two senators,
including one Republican.
...
So overall, things are going great.]

http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/2/10/14573144/trump-court-russia-china

President Trump’s chaotic, leaky, feud-filled past 24 hours, explained
There’s so much going on that it’s almost impossible to keep up.

Updated by Andrew [email protected]  Feb 10, 2017, 10:20am EST

***Even for President Donald Trump, the past 24 hours have been
tumultuous.*** [Emphasis added.]

***There was the court ruling that kept his most sweeping policy
initiative (thus far) frozen. There was the ethical breach by a top
aide who promoted Trump’s daughter’s products. There was a report that
another top aide mischaracterized his contacts with the Russian
ambassador. There was a reversal on Trump’s stated plans for Taiwan
policy aimed at pleasing China. There was a report that Trump paused a
call with Vladimir Putin because he didn’t know what a major nuclear
arms treaty was. And there were Twitter attacks on two senators,
including one Republican.*** [Emphasis added.]

Whew.

Trump’s own top-billed event of the day was a photo op in which he
signed three basically toothless executive orders on crime. As German
Lopez explains, all these orders do is create various “task forces” or
demand plans be written to address various issues. That’s a classic
politician trick to create the impression of bold action when what’s
actually happening is not-so-bold punting. Still, better for the
administration to take its time with major policy changes then to roll
them out haphazardly.

The actual biggest policy news out of Thursday, then, was the ruling
from a Ninth Circuit panel that kept President Trump’s refugee and
visa ban — his most sweeping policy move yet — temporarily frozen.

The Ninth Circuit panel’s ruling used strikingly strong language to
swat down the Trump administration’s claims that the judiciary had no
authority to review his order. “There is no precedent to support this
claimed unreviewability, which runs contrary to the fundamental
structure of our constitutional democracy,” the three-judge panel —
which included one Republican appointee — wrote.

But it’s important to note that no court has yet ruled on the merits
of the immigration order itself. All they have ruled on to this date
is whether the order should be temporarily blocked while the court
system susses out its legality.

SEE YOU IN COURT, THE SECURITY OF OUR NATION IS AT STAKE!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 9, 2017
So when Trump tweets “SEE YOU IN COURT,” this is what he means — the
real legal battle is still ahead. Dara Lind has more on what’s next,
but the upshot is that even this one particular lawsuit is likely many
months away from being resolved.


Foreign leader follies
Meanwhile, the steady stream of leaks involving Trump’s phone calls
and meetings with foreign leaders and officials continued Thursday.

When President Vladimir Putin of Russia brought up the New START
nuclear arms treaty to Trump in a recent call, “Trump paused to ask
his aides in an aside what the treaty was,” according to three sources
cited by Jonathan Landay and David Rohde of Reuters. Once briefed,
Trump quickly told Putin the treaty was a bad deal, and also “talked
about his own popularity,” the authors write. (The Trump
administration is now investigating this leak and other leaks of
foreign leader conversations.)
Remember when Trump said during the transition that the US doesn’t
have to be “bound by a ‘one China policy’ (the diplomatic stance that
Taiwan is part of China rather than an independent nation), and took a
call from Taiwan’s leader? Xi Jinping does. The Chinese president
refused to speak for Trump for months afterward, the New York Times’
Mark Landler and Michael Forsythe reported Thursday. However, Trump
and Xi finally spoke Thursday night and Trump agreed to stick with the
One China policy after all, which seems like a rather complete
capitulation.
Meanwhile, questions continue to swirl about National Security Adviser
Michael Flynn’s contacts with the Russian ambassador to the US during
the transition. Flynn had denied, and continued to deny up to this
week, that the two discussed then-President Obama’s expected sanctions
against Russia that were a reprisal for Russian election-related email
hacking. But the Washington Post reports that, according to “nine
current and former US officials” speaking anonymously, “­Flynn’s
references to the election-related sanctions were explicit.” Two
officials argue that Flynn in fact “urged Russia not to overreact”
because Trump would soon be in office.
Finally, yet another set of embarrassing leaks to Kylie Atwood and
Brian Gottlieb of CBS News suggest that, per Mexican officials, Trump
made last-minute changes to his speech announcing his executive order
on building a wall in Mexico at the direct behest of the Mexican
foreign minister, who was visiting. The report claims that senior
adviser and Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner worked with the foreign
minister to rewrite the speech to be more “positive,” and that Trump
was annoyed but eventually agreed to read the new version. (The White
House has denied this story.)
Kellyanne Conway in hot water
Kellyanne Conway, campaign manager for President-elect Donald Trump,
pauses to speak to passersby across form Trump Tower in New York
Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2016.
Craig Ruttle/AP Photo
Meanwhile, a White House already dealing with a host of ethical
controversies was suddenly handed a new one Thursday. In an appearance
on Fox & Friends, senior counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway
told the public to “Go buy Ivanka’s stuff.”

This is a follow-up to President Trump’s own ethically questionable
complaints that Nordstrom was treating his daughter “unfairly” by
dropping her fashion label (the company says they did so because the
brand was selling poorly).

The problem is that, as Libby Nelson writes, “Federal employees in the
executive branch, including Conway, aren’t allowed to ‘endorse any
product, service or enterprise.’ The rules are strict.”

White House press secretary Sean Spicer responded to the controversy
during his Thursday press briefing by saying Conway has “been
counseled, and that's all we're going to say.”

The president doesn’t seem particularly bothered by Conway’s promotion
of his daughter’s branded products, though. Since nothing can ever
come easy for the beleaguered Spicer, anonymous leaks soon indicated
that Trump was unhappy with his statement. Per Politico:

A source familiar with the matter said Trump is fully backing Conway
and does not agree with the “counseled” remark. This person said the
president found it unfair "because it sounds like she has been
reprimanded or needs counseling."
Yet even House Oversight Committee chair Jason Chaffetz, who dogged
the Obama administration with investigations but has been notably
reticent to criticize Trump so far, took ire at Conway’s comment,
sending a letter calling what she did “wrong, wrong, wrong” and
recommending the Office of Government Ethics look into disciplinary
action. (Later that night, hundreds of people attended a Chaffetz town
hall in his Utah district in which they chanted “do your job” at him.)


Twitter feuds with two US senators
Despite all this, Trump took time out of his day to personally tweet
attacks on not one but two US senators, including one from his own
party.

There’s been a lot of discussion on President Trump’s first major
foreign operation, a strike in Yemen in which a member of SEAL Team 6
was killed. After a briefing on the mission earlier this week, Sen.
John McCain (R-AZ) characterized it as “a failure.”

But the Trump administration can’t admit anything was a failure, and
has instead been sticking to the line that the operation was a
success. So Sean Spicer pushed back against McCain in a press
briefing, calling the mission “highly successful” and suggesting that
anyone who said otherwise was insulting the memory of the dead
American soldier.

Yet McCain fired back again, referring to his own Vietnam service in
what was the Post called a “brutal rejoinder” to Spicer. That’s when
the president seems to have become annoyed enough by this to weigh in
personally:

Sen. McCain should not be talking about the success or failure of a
mission to the media. Only emboldens the enemy! He's been losing
so....

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 9, 2017
...long he doesn't know how to win anymore, just look at the mess our
country is in - bogged down in conflict all over the place. Our hero..

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 9, 2017
..Ryan died on a winning mission ( according to General Mattis), not a
"failure." Time for the U.S. to get smart and start winning again!

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 9, 2017
It seems unwise for the president to escalate a feud with a leading
Senate committee chair from his own party who oversees the military
and is highly interested in investigating Russia’s influence on US
politics, but that is what Trump has done.

And that was just his second attack on a senator that morning. A bit
earlier, Trump decided to respond to a report that his Supreme Court
nominee had criticized his recent attacks on the judiciary in a
private conversation with Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT). Though
Gorsuch’s spokespeople had already confirmed the comments to multiple
media outlets, Trump can’t stand to be criticized — so he responded
here by, naturally, attacking Blumenthal and accusing him of lying:

Sen.Richard Blumenthal, who never fought in Vietnam when he said for
years he had (major lie),now misrepresents what Judge Gorsuch told
him?

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) February 9, 2017
However, the comments seem pretty indisputable — Gorsuch’s own
spokespeople confirmed them, and Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NE) publicly said
Gorsuch expressed similar sentiments to him in private. “He got a
little bit emotional and he said that any attack, or any criticism, of
his ‘brothers and sisters of the robe’ is an attack or a criticism on
everybody wearing the robe as a judge,” Sasse said on the Senate
floor.

Democrats smell a setup here. Many suspect Gorsuch has the White
House’s full blessing and is distancing himself from Trump’s
anti-judiciary tweets as part of a deliberate strategy to help his
confirmation chances. “It was pre-planned, woefully insufficient, and
the @WhiteHouse walked it back the next day. It will not work,” Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s communications director Matt House
tweeted.

More Senate shenanigans, and the slow and painful process of Cabinet
confirmations
Toward the middle of the day, Trump met with a bipartisan group of
senators at the White House. Some of those senators emerged and
proceeded to tell the press what was discussed. Sens. Joe Manchin
(D-WV) and Heidi Heitkamp (D-ND) announced that Trump is now
“committed” to the Export-Import Bank, which conservatives have been
seeking to abolish and which Trump condemned during the campaign.

Manchin also claimed Trump said there was “a lot of merit” in the
Senate’s 2013 “gang of eight” immigration reform bill. The Wall Street
Journal’s Laura Meckler and Kristina Peterson report: “Mr. Trump asked
for more information, one person said, and [Sen. Lamar] Alexander
[R-TN] went into more depth on the Gang of Eight bill, with Democrats
present praising it as the White House senior staff looked
uncomfortable.” (Trump aides later said the president was only
expressing general support for doing something on immigration.)

Meanwhile, the full Senate continued to move at a snail’s pace toward
confirming Trump’s Cabinet. Just before 2 am, Tom Price won
confirmation as Health and Human Services Secretary in yet another
party-line vote — despite ethical questions stemming from reports that
he bought and sold hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of shares
in health care stocks while he worked on the issue in Congress. Price
will now decide just what to make of Trump’s extremely vague executive
order on dismantling Obamacare, and will help craft the
administration’s own “repeal and replace” plan that we’ve been
promised is coming.

Price is the seventh of Trump’s 15 nominees for the main Cabinet
departments that have made it through Congress so far, so we haven’t
even made it halfway yet. (Trump is supremely annoyed that his
confirmations are taking so long.) Things are slow because Democrats,
who no longer can actually block nominees with the filibuster, are
responding by using parliamentary delay tactics and preventing even
noncontroversial nominees from sailing through, as his been the norm
for previous presidents. Next up is Treasury secretary nominee Steve
Mnuchin, who’s also expected to be confirmed … despite questions about
his own veracity in committee testimony.

***So overall, things are going great.*** [Emphasis added.]

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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