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https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/trump-attack-press-discredit-you-all

Lesley Stahl: Trump Told Me He Attacks The Press ‘To Discredit You All’

CBS News’ Lesley Stahl said Monday that President Donald Trump once told her that he attacked the press “to discredit you all and demean you all, so when you write negative stories about me no one will believe you.”

Speaking with PBS’ Judy Woodruff at the Deadline Club Awards Dinner in New York City on Monday, Stahl recalled a meeting she had with Trump ahead of his first interview after winning the presidential election:

At one point he started to attack the press. And it’s just me and my boss and him, in— He has a huge office. And he’s attacking the press. And there were no cameras. There was nothing going on, and I said, ‘You know, that is getting tired. Why are you doing this? You’re doing it over and over, and it’s boring, and it’s time to end that. You’ve won the nomination (sic). Why do you keep hammering at this?’

“And he said, ‘You know why I do it? I do it to discredit you all and demean you all, so when you write negative stories about me no one will believe you.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/muckraker/aclu-ohio-partisan-gerrymandering-lawsuit

ACLU Sues Ohio Over U.S. Congressional Map


Ohio’s GOP-drawn U.S. congressional map is an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander, the ACLU alleged in a lawsuit filed Wednesday.

The suit, the latest to target the practice of drawing district lines for partisan gain, points to the map itself, as well as what it calls the “tightly controlled process” Republicans used in 2011 to draw it. The map has routinely elected 12 Republicans to four Democrats, even as the two parties have split Ohio’s statewide congressional vote roughly evenly.

“The 12-4 map was drawn in secret in a hotel room, nicknamed ‘the bunker’ by the map drawers, to which only Republicans had access,” the lawsuit claims. “Versions of the map had to be approved by national Republicans, despite no official role in Ohio’s redistricting statutes for the national Republican Party.”

The complaint describes one district as a “detached shoulder blade with a robotic arm that reaches out from a shoulder of Cleveland into Akron.” Another district it dubs the “Snake on the Lake,” because it “eats its way across the southern border of Lake Erie, ingesting portions of five counties (none in its entirety).”

“The contorted shapes of some of these districts also make clear the length the map drawers had to go to in order to achieve their political goals,” the lawsuit says.

The challengers are asking the court to declare the congressional map an unconstitutional gerrymander and to block its implementation in future elections.

The ACLU is bringing the complaint on behalf of 16 voters as well as the Ohio A. Philip Randolph Institute. It names Gov. John Kasich, Secretary of State John Husted, Ohio House Speaker Pro Tempore Kirk Schuring and Ohio State Senate President Larry Obhof as defendants.

Earlier this month, Ohio voters passed a ballot initiative that creates a bipartisan process for drawing congressional district lines. But the lawsuit notes that, under the measure, if that process fails, Ohio’s legislature will be able to fall back on producing maps with a simple majority.

The complaint also quotes a friend-of-the-court brief Kasich signed in a Supreme Court redistricting case from Wisconsin, that said “partisan gerrymanders are unconstitutional, are harming our republican government, and readily can be identified and addressed by courts.”

The Supreme Court is expected to issue rulings in the Wisconsin case and in a separate partisan gerrymandering case out of Maryland before its current term ends. One or both of those rulings could clarify when, if ever, partisan gerrymanders are unconstitutional.

In addition to Ohio and Wisconsin, Republicans in Pennsylvania, Michigan, North Carolina, Virginia, and Florida, among other states, used the redistricting process at the start of the decade to draw lines that benefited their party. Those maps have given the GOP a major advantage in the state legislative and congressional elections that have followed.

Ohio has faced a number of lawsuits for its election practices in recent years. A challenge to its system of purging the voter rolls was heard by the Supreme Court this year, with a ruling also expected this term. The Supreme Court in 2016 allowed the state’s cutbacks to early voting to go into effect for the presidential election, after an appeals court reversed a lower court’s decision to block the cuts.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/democrats-barred-from-doj-briefing-about-fbi-informant

Democrats Barred From DOJ Briefing About FBI Informant

Chief of Staff John Kelly has excluded Democrats from a meeting planned for Thursday to provide more information about the FBI informant that President Donald Trump claims infiltrated his 2016 campaign, according to a Tuesday Politico report.

Kelly reportedly arranged the meeting, which was an idea borne from Monday’s meeting on the same topic with Trump, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, FBI Director Christopher Wray, and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats.

Democrats are furious about the exclusion. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer lashed out on Twitter after White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters that as Democrats were not requesting information about the informant, they should not expect an invite.

Sen. Adam Schiff, ranking member on the House Intelligence Committee, joined in the chorus, tweeting “this is another serious abuse of power. There’s a bipartisan mechanism called the Gang of 8. They need to use it.”

Per Politico, the meeting will include Wray, Coats, DOJ official Ed O’Callahan, Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA), and Rep. Trey Gowdy (R-SC).

 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/israeli-intel-company-partner-cambridge-analytica

Israeli Intel Co Worked With Cambridge Analytica To Win Business With US Gov

An Israeli intelligence company called Psy-Group formed a partnership with President Trump’s campaign data firm, the now-defunct Cambridge Analytica, in order to win business deals with the U.S. government after the election, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

Psy-Group — which is owned by Joel Zamel, a person of interest in special counsel Robert Mueller’s probe — signed a memorandum of understanding in December 2016 with Cambridge Analytica, people familiar with the matter told the WSJ. The plan was for the two firms to work together to share intelligence and social media services, while also helping each other win government contracts, people familiar with the efforts told the WSJ.

While Psy-Group has not yet been granted any governmental contracts, according to the WSJ’s search of public records, Cambridge Analytica’s parent company, SCL Group, was given a $500,000 contract with the State Department in February 2017.

Cambridge Analytica closed earlier this month after it was revealed that the company improperly harvested the data of millions of private Facebook users.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/paul-ryan-vents-used-word-crap

In Meeting With Colleagues, Ryan Vents About Infighting, Used Word ‘Crap’ Once


Following multiple reports that Republican party infighting may soon cost Paul Ryan (R-WI) his speakership, Ryan reportedly wrangled up his closest colleagues on Tuesday for a closed door meeting to vent, according to The New York Timesand the Washington Post.

At the meeting, Ryan reportedly lectured his colleagues about sticking together and behaving “as though they are in the majority,” per the Times. He also expressed his irritation with the embarrassing dismantling of the farm bill last week, which conservatives sank amid a broader debate over immigration policy, and said he thinks the “political winds” were finally blowing in Republicans’ direction, according to the Post.

Ryan was reportedly so worked up that he even “used the word ‘crap’ once,” Rep. Mark Amodei (R-NV) told reporters.

“For Paul Ryan, ‘crap’ is pretty blue language,” he said.

Despite Ryan’s apparent frustration, the meeting ended well— with a standing ovation that could be heard in the hallway, according to the Post.

While the White House has been tight lipped about its opinion on who Ryan’s successor should be ever since Ryan announced his retirement in April, one senior White House official told the Post that the White House is unsure if Ryan should remain speaker through the end of his term.

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...isconsin-to-try-to-calm-republican-infighting

Ryan Dashes Back To DC From Wisconsin To Try To Calm Republican Infighting

WASHINGTON (AP) — Seven months before his planned retirement, House Speaker Paul Ryan is facing growing disruption among the GOP ranks, raising fresh questions about his ability to lead a divided group of Republicans through a tough election season.

Ryan sought to quell infighting Tuesday, dashing back to Washington from Wisconsin and abandoning plans for family time at home, as he tried to unify the factions and reassert control over the majority.

In remarks to reporters, the speaker acknowledged restlessness among Republican lawmakers and argued an internal election to replace him at the helm would be a distraction. For now, he told reporters, “We all agree the best thing for us is to complete our agenda and not wedge into the middle of the completion of our agenda a divisive leadership election.”

Ryan’s job leading the rambunctious House Republicans has never been easy, but it has become more difficult since he turned himself into a lame-duck speaker by announcing he won’t seek re-election to Congress in the fall. The move immediately prompted questions about whether his status would undermine his efforts to set a legislative agenda and jeopardize Republican hopes of holding on the House majority in November’s midterm elections. Those questions intensified in recent days after Ryan tried and failed to pass a farm bill — a casualty of an unrelated immigration standoff.

Over the weekend, a top Cabinet official mused openly about replacing Ryan. Republicans are publicly at odds, blaming one another for squandering the waning time before the elections.

It’s not at all clear how much longer Ryan will be able to stick around as planned, despite his ability to raise large sums for Republican re-election campaigns.

Behind closed doors at Tuesday’s meeting, the speaker made a plea for GOP unity, expressed his own frustrations over their divisions and encouraged Republicans to work together to rack up legislative accomplishments, according to lawmakers at the meeting who asked for anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the private talks.

Ryan received a standing ovation, according to one person who attended.
Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, said Republicans don’t want Ryan to leave, but they want him to lead. “Nobody I know is pressuring Paul Ryan to step aside. We just want results,” Barton said.

Barton said that with the largest House majority in almost a century, Republicans have their best chance before the midterms, when their numbers are likely to shrink. “If we really want to accomplish things there is no better time than right now,” he said.

The latest dustup is a familiar one, pitting the conservative House Freedom Caucus against more moderate Republicans over what to do on immigration.

But for some lawmakers, the details hardly matter anymore. They are expressing their own sense of rebellion fatigue, tired of the almost unending churn of leadership power struggles and factional infighting that have become the norm among the House GOP.

Rep. Ryan Costello, R-Pa., who is retiring rather than seeking re-election in fall, said it makes sense to revisit the leadership issue after “things blow up” as they did Friday over the immigration dispute. “But things blow up every couple of weeks around here.”

Speaking a weekend conference sponsored by The Weekly Standard, Mick Mulvaney, the former congressman now heading the White House budget office, mused openly about a leadership race that would force Democrats to have to say whether or not they support Nancy Pelosi, the minority leader.

Mulvaney’s spokeswoman said he was not working behind the scenes for an early speaker’s race, but rather was “supportive of any ideas that unite Republicans and divide Democrats.”

The Republican next in line for Ryan’s job, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., has not yet secured the votes needed to become leader, Republicans say, ensuring a messy battle if early elections were held now.

Rank-and-file lawmakers say they have no interest in facing two rounds of leadership elections — one now and another after the midterm election — with each race giving the GOP factions another opportunity to extract demands before giving their support.

“You want to do it twice?” asked Rep. Doug LaMalfa, R-Calif.

For now, the choices ahead for Ryan are fraught with problems as he tries to resolve the standoff over immigration, an issue that has long divided Republicans.

On the one side are moderate Republicans who are close to having the signatures necessary to force a vote on their bill to provide a citizenship path for “Dreamers” — young immigrants brought illegally to the U.S. as children.

On the other is the Freedom Caucus, which will reject any bill they perceive as amnesty for immigrants here illegally.

Ryan could simply allow the “Dreamer” bill to proceed. It would probably pass the House with support from most Democrats and some centrist Republicans.

But in doing so, he would violate a promise made to the Freedom Caucus when he was first securing their votes to become speaker. Then, he said he would not bring forward immigration legislation unless it had support from most members in the GOP majority. The Freedom Caucus could threaten a procedural move to oust Ryan — as it did his predecessor, John Boehner — though it’s unclear such threats matter to Ryan at this point.

President Donald Trump has been of little help.

Trump initially said he wanted to do something “nice” to help the Dreamers, but the White House has since tacked on a growing list of demands beyond Trump’s funding for the border wall with Mexico.

Last week, after Ryan and GOP leaders rushed to the White House to enlist Trump’s help, they returned to the floor chaos as the farm bill was defeated over the immigration dispute.

Ryan says a bipartisan bill will never get Trump’s signature, and he doesn’t want to pursue any bill unless it can become law. That leaves him few options.

On Tuesday, lawmakers said they were told to expect votes in mid-June on some immigration legislation as Ryan and his leadership team, including McCarthy, try to cobble together a compromise that would win Republican support. But that remains far off.

Just two months ago, Ryan announced he would step down, saying he wanted to spend more time with his family. Tuesday was his youngest son’s eighth-grade graduation, and officials said he intended to dart back home to Wisconsin later Tuesday evening to be there for it.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/kim-concerned-coup-if-leaves

Kim Concerned Leaving North Korea, Meeting With Trump Will Expose Him To Coup

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has in recent days cooled on the idea of meeting with President Donald Trump to discuss denuclearization, in part because he’s concerned if he leaves his country for too long, he could lose power, the Washington Post reported.

According to people familiar with the discussions who spoke to the Post, Kim is purportedly concerned a trip so far from home could expose him to a military coup or other attempts to replace him. The North Korean regime leader is also worried about his personal safety and about having enough fuel to get to Singapore where he plans to meet Trump on June 12.

During a press conference with South Korean President Moon Jae-in on Tuesday, Trump told reporters that Kim would not only be “safe” during and after their meeting, but also “happy, his country will be rich, his country will be hard-working and prosperous,” he said.

It’s been widely reported that, at least in part, comments made by Trump’s National Security Adviser John Bolton — about the U.S. using the “Libya model” to promote denuclearization in North Korea — threw cold water on Kim’s interest in meeting with the U.S., likely because that deal ended with the country’s former leader being forced from power and killed.
 
https://www.mediaite.com/tv/trump-tries-to-market-spygate-to-reporters-youre-calling-it-spygate/

Trump Tries to Market ‘SpyGate’ to Reporters: ‘You’re Calling it SpyGate’

President Donald Trump met briefly with reporters on the White House South Lawn, and he elaborated on his extensive tweetstorm against the FBI and the “criminal deep state” earlier today.

Trump outright condemned the FBI for embedding an informant to spy on his 2016 campaign in his morning tweetstorm, but he backtracked to a more accusatory stance this afternoon by saying “I hope it’s not true, but it looks like it is.”

POTUS also took the opportunity to tear into James Clapper and James Comeyonce again after the two former intelligence chiefs denounced his unproven claims over the last few days.

“If you look at what he did, if you look at all of the lies, the tremendous lies…I think James Comey has got a lot of problems,” Trump said. “I did a great service to this country by firing James Comey.”

Trump also made a big deal of showing off his fancy, new, totally uninspired name for the alleged scandal against him.

We now call it Spygate. You are calling it Spygate. A lot of bad things have happened. I want them all to get together. They will sit in a room. Hopefully they will be able to work it out among themselves.

Trump was repeatedly asked whether he has confidence in Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, but he refused to say one way or the other as he demanded “total transparency.”

https://www.mediaite.com/tv/cnns-ze...pygate-he-means-his-advisers-and-fox-newsers/


CNN’s Zeleny: When Trump Says ‘We Now Call It Spygate,’ He Means His Advisers and Fox Newsers

During his brief remarks to reporters this afternoon, President Trump not only stood by his labeling of this FBI informant controversy “Spygate,” but he said, “We now call it Spygate.”

He also told the press, “You’re calling it Spygate.”

This comes on the heels of Trump himself calling it that on Twitter this morning after his initial “demand” on Sunday to the DOJ regarding this issue, saying, “SPYGATE could be one of the biggest political scandals in history!”



After the President’s remarks ended this afternoon, CNN’s John King brought on Jeff Zeleny and rather pointedly rebutted Trump’s claim: “No, we’re not.”

Zeleny said of course not, but noted what Trump’s “we” actually refers to:

When the President says ‘a lot of people are saying,’ he’s true in some respects, but that is people who are on one channel, one spectrum, if you will. And those are many of his advisors, including some who work for Fox News, quite frankly. Sean Hannity is essentially an advisor to this president, others are as well, so some spectrums are calling it ‘Spygate.'”

The CNN White House correspondent added that this episode fits a pattern of President Trump picking up on “a potential rumor” and then setting off “a days-long conspiracy theory” that captures the media’s attention.
 
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