Welcome To aBlackWeb

The Official World Politics Thread

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-democrats-are-playing-a-con-game-with-kavanaugh-allegations

Trump: Kavanaugh Allegations Are ‘A Con Game Being Played By The Democrats’

Sitting beside the President of Colombia, Iván Duque Márquez, President Donald Trump said the two on-record accusations of sexual assault and misconduct made against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh were “a con game being played by the Democrats.”

“As the President of a great country, Colombia, you must say, ‘How is this possible?’” Trump asked the Colombian president.

“Thirty-six years ago and nobody ever knew about it, nobody ever heard about it?” Trump continued. “And now a new charge comes up and she said, well, it might not be him, and there were gaps, and she said she was totally inebriated and she was all messed up and she doesn’t know it was him, but it might have been him? Oh gee, let’s not make him a Supreme Court judge because of that?”

“This is a con game being played by the Democrats.”

 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/livew...on-kavanaugh-allegations-left-wing-conspiracy

Conway Continues Kavanaugh Crusade: This Is A ‘Left Wing Conspiracy’

Kate Riga

White House counselor Kellyanne Conway doubled down on her assertion that the sexual misconduct and assault allegations against Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh are part of a “left wing conspiracy,” a theme conservatives are using in their effort to spin the accusations as a smear campaign.


“You’ve got a lot of Democrats, consultants, Hollywood folks and others of the left wing in cahoots, coddling each other, definitely coaching each other on this,” she said on Fox News on Tuesday. “There is no question.”

 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...s-hire-outside-attorney-for-kavanaugh-hearing

All-Male Senate Judiciary Republicans Hire Outside Attorney For Kavanaugh Hearing

The all-male contingent of Senate Judiciary Committee Republicans have hired an outside attorney, a woman, to ask questions at Thursday’s hearing with Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford, who has accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault, Politico first reported Tuesday.

Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-IA) has not revealed the lawyer’s name. “I guess we’re just being cautious,” he told Politico.

Grassley told TPM: “The attorney is a staff counsel, hired just like all the other lawyers we hired for the Supreme Court, and we have done it because we want to depoliticize the whole process, like the Democrats politicized the Anita Hill thing.”

“The whole purpose is to create an environment, where it’s what Dr. Ford has asked for, [that] it be professional and not be a circus,” he added.

An unnamed Democratic staffer told HuffPost: “Democratic senators feel capable of asking their own questions.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), a member of the committee, confirmed Tuesday that rather than ask questions himself on Thursday, “I’m going to let the professional person do it.”

Graham justified the unusual choice by saying there were too many senators on the panel to allow any one the time necessary to perform sufficient questioning, and said he viewed the hearing as a legal proceeding.

“I’m very comfortable [with] the idea of calling an outside counsel and giving them the time they need to ask questions,” he told reporters, adding: “If you’re going to nominate to the Supreme Court, right, why don’t you use some of the concepts they’ll be talking about?”

“I’m not big into my feelings,” he continued. “I don’t believe you have to believe a woman because they said it. I do believe a lot of women get abused who never say anything.”

On Sunday, Ford’s attorneys told Grassley they still didn’t know whether senators “or staff attorneys” would be asking questions Thursday. In a letter responding, Grassley said questions of “which witnesses to call, how many witnesses to call, in what order to call them, and who will question them” were “non-negotiable.”

Also on Sunday, Graham said of bringing in “our own counsel” to do the questioning: “I thought it would be really smart to have somebody come in that knows what the hell they’re doing, to ask the questions, to be respectful.”

He’s also said, referring to the allegations, “I’m not going to ruin Judge Kavanaugh’s life over this” and that “coaching witnesses or reporting thinly-sourced stories” were part of a coordinated strategy against Kavanaugh’s nomination.
 

https://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/mcconnell-have-votes-confirm-kavanaugh

McConnell Believes He Has The Votes To Confirm Kavanaugh

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said in a Tuesday press conference that he believes he has the votes to confirm Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court.

“I believe he’ll be confirmed, yes,” McConnell said when asked if he had the votes.

Earlier in the press availability, McConnell said he was “confident we’re going to win.”

Asked if his language made it seem like he would not approach Blasey Ford’s testimony about the alleged sexual assault seriously, McConnell noted that few people were willing to testify under oath about the matter.

He also indicated in a Tuesday press availability that Republicans will move quickly to hold a vote on Kavanaugh after he and his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, testify on Thursday.

“It is our plan to move forward in the very near future,” McConnell said.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/nbc-marist-poll-slight-leads-democrats-nelson-gillum

NBC Poll: Gillum Up 5 Points On DeSantis, Nelson Leads Scott By 3

Democrats are heading into the final six-week stretch before the midterms with leads in both of Florida’s crucial top-of-ticket races, according to a NBC News/Marist poll out Tuesday.

Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson leads Republicans Gov. Rick Scott 48 percent to 45 percent among likely voters in the Senate race. Democratic gubernatorial nominee Andrew Gillum leads Republican Rep. Ron DeSantis by 5 points, 48 percent to 43 percent.

“The political environment in Florida, overall, is tipping in the Democrats favor,” Lee Miringoff, director of the Marist College Institute for Public Opinion, said of the survey results.

Both races are closely-watched and highly-competitive. The Senate contest could prove decisive in which party takes control of the chamber, while the governor’s race pits a progressive vying to become the state’s first black governor against a diehard Trump ally.

The NBC/Marist results are in line with a number of other recent polls of likely Florida voters. Those surveys have showed Scott and Nelson in almost a dead heat, with Gillum more substantially edging out DeSantis.

A slight outlier is a Quinnipiac University poll released Monday that showed Nelson ahead of Scott 53 to 46 percent.

The NBC/Marist poll was conducted Sept. 16-20 among 600 likely voters. The margin of error is 4.7 percentage points.
 
The GOP stay on some get down or lay down shit......I think 45 and anyone that is loyal to his cause is going to get off if this goes through



 
Im skeptical as fuck of the GOP choosing anyone to ask questions don't let the "woman" smoke screen fool you.. they cant be trusted to have someone put their best foot forward in a fact finding mission.. They chose her for a reason now lets just wait and see
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/fema-cost-taxpayers-151000-unofficial-travel

FEMA Chief Brock Long Spent $151,000 Of Taxpayer’s Money On Unofficial Travel

Brock Long, the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency, spent more than $150,000 of government funds for personal travel on trips to and from his home in North Carolina on the weekends and during a family vacation to Hawaii, the Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday.

According to a portion of a Department of Homeland Security inspector general report obtained by the Journal, $94,000 of the $151,000 went toward the salary of staff whom he had drive him to North Carolina. Another $55,000 was used on travel expenses and $2,000 for maintenance.

Long racked up a portion of the expenses during a trip to Hawaii, when he had aides drive him and his family around in government vehicles. The trip was both for a family vacation and official business. The aide who transported Long and his family reportedly erased evidence of the travel to try to throw off the IG probe, according to the WSJ’s review of the report.

During his frequent trips from Washington, D.C. to North Carolina and back, Long also had an aide accompany him and used taxpayer funds to put the staffer up in a hotel while he spent time with family. The IG probe was apparently opened at the behest of DHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, who reportedly have a tense relationship with Long due to his frequent tardiness and use of government vehicles.

Nielsen’s spokesperson told the WSJ last week that Long would repay the government “as appropriate,” but when contacted on Tuesday, a spokesperson didn’t specify how much would be repaid.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/...ee-more-yalies-retract-support-from-kavanaugh

As Accusations Mount, Three More Yalies Retract Support From Kavanaugh


Yale Law School graduates Kent Sinclair, Douglas Rutzen and Mark Osler, all of whom previously signed a letter attesting to Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s virtue, are now pushing for an investigation into the accusations against him, according to a Tuesday Washington Post report.


“The confirmation process should be conducted in a way that fosters trust in the process and the Supreme Court, and that seriously considers allegations of sexual violence,” Sinclair told the Washington Post.

These three are not the only Yale classmates of Kavanaugh’s who have had a change of heart since the number of allegations against him grew.

Two of his peers during his undergrad time at Yale, Louisa Garry and Dino Ewing, withdrew their names Monday from a statement of support that ran in the New Yorker article detailing Deborah Ramirez’s accusation of sexual misconduct. They said that they were “not present” when the alleged incident occurred, and therefore “cannot dispute” Ramirez’s story.

Many present-day Yalies are also expressing disapproval of the alumnus, as students clog the halls of the Senate with anti-Kavanaugh protests and law school faculty members sign a letter calling for an FBI investigation into the accusations.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/trump-netanyahu-meeting-united-nations

Trump Says US Embassy Jerusalem Move Was ‘A Big Chip’ Delivered To Israel

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — President Donald Trump waded into thorny Middle East politics while at the United Nations on Wednesday, endorsing the two-state solution to bring an end the decades-long conflict between Israel and the Palestinians while poised to denounce the dangers posed by Iran.

Trump, a day after being greeted with laughter by world leaders still uncertain how to manage his “America First” ideology, explicitly backed Israel, leaned in on the importance of moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem and suggested that he saw progress on the horizon for long-delayed hopes for Middle East peace.

“I like two-state solution,” Trump said in his most clear endorsement of the plan. “That’s what I think works best.”

Meeting with Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Trump indicated that moving the embassy was “a big chip” the U.S. delivered to the Israelis.

“I took probably the biggest chip off the table. And so obviously they have to start you know we have to make a fair deal. We have to do something. Deals have to be good for both parties.”

Trump said he believed that the embassy “was always the primary ingredient as to why deals couldn’t get done.”

“Now that’s off the table,” Trump said. “Now that will also mean that Israel will have to do something that is good for the other side.”

The two-state “solution” is mostly aspirational. Ongoing conflict between Israel and Palestinians over the division of territory, borders and governance has spawned violence going back years and long stymied Mideast peace efforts.

Moving the embassy from Tel Aviv triggered considerable protest from the Palestinians and expressions of condemnation from many American allies who worried about further violence that could destabilize the fragile region. Trump said that his administration’s peace plan, in part helmed by his son-in-law senior adviser Jared Kushner, would be released in the coming months.

Trump’s meeting with Netanyahu came, symbolically, just ahead of his chairing a meeting of the U.N. Security Council about nuclear proliferation. The president had suggested, in a recent tweet, that Iran could be his focus, and he unloaded harsh rhetoric the day before on the nuclear-aspirant nation as a persistent malign influence across the Middle East.

“We ask all nations to isolate Iran’s regime as long as its aggression continues,” said Trump on Tuesday. The president has removed the U.S. from the 2015 nuclear accord with Iran, citing the country’s destabilizing actions throughout the region and support for terrorist groups like Hezbollah, and he accused its leaders on Tuesday of sowing “chaos, death and destruction.”

His national security adviser, John Bolton, went even further in a speech Tuesday, issuing a dire warning to Iran: “If you cross us, our allies or our partners; if you harm our citizens; if you continue to lie, cheat and deceive, yes, there will indeed be hell to pay,” Bolton said.

But despite his tough talk, Trump said he could envision relations with Iran moving along a similar “trajectory” as ones with North Korea. A year ago from the U.N., Trump belittled its leader Kim Jong Un as “Rocket Man” and threatened to annihilate the country but on Wednesday he touted the “the wonderful relationship” with Kim and teased that details of a second summit between the two men could be released soon.

The high-profile Security Council meeting came a day after Trump poured scorn on the “ideology of globalism” and heaped praise on his own administration’s achievements in a speech to the U.N. General Assembly that drew head shakes and even mocking laughter from his audience of fellow world leaders.

“The U.S. will not tell you how to live and work or worship,” Trump said as he unapologetically promoted his “America First” agenda. “We only ask that you honor our sovereignty in return.”

Speaking in triumphal terms, Trump approached his address to the world body as something of an annual report to the world on his country’s progress since his inauguration. He showcased strong economic numbers, declared that the U.S. military is “more powerful than it has ever been before” and crowed that in “less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.”

Just sentences into the president’s remarks, the audience began to chuckle and some leaders broke into outright laughter, suggesting the one-time reality television star’s puffery is as familiar abroad as it is at home. Trump appeared briefly flustered, then smiled and said it was not the reaction he expected “but that’s all right.”

Later he brushed off the episode, telling reporters, “Oh it was great. Well, that was meant to get some laughter so it was great.”

The leaders’ spontaneous response to Trump’s address only reinforced the American president’s isolation among allies and foes alike, as his nationalistic policies have created rifts with erstwhile partners and cast doubt in some circles about the reliability of American commitments around the world.

The laughter evoked a campaign line Trump frequently deployed against his predecessor Barack Obama — who embraced international engagement — suggesting that due to weak American leadership, “the world is laughing at us.”

In 2014, Trump tweeted, “We need a President who isn’t a laughingstock to the entire World. We need a truly great leader, a genius at strategy and winning. Respect!”

The General Assembly is four days of choreographed foreign affairs were designed to stand in contrast to a presidency sometimes defined by disorder, but they were quickly overshadowed by domestic political crises.

The fate of his second Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, was in fresh doubt after a second allegation of sexual misconduct, which Kavanaugh denies. Kavanaugh and his first accuser testify to Congress on Thursday.

Drama also swirls around the job security of Trump’s deputy attorney general. Rod Rosenstein was reported last week to have floated the idea of secretly recording the president last year and to have raised the idea of using the 25th Amendment to remove him from office. He will meet with Trump at the White House, also on Thursday.
 
Back
Top