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https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/tur-stream-of-consciousness

Tur Sums Up Trump: ‘Stream Of Consciousness’ From A Lonely President


MSNBC host Katy Tur summed up President Donald Trump’s meandering pool spray at a Cabinet meeting Wednesday, which clocked in at over 90 minutes and careened from topic to topic.

“I think what we saw right there was the stream of consciousness from man who hasn’t talked to anybody in a few weeks,” Tur said.


During the Cabinet meeting pool spray, Trump mentioned his recent loneliness over the holiday, as well as former Defense Secretary Jim Mattis’ ouster, incoming Sen. Mitt Romney’s (R-UT) op-ed and the war in Syria.

 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/news/saudi-arabia-seek-death-pentalty-khashoggi-killing

Saudi Arabia: 5 Suspects Will Face Death Penalty In Khashoggi Killing

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Saudi Arabia announced on Thursday it will seek the death penalty against five suspects in the slaying of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi, a killing that has seen members of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s entourage implicated in the writer’s assassination.

Prosecutors announced that 11 suspects in the slaying attended their first court hearing with lawyers, but the statement did not name those in court. It also did not explain why seven other suspects arrested over the Oct. 2 killing at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul did not immediately face formal charges. The kingdom previously announced 18 people had been arrested.

Saudi officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The killing of Khashoggi, who wrote columns critical of Prince Mohammed, has strained the decades-long ties the kingdom enjoys with the United States. It also has added to a renewed international push to end the Saudi-led war in Yemen.

The state-run Saudi Press Agency and state television gave few details about the hearing.

“The Public Prosecutor demanded imposing proper punishments against the defendants and is seeking capital punishment for five of the defendants for their direct involvement in the murder,” a statement from prosecutors said, without elaborating.

The suspects requested copies of the indictments they faced, as well as asked for more time to prepare for their case, prosecutors said.

While vague on details about the case, prosecutors made a point to express concerns about Turkey. They alleged that Turkish officials did not answer two formal requests made for evidence in the case.

“To date, the Saudi Public Prosecutor has not received any response, and the Public Prosecution is still awaiting their response,” the statement said.

Officials in Ankara could not be immediately reached for comment. Turkish officials have previously said they shared evidence with Saudi Arabia and other nations over Khashoggi’s killing.

Turkey also has demanded Saudi Arabia extradite those 18 suspects to be tried there for Khashoggi’s killing. Turkish security officials have kept up a slow leak of videos, photographs and morbid details surrounding Khashoggi’s slaying to pressure the kingdom, as the two U.S.-allied countries vie for influence over the wider Mideast.

Turkish media have published photographs of members of the crown prince’s entourage at the consulate in Istanbul ahead of the slaying. Khashoggi’s body, believed to have been dismembered after his killing, has yet to be found.

Khashoggi, 59, entered the consulate Oct. 2 as his fiancée waited outside. But unbeknownst to him, a team of Saudi officials had flown in before his arrival and laid in wait for him.

Saudi Arabia denied for weeks that Khashoggi had been killed but later changed its story and ultimately acknowledged the brutal slaying. King Salman ordered the restructuring of the country’s intelligence service, but has so far shielded Prince Mohammed, his 33-year-old son who is next in line to the throne in the oil giant kingdom.

All that has not has not stopped widespread international criticism against the kingdom. Under Prince Mohammed, Saudi Arabia has seen the arrest of business leaders, royals and activists while also recently granting women the right to drive.

U.S. senators in December passed the measure that blamed the prince for Khashoggi’s killing and called on Riyadh to “ensure appropriate accountability.” Senators also passed a separate measure calling for the end of U.S. aid to the Saudi-led war in Yemen. Both measures drew angry responses from the kingdom, but a renewed international effort has begun to end the Yemen war.

It is no surprise that the kingdom would seek to execute those accused in Khashoggi’s slaying. Saudi Arabia was the world’s third top executioner in 2017, behind China and Iran, according to Amnesty International’s most recent figures available.

The kingdom executed at least 146 people, according to the group. It regularly beheads those condemned to death and last year said it “crucified” a Myanmar man, an execution in which the condemned is usually beheaded and then the body put on display, arms outstretched as if crucified.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/world-news/china-far-side-moon-landing

China Becomes First Nation To Land On ‘Dark’ Side Of The Moon


BEIJING (AP) — China’s burgeoning space program achieved a first on Thursday: a landing on the so-called dark side of the moon that brings the country closer to its goal of becoming a space power.

Three nations — the United States, the former Soviet Union and more recently China — have sent spacecraft to the near side of the moon, which faces Earth, but this landing is the first-ever on the far side.

The China National Space Administration said the 10:26 a.m. touchdown of the Chang’e 4 craft has “opened up a new chapter in human lunar exploration.”

A photo taken at 11:40 a.m. and sent back by Chang’e 4 shows a small crater and a barren surface that appears to be illuminated by a light from the lunar explorer. Its name comes from that of a Chinese goddess who, according to legend, has lived on the moon for millennia.

The landing highlights China’s growing ambitions to rival the U.S., Russia and Europe in space, and more broadly, to cement the nation’s position as a regional and global power.

“The space dream is part of the dream to make China stronger,” President Xi Jinping said in 2013, shortly after becoming China’s leader.

In year-end wrap-ups, Chinese media and officials hailed the Dec. 8 launch of Chang’e 4 as one of the nation’s major achievements in 2018. The landing on Thursday was announced to the public by state broadcaster CCTV at the top of the noon news.

“On the whole, China’s space technology still lags behind the West, but with the landing on the far side of the moon, we have raced to the front,” said Hou Xiyun, a professor at Nanjing University’s school of astronomy and space science.

He added that China has Mars, Jupiter and asteroids in its sights: “There’s no doubt that our nation will go farther and farther.”

In 2013, Chang’e 3, the predecessor craft to the current mission, made the first moon landing since the former Soviet Union’s Luna 24 in 1976. The United States is the only country that has successfully sent a person to the moon, though China is considering a crewed mission too.

For now, it plans to send a Chang’e 5 probe to the moon next year and have it return to Earth with samples — also not done since the Soviet mission in 1976.

The moon’s far side isn’t always dark but is sometimes called the dark side because it faces away from Earth and is relatively unknown. It has a different composition than the near side, where previous missions have landed.

Chang’e 4, a combined lander and rover, will make astronomical observations and probe the structure and mineral composition of the terrain above and below the surface.

“The far side of the moon is a rare quiet place that is free from interference from radio signals from Earth,” mission spokesman Yu Guobin said, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. “This probe can fill the gap of low-frequency observation in radio astronomy and will provide important information for studying the origin of stars and nebula evolution.”

One challenge of operating on the far side of the moon is communicating with Earth. China launched a relay satellite in May so that Chang’e 4 can send back information.

China conducted its first crewed space mission in 2003, becoming only the third country to do so after Russia and the U.S. It has put a pair of space stations into orbit and plans to launch a Mars rover in the mid-2020s. Its space program suffered a rare setback last year with the failed launch of its Long March 5 rocket.

Wu Weiren, the chief designer of the China Lunar Exploration Project, called the landing a trailblazing milestone.

“Building a space power is a dream that we persistently pursue,” he said in an interview with CCTV at the Beijing Aerospace Flight and Control Center. “And we’re gradually realizing it.”
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/trump-gets-checked-as-dems-officially-take-house-control-at-noon

Trump Finally Gets Checked As Dems Officially Take House Control At Noon

Things are about to change in a big way in Washington.

Democrats will take back control of the House for the first time in eight years at noon ET Thursday, putting an official check on President Trump’s powers and setting up what could be an increasingly acrimonious two years in the nation’s capital as they square off with the bellicose president.

Democrats will have 235 seats in the House, enough to block any GOP legislative proposals and a seat at the table in all legislative functions. Their new majority will also play a key oversight role of the president, with multiple committees champing at the bit to start investigating potential malfeasance committed by the Trump administration.

Renewed congressional oversight could trigger massive fights between the House and the administration over executive privilege as Democrats go digging into various White House actions, as well as the departments and agencies. The newly renamed House Committee on Oversight and Reform (dropping Government from the name), House Intelligence Committee and House Judiciary Committee are all expected to play key roles in investigating the administration, something the GOP-controlled House willfully refused to do. Their subpoenas won’t be limited to solving whether Trump’s campaign colluded with Russia during the 2016 election, either.

Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) is all but guaranteed to take back the speaker’s gavel, making her the first person to return to the speakership since Sam Rayburn did so back in 1954. Pelosi, 78, achieved this feat by cutting a deal with Democrats who opposed her return by promising to serve only two more terms as her party’s leader.

Governing in the minority tends to be easier — it’s a lot simpler to keep one’s party united against a common foe than to get members to agree on positive policy. That’s already been seen as Democrats from across the spectrum have stood fast against giving Trump money for his border wall, pressuring Trump to back off in order to end the ongoing government shutdown.

But Pelosi had to fight to get back to the speakership, and there are signs that she’ll have to keep working hard to keep both the left and center flanks of her party happy.

Even after Pelosi’s deal with a group of less than two dozen House Democrats secured her speakership, a handful of freshmen from tough districts have said they’ll vote for someone else on the floor as they keep one eye on the next election. On the other side, a restless group of progressives led by freshman Rep.-elect Alexandrio Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) are threatening to vote against Democrats’ rules package on Thursday because of a provision requiring bills to be deficit-neutral, known as PAYGO or “pay as you go,” the latest sign that they’re not going to bow to leadership.

With 2020 right around the corner, Pelosi will also have to help shield the dozens of newly elected Democrats in districts Trump carried in order to keep the House in Democratic control after the next election.

Things could get increasingly complicated once special counsel Robert Mueller’s report is completed. It’s unclear what the report will contain, but Pelosi will likely have to manage competing impulses between progressives who see impeachment as a viable option (58 already voted to impeach Trump more than a year ago) and more moderate members wary of playing the ultimate card with a GOP Senate unlikely to convict — and their own reelections on the line.

But for now, a relatively unified Democratic Party will be able to block some of Trump’s biggest goals and for the first time will have subpoena power to investigate his administration. And Pelosi will once again run the show.
 
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/dc/ho...troduce-articles-of-impeachment-against-trump

House Dem Plans To Re-Introduce Articles Of Impeachment Against Trump

A California Democrat plans on re-introducing Thursdays articles of impeachment against President Trump, just as House Democrats take control of the new Congress, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA), originally rolled out the measure in 2017, which includes allegations that Trump obstructed justice by firing former FBI Director James Comey.

Then, it was up to Republicans, who controlled the House and have largely remained aligned with Trump, whether to take the impeachment articles up. Now the decision rests with Democratic leaders, who have walked a careful line of not ruling out impeachment proceedings entirely but also not encouraging them.

“We have to wait and see what happens with the Mueller report,” Rep. Nancy Pelosi, who likely will be elected House speaker Thursday told NBC News, while referring to the report special counsel Robert Mueller is expected to write as part of his Russia investigation. “We shouldn’t be impeaching for a political reason, and we shouldn’t avoid impeachment for a political reason.”
 
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