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Omar’s GOP Rival Permanently Suspended On Twitter Over Threatening Tweets


Twitter permanently suspended Danielle Stella, Rep. Ilhan Omar’s (D-MN) Republican challenger, on Thursday after she tweeted several times that Omar ought to be “hanged” if baseless conspiracy theories about her are true.

“The account was permanently suspended for repeated violations of the Twitter Rules,” a Twitter spokesperson told TPM.

Prior to the suspension, which was first reported by the Washington Times, Stella had posted threatening tweets about Omar while peddling bogus conspiracy theories accusing the Muslim congresswoman of acting as a double agent for governments in the Middle East.

“If it is proven @ IlhanMN passed sensitive info to Iran, she should be tried for #treason and hanged,” Stella tweeted on Tuesday morning, per screenshots provided by Mediaite.

Several hours later, the Republican candidate posted an article from a far-right site with the headline “Omar Challenger Says She Should be Hanged for Treason if Reports of Qatari Recruitment True.” Stella included a digital drawing of a hanged figure in the tweet.

“My suspension for advocating for the enforcement of federal code proves Twitter will always side with and fight to protect terrorists, traitors, pedophiles and rapists” Stella said in a statement.

“This is the natural result of a political environment where anti-Muslim dogwhistles and dehumanization are normalized by an entire political party and its media outlets,” Omar tweeted in response to her challenger’s suspension. “Violent rhetoric inevitably leads to violent threats, and ultimately, violent acts.”

Stella, who’s aiming to unseat Omar in Minnesota’s Fifth District, has a checkered history: She was arrested twice this year for allegedly shoplifting from Target, and she also hinted that she was a follower of the QAnon conspiracy theory, though her former campaign staffer told the Daily Beast she only did so “to get attention.”
 

Trump Admin Lifts Unexplained Months-Long Hold On Military Aid To Lebanon

President Donald Trump’s administration has unfrozen the $105 million in congressionally approved military aid to Lebanon that it had been withholding since September without explanation.

According to the Associated Press and CNN, lawmakers were informed on Monday that the aid was released shortly before Thanksgiving.

Though Congress had approved the funds with support from the Department of Defense, the National Security Council and the State Department, the Office of Management and Budget refused to disburse the aid and ignored lawmakers’ questions about the delay for several months.

The mystery enshrouding the aid to Lebanon closely mirrors the administration’s unexplained freeze on military aid to Ukraine. It was later revealed that Trump had withheld the funds as he pushed the Ukrainian government to manufacture dirt on his political opponents.

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT), who sits on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said on Monday that he was “relieved” to hear the hold had been lifted.

“There was no legitimate security rationale to withhold funding, and lots of reasons why withholding aid would actually hurt U.S. interests,” he said in a statement. “But the administration alarmingly decided to delay these funds without explanation and did so at the worst possible time.”

House Foreign Affairs Committee member Ted Deutch (D-FL) said he and committee chair Eliot Engel (D-NY) had asked the administration about the aid delay last month.

“I’m pleased to see this critical aid finally resuming,” he tweeted.
 

Barr Denies IG Report Assertion That FBI Had Enough Info To Investigate Trump Campaign

Attorney General William Barr is already breaking with a point in the Justice Department Inspector General’s upcoming report that would undermine President Donald Trump’s constant protestations that the probe into his 2016 campaign was a “witch hunt.”

According to the Washington Post, IG Michael Horowitz plans to release his report next week which asserts that the FBI did have enough information to open an investigation into members of the Trump campaign in 2016.

The report also concludes that the FBI did not open the investigation based on the Steele Dossier or leaked information from the CIA, and that the probe did not have its roots in anti-Trump bias at the bureau.

Barr has reportedly praised Horowitz for his work in general, and it is not yet clear how he’ll register his disagreement.

Barr, who has remained in lockstep with Trump since his appointment, seems unwilling to acquiesce to Horowitz’s finding which would undermine one of the President’s primary and longest-lasting talking points. Trump’s grievance that those in the government were working to undermine his candidacy, and then presidency, from the start — neatly summed up with constant “WITCH HUNT” tweets — has formed the foundation of his messaging strategy.

Barr has willingly sung along to the President’s tune, and has publicly stated that he believes “spying did occur” by US intelligence agencies on the Trump campaign. Those in the intelligence community, like former DNI James Clapper, have pushed back on the Trump camp’s word choice, saying that the intelligence agencies were scrutinizing Russian interference in the election.

“They were ‘spying’ on — a term I don’t particularly like, but — on what the Russians were doing,” Clapper said last spring. “Trying to understand were the Russians infiltrating, trying to gain access, trying to gain leverage or influence, which is what they do.”
 

After Trump Pressure, Favorite Fox News Guest’s Company Gets $400m Border Wall Contract

President Donald Trump’s months of pressure on behalf of a star Fox News guest has finally paid off: The Pentagon has awarded the talking head’s construction company a $400 million border wall construction project.



The Defense Department announced Monday that Fisher Sand and Gravel Co. had been awarded the job to design and build a wall along the southern edge of the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge in Arizona. Two months ago, the Interior Department announced that it was transferring 230 acres of public land along the edge of Cabeza Prieta for Trump’s desired border wall.

The company’s previous bids for government contracts didn’t meet government standards, the Washington Post reported. And a binational commission has asked the group to halt construction on its latest project, a wall along a section of the banks of the Rio Grande, over hydrology concerns.

For months, Trump repeatedly and aggressively pushed DHS and the Army Corps of Engineers for Fisher to get a wall contract, the Post reported in May. He complained about the slow progress of existing wall construction in phone calls, White House meetings and Air Force One conversations with DHS and Army Corps officials, multiple sources told the Post.

In one instance described to the paper, Trump “immediately” brought up Fisher after summoning the chief engineer of the Army Corps, Lt. Gen. Todd Semonite, to the White House.

“He always brings them up,” Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-ND) said of Trump’s affinity for Fisher.

“He said these other guys were full of shit,” an unnamed official told the Post.

Fisher, who portrays himself as a straight-talking businessman during his Fox appearances, has made an impression on right-wing media personalities.

“The President, if he allows our team of Fisher Industries to play, I guarantee it, no different than Tom Brady: Once we get in, we never come out,” Fisher recited in a March interview with Fox News’ Laura Ingraham. “And if we don’t perform, the President can fire us. That’s how comfortable and confident I am, is when people see what I really offer.”

“I love it!” Ingraham responded. “Not taking sides on which prototype is best, but this is why you’re a good businessman.”

No contract appeared for the company, so Fisher went elsewhere on the border — to a GoFundMe-powered private wall project called “We Build The Wall.”

Fisher and We Build The Wall, which has raised millions from donors online and counts Steve Bannon and Kris Kobach as advisers, built its first small wall segment just outside of El Paso over the summer.

The project was temporarily stopped by the local government in Sunland Park, New Mexico over an incomplete permit application, but the hold was lifted after WBTW founder Brian Kolfage urged supporters to bombard city officials with phone calls. The project was also swarmed with right-wing militia members, one of whom was later charged with impersonating a Border Patrol agent and fraudulently collecting money for a cancer-stricken child.

The wall project, despite it’s hiccups, won Fisher the notice of the first family — Donald Trump Jr. visited the construction site. And just recently, the new leadership at the Department of Homeland Security visited Sunland Park to add their stamp of approval.

“When that wall got built, everything changed for us,” El Paso Border Patrol sector chief Gloria Chavez said at a press conference last week, with the latest acting DHS secretary, Chad Wolf, standing beside her.

Another recent project along the Rio Grande — the one that was halted over hydrology concerns — is also a partnership between Fisher and We Build The Wall.

The Post noted that the hydrology report that Fisher submitted for that project to the International Boundary and Water Commission — the binational commission that ultimately asked for construction to be delayed — consisted of six pages of depictions of the river that looked to be produced on basic paint-and-draw software.
 
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