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As Contenders For Speaker Gig, McCarthy Easily Out-Raises Scalise
WASHINGTON (AP) — Some say it’s a fight between West and South. Or a battle for President Donald Trump’s affections. Or a test of who can woo conservatives.
But one thing is clear: If the showdown between California Rep. Kevin McCarthy and Louisiana Rep. Steve Scalise for House speaker is a popularity contest, it will be tight.
“Steve is the more low-key guy, Kevin is more the big handshake, but they’re equally popular,” said Rep. Peter King, R-N.Y. “It’s not like right versus left or a good guy versus a bad guy.”
House Speaker Paul Ryan told colleagues Wednesday he wouldn’t seek re-election in November, implicitly starting the race to replace him. Disconcertingly for the GOP, Trump’s unpopularity and early Democratic momentum leave it unclear whether Ryan’s replacement will be speaker or minority leader.
For now, McCarthy and Scalise are seen as the chief contenders.
McCarthy, 53, an affable California who has developed a rapport with Trump, is from a Central Valley district. He was elected in 2006 and rocketed into a leadership job in 2009, thanks to his campaigning for fellow Republicans. He replaced Eric Cantor as majority leader in 2014 after the Virginian unexpectedly lost a primary for his House seat and quit.
In 2015, McCarthy sought to succeed Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, who’d alienated conservatives who considered him insufficiently doctrinaire. McCarthy abruptly left that contest days later after failing to line up enough votes, and Ryan accepted the post.
Scalise, 52, the House GOP vote counter first elected a decade ago, had little national name recognition when tragedy thrust him into headlines. He was shot at a congressional baseball practice last year and has slowly come back from his injuries.
The former state legislator and Louisiana conservative has earned the respect of his fellow lawmakers.
“The strength he’s shown with his injury, I think, has heightened where he is” among colleagues, said Rep. Phil Roe, R-Tenn.
Lawmakers and GOP donors want a leader who can raise money, and there McCarthy has an advantage. His leadership political committee has reported contributing more than triple that of Scalise’s total to GOP candidates since January 2017.
Neither man is known for rhetorical flourishes. And both have resume problems that fellow Republicans insisted they’d overcome.
In 2014, Scalise was discovered to have addressed a white-supremacist group in 2002 founded by former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke. Scalise apologized and said he’d been unaware of the group’s racial views.
McCarthy suggested in 2015 that a House committee probing the deadly 2012 raid on the U.S. embassy in Benghazi, Libya, had damaged Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s poll numbers, undermining GOP arguments that the investigation wasn’t politically motivated.
That raised questions about his ability as a communicator, a key for party leaders. But he was one of Trump’s earliest and most loyal congressional supporters in the 2016 presidential race.
Some Republicans prefer Scalise’s deep red state background to McCarthy’s bright blue California, since the GOP’s chief strongholds are in rural and red state districts.
“You have a lot of the Southern states who are looking to shift leadership back to that part of the country,” said Rep. Steve Russell, R-Okla.
Scalise is viewed as more conservative than McCarthy, important in a House GOP conference that’s drifted to the right. That could be intensified after November, when Republicans are expected to lose seats and many of those departing will be moderates.
Conservative groups have awarded Scalise modestly stronger voting ratings than McCarthy. But McCarthy has worked to improve his relationship with conservatives, including trying to craft legislation cutting spending from the government budget enacted recently.
Either man could cut a deal with the House Freedom Caucus. Those roughly 30 conservative members could theoretically deliver their votes to a contender in exchange for a promise to back a caucus member for a leadership post.
Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., who heads the Freedom Caucus, said a candidate’s willingness to listen to all lawmakers is “probably the top priority” for backing someone.
Neither Scalise nor McCarthy would acknowledge a race for Ryan’s job or definitively deny it. Scalise said it’s not “time to talk about what titles people want,” while McCarthy said, “There is no leadership election. Paul is speaker.”
Those close to Scalise say he is unlikely to directly challenge McCarthy. But he doesn’t need to. By offering himself as an alternative choice, ready in case McCarthy fails to muster support, he is essentially making an indirect bid for the top post.
Congressional leadership races often move quickly, with candidates rushing to win supporters and outmaneuver rivals. Several lawmakers said privately such moves are underway. But others said the race could stretch until after the election clarifies the number, ideology and mood of House Republicans.
CNN’s Phil Mudd Mauls ‘Dirtbag’ Hannity in Fiery Diatribe: ‘I’m So Pissed Off’ He Called Mueller a ‘Crime Boss’
Counterterrorism analyst and CNN contributor Phil Mudd has never been shy about speaking his mind, but this was a new level of forthrightness.
On CNN Newsroom Thursday, John Berman noted that President Donald Trumpcalled for his Twitter followers to tune into Hannity, and “minutes later, probably not coincidentally, Sean Hannity said” that special counsel Robert Mueller is a “crime boss.”
Hannity opened his Fox News show Wednesday night with a monologue slamming former FBI director James Comey for his reported comparison of Trump to a “mob boss,” making the case that by that standard, Mueller is also criminal.
When Berman asked Mudd for his thoughts on Hannity’s comments, Mudd went on a veritable tirade.
Here’s what he said:
I spent four and a half years by Robert Mueller. This is a storied prosecutor, one of the most legendary FBI directors – spent 12 years as an FBI director for both President Bush and President Obama – decorated military veteran being compared to a crime boss when he’s investigating a man who bragged about his genitalia during a campaign, who lied about the Obama birth certificate during the campaign and said so, whose press secretary lied within 24 hours of getting into the White House, who lied about the Trump Tower’s being wired, who’s got – what – 17, 18 women, I’ve lost the number of fingers to count on how many women who’ve said he did something inappropriate, whose advisors have quit because they lied to federal investigators about everything from financial fraud to their involvement with the Russian ambassador, so you got that dirtbag telling me that one of the most storied FBI directors ever is a crime boss? You put [Trump and Mueller] side by side and you tell me what we got here John, facts or facts?
And the coup-de-grace: “Robert Mueller’s an American legend, the president is a dirtbag.”
Berman was left stunned and reminded Mudd that he was talking about the President of the United States, calling his words a “remarkable statement.”
“Oh come on, John, he spoke about his genitalia,” Mudd replied. “He made fun of a woman’s face during the campaign. He made fun of a woman’s menstrual cycle. What do you want me to say?”
Maddow Defeats Hannity on Wednesday Night Despite Trump’s ‘Big Show’ Promotional Tweet
Minutes before Fox News’ Hannity aired Wednesday night, President Donald Trump took to Twitter to promote the program, telling his 50+ million followers that it was going to be a “big show” while advertising the time and network.
While the president’s tweet caused a lot of online chatter about what he wanted viewers to see on fervently pro-Trump conservative host Sean Hannity’s show that evening — Hannity railed against former FBI Director James Comey and Special Counsel Robert Mueller while attorney Joe diGenova called on Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to be fired — it didn’t end in a ratings victory for Hannity.
According to Nielsen, MSNBC’s The Rachel Maddow Show was the most-watched cable program on Wednesday, pulling in 3.257 million total viewers. Maddow, which airs in the same 9 PM ET timeslot as Hannity, also led all of cable news in the key 25-54 demographic, attracting 767,000 in the metric.
Hannity finished second overall in total viewership (3.045 million) and fourth in the demo (571,000). MSNBC’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell placed second in demo viewers (603,000) while Fox’s Tucker Carlson Tonight was third with 582,000.
https://www.mediaite.com/online/cnn...so-pissed-off-he-called-mueller-a-crime-boss/
Phil Mudd went right in as he usually does...
Trump’s Allies Are Reportedly Concerned Feds Seized Recordings From Michael Cohen
Apparently, Trump attorney Michael Cohen had a tendency to tape conversations and to hold on to the recordings. Following the FBI’s raid of Cohen’s office, allies and associates of President Donald Trump are now worried that the feds are in possession of those tapes, according to the Washington Post.
From the Post’s article:
Cohen, who served for a decade as a lawyer at the Trump Organization and is a close confidant of Trump, was known to store the conversations using digital files and then replay them for colleagues, according to people who have interacted with him.
“We heard he had some proclivity to make tapes,” said one Trump adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation. “Now we are wondering, who did he tape? Did he store those someplace where they were actually seized? . . . Did they find his recordings?”
It isn’t known if Cohen had any recordings of conversations with Trump. People familiar with the matter, however, noted that Cohen habitually taped personal and business discussions. And one person stated that the president was aware that this was Cohen’s practice because the lawyer would regularly play them for Trump.
It has been reported that the FBI took Cohen’s phones and computers during the raid and were looking for any records and communications related to Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal, who both received hush payments surrounding their alleged sexual encounters with Trump. The FBI is also reportedly looking into any other records related to attempts to quash negative publicity during the election, such as the infamous Access Hollywood tape.