Tag: donald trump
New Court Filing 'Obviously Written By Trump' Cites Shooting To Boost Ballroom

New Court Filing 'Obviously Written By Trump' Cites Shooting To Boost Ballroom

Early Saturday evening, during Memorial Day Weekend on May 23, Secret Service agents exchanged fire with a gunman who was approaching a White House security checkpoint in Washington, DC. The gunman was killed, and President Donald Trump is responding to the incident by arguing that it makes a case for his White House ballroom. And Trump's legal team makes that argument in a court filing posted online the day after the incident.

Politico legal affairs reporter Josh Gerstein posted the six-page legal document on X, formerly Twitter, noting how decidedly Trumpian the language in the filing is.

Gerstein tweeted, "JUST IN: Another court filing obviously written by Trump, seeks to leverage shooting Saturday to end litigation over WH ballroom project. Calls latest episode 'assassination attempt.' Cites news reports, but no other proof/legal cases. Ends w/a '!"

The filing in National Trust For Historic Preservation, Plaintiff, v. National Park Service, as Gerstein points out, is full of Trump Administration talking points.

"On Saturday night, May 23rd," the document reads, "a shooter once again sought to murder the President, his family, and his staff at the historic White House complex. We submit this urgent filing to update the Court on a second attempted assassination on the President within a single month. Last night, shortly after 6:00 p.m., an armed assassin approached a White House security checkpoint near 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, professionally pulled a high caliber gun from a bag, and opened fire in the exact direction of the White House. Brave Secret Service officers returned fire. The gunman was killed and an innocent bystander was seriously wounded in the shooting."

Many of Trump's critics are attacking the proposed ballroom as a vanity project that will cost taxpayers a fortune. But the court filing claims that the ballroom is necessary from a national security standpoint.

"This second attack on the President this month underscores the critical need for top level, state of the art security at the White House, including the Ballroom, a knitted, unified, cohesive part of the East Wing Project, which is vital for National Security, and is being constructed to ensure that the President can perform his constitutional duties in a safe and heavily secured facility," the filing states.

"This court's unlawful injunction has wrongfully cast a cloud of uncertainty around the future of the entire East Wing Project, which is being constructed for the physical safety and security of all Presidents, their families, staff, Foreign Dignitaries, and guests. When completed, this highly knitted, integrated, and unified Project, which is a singular and vital National Security facility, will provide a 'SAFE HAVEN' from attackers such as the one last night, and on April 25th. It will provide a highly secure space for future Inaugurations, and other major events, such as the recent visit of the King and Queen of the United Kingdom, and the coming visit in September of President Xi of China."

The document also states that the "under construction East Wing Project, which is on time and under budget, includes state of the art security features to repel all attacks against the President, his family, his staff, and esteemed visitors."

"These include a heavy steel, drone proof roof, missile resistant and drone proof columns, bullet, ballistic, and blast proof glass, Military grade venting for air conditioning and heating, and much more," the Trump Administration writes. "Together, the entire Facility, which includes bomb shelters, a state of the art hospital and medical facilities, Top Secret military installations, structures, and equipment, protective partitioning, and other features, is a single integrated, complex unit that is vital for the National Security of the United States."

Reprinted with permission from Alternet


Did We Lose Yet? Trump's Ego-Driven Iran 'Excursion' Crashes Into Reality

Did We Lose Yet? Trump's Ego-Driven Iran 'Excursion' Crashes Into Reality

“Many questions, few details in latest Iran peace proposal,” read the headline on a New York Times report Sunday. As the subhead explained, “It is too early to tell what exactly Trump and Iran have agreed to, or if they have agreed to much at all.” The article, by the way, was written by David Sanger, who Trump called “treasonous” over his clearly accurate reporting on how badly the war was going.

But, in fact, Trump’s Iran war may be over, or virtually over. America lost.

Iran may or may not agree to exercise restraint in its control over the Strait of Hormuz and its nuclear program. But as Donald Trump of all people should know, agreements can be broken. At a fundamental level Trump, who began by demanding UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER and trying to impose a subservient new regime, is now slinking away, leaving Iran’s hard-liners empowered — and America’s reputation shattered.

How did that happen? America is a superpower, Iran a middle-sized regional power at best. Spending isn’t the only determinant of armed might, but even so a comparison of the two government’s military budgets is ludicrously one-sided:

US and Iran military spending 2025 Data from Stockholm International Peace Research Institute

Yet the Iranian regime is not only still standing, it is stronger than before. Meanwhile, Trump is running away.

Trump’s disastrous leadership isn’t the sole factor behind this debacle, although it’s a large part of the story. In my view there are four main reasons Trump’s Iran “excursion” is ending in humiliation.

First, this was a fundamentally unwinnable war.

Once the initial decapitation strike against Iran’s leadership left the regime’s hold on power intact, Operation Epic Fury became an attempt to end Iran’s threat to world oil supplies by suppressing its missiles and drones with air power. Unfortunately, as the Substack History Does You has documented, such campaigns have never worked. Allied air forces tried to stop Nazi Germany from launching V1s and V2s in World War II; they failed. During the first Gulf War, Coalition air forces devoted huge resources to an attempt to stop Iraq from launching Scud missiles; they also failed. Chasing down mobile launchers, especially in an era of cheap, abundant drones and in a huge, mountainous country like Iran, is an impossible game of whack-a-mole.

Of course, leaders who aren’t terminally arrogant and ignorant don’t start unwinnable wars in the first place.

Second, painful as this is to recognize, the U.S. military, after decades of unchallenged dominance, appears to have lost much of its edge. As Phillips O’Brien recently wrote,

The lack of thought-through US response to the technological changes we are seeing [especially in the Russia-Ukraine war] before it embarked on the Iran bombing shows how smug militaries can be—and the bigger and more powerful they think they are the more smug they tend to be.

There is far too much self-congratulation in the US about its military, a belief that US armed forces are highly professional, show initiative, are thoughtful, etc. This is a romantic vision that Americans are using now to throw all blame for the Iran failure on the Trump Administration.

That said, the Trump administration has made the degradation of the military much worse.

Pete Hegseth, the self-proclaimed Secretary of War, has carried out an unprecedented purge of military officers with impeccable reputations, with the majority of those fired Black or female. He has replaced them with political loyalists like Admiral Brad Cooper, the head of Central Command, who has in effect been running Trump’s war.

The officers who survived the purge got the message. Under Hegseth, official accounts of the war’s progress have been a stream of bombastic claims of victory and ludicrously rosy depictions of the situation on the battlefield. Less than two weeks ago Cooper was still peddling fantasies of easy victory to Congress, asserting among other things that the U.S. could easily open the Strait of Hormuz by force.

Do you believe that these delusions are only for public consumption, that Hegseth has been getting and acting on accurate information? I don’t. It’s far more likely that Hegseth and Trump have also been receiving false, optimistic reports, because nobody in the military dares to tell them the uncomfortable truth.

The sycophancy and flattery Cooper exhibited in that testimony surely reflected groupthink that has led to many bad decisions. For example, reporting by CNN, the Washington Post and the Times finds that U.S. bases and facilities have suffered a remarkable amount of damage from Iranian drone and missile strikes, with casualties and much expensive equipment and aircraft destroyed. Why wasn’t the U.S. military prepared for this possibility?

The lack of preparation clearly reflected a predetermined view that Iran would be so devastated by U.S. attacks that it would be unable to strike back. And it’s reasonable to infer that any officers who tried to warn of the dangers were treated as defeatists and silenced.

Finally, success in modern war depends crucially on out-thinking one’s enemies. But MAGA is all about deprecating hard thinking and valorizing belligerent ignorance.

On Saturday Hegseth addressed the graduating class at West Point. In war, he declared, “you can’t throw your pronouns at the enemy.” He congratulated the cadets on being “fit, not fat.” Despite humiliating failure, Hegseth still has his job — and is still asserting that eliminating DEI wins wars and that bulging biceps can beat drones.

Can America still snatch victory from the jaws of defeat, or should it accept a deal that leaves us clearly worse off than we were before the war? The answer is that running away — if that is what Trump is doing — is now the right move. It’s better to accept a bad deal, one that leaves America much weaker than it was a few months ago, than to double down on a failed war. Time is not on our side: looming shortages of critical weapons, the imminent exhaustion of world oil inventories, and the lost support of our allies and the American public mean that this war needs to end soon.

Paul Krugman is a Nobel Prize-winning economist and former professor at MIT and Princeton who now teaches at the City University of New York's Graduate Center. From 2000 to 2024, he wrote a column for The New York Times. Please consider subscribing to his Substack.

Reprinted with permission from Paul Krugman.

Trump Built His Slush Fund 'Settlement' On A Lie -- And An Impeachable Offense

Trump Built His Slush Fund 'Settlement' On A Lie -- And An Impeachable Offense

Editor’s Note: The creation of a $1.8 billion fund for supposed victims of (nonexistent) weaponization of the Department of Justice in the last administration is the most grave dereliction of duty in Trump 2.0, save only the pardons of the January 6 offenders. Trump and Blanche are attempting to bypass the constitutional responsibilities of all three branches. At the same time, they are trying to force the American people to pay a wholly undeserved bounty to perpetrators of some of the most perfidious crimes against the nation in our history.

This is a two-part essay. Today’s part canvases the multiple legal violations and anomalies of the scheme to settle a bogus lawsuit in exchange for creation of the fund. Part Two will focus on the ultimate victims—the American people—as well as discuss what can be done going forward to try to blunt or nullify the outrageous swindle.

The most corrupt president in the nation’s history has managed to reach a new low.

Not in terms of sheer violence to the country: that dubious distinction remains with his repugnant pardon of the January 6th offenders. But for layer upon layer of corruption—abuse of every branch of government, the Constitution itself, and the American people—the bogus “settlement” and creation of a $1.776 billion fund for supposed victims of Biden’s weaponization is a new nadir.

Imagine that Trump had simply announced the creation of a $1.8 billion fund, drawn from general DOJ funds, to compensate Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, and everyone else who claims they were victimized by Biden’s weaponization of the justice system.

The political uproar would have been immediate and thunderous. Trump’s allies in Congress would have buried their heads deep in the sand while Democrats went on the political warpath, promising, among other things, a thorough investigation and challenge if they regain the House, including a possible impeachment inquiry.

Yet what Trump and the administration—which is to say, Trump and Trump—in fact did was much worse: a raw violation of his constitutional duty to faithfully execute the laws, an abuse of every branch of government, and a sizable shakedown of the public’s money. All of it by subterfuge: using a sham lawsuit, a rigged settlement, and a voluntary dismissal timed to outrun a federal judge who was closing in on the scheme.

This scandal has layers, and each one is more rotten than the one beneath it. With the exception of the January 6th pardons themselves, it is the most glaring violation of the public trust in Trump 2.0—and that is a crowded field.

I have been writing about Trump’s IRS lawsuit since February—calling it what it is: a collusive non-lawsuit in which Trump controlled both sides. He sued the IRS and Treasury, agencies he runs with an iron fist, defended by a DOJ led by his own former personal criminal defense lawyer, Todd Blanche, who declared at his first press conference, “I love working for President Trump.”

As I explained in prior pieces, this fails the Constitution’s basic requirement that federal courts only hear genuine cases or controversies between adverse parties. You don’t have a lawsuit when the plaintiff tells reporters he is going to “work out a settlement with myself” and instructs the Treasury Secretary to “pay me.” Asked about it at the White House on Monday, Trump said he knows “very little about it” and “wasn’t involved in the creation of it.” The man who said “tell ‘em to pay me” suddenly knows nothing about it. Which tells you much of what you need to know.

Judge Kathleen Williams of the Southern District of Florida saw it too. She ordered briefing on the collusion question and appointed a gold-plated set of amici—former federal judge and legendary AUSA John Gleeson, former Solicitor General Donald Verrilli, and Faith Gay—to present the arguments that neither Trump nor his captive DOJ could be trusted to make. That filing was supplemented by a brief on behalf of 93 members of Congress arguing flatly that the court lacks jurisdiction because the lawsuit is collusive.

Two weeks ago, I predicted that DOJ would run rather than face that hearing. They did, filing a notice of voluntary dismissal just two days before they would have had to choose between two untenable alternatives: either concede the DOJ stands in genuine opposition to Trump, a position the entire record belies, or admit it does his bidding—which would be a confession that the lawsuit was a constitutional nullity from the start. They chose an off-ramp instead.

The dismissal instructs Judge Williams that there was nothing left she could do, but that’s not quite right. It’s true that Judge Williams had to accept Trump’s voluntary dismissal: the Eleventh Circuit has held that such a notice is self-executing and strips the district court of jurisdiction. But Judge Williams put down a marker in her order granting the dismissal, and it’s going to continue to have a legal and political impact on the pushback against the fund.

After canvassing the law strongly indicating that Trump v. IRS was a collusive suit, i.e., a constitutional nullity, Judge Williams wrote that because the notice of voluntary dismissal “does not reference or include a stipulation of settlement, there is no settlement of record.”

Read that again. There is no settlement of record before her court. The entire settlement agreement, which says up front it is settling the case before Judge Williams, is built on a lie, and the parties know it. The agreement declares that the United States—you and I—receive the benefit of the dismissal of Trump’s lawsuit. But a lawsuit that is unconstitutional and cannot be brought in federal courts is of zero value. You cannot settle something that never existed. The consideration on the government’s side of this transaction is pure air.

Williams expressly tied the statement of no settlement to the “outstanding question as to whether an actual case or controversy existed.” That means, at a minimum, that the unconstitutionality of the original case, which is the only even purported consideration for the creation of the fund, is in serious doubt.

Worse, as Williams made plain, the DOJ under its own regulations has “an independent obligation to uphold the public’s strong interest in knowing about the conduct of its Government and expenditure of its resources”—and it filed nothing to fulfill that obligation. Not a word in court to justify spending $1.776 billion of public money. (Note the cute nod to 1776, just months before the semiquincentennial, as if by a feat of patriotic magic that’s the fair value) And how could there be? The administration is creating a huge slush fund to benefit some of the most perfidious offenders against the Constitution in our history, in exchange for the dropping of an unconstitutional non-lawsuit.

This is not a settlement. It is a money grab. It’s a party for all of Trump’s fellow travelers who claim the Biden administration weaponized the DOJ and harmed them, featuring a piñata with $1.8 billion that Trump will let fly. And who will oversee the distribution of the booty? Five commissioners appointed by Blanche and serving at Trump’s pleasure. The fix is in up and down and side to side.

Stuart Rhodes, five million? Sounds about right. Steve Bannon, thirty million? Why not? Every January 6th offender—people who together committed the most serious assault on American democracy since at least the Civil War, and who have already had their entirely fair convictions swept away by pardon—can dip into the cookie jar.

And, another of the cascading outrages of the whole setup, the agreement provides that the names of people who get payouts and the amounts they draw from the honeypot are to remain confidential, provided only to the attorney general.

Oh, and one more thing added this morning as if by afterthought. The DOJ has beneficently appended a promise that the IRS will not pursue any claims it may have against Trump and his family over unpaid taxes. That significantly increases the enormous price tag to the public of the deal, in exchange for, well, nothing.

Blanche reaches for Keepseagle v. Vilsack as legal cover. That Obama-era settlement came after eleven years of genuine adversarial litigation by Native American farmers proving decades of documented discrimination—a payout representing 98 percent of what plaintiffs could have won at trial. This case started and ended in four months, with the government never filing a single word in defense. The analogy doesn’t limp. It doesn’t walk at all.

The arrangement is also a direct affront to Congress, and a rank violation of the law governing disbursement of money Congress has allocated.

Congress has set aside money in the Judgment Fund precisely for bona fide settlements of actual or imminent litigation against the United States. The GAO has explained that the Fund “is limited to litigative awards, meaning awards that were or could have been made in a court.” The law that Blanche invokes—28 U.S.C. § 2414—requires the same: it authorizes settlements only for suits against the United States, not for separate free-standing compensation funds paying unnamed future claimants who have filed nothing and sued nobody.

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D_MD) —who, as ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, may be leading the charge against this whole foul arrangement—threw down the gauntlet Monday. Only Congress has the power to appropriate federal dollars, he said, and Congress never authorized a nearly $1.8 billion political slush fund for aggrieved MAGA foot soldiers and sycophants. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR), the ranking member of the Senate Finance Committee, was even more pointed: he called it the most brazen theft and abuse of taxpayer dollars by any president in American history.

In Blanche’s Senate testimony today before the Appropriations subcommittee on the overall DOJ budget request, he evaded answering whether January 6 offenders who had attacked Capitol police officers would be eligible for a bounty. He adopted the all-purpose deflection that he was not going to be one of the Commissioners.

During the same hearing, Democratic Senators said they expected there to be a vote on the slush fund as part of the “vote-a-rama” later in the week. More about that in Part 2, which will explore possible lines of future resistance.

And then there is DOJ itself—an institution with its own independent obligations, which this arrangement completely compromises.

Federal statute limits the attorney general’s settlement authority to “compromise settlements of claims…for defense of imminent litigation or suits against the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2414. The Judgment Fund regulation at 31 C.F.R. § 256.1 likewise requires that payments be for “actual or imminent litigation” and comply with “the statutory and regulatory requirements that authorize the award or settlement.” DOJ’s own settlement policies prohibit paying claims of parties who were never before the court.

The Anti-Weaponization Fund violates every one of these requirements. It pays future claimants who were not parties to Trump v. IRS, who have no pending litigation against the United States, and whose claims do not yet exist. Blanche’s own letter concedes as much, stating that the corpus “does not represent the value of any current claim by Plaintiffs.” He intends that as an explanation. It reads as a confession.

It also sets up a minefield for some unlucky Executive Branch official to navigate. Someone will have to certify that the funds are spent in compliance with 28 U.S.C. §1414, which governs the DOJ’s settlement authority. But that statute specifies that the funds can only be used for defense of “actual or imminent litigation.” As the brief filed for 93 members of the House explains, “There must be a legitimate dispute over either liability or amount.” After all, “the Judgment Fund is limited to litigative awards, meaning awards that were or could have been made in a court.” (quoting GAO report and CRS article on Judgment Fund; emphases in brief).

That may explain the report in this morning’s Wall Street Journal of the abrupt resignation of the general counsel of the Treasury Department, which will bear responsibility for approving the use of the government’s judgment fund. Brian Morrisey is a highly credentialed lawyer, a former clerk to Justice Clarence Thomas who left a partnership at the white shoe firm of Sidley & Austin to take the plum government job. The Journal report leaves the conspicuous implication that Morrisey’s exit was to avoid having his fingerprints on the programmatic approvals going forward.

You can bet that many more government officials will be taking cover before the radioactive fallout from this constitutional meltdown has run its course. In the second part of this essay, I will analyze the grave injury to the American public and sketch possible lines of legal and political resistance to the whole debacle.


Senate Republicans Enraged Over Trump Endorsement Of Lone Star Sleazebag Paxton

Senate Republicans Enraged Over Trump Endorsement Of Lone Star Sleazebag Paxton

President Donald Trump’s 11th-hour endorsement in the Texas GOP primary went to far-right Attorney General Ken Paxton over establishment Republican Sen. John Cornyn, dealing a severe blow to the lawmaker’s chances, angering some prominent GOP lawmakers, and likely boosting the chances of underdog Democrat James Talarico winning the seat in the red Lone Star State.

“Ton of concern among GOP [senators] about Trump’s endorsement of Paxton,” CNN’s Manu Raju reported. “Fear it will cost them a lot more money to save a seat in a red state.”

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) said that Trump’s Paxton endorsement “puts that seat in jeopardy” and asked, “how does that help strengthen the president’s hand when we lose a state like Texas?”

“Supremely disappointed,” is how she characterized her reaction.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) declared Paxton is “an ethically challenged individual,” reports Semafor congressional bureau chief Burgess Everett.

“John Cornyn is an outstanding senator and deserved, in my judgment, the president’s support,” she said. “Obviously, it’s the president’s call, but I’m disappointed that he did it.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), a top Trump ally, said, “I think Paxton can win. I think it’d be three times more expensive.”

Sen. Ron Johnson said he was “speechless” and added, “I really have no comment.”

Described as “not happy looking,” Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), who has supported Sen. Cornyn, acknowledged it was President Trump’s decision to make.

Punchbowl News’ Andrew Desiderio reported that Thune was “stone-faced” after the endorsement, and appeared “pretty deep” in anger.

“Most GOP senators really want him to endorse Cornyn,” Everett had reported about 90 minutes before the Trump-Paxton endorsement dropped.

Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT) had said, “I would like to see him support John Cornyn in Texas. I’ve made that clear.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) had said, “I am hopeful that he backs Sen. Cornyn. John has been a steadfast ally of the president and I hope the president sees that.”

Congressional reporter Jamie Dupree described U.S. Senator Roger Wicker’s (R-MS) response as “stone cold silent.”

Professor Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, called Trump’s endorsement of Paxton “Great News for Talarico,” “Bad News for GOP money reserves,” and declared, “If ever there’s a year when a D can win statewide in TX, it’s 2026.”

Talarico responded to the Trump endorsement: “As I said on primary night, it doesn’t matter who wins this runoff. We already know who we’re running against: the billionaire mega-donors and their corrupt political system.”

Reprinted with permission from Alternet


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