Tag: donald trump
James Comer

Republicans Spouting Absurd Claims To Deflect Trump's Epstein Letter

In yet another sign that GOP lawmakers have no shame when it comes to defending their Dear Leader, multiple Republican members of Congress made the insane claim this week that President Donald Trump’s vile birthday message to Jeffrey Epstein was forged.

The lawmakers were taking cues from the White House, which claimed that Trump's signature on the birthday note is not real—suggesting that someone nearly 25 years ago had the foresight to forge Trump's signature.

"From what I've seen, it's not his signature," Rep. Byron Donalds of Florida said, even though it is very clearly Trump's signature.

And, in true Republican fashion, Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee used it as an opportunity to turn attention back to President Joe Biden’s use of an autopen.

"I don't know. I mean, anyone can do a signature. We’ve seen autopens been used quite a bit by the Biden administration,” he said.

“The president says he did not sign it. So I take the president [at] his word,” House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer told CNN.

Comer, who spent two years investigating Biden, added that he has no plans to investigate Trump over the letter.

“You asked if I'm going to be trying to figure out whether that, you know, fake or not, probably not. We're going to be trying to get justice for the victim,” he said.

Similarly, Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio told CNN that he doesn't "buy" that the signature was Trump's, and that he doesn't think that the House should investigate Trump's ties to Epstein. But what else would you expect from someone accused of refusing to protect sexual assault victims when he was a wrestling coach at the Ohio State University?

Rep. Eric Burlison of Missouri tried to pull the notorious "I haven't seen the letter" cop out when asked about it by CNN's Manu Raju. But when Raju pulled out a copy of the birthday message, Burlison refused to look at it.

"I don't want to see it,” he said while laughing.

House Speaker Mike Johnson also ridiculously claimed to have not seen the note.

"I’ve heard about it. But no," Johnson told reporters. "And the White House says it’s not true."

Meanwhile, Democrats are mocking Republicans for their blatant lies.

“So let me get this straight … 20 years ago, Democrats forged Trump’s signature on a creepy birthday card to a pedophile … planted it in Epstein’s estate before Trump even ran … and then waited to release it until *after* Trump got reelected? Got it,” Rep. Jim McGovern of Massachusetts wrote on X.

"I have two eyes. You have two eyes,” Rep. Eric Swalwell of California told CNN. “Anyone who looks at that letter which was provided by the Epstein estate knows whose signature that was.”

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos

Lisa Cook

Lying With Impunity: Nepo Billionaire Pulte Framed Lisa Cook

A few weeks back, Bill Pulte, the Federal Housing Finance Agency Director (FHFA) and the billionaire heir to a housing construction firm, claimed to have found evidence that Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook had committed mortgage fraud. Donald Trump immediately tried to fire Cook from her position at the Fed, with the intention of getting another seat on the Fed’s seven-person board.

This attempted firing raised several serious questions. Most immediately, whether the FHFA Director is supposed to be rifling through the mortgage documents of Trump’s political opponents.

Previously, Pulte had claimed to have found evidence that California Senator Adam Schiff had committed mortgage fraud. Schiff had led the first impeachment case against Trump in 2019, as a member of the House. Pulte also claimed to have found evidence of mortgage fraud by Letitia James, the Attorney General of New York, who had gotten a civil conviction against Trump for, among other things, lying on loan forms.

But it also raised questions about Trump’s power as president. While the Republican Supreme Court claimed to find wording in the Constitution that allowed the president to freely fire members of ostensibly independent agencies like the Federal Trade Commission, which overseas antitrust law, and the National Labor Relations Board, which monitors labor law violations, it also apparently found wording that prevented the president from behaving similarly towards the Fed.

The Republican Supreme Court’s argument for the Fed’s special treatment was a bit more complicated, but it would only be a slight simplification to say that it was because the Fed is important. The Court apparently accepted the argument of the vast majority of economists that it would be bad news to have a Fed under the complete control of the president. For this reason, they appeared to leave in place the pre-existing standard for appointees of independent agencies, that they could only be removed for cause.

This is where Pulte’s accusation appeared useful. Trump could now pronounce Cook, a Black woman (like Letitia James), guilty of mortgage fraud, and therefore someone who could be fired for cause. This was never the open and shut case that Trump and his sycophants claimed.

First, it was not clear that what Cook had allegedly done amounted to fraud. According to Pulte, she had listed two different homes as primary residences on mortgage applications. If true, this might violate the law, but it is a common breach that is rarely prosecuted. It turns out three Trump cabinet members, as well as Mr. Pulte’s parents, seem to have done the same thing. If Cook’s actions had violated the law, it probably ranks as something somewhat more serious than a traffic ticket, but considerably less serious than the spousal abuse that Trump laughed off as a real crime earlier this week.

There was also the second point, that the alleged offense had occurred prior to Cook’s appointment to the Fed. Can “cause” refer to an action someone had done before being appointed to office?

There were allegations of sexual assault against Trump Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth before his appointment. RFK Jr. was an admitted heroin addict in his youth. While both cabinet members are political appointees, who clearly hold their positions at the president’s discretion, would these past offenses in principle be grounds for removal for cause?

And then there is the final point. Cook was never proven to have done anything wrong. All Trump had was Pulte’s accusation of wrongdoing.

It turns out Pulte’s accusation is not worth very much. NBC News, among other news outlets, obtained loan documents showing that Cook had identified her Atlanta house as a “vacation home,” which would seem to be in full compliance with the law. The question is now whether Trump can fire a Fed governor over a seemingly false allegation from one of his political appointees. That seems to be a pretty clear-cut loss for Team Trump, but I can’t speak for the Republican Supreme Court.

Since we’re on the topic of Trump lies, let me digress for a moment to the assassination of Charlie Kirk. First, no one should in any way applaud this act. As my eighth-grade teacher told the 13-year-old idiots celebrating the shooting of George Wallace in 1972, you kill the movement, not the man. Like Wallace, Kirk was a real human being, with friends and family. His death is a tragedy.

But moving to the broader political context, Team Trump moved to weaponize the shooting before the body was even cold, blaming the left for the killing at a point where they knew nothing about the shooter. They looked to purges of the media, schools and universities, and all other institutions.

Now that the suspect, Tyler Robinson, is in custody, it appears that the motivation for the killing was more likely to have come from the right than from the left. It’s still early, and more information will surely come out, but one thing that seems clear from this shooting is that it was done by a troubled young man who had too easy access to guns. The same is true of Thomas Cook, the 20-year-old man who shot Donald Trump in Butler Pennsylvania last summer.

Trump and his supporters are quick to blame these shootings on a mysterious “they,” implying that it is somehow part of a grand plot by the left. But like the charges against Cook, the story of the plot is a lie, invented entirely by Team Trump. Lying is apparently a way of life for those born into families with billions, but the rest of the country should not have to suffer the consequences of the lies from the rich and very rich.

Dean Baker is a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research and the author of the 2016 book Rigged: How Globalization and the Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer. Please consider subscribing to his Substack site.

Reprinted with permission from Dean Baker

Promoting 'Civil War' After Kirk's Murder? The Usual Suspects -- Including Russia

Promoting 'Civil War' After Kirk's Murder? The Usual Suspects -- Including Russia

Just as sickening as the terrible murder of Charlie Kirk is the stampede to weaponize his death, an ominous online scramble that has swept across the far right in recent days -- from tiny online accounts to Republican members of Congress to the White House, where the president himself mocked any effort to unify Americans and instead declared war on half the nation.

We know why Donald Trump seeks confrontation and division, presumably in hope of distracting attention from his poor approval ratings, his worsening economic data, his embarrassing, scandalous, and increasingly obvious connections with the dead pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. Long before Kirk’s killing, Trump vowed “retribution” against his political opponents, and that tragic event now provides a fresh rationale for presidential vengeance.

But Trump and his bloody-minded MAGA cult are not the only political force that seeks to exploit “civil war.” Both he and his movement also remain what they became during the past decade: useful idiots for the geopolitical machinations of a hostile foreign power.

The shrillest noises now promoting violence and division in American society echo from the same figures who have long served up Russian propaganda in our media and politics – and they are easily identified, from Trump down.

Last year saw the exposure of a gang of “influencers,” under the patronage of an outfit called Tenet Media, with a stable that included such reliable MAGA mouthpieces as Benny Johnson and Tim Pool – and a multi-million-dollar payroll subsidized by Russia Today, the Kremlin’s central media apparatus. Their posts and podcasts routinely echoed Kremlin political themes, from sycophantic support of Trump to pushing Putin’s line on Ukraine. Naturally they all claimed to be innocent and unknowing “victims” of this Russian operation, an alibi that may be assessed in light of their generally poor credibility.

But today, Johnson and Pool are among the loudest voices promoting the “civil war” theme online, inciting fury against Democrats and demanding vengeance. Despite hundreds of condolence messages from Democratic elected officials, party leaders and ordinary voters, Johnson declared on various podcasts and his X stream that “the Democratic Party is not ‘sorry when political violence happens. They want it to happen. They create the conditions for it…”

He went to concoct a conspiracy theory claiming that “Left-Wing dark money groups fund, arm, and radicalize people to target you…They hype violence, glorify killers, and manipulate minds with drugs and social media…” Johnson is a notorious fabricator and plagiarist, and of course could not cite a fragment of proof to support those wild charges.

Tim Pool, also subsidized lavishly by Russia via Tenet, has spread a disingenuous propaganda line, “regretfully” proclaiming that the civil war has already begun – because the left and Democrats are gloating online over Kirk’s murder. He and Johnson are far from alone in promoting such dangerous, inflammatory reactions on the right. Even some Republican members of Congress, such as Wisconsin’s Derrick van Orden, are posting hysterical proclamations that “the gloves are off…The left and their policies are leading America into a civil war. And they want it. Just like the democrat party wanted our 1st civil war.”

Blaming the “democrat party” for Kirk’s death and announcing the inevitability of civil war may serve the short-term interests of Donald Trump, but exacerbating social tensions and violence in America remains the long-term goal of this country’s international adversaries – most notably in Putin’s Russia. And the principal exponent of the Russian dictatorship’s brand of imperial fascism, Alexander Dugin, has explicitly welcomed what he predicts will be the shattering impact of Kirk’s death in the United States.

The Putin adviser joined in with his own outrageously dishonest framing of the Democrats, suggesting on an Internet platform that “half of the Democratic Party – at the level of senators, at the level of congressmen, and at the level of their social network said: ‘Correct, we killed, we are killing, and we will continue to kill. They are all Nazis.”

Not a word of Dugin’s outburst was true, but his desire to intensify and inflame divisions in this country is utterly sincere. His comrades in the Russian intelligence services undoubtedly are employing artificial intelligence to supercharge the bots that they have long used to pursue such ends. Only a year ago, the Justice Department uncovered and disrupted a Kremlin operation that had sprouted thousands of fake social media profiles posing as Americans.

Who benefits from the civil war meme? Who is promoting it? Whoever does that here, whether ostensibly “right” or “left,” whether consciously or just plain stupidly, is doing the work of our country’s enemies.

Joe Conason is founder and editor-in-chief of The National Memo. He is also editor-at-large of Type Investigations, a nonprofit investigative reporting organization formerly known as The Investigative Fund. His latest book is The Longest Con: How Grifters, Swindlers and Frauds Hijacked American Conservatism (St. Martin's Press, 2024).

Reprinted with permission from Creators.

' This Is Who He Is': Trump Niece Accuses President Of 'Stoking' Violence

' This Is Who He Is': Trump Niece Accuses President Of 'Stoking' Violence

Mary Trump — the niece of President Donald Trump — recently said her uncle plays a significant role in the escalation of political violence in the United States.

During a Thursday interview with former CNN host Jim Acosta, Mary Trump agreed with Acosta when he said that Trump was incapable of being a "consoler-in-chief" in the wake of the murder of 31 year-old MAGA activist Charlie Kirk. She said her uncle was "pouring gasoline on a raging fire" by singularly blaming the political left for Kirk's death.

"He will never change. He's been the same person for decades. And quite frankly, he's been rewarded for being this person. So it's a fool's errand to suggest that he will ever change."

Acosta reminded viewers that despite Trump's promise to find and prosecute the person responsible for shooting Kirk, he said nothing about the death of former Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman (D) when she was assassinated by a far-right activist in June. And he lamented that Trump didn't call Minnesota Governor Tim Walz (D) after Hortman's shooting, saying it would have been a "waste of time."

Mary Trump agreed with Acosta, and went on to argue that the media was so far absolving the president for his role in exacerbating political divisions in the U.S.. She argued that her uncle was engaging in a "slippery slope" of suggesting that Democrats should be "targeted" in the wake of Kirk's murder.

"I see people still giving him the benefit of the doubt, and it is mystifying to me. Because how much more evidence do we need really, that this is who he is and this kind of behavior benefits him?" She said. "Just as the divisiveness — he is largely responsible for stoking in this country over the last decade — benefits him and protects him."

Reprinted with permission from Alternet

Shop our Store

Headlines

Editor's Blog

Corona Virus

Trending

World