Tag: donald trump
'JD's Deal': Right-Wing Media Hawks Scapegoat Vance For Iran Crashout

'JD's Deal': Right-Wing Media Hawks Scapegoat Vance For Iran Crashout

The right-wing media’s hawks recognize the reported memorandum of understanding that President Donald Trump and Vice President J.D. Vance signed with Iran on Sunday is a dog’s breakfast that fails to achieve the administration’s stated war goals and leaves the U.S. in a weaker geostrategic position than before it began. But they also understand that the cult-like structure of the MAGA movement means that criticizing Trump directly could trigger an audience revolt, and that Trump himself is unlikely to change course if he feels personally impugned.

The result is a truly pathetic effort to blame the MOU’s contents on Vance — who reportedly supported the agreement and is making the interview rounds defending it while Trump is in Europe — while absolving Trump of responsibility for the document that he signed and publicly describes as “a very strong deal.”

Fox & Friends co-host Brian Kilmeade exemplifies this approach. A longtime supporter of military strikes on Iran, Kilmeade supported Trump launching the war in February. Over the past months, he has repeatedly urged the president to undertake risky escalations to “finish the job.”

He also laid down a marker by asserting that “we can't leave this conflict with the uranium in the ground and the strait in Iran's hands.” This reported agreement plainly does not meet that standard, and unlike his primetime colleagues Jesse Watters and Sean Hannity, who are lavishing Trump with praise for the MOU, Kilmeade is responding by being forthright about his concerns.

But while Kilmeade spent much of Wednesday’s program panning the MOU’s reported contents, he repeatedly placed the blame on Vance while suggesting that Trump may have been out of the loop and deceived — and now that he’s paying attention, could ultimately decide to blow up the deal at the last moment

“All I'm going to say, the vice president was here and did a wonderful job on every outlet, including The View,” Kilmeade said near the top of the show. “But this is his deal. It's not the president's deal. And it's his deal and Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner together. I just hope they didn't let the president down. Because the president is putting a lot of stock in them. He can't do everything himself. I just hope they didn't let him down.”

Later in the program, after enlisting Hudson Institute senior fellow Rebeccah Heinrichs to help criticize the MOU for relieving the U.S. blockade and helping to rebuild the Iranian economy while allowing Iran to implement tolls on the strait and leaving the regime in place, Kilmeade added: “Everything that you said, I think the president would say. I’m just wondering if the people that negotiated this have informed the president about what’s in the page and a half he is going to read publicly on Friday.”

He went on to say that he hoped Trump would “go in” and change the agreement to make it more favorable “in the next 24 hours.”

"It doesn't look like Iran has been brought to its knees,” Kilmeade complained in a third segment. “Iran got a lot out of it that many people weren't expecting. That's going to be the issue. And maybe the president wasn't even expecting, because he has got enough plates in the air that he can't be into every detail.”

“So, I just wonder if the vice president, who was against this by all reports, was against the conflict to begin with, maybe he wasn't the right person to bring this conflict to an end," he concluded.

In this telling, Trump — who has spent recent weeks planning a birthday bash featuring military flyovers and a UFC fight at the White House, ensuring that the bottom of the Reflecting Pool is painted “American flag blue,” and complaining about his name being removed from the John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts — simply lost track of the negotiations to end the war he started, is either too lazy to read the page and a half agreement or too stupid to understand its contents, and was hoodwinked by his perfidious vice president.

And this is the story he’s telling to avoid blaming the president!

Others have similarly sought to make Vance the “Iran Deal Fall Guy,” as The Bulwark’s Joe Perticone put it after speaking to Senate Republicans like Lindsey Graham, who described the vice president as “the architect of the deal.” On Tuesday, Ben Shapiro similarly characterized it as “JD’s deal.” Vance, meanwhile, is accusing right-wing media hawks who criticize the agreement, like Fox’s Marc Thiessen and Mark Levin, of believing “Iranian propaganda,” a characterization sure to widen the split.

Ultimately, the MAGA hawks are victims of their own success and their own hubris. They got the war they demanded, only for Iran’s obvious counterstroke of closing the Strait of Hormuz to prove just as damaging as national security experts had warned. Now the incompetent president they supported is careening that war towards failure, and they can’t even manage to say that publicly without further discrediting themselves and risking their position within the movement.

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters

With Oil Sanctions Suddenly Lifted, Iran Already Banking Billions From Trump's Deal

With Oil Sanctions Suddenly Lifted, Iran Already Banking Billions From Trump's Deal

Not only does President Donald Trump’s “deal” to end the Iran war guarantee profits for the Tehran regime, but the money is already flowing as the United States lifts its blockade of Iranian ports.

Sanctions on the country’s oil sales, which have financed its military and nuclear programs for decades, appear to have been lifted as soon as Trump and Vice President JD Vance electronically signed the “memorandum of understanding” with their Iranian counterparts on June 16. The Iranians also gained immediate access to international banking and insurance services.

According to sources quoted by the Wall Street Journal, the first supertanker loaded with Iranian crude left the port of Chahabar, sailed past the US naval blockade, and cruised out of the Gulf of Oman on Tuesday. A second supertanker soon followed.

The Journal also reports that a draft of the memorandum of understanding outlined the resumption of oil sales, “along with the promise after further negotiations…of extensive sanctions relief, release of frozen assets and billions of dollars in reconstruction funding.” How soon the regime would obtain those additional funds remains unclear, although senior administration officials have suggested they would be tied to “performance” on issues such as nuclear enrichment and opening the Strait of Hormuz.

Murky as the MOU remains, what is becoming clear is that Iran has won a major strategic victory rather than suffering the “total defeat” that Trump has repeatedly claimed. The Supreme Leader and the Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps will soon be collecting billions of dollars in fresh oil revenues, having achieved the sanctions relief they have long demanded from the United States. And they will have gotten that benefit, with all its dangers to the West, merely by returning to the pre-war status quo.

So why did we expend hundreds of billions of dollars in military and economic costs, along with more than dozen American lives and thousands of innocent Iranians we were supposedly trying to protect?

If the Journal reporting proves correct, it won’t be easy for Trump and his MAGA propagandists to answer those questions. Indeed, the Republicans who have stooged for the White House on this war and so many other ruinous decisions already appear to see a political disaster looming.


Facing Iran Fiasco, MAGA Media Figures Choose Propaganda Over Independence

Facing Iran Fiasco, MAGA Media Figures Choose Propaganda Over Independence

The right-wing media’s debate over the reported memorandum of understanding between the United States and Iran provides a test of whether, ten years after President Donald Trump first took power, his supporters are still capable of independent thought. Some of the biggest names in MAGA propaganda are failing it.

The framework agreement Trump and Vice President JD Vance reportedly signed virtually on Sunday appears to leave the U.S. in a worse geostrategic position than before they launched the war with Iran in February — but the full terms of the U.S. surrender are unclear because the actual text of the memorandum has yet to be released. Trump said Monday that the American people won’t be able to see the “very powerful document” that he’s already signed on their behalf until “sometime after Friday,” when a formal signing event is scheduled. Vance, meanwhile, has been on a media tour purporting to describe in detail the contents of the agreement that he signed, which he claims is “about a page and a half” long and a “very general” document.

If you have two functioning neurons to rub together, this seems very suspicious. Why is Vance going on Fox News host Sean Hannity’s show to talk up the MOU — while complaining that the U.S. press is adopting “talking points and propaganda” from the Iranian regime “that has no support in the text of the agreement that we've actually negotiated” — rather than simply putting out the document so the public can see it? Are the terms supposed to be so good for the U.S. that we’re worried about embarrassing Iran?

The lack of disclosure is raising concerns among some of MAGA’s hawks, who supported launching the war and prefer to see further escalation rather than an agreement that ends the conflict.

“I have asked for days, why can’t we, the people, see the damn MOU?” Fox host Mark Levin posted to social media on Sunday night. “Not through people briefed by an anonymous person. Honestly, I’ve never seen anything like this. If it is a great outcome for peace, then release it.”

“Alright, so, we still don’t have much information at this point,” Ben Shapiro complained Monday at the beginning of his podcast on the reported agreement. “No text to the MOU. Could have been released — I mean, it’s been signed. We know that because that’s been announced by the administration.”

“We still have a lot of questions,” Shapiro continued. “So here’s the thing: Just release it, then we can talk about things we know. Because that’s the really cool thing about written agreements. They’re filled with words, and those words, we can all read them and they mean things, and then we can understand what they mean, and then we can discuss them publicly. Either that or we don’t have any choice but to speculate.”

And Substacker Erick Erickson noted on Tuesday that “the administration has been conspicuously slow to publish” the text of the agreement, adding: “When a deal is good, you release the text. When you guard it, you are managing a story rather than reporting a victory.”

But plenty of big MAGA players are willing to help the administration manage the story by shilling for the MOU without showing much interest in why Trump won’t just release the text of the agreement they are cheering for.

Hannity interviewed Vance Monday night and had the vice president walk him through the purported ins and outs of the unreleased agreement. The host did raise the issue of the document text, though he presented it as an opportunity for Vance to rebut a critical talking point rather than an actual issue.

“A lot of people are questioning why not release the memorandum of understanding,” Hannity said. “You said it will happen this week.”

But when Vance responded by citing vague “sequencing” concerns and saying that Trump wants to keep it secret until the Friday signing, Hannity swallowed that without further comment.

“Trust in Trump” was MAGA shill Benny Johnson’s take on Sunday, acknowledging that he didn’t know the details of the agreement but nonetheless celebrating it as “historic,” “the deal that we all wanted,” an Iranian “surrender” and a “massive W” for the president.

And Fox host Jesse Watters, a similarly credulous buffoon, seemed to reel off the administration’s talking points while scoffing at the “fake news” and “Iranian spin.”

“The details of the deal, they'll be released after Friday. Everybody will be able to read it,” he said, apparently incurious about why the text wouldn’t be available sooner.

Trump has spent years culling his propagandists through scandal, corruption, crimes, and insurrection. What remains at the highest levels of right-wing media are the purest hacks.

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters

Take The Kennedy Center Win -- And Then Get Up For The Next Battle

Take The Kennedy Center Win -- And Then Get Up For The Next Battle

Well, that was pretty fun.

There was an almost physical satisfaction seeing the letters “Donald J. Trump” removed from the facade of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. We saw the tangible payoff of the triumph of the law over Trump’s raw vanity, like the expulsion of a usurper to the throne. It was reminiscent of the post-Communist toppling of the giant statues of Stalin that Russian people had had to endure for decades.

In its ultimate pettiness, the Trump administration launched a 12th-hour appeal for a short delay in complying with the order to take down the Trump name that had sullied the John F. Kennedy Center for the last six months. The apparent goal was to deny the gathering crowd the satisfaction of seeing the tyrant’s name physically removed. They got a 12-hour extension and then waited until the wee hours to comply, in a process that took less than an hour.

Besides the satisfaction of a modest but tangible victory, the case provides a workable template for many of Trump’s lawless power grabs.

A significant percentage of the outrages of Trump’s second term reduce to some version of the same move as with the Kennedy Center. Congress long ago made a decision and put it into law, and the Trump administration acted as if it could just ignore it.

The administration has refused to spend appropriated funds, asserted the power to fire officials Congress insulated by law, rewritten election procedures Congress had already legislated, and stood up a $1.776 billion “compensation fund” with no clear appropriations basis at all. Each of these fights involves its own tangle of doctrine and politics, but the general principle of steamrolling congressional decisions is the unifying factor.

In the case of the Kennedy Center, Congress passed a statute in 1964 designating the National Cultural Center as “the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts” and providing that it would serve as the nation’s “sole national memorial” to the slain president. Nothing in that statute gives a board of presidentially appointed trustees the authority to rename the institution. Full stop.

U.S. District Judge Christopher Cooper’s meticulous May 29 opinion runs 94 pages, but its holding fits in two sentences anyone can understand:

“The Kennedy Center’s organic statute makes crystal clear that the Center is to be named for President Kennedy, and it cannot bear any other formal name or public memorial based on the Board’s unilateral say-so. Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it.”

That’s the whole separation-of-powers argument, stated with simple elegance.

The Trump takeover of the Kennedy Center was of a piece with his takeover of the government. The whole operation rededicated the Kennedy Center to the interest of the new Trump namesake, abandoning the broader cultural mission and service to the people that was its animating purpose.

The letters “THE DONALD J. TRUMP AND” had been installed last December, less than 24 hours after a hastily called, off-agenda board vote. When Rep. Joyce Beatty (D-OH), the board’s ex officio member and the only trustee not chosen for loyalty, tried to object, her microphone was cut; and the vote was gaveled through as “unanimous.” The new letters went up on the building’s portico the very next day. The fix was in.

The Center’s foundation, the entity raising private money for the renovation, adopted bylaws conditioning every donation on the name staying exactly as Trump wanted it: “Donald J. Trump and John F. Kennedy Memorial Center for the Performing Arts.” If the Center ever removed Trump’s name from “its filings, marketing, branding, façade, or any other affiliated location,” the Foundation would claw back every dollar it had given.

Anyone who has served on a nonprofit board knows what the job entails: looking out for the health, finances, and reputation of the institution. It was a straightforward breach of fiduciary duty for the board to insert a provision saying that if the Center ever complied with the law and dropped Trump’s name, every dollar raised under the Trump brand would be clawed back. Plainly, the only person this policy served was Trump.

The same instinct drove the emergency stay motion DOJ filed once the litigation went south. As with the wacky legal submissions in the ballroom case, the brief here seemed to bear Trump’s personal imprint: its first paragraph runs three solid pages, larded with overheated rhetoric to the effect that only Trump could fix the Center.

It didn’t matter legally, but in fact, that submission was dead wrong. Judge Cooper’s opinion, along with a stream of accounts from people who worked at the Kennedy Center before Trump’s team purged them, makes clear that the takeover, far from being the salvation Trump claimed, gutted a storied institution.

Under Trump’s nominal leadership, the institution was quickly driven into freefall. A discharged curator, Josef Palermo, described leadership with no arts management experience whose apparent goal was to “show up on a red carpet and take pictures,” and a fundraising operation that sold proximity to Trump as the product. His overall word for the takeover: desecration.

That same pettiness ran through the broader record of how this institution treated the artists it depended on. A series of performers canceled their bookings, unwilling to lend their names to the Trump brand.

In January, the great American composer Philip Glass withdrew the premiere of his Symphony No. 15, “Lincoln,” from the Center, explaining that “the values of the Kennedy Center today are in direct conflict with the message of the symphony.” Trump’s response was a sneering dismissal.

The institutional toll was equally stark. The Washington National Opera, the Center’s resident company since 1971, announced it would leave, while ticket sales across the Center’s programming plunged 70 percent after the renaming. It was the same flim-flam Trump perfected decades ago in Atlantic City and New York, bankrupting one venture after another while insisting each was the greatest of its kind, selling brass and calling it gold.

As it does in every dispute, the administration led with a standing argument—not that it had the legal right to rename the Center, but that nobody had the right to bring a court challenge in the first place. The emergency stay motion repeated the claim that Rep. Joyce Beatty, the board’s ex officio member who brought the suit, lacked standing to challenge any of this in the first place.

Cooper didn’t buy it. Beatty, as a trustee with fiduciary obligations under the statute, had standing to challenge the full board. And at that point, the path was clear to restore what Congress had written into law. Congress gave the Kennedy Center its name, and only Congress can change it. Q.E.D.

Cooper’s order didn’t specify that the restored name had to remain visible, and that apparently gave someone in the White House the idea of covering it with a tarp—to spare Trump’s bruised feelings and deny the public the satisfaction of watching his name come down.

It’s as if the federal government were saying that if Donald Trump’s name couldn’t appear on the building, nobody’s could. Had the protagonist been anyone else, the spectacle might have seemed pitiable. Because it was Trump—the third-grade spoiled child incarnation—it registered instead as ridiculous.

That fairly absurd coda aside, it’s evident that while legal doctrine fueled the opinion, public outrage at Trump’s vainglory supplied the kindling. It’s one of several recent episodes in which the public, and as a result at least some Republicans in Congress, stood against the Trump tide. Democracy-loving Americans should take the win, and then get up tomorrow and fight the next fight.

Harry Litman is a former United States Attorney and the executive producer and host of the Talking Feds podcast. He has taught law at UCLA, Berkeley, and Georgetown and served as a deputy assistant attorney general in the Clinton Administration. Please consider subscribing to Talking Feds on Substack.

Reprinted with permission from Talking Feds.

Shop our Store

Headlines

Editor's Blog

Corona Virus

Trending

World