…While many of us were watching the federal
courthouse in Washington, D.C., to see if an indictment was forthcoming against
former president Trump for his attempt to overturn the results of the 2020
election, a different set of charges appeared tonight.
Special counsel Jack Smith brought additional charges against Trump in
connection with his retention of classified documents.
The new indictment alleges that Trump plotted
to delete video from security cameras near the storage room where he had stored
boxes containing classified documents, and did so after the Department of
Justice subpoenaed that footage. That effort to delete the video involved a
third co-conspirator, Carlos De Oliveira, who has been added to the case.
De Oliveira is a former valet at the Trump
Organization’s Mar-a-Lago property who became property manager there in January 2022. Allegedly,
he told another Trump employee that “the boss” wanted the server deleted and
that the conversation should stay between the two of them.
In the Washington Post, legal columnist
Ruth Marcus wrote, “The alleged conduct—yes, even after all these years of
watching Trump flagrantly flout norms—is nothing short of jaw-dropping: Trump
allegedly conspired with others to destroy evidence.” If the allegations hold
up, “the former president is a common criminal—and an uncommonly stupid one.”
This superseding indictment reiterates the
material from the original indictment, and as I reread it, it still blows my
mind that Trump allegedly compromised national security documents from the
Central Intelligence Agency, the Department of Defense, the National Security
Agency, the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency (surveillance imagery), the
National Reconnaissance Office (surveillance and maps), the Department of
Energy (nuclear weapons), and the Department of State and Bureau of
Intelligence and Research (diplomatic intelligence).
It sounds like he was a one-man wrecking ball,
aimed at our national security.
The Justice Department has asked again for a
protective order to protect the classified information at the heart of this
case. In their request, they explained that, among other things, Trump wanted
to be able to discuss that classified information with his lawyers outside a
Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, or SCIF, a room protected against
electronic surveillance and data leakage.
Former deputy assistant director of the FBI’s
counterintelligence division Peter Strzok noted that there is “[n]o better
demonstration of Trump’s abject lack of understanding of—and disregard
for—classified info and national security. He is *asking the Court* to waive
the requirements for classified info that EVERY OTHER SINGLE CLEARANCE HOLDER
IN THE UNITED STATES must follow.”
The Senate today passed
the $886 billion annual defense bill by a strong bipartisan margin of 86 to 11
after refusing to load it up with all the partisan measures Republican
extremists added to the House bill. Now negotiators from the House and the
Senate will try to hash out a compromise measure, but the bills are so far
apart it is not clear they will be able to create a bipartisan compromise. The
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) has passed on a bipartisan basis for
more than 60 years.
The extremists in the House Republican
conference continue to revolt against House speaker Kevin McCarthy’s (R-CA)
deal with the administration to raise the debt ceiling. They insist the future
cuts to which McCarthy agreed are not steep enough, and demand more. This has
sparked fighting among House Republicans; Emine Yücel of Talking
Points Memo suggests that McCarthy’s new willingness to
consider impeaching President Biden might be an attempt to cut a deal with the
extremists.
As the Senate is controlled by Democrats, the
fight among the House Republicans threatens a much larger fight between the
chambers because Democratic senators will not accept the demands of the
extremist Republican representatives.
The House left for its August recess today without passing
11 of the 12 appropriations bills necessary to fund the government after
September, setting up the conditions for a government shutdown this fall if
they cannot pass the bills and negotiate with the Senate in the short time
frame they’ve left. Far-right Republicans don’t much care, apparently. Representative
Bob Good (R-VA) told reporters this week, “We should not fear a government
shutdown… Most of what we do up here is bad anyway.”
Representative Katherine Clark (D-MA), the
second ranking Democrat in the House, disagreed. “The Republican conference is
saying they are sending us home for six weeks without funding the government?
That we have one bill…out of 12 completed because extremists are holding your
conference hostage, and that’s not the full story: the extremists are holding
the American people hostage. We will have twelve days…when we return to fund
the government, to live up to the job the American people sent us here to do.
This is a reckless march to a MAGA shutdown, and for what? In pursuit of a
national abortion ban? Is that what we are doing here?
“The American people see through this. They
know who is fighting for them, fighting for solutions…. Your time is coming.
The American people are watching. They are going to demand accountability. We
should be staying here, completing these appropriations bills, stripping out
the toxic, divisive, bigoted riders that have been put on these bills and
get[ting] back to work for freedom and for our economy and the American
family.”
—Heather Cox Richardson
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