Trump’s legal woes get real

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Jan 30, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

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Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the South Carolina Statehouse, Saturday, Jan. 28, 2023, in Columbia, S.C. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Many Republicans are hoping that some external force will magically stop Donald Trump from winning the nomination. | Alex Brandon/AP Photo

Deus ex machina: It’s what many Republicans hoped for — and never received — as DONALD TRUMP steamrolled to the GOP presidential nomination in 2016. Almost eight years later, many Republicans (perhaps even the majority of party officials) again want the GOP to coronate someone other than Trump.

But they still basically have no strategy for that to happen other than hoping that fate intervenes somehow, The Atlantic’s McKay Coppins reports in a new piece about Republicans’ magical-intervention dreams. Several tell Coppins they’re literally just waiting for the 76-year-old to shuffle off this mortal coil — what former Rep. PETER MEIJER (R-Mich.) describes as “actuarial arbitrage.”

Others hope for criminal indictment, a mass donor exodus or the emergence of a 2024 primary savior. But Republicans may be kidding themselves, Coppins writes: “This plague of self-deception among party elites contains obvious echoes of Trump’s early rise to power.” And it raises the prospect that Trump could once again glide past a fractious field of opponents and feckless party institutions to victory.

And yet … the past few days have brought meaningful signs of myriad threats to Trump’s resurrection bid.

Breaking moments ago, NYT’s William Rashbaum, Ben Protess and Jonah Bromwich reported that Manhattan DA ALVIN BRAGG is presenting evidence today to a grand jury about the STORMY DANIELS hush payments during the 2016 campaign, “laying the groundwork for potential criminal charges against the former president in the coming months.” DAVID PECKER, the former National Enquirer editor, was one of the witnesses going to the grand jury’s building today.

“Mr. Bragg’s decision to impanel a grand jury focused on the hush money — supercharging the longest-running criminal investigation into Mr. Trump — represents a dramatic escalation of an inquiry that once appeared to have reached a dead end,” the Times writes.

Manhattan isn’t the only investigation ramping up. Fulton County, Ga., DA FANI WILLIS could bring 2020 election-related charges sooner than federal investigators, and her comments in court last week have some observers on notice, AP’s Kate Brumback and Eric Tucker report from Atlanta today. Willis referred to “future defendants,” and said decisions in her probe into the efforts to overturn the election were “imminent.” “Though Willis, a Democrat, didn’t mention Trump by name, her comments marked the first time a prosecutor in any of several current investigations tied to the Republican former president has hinted that charges could be forthcoming.”

And even if Trump evades legal issues, the political challenges remain. From Columbia, S.C., Semafor’s Shelby Talcott flags an interesting angle on Trump’s campaign events this weekend: On culture-war issues, he was mostly playing catch-up to the conservative pace-setter, Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS. On topics like “critical race theory” in schools, “he sounded noticeably like the man everyone expects to be his chief rival.”

WHO’S AT DEFAULT — With the looming threat that Congress will fail to raise the debt ceiling, various outlandish ideas for the U.S. to avert default have entered the political conversation, from minting a trillion-dollar coin to auctioning off federal land. Many are seen as little more than gimmicks.

But prominent experts at major banks are increasingly taking the side of conservatives who argue that the U.S. could avoid financial calamity via experimental Treasury Department moves to prioritize payments, Zachary Warmbrodt reports. Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN, the White House and Democrats argue that paying bondholders to avoid a default, but skipping other payments, isn’t feasible. Certainly, it would be risky (and politically perilous).

“But disclosures over the past several years — driven in part by investigations by House Republicans — have revealed that officials believe the government has the technical capacity,” Zachary writes. And a growing number of Wall Streeters see this as an out.

Good Monday afternoon, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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ALL POLITICS

GOP NOT BACKING DOWN ON ABORTION — Score one for the anti-abortion advocates who want the party to get more forceful, not moderate, on the issue: A new RNC resolution calls for Republicans to “go on offense in the 2024 election cycle.” The document also urges federal and state legislators “to pass the strongest pro-life legislation possible,” with language indicating six-week abortion bans, as Alice Miranda Ollstein flags.

— In the other direction: “Rep. Nancy Mace warns her party to adopt a more ‘centrist’ abortion agenda or lose women voters,” by The 19th’s Mel Leonor Barclay

2024 WATCH — Former Arkansas Gov. ASA HUTCHINSON told USA Today’s Francesca Chambers that he’ll decide on a presidential run in the first half of this year, as he continues to “seriously consider” it.

ANNALS OF INFLUENCE — On the heels of multiple recent brouhahas, Southwest Airlines is hiring its first new lobbyist in five years: Former Rep. JERRY COSTELLO (D-Ill.) will take on the FAA reauthorization, Caitlin Oprysko reports.

THE NEW GOP — “Politicians Want to Keep Money Out of E.S.G. Funds. Could It Backfire?” by NYT’s Ron Lieber: “States are supposed to act in the best interests of citizens and retirees. Divesting from E.S.G. funds and companies like BlackRock that run them may create legal jeopardy.”

Related read: “This group is sharpening the GOP attack on ‘woke’ Wall Street,” by WaPo’s Steven Mufson: “Bankrolled by mysterious donors, a little-known group named Consumers’ Research has emerged as a key player in the conservative crusade to prevent Wall Street from factoring climate change into its investment decisions.”

VALLEY TALK

TIKTOK ON THE CLOCK — SHOU ZI CHEW, the CEO of TikTok, will testify before House Energy and Commerce on March 23, WSJ’s John McKinnon scooped. He’ll be the sole person going before the panel that day, which he agreed to do voluntarily. It’ll be “the first appearance of a TikTok CEO before a congressional panel.”

Energy and Commerce isn’t the only committee homing in on TikTok: The new select committee focused on China competition is focused on the app as well, WaPo’s David Lynch reports. Chair MIKE GALLAGHER (R-Wis.) is interested in banning TikTok or getting it sold to an American owner. His plans are part of a broader rethinking in Washington of the U.S. economic relationship with China.

THE WHITE HOUSE

INFRASTRUCTURE YEAR — When President JOE BIDEN visits the Baltimore and Potomac Tunnel later today, he’ll highlight a project that will use significant federal funding to create tens of thousands of jobs, The Baltimore Sun’s Jeff Barker previews. Biden will also tout benefits for organized labor, as the Amtrak replacement includes labor agreements with big unions. The project would tackle Amtrak’s worst bottleneck between D.C. and New Jersey and ameliorate chronic delays, WaPo’s Luz Lazo writes. Amtrak Joe, of course,is very well acquainted with this stretch of railway, AP’s Chris Megerian notes.

 

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CONGRESS

ONE TO WATCH — Progressives are ramping up their calls for Senate Democrats to ditch the “blue slips” protocol that gives deference to home-state senators on judicial nominees — and one Judiciary Committee member, Sen. RICHARD BLUMENTHAL (D-Conn.), is open to doing so, WaPo’s Theo Meyer and Leigh Ann Caldwell report. Other Dems are more cautious, saying simply that they hope Republicans don’t abuse the blue slips. But a new letter from Senate Judiciary Chair DICK DURBIN (D-Ill.) warns the GOP that he’s keeping count — and Republicans have returned only 12 blue slips for Biden nominees, compared to 130 from Dems during the Trump years.

DOCU-DRAMA — House Oversight Chair JAMES COMER (R-Ky.) said he and ranking member JAMIE RASKIN (D-Md.) will work together on a bipartisan legislative fix to change how documents are stored at the end of a presidency, in light of the recent cascading revelations. More from Jordain Carney in Congress Minutes

TOP-ED — Notable for those keeping an eye on Rep. RO KHANNA’s (D-Calif.) ambitions: His chief of staff, GEO SABA, is out with an op-ed in Newsweek today touting Khanna’s bipartisanship and Saba’s own experience living with two GOP leadership staffers.

THE TALENTED MR. SANTOS — Rep. GEORGE SANTOS (R-N.Y.) met with KEVIN McCARTHY this morning, the speaker confirmed to CNN’s Manu Raju.

JUDICIARY SQUARE

MUCK READ — LYNDA BENNETT, an ally of MARK MEADOWS who lost a 2020 congressional primary to MADISON CAWTHORN, is pleading guilty to taking an illegal campaign contribution, Kyle Cheney and Josh Gerstein scooped. There aren’t many details yet on the nature of the offense. The charging document

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

LATEST IN MEMPHIS — A sixth Memphis police officer has been suspended in connection with the death of TYRE NICHOLS, officials said today.More from the Memphis Commercial Appeal

FIRST THINGS FIRST — NYT’s Maggie Astor has a fun roundup of the initial actions several new governors have taken in their first few weeks — a telling and quirky indicator of what’s getting top priority, and how that varies by partisanship, ideology, geography and personality. Hawaii Gov. JOSH GREEN declared an emergency regarding homelessness. Arkansas Gov. SARAH HUCKABEE SANDERS repealed Hutchinson’spandemic-related executive orders. Nebraska Gov. JIM PILLEN laid out bills to lower taxes. Massachusetts Gov. MAURA HEALEY created a student essay contest to decide which former governors’ portraits should be hung. And much more.

POLICY CORNER

CLIMATE FILES — The massive infusion of federal dollars into the EPA is triggering plenty of outside sniping — from the left and the right — over how the agency will deploy the money, WSJ’s Eric Niiler reports. Community groups and environmental justice advocates are waiting for the EPA to lay out how it will help, while conservatives warn that the funds need strict congressional oversight.

COME TO YOUR CENSUS — The Biden administration’s plans to revise race and ethnicity categories on census forms could help various groups of people of color tick boxes that align more closely with their identities, WaPo’s Silvia Foster-Frau reports. The two big changes: (1) People of Middle Eastern and North African heritage will have their own category instead of having to choose white, and (2) Hispanic/Latino people will be able to select just that category without having to add a distinct race. “The proposed changes for the 2030 census could further reduce the White population count and reflect the country’s increasingly diverse makeup.”

 

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MEDIAWATCH

CHRIS LICHT SPEAKS — The head of CNN talks to the L.A. Times’ Stephen Battaglio about the glare of the spotlight, prioritizing correspondents over contributors and how he lured more Republicans to return to the network for interviews. This exchange stood out to us: Battaglio asks if the network has “deals” with Republicans to appear, and cites Rep. RYAN ZINKE (R-Mont.) coming on CNN during the speaker vote without getting asked about his ethics controversies as Interior secretary.

“There are absolutely not deals like that,” Licht answers. “But I think it has to make sense in the scope of the discussion we’re talking about. If he was coming on to promote something that flies in the face of something in his past, then absolutely we would then go, ‘But wait a second, you had to retire,’ or ‘You had to resign because of X, Y and Z.’ But if he’s coming on to talk about a narrow focus, as he did about what was happening on the floor of the House, that is not the appropriate forum. If we’re doing a broad-ranging interview, then of course you’re going to ask those questions.”

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

BLINKEN ABROAD — As Secretary of State ANTONY BLINKEN arrived in Israel today, he put out a statement condemning the recent violence in Jerusalem. “Calls for vengeance against more innocent victims are not the answer,” he said. “And acts of retaliatory violence against civilians are never justified.” Blinken is talking today with Israeli PM BENJAMIN NETANYAHU; tomorrow, he’ll meet with Palestinian leaders. More from the NYT

FOR YOUR RADAR — U.S. Ambassador to Russia LYNNE TRACY, who started last week, met today with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister SERGEI RYABKOV, per the AP.

STORY OF THE DAY — “2 Cuban sisters’ 4,200-mile journey to the U.S. and a new life,” by AP’s Megan Janetsky in Havana: “Their odyssey of more than 4,200 miles (6,000 kilometers) would lead the medical students to question their past lives, race unknowingly against a ticking legal clock and leave them teetering on the edge of death as they tumbled down a cliff. … The Rolo González sisters, like other Cuban migrants, lost hope for the future in their country. Their optimism rested in the hazy prospect of life in the U.S. and a brighter future for the little girl who would have no memories of the island.”

PLAYBOOKERS

SPOTTED: Goldie Hawn having dinner with Alan Fleischmann and Dafna Tapiero at Cafe Milano last night. (Hawn was visiting family in town.)

OUT AND ABOUT — SPOTTED at a party last night celebrating Susan Glasser and Peter Baker’s book “The Divider” ($32)at the LA home of former longtime Washingtonians Meena and Liaquat Ahamed: Dee Dee Myers and Todd Purdum, Todd DeLorenzo, Ben Sheffner, Tim Burger, Lynn Glasser, Laura Glasser, Jeff Glasser, Mark Schoofs, Derek Shearer, John Emerson, Jim Newton, Adam Nagourney and Benjamin Oreskes.

Global Community Corps and Paradox Public Relations held an event for Ukraine’s Territorial Defense Forces at the D.C. townhouse of Brock Pierce on Friday that featured remarks from Global Community Corps President Laura Vanderberg, Eleos-Ukraine Chair Serhiy Dmytriev and Eleos-Ukraine project manager Tetiana Ivanova. SPOTTED: D.C. shadow Sen. Paul Strauss (D), Lachlan Markay, Nathan Kiker, Hollie McKay, David Grasso, Juliee Conde, Oksana Barchuk and Kateryna Lisunova.

WHITE HOUSE ARRIVAL LOUNGE — Mark Latonero has joined the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy as deputy director for the National AI Initiative Office. He previously was a senior policy adviser at the National Institute for Standards and Technology, where he worked on the AI Risk Management Framework.

WHITE HOUSE DEPARTURE LOUNGE — Liz Jurinka is now operating director for health care policy at the Vistria Group. She previously was special assistant to the president.

TRANSITIONS — Eric Chewning is joining HII as a senior executive for strategy and development, Breaking Defense’s Justin Katz reports. He most recently has been a partner at McKinsey, and is a Trump DOD alum. … Abhi Rahman is now a senior director of strategy for Penta Group. He most recently was a VP of comms for H/Advisors Abernathy, and is a Beto O’Rourke alum. … Matt Sommer is now staff director for Sen. Mike Braun (R-Ind.) on the Senate Aging Committee. He previously was a legislative assistant with Braun. …

Caitlin Rooney is now senior labor policy adviser for Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on the Senate HELP Committee. She most recently was director of economic development for Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.). … Kyle McCarthy is now scheduler for Rep. Donald Norcross (D-N.J.). He most recently was scheduler for former Rep. Tom O’Halleran (D-Ariz.). …  Emily Lavery is now a VP at Fulcrum Public Affairs. She previously was an investment adviser at AllianceBernstein, and is a Tim Scott alum.

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California Today: Covering the Monterey Park Shooting

A conversation with the Times video journalist Isabelle Qian.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Monday. I spoke to a Times video journalist about how she covered the Monterey Park shooting. Plus, a San Francisco court released footage showing the attack on Paul Pelosi.

A memorial emerged outside the Star Ballroom Dance Studio in Monterey Park after the Jan. 22 mass shooting. Mark Abramson for The New York Times

When the news broke about the mass shooting in Monterey Park, The New York Times dispatched journalists from across the country to help cover the story.

One of them was Isabelle Qian, a video journalist based in New York who typically reports on China for The Times. Isabelle grew up in Shanghai and speaks Mandarin, as do many of the patrons of Star Ballroom Dance Studio, where 11 people were fatally shot. Monterey Park is one of the most predominantly Asian American cities in the country, and it is considered the first suburban Chinatown in the United States.

Isabelle spent a week in Monterey Park, learning about the histories, hobbies and aspirations of those who were killed from relatives and friends. She interviewed a man who escaped the shooting and who had filmed his own video of joyous dancers celebrating the eve of Lunar New Year a few minutes before the massacre began.

I spoke to Isabelle about her experience reporting on a community that has been rocked by so much tragedy. Here's our conversation, lightly edited for clarity and space:

How did you end up flying out to California?

I had just celebrated Lunar New Year myself — I had a dumpling party. That evening, my editors told me they wanted to send me to California to cover the mass shooting. The crazy thing is, while I was on the plane the next day, I was reading the news and saw that the Half Moon Bay shooting happened. It was just very surreal. When I landed, I was not sure whether I would be staying in Monterey Park or be sent up to Half Moon Bay.

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Your editors decided you'd stay in Monterey Park. And from your coverage, it seems as though you were able to ingratiate yourself in the community there really quickly. How did you do that?

There are two other reporters on my team who are fluent in Mandarin, Muyi Xiao and Ang Li. While I was focused on sorting out gear, logistics, they were putting their incredible reporting and language skills to use and found people who could meet with me as soon as I arrived.

And speaking the language opened all the doors for me. At a dance studio I visited, I was making small talk in Mandarin with the dance students. None of them wanted to be featured on camera or speak. But then a woman I met there connected me to a witness who managed to escape, saw the whole thing, and actually filmed inside the dance hall a few minutes before the shooter came in.

So I gave him a call. We're both from Shanghai — I can understand his accent, I spoke in his dialect. He said: "You know, I didn't want to talk to anyone, but for you I can make an exception. Let's meet in 20 minutes." And that's how I got that interview with him.

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Do you think it's just that you spoke Mandarin? Or was there an extra level of connection since you also grew up in China?

They could tell that I'm kind of one of them. It's hard to explain. I'm not second-generation Chinese American. I didn't learn Chinese at a language school. They can tell that we share the same culture and that I am also sort of a first-generation immigrant like them, even though we're not the same age.

Have you been surprised by anything about the Monterey Park community?

I didn't know that in L.A. there was a suburb that's so predominantly Asian American and specifically Chinese American. It's pretty incredible — immigrants arrive here, some meet people from their hometowns who help them settle down in this new country, and then near the end of their life, this is where many of them return.

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I met this 88-year-old Taiwanese guy who left the dance hall seven minutes before the shooter came in. He had moved away from Monterey Park, but now that he's too old to drive, Monterey Park is a great place to live because he can walk to restaurants he likes, walk to have dim sum with his friends. He can walk to a dance hall.

Speaking of dance halls, did you get a sense of what kind of role they play in the community?

The two that are prominent in and around Monterey Park — Lai Lai and Star Ballroom Dance Studio — cater to casual dancers who go there to celebrate birthdays or for social functions on major holidays. But they also serve this group of very dedicated dancers, where dancing is their biggest hobby and they spend a lot of money and time taking classes from professional dancers. These two places provide a major form of entertainment and exercise for Asian Americans of a certain age. This is their social circle. Instead of going to church, or in addition to going to church, this is their friend circle. This is where they go, and this is what they do after they retire.

I heard you ended up dancing yourself.

That 88-year-old man I met took me to a social dance at a private club on Wednesday. They were honoring the victims with a memorial service, and also by dancing. This was their weekly social dance and they were not going to cancel. I could really feel that dancing means a lot to this community. Like I said, it's where they meet their friends. It's where they hang out. And they're all so good!

I got dragged into dancing three times. Because it's very, very hard to say no to very insistent Chinese grandpas. But after I did that, I think they opened up to me even more.

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Monterey Park, where a mass shooting this month left 11 people dead.Mark Abramson for The New York Times

The rest of the news

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • San Francisco population drop: The City by the Bay lost 0.5 percent of its population between July 2021 and July 2022, bringing the number of residents to its lowest level in a decade, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
Joe Lingeman for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

What we're eating

A view of Corona del Mar in Newport Beach.Monica Almeida/The New York Times

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Linda Ashe, who lives in Newport Beach:

"Corona del Mar, a village in Newport Beach bisected by the Pacific Coast Highway, translates to Crown of the Sea! It is similar to an East Coast downtown (in a good way) with its walkability, cute shops and salty ocean air. The temperature is mild, the sandy beaches are clean and wide, and the restaurants are some of the best in the area. Surfboards aren't allowed on its two beaches, Big Corona and Little Corona, so we can swim and body surf to our heart's content. While heading down the steep access road, we've been delighted by the sight of pods of dolphins passing by. Sometimes, at night, when there are few cars on Pacific Coast Highway, the sound of barking sea lions carries through the damp air. Paradise!"

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

David Gordon and Sandra Brooke exchanged vows in Palm Springs.Allison Maginn Photography

And before you go, some good news

After their spouses died, Sandra Brooke, 65, and David Gordon, 81, became each other's source of support. The two live and work in the Los Angeles area, and had known each other for years.

Their newfound friendship eventually evolved into romance. And earlier this month, they got married in Palm Springs.

"We both know that you only have today," Brooke told The Times. "I think that made us both want to live life more ferociously."

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

Briana Scalia, Lyna Bentahar, Allison Honors and Maia Coleman contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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