As Trump surrenders, Hill allies go on offense

Presented by The American Petroleum Institute (API): POLITICO's must-read briefing on what's driving the afternoon in Washington.
Aug 24, 2023 View in browser
 
Playbook PM

By Eli Okun

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House Judiciary Committee Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) questions Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas during a hearing on Capitol Hill July 26, 2023. (Francis Chung/POLITICO via AP Images)

House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) demanded information from Fulton County, Ga., DA Fani Willis. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

GEORGIA ON MY MIND — With the GOP presidential debate over, all political eyes are on Fulton County, Ga., where DONALD TRUMP is expected to surrender on criminal charges later today — and we’ll get a mugshot worth a thousand words (or T-shirts).

Never one to avoid some last-minute drama, Trump has shaken up his legal team in Georgia, bringing on STEVEN SADOW today as his top lawyer in the case, as ABC’s John Santucci scooped. Sadow, a top white-collar defense attorney in Atlanta, is replacing DREW FINDLING, though JENNIFER LITTLE is expected to remain on Trump’s legal team. He blasted the charges brought against Trump in Fulton County, and he’s criticized prosecutors’ approach in the case previously.

The other defendants in the sprawling racketeering case over alleged subversion of the 2020 election are making moves, too. And just now, DA FANI WILLIS filed a motion for the broad trial of all 19 defendants to begin this Oct. 23, less than two months away. Willis’ request came in response to requests from KENNETH CHESEBRO for a speedy trial and expedited arraignment in his case, The Messenger’s Eva Surovell reports. The attorney had asked Judge SCOTT McAFEE to move quickly on pre-trial motions, setting a trial date and more. “This looks like Willis calling his bluff, or at least setting down a marker while allowing other parties to attempt to slow this down,” Kyle Cheney writes. In reality, Oct. 23 “seems implausible.”

And as MARK MEADOWS seeks to move his case to federal court at a hearing Monday, Willis has subpoenaed Georgia Secretary of State BRAD RAFFENSPERGER and his investigator FRANCES WATSON to testify at the hearing. “This is shaping up to be a mini-trial,” Kyle notes, as prosecutors fight to keep the former White House chief of staff’s prosecution in state court. There were also new bond orders today for Meadows ($100,000), JEFF CLARK ($100,000) and TREVIAN KUTTI ($75,000).

Investigating the investigators: Back in Washington, Trump’s congressional allies are fighting back against the legal system. House Judiciary Republicans today announced they’re launching an investigation of Willis, as CNN’s Annie Grayer and Melanie Zanona reported. It’s a “familiar playbook” for Republicans on the Hill, who pursued similar lines of inquiry into Manhattan DA ALVIN BRAGG after he indicted Trump — namely, about coordination with federal prosecutors or use of federal funding. Chair JIM JORDAN’s (R-Ohio) letter to Willis claims that “the circumstances surrounding your actions raise serious concerns about whether they are politically motivated.” He wants information from her by next month.

At the same time, state-level Republicans in Georgia are weighing an investigation of Willis. The Judiciary Committee may also schedule a markup of a bill that would allow former presidents to move cases from state to federal court.

Good Thursday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com.

 

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2024 WATCH

MORE DEBATE POST-MORTEMS — The assessments, polls and inside-the-room reports are still pouring in after last night’s GOP presidential debate in Milwaukee, where candidates jostled with each other but an absent Trump still loomed as the undisputed frontrunner. Among the takeaways:

— VIVEK RAMASWAMY took center stage at the debate, often stealing more focus than Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS, with whom he’s competing for second place in the polls. He has “suddenly become a major factor in the race,” Natalie Allison and Adam Wren write, with more than 1 million Google searches for his name in the last day (not even counting misspellings). At one Americans for Prosperity watch party in Manchester, N.H., Ramaswamy excited many attendees, though many remain undecided, WaPo’s Sabrina Rodríguez reports. And a snap poll from J.L. Partners and the Daily Mail found Ramaswamy narrowly edging out DeSantis as Republicans’ pick for the best performance.

In the spin room afterward, Ramaswamy gave National Review’s John McCormack a complicated answer about whether he thinks MIKE PENCE did the right thing on Jan. 6.

— RNC Chair RONNA McDANIEL said she appreciated the candidates’ debate on abortion policy in an interview this morning on Fox News, arguing that the Republicans effectively framed Democrats as the more extreme party on the issue. “Democrats used that in 2022,” McDaniel said. “If our candidates aren’t able to fend [off] a response and put out a response, we’re not going to win.”

— But in the end, the debate seems unlikely to threaten Trump’s grip on the nomination, The Atlantic’s McKay Coppins writes, as the “magical thinking” that Trump will somehow stumble or be removed continues in much of the GOP: “Trump’s rivals struggled to show they were equipped to take him down. In fact, few even tried.” He recounts an amazing back-and-forth with Rep. CHIP ROY (R-Texas), who’s backing DeSantis, in the spin room:

Roy: “Go back and look at where TED [CRUZ] was in the numbers in 2016.”
Coppins: “But … Cruz didn’t win the primary.”
Roy: “Well, but he won Iowa!”

“In private, they all hope that he will fail,” WaPo’s Josh Dawsey and Isaac Arnsdorf add from Milwaukee, “but most of them don’t want to be seen as responsible for helping make it happen.” Even Ramaswamy simply “checked all the boxes” to become Trump’s running mate, Washington Monthly’s Bill Scher wrote (though Ramaswamy has said he would turn down that position). And so Trump won the debate, The Cook Political Report’s Amy Walter declared.

— On the outside looking in: From a Times Square Marriott, WILL HURD was unimpressed with the debaters. Kathy Gilsinan watched with him, and has a POLITICO Magazine breakdown of how Hurd responded to the debate in real time.

 

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MEDIAWATCH

ISLANDS IN THE STREAM — CNN+ is dead. Long live CNN on Max! Warner Bros. Discovery’s latest attempt to translate CNN to streaming could be announced as soon as today, involving a 24-hour livestream of CNN content on the Max platform, Axios’ Sara Fischer reports. With a focus on live news, the streaming channel will combine some exclusive weekday shows with CNN International’s North America coverage. As Variety’s Brian Steinberg reported last night, the big-name journalists involved include CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR, BIANNA GOLODRYGA, JIM SCIUTTO and RAHEL SOLOMON.

SCAMMER SEASON — “Inside the HBO Doc Exposing the Biggest Fundraising Scammers,” by The Daily Beast’s Roger Sollenberger: “Days after HBO released its new Telemarketers documentary series — which raises the curtain on decades of political, police, and charity telemarketing fraud — the producers got a major PR boost from an unexpected place: the Department of Justice. Last week, federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York indicted two of the country’s most notorious fundraising fraudsters — RICHARD ZEITLIN and ROBERT PIARO — alleging that the duo had defrauded donors out of tens of millions of dollars over several years.”

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

CHIPS OFF THE STUMBLING BLOCK — “Arizona Labor Spat Signals Challenges for U.S. Chip Manufacturing,” by WSJ’s Yuka Hayashi and Yang Jie: “[C]onstruction has been delayed by a shortage of skilled workers, [Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.] says, and it is seeking to bring in workers from Taiwan to get construction back on track. … [Chair MARK] LIU’s remarks drew a sharp rebuke from Arizona trade unions, who say bringing in workers from overseas would undermine one of the key goals of the Chips Act — to create more domestic jobs in the industry.”

WAR IN UKRAINE

BATTLEFIELD BLUES — Privately, U.S. officials have been clashing with Ukrainians for weeks about Kyiv’s approach to the counteroffensive, WSJ’s Michael Gordon, Gordon Lubold, James Marson and Vivian Salama report. With the clock ticking before the onset of winter, Americans are concerned that Ukraine is running out of time to make an impact and want the forces to focus primarily on the south. The U.S. warns that the amount of equipment it gave to Ukraine this year won’t be repeated in 2024. But Kyiv insists that it still has time for a breakthrough, and that a big success is imminent.

 

Enter the “room where it happens”, where global power players shape policy and politics, with Power Play. POLITICO’s brand-new podcast will host conversations with the leaders and power players shaping the biggest ideas and driving the global conversations, moderated by award-winning journalist Anne McElvoy. Sign up today to be notified of the first episodes in September – click here.

 
 

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

CHOOSE YOUR NEWS — U.S. officials think the plane crash that likely killed YEVGENY PRIGOZHIN in Russia yesterday was due to a surface-to-air missile inside the country that shot and downed the plane, Reuters scooped.

Or was it? WSJ’s Michael Gordon, Warren Strobel, Matthew Luxmoore and Alan Cullison scooped that U.S. officials (presumably not the same ones) think it was an assassination but likely not a surface-to-air missile — instead a bomb or “some other form of sabotage.”

As Josh Gerstein notes, it’s worth remembering that Prigozhin was still under indictment in the U.S. for allegedly interfering in the 2016 election.

WHAT MIKE GALLAGHER IS READING — The White House wants to extend a 1979 U.S.-China science and technology agreement for six more months, WSJ’s Sha Hua reports from Singapore. The news will be a relief to researchers who called it a crucial tool for scientific cooperation and research, but Republicans have called for the U.S. not to renew the landmark agreement over security concerns. The State Department says the short-term extension will provide time for negotiations to make the agreement stronger.

EXPORTING VIOLENCE — “NRA-Style Politics Transformed Canada’s Gun Culture — and Shootings Rose 869%,” by Bloomberg’s Natalie Obiko Pearson, David Kocieniewski and Eric Fan: “A third of guns used in Canadian crimes and then traced by authorities were legally imported from the U.S. That’s three times the global average.”

CONGRESS

THE LOAN LURCH — Congressional Democrats are pressuring the Biden administration to do more to help borrowers struggling with student loan debt, NBC’s Liz Brown-Kaiser scooped. Sen. ELIZABETH WARREN (D-Mass.) and Rep. AYANNA PRESSLEY (D-Mass.) led the letter of almost 90 members of Congress, which counts Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER among the signatories.

PLAYBOOKERS

IN MEMORIAM — “Warren Hoge, Who Covered Wars and World Crises for The Times, Dies at 82,” by NYT’s Robert McFadden: “A correspondent and bureau chief, he wrote vividly from all corners of the globe before rising in newsroom leadership as foreign editor and assistant managing editor.”

TRANSITION — Alex Schriver will be SVP of public affairs at PhRMA. He most recently was head of public affairs at Targeted Victory.

BIRTHWEEK (was yesterday): Bradley Singer of WME

BONUS BIRTHDAY: Harry Rhoads of the Washington Speaker Bureau

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California Today: What if your town doubled as a residential power grid?

A conversation with Kaya Laterman, who recently wrote about the growing number of microgrid communities in the country.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Thursday. What if your town doubled as a residential power grid? Plus, an "octopus garden" off the Central Coast.

Solar panels are among the features of Heron's Nest, a microgrid community in Shallotte, N.C. A similar community is being developed in Menifee, Calif.Bobby Altman for The New York Times

For all of California's many charms, living here isn't always easy.

There's the astronomical cost of housing, of course, and the seemingly constant threat of catastrophe, whether from earthquakes, fires or extreme heat. Especially as the effects of climate change increase, disaster often seems to be lurking right around the corner.

This newsletter recently covered the increasing popularity in California of "disaster-proof" homes, built to better withstand high winds and temperatures, and to limit entry points for wildfire embers. And last year, my colleague Ivan Penn wrote about Californians who, out of frustration with blackouts and rising utility prices in our warming world, are opting to live off the grid.

Here's another way Californians are trying to adapt: microgrid communities. Kaya Laterman recently wrote about them in The New York Times.

These are energy-resilient communities that can operate independently from a larger municipal electrical system when necessary, by generating their own electricity (often using solar panels) and storing it in batteries for later use.

The goal is for the communities to be able to withstand power outages, something that feels increasingly necessary in a time of worsening wildfires and devastating heat waves.

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Kaya told me that she had long been interested in how utilities hope to keep up with energy demand, as the country shuts down nuclear power plants and deals with aging power infrastructure, storage issues and other challenges.

"It's scary to read headlines where people don't have water, or blackouts happen 20 times a year," Kaya said. "That's frightening to me. So when I hear about ideas that can keep powering everyone's lights, it intrigues me, especially at a time when the country is trying to produce, store and use more green energy to reduce carbon emissions."

A new microgrid community in Menifee, about 80 miles southeast of downtown Los Angeles, bills itself as the state's first all-electric residential community. Residents began to move in during the spring.

The development will include about 200 houses, each with its own heat pump, solar panels and battery to store surplus solar energy. In an emergency, the community can power itself with stored energy from a communal battery.

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Dan Bridleman, senior vice president of sustainability, technology and strategic sourcing for KB Home, the company behind the project, said the Menifee microgrid would help demonstrate "whether an entire community can become self-sufficient with power."

He added, "We wanted to do something that seemed disruptive but will eventually become the standard."

Enjoy all of The New York Times in one subscription — the original reporting and analysis, plus puzzles from Games, recipes from Cooking, product reviews from Wirecutter and sports journalism from The Athletic. Experience it all with a New York Times All Access subscription.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and Elon Musk toured Tesla's new global engineering and A.I. headquarters in Palo Alto in February./EPA, via Shutterstock

The rest of the news

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Southern California

Central California

  • An inactive water volcano off the coast of central California is also the site of scores of upside-down octopuses.

Northern California

Visitors get a close-up view of the rush and spray of Twin Lakes Falls cascading down from Lake Mamie to Twin Lakes in Mammoth Lakes.Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Sarah Wauters, who recommends a trip to the Eastern Sierra near Bishop and Mammoth Lakes during the summer:

"Take the Rock Creek Trail up to Ruby Lake. Only two miles and 1,000-foot elevation gain — so it's a good hike with just rain gear, snacks and water in your pack. It's rare to get up so high so quickly and experience the towering rocks and snow fields of the Sierra.

"Visit Wild Willy's Hot Springs: There are several pools and a convivial atmosphere. The hot springs are surrounded by an Alaska-like scene — a broad prairie between the High Sierra on one side and an arid mountain range on the other, grazing cattle and waving wildflowers. The march of the clouds across the sky and the light show across the prairie floor as they pass are glorious. I saw a full double rainbow as I drove from the hot springs to Mammoth one evening.

Mammoth is a ski town and looks rather bare in the summer, but it has many options for lodging and eating. I enjoyed Booky Joint, a bookstore with shelves of mountain- and nature-oriented titles (both used and new), as well as plenty of fiction."

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.

A still captured from a video showing newly discovered mountain lion cubs in their den in the Santa Susana Mountains.National Park Service

And before you go, some good news

Southern California has welcomed two new furry residents: mountain lion kittens known as P-116 and P-117.

The kittens, a girl and a boy thought to have been born in May, were recently discovered roaming the Santa Susana Mountains, just north of Los Angeles, ABC7 reports. In a video that officials with the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area posted on Facebook, the pair can be seen purring in their den at just 24 days old.

The litter is the 26th to be found at the Southern California den site, according to the National Park Service, which has been studying how mountain lions have adapted to urbanized conditions in the Santa Monica Mountains since 2002.

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

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

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