Friday, January 17, 2025

MAGA MORONS

 




MAGA MIKE


 






KILLING OUR COUNTRY


 




PUTIN'S PUSSY


 

PIGS FEEDING AT TRUMP'S TROUGH


 



Trump plans an audacious grab for congressional ‘power of the purse’

 


Karen Tumulty

Trump plans an audacious grab for congressional ‘power of the purse’

He would trample what the Founders intended.

 

January 17, 2025 at 11:55 a.m. ESTToday at 11:55 a.m. EST

 

 

As a presidential candidate last year, Donald Trump declared that if California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) did not divert more of the state’s limited water supply to farmers, “we won’t give him money to put out all his fires. And if we don’t give him the money to put out his fires, he’s got problems.”

 

This is the cudgel of a monarch or heartless despot, which is precisely why the Founders of this country invested the people’s representatives in Congress — not the president — with the “power of the purse.” The Constitution stipulates that money coming from the federal treasury has to have been appropriated by the legislative branch, starting with the House, in laws directing how those funds must be spent.

 

On the flip side, it is illegal for a president to unilaterally withhold or needlessly delay disbursement of federal money once it has been approved by Congress and signed into law. The Impoundment Control Act of 1974 was one of the most important of the post-Watergate reforms, passed after skirmishes in which then-president Richard M. Nixon put his signature on appropriations bills and then “impounded” — refused to spend — money that had been allocated to programs that he opposed.

 

A half-century later, that will again become a flash point in the second Trump administration. The incoming president and his team are positioning to vastly expand the dominance of the executive branch; Trump’s dubious claims to impoundment authority will be a key lever in achieving it.

 

“I am hard-pressed to think of what would be a more substantial shift of power from the Congress to the president,” University of Maryland public policy professor Philip Joyce, a leading expert on the use of federal budget authority, told me.

 

Trump’s first impeachment trial in 2020 came about because he stalled $214 million in military assistance for Ukraine that had been overwhelmingly approved by Congress, so he could pressure Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to dig up incriminating evidence about the Biden family. The nonpartisan Government Accountability Office, a watchdog agency that reports to Congress, found that the White House violated the law.

 

Trump’s intended nominee for a second stint as head of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell Vought, reiterated at his confirmation hearing Wednesday his and Trump’s claim that a president has the constitutional authority to impound money — though courts have ruled otherwise.

 

Vought also refused to commit to spending $3.8 billion that has been enacted for security assistance to Ukraine, telling the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs he would not “get ahead of the president on a foreign policy issue.”

 

Trump campaigned on an explicit promise to “choke off the money” that Congress has appropriated and press for the repeal of the Impoundment Control Act. He portrays these actions as means of trimming wasteful spending, though experience suggests he plans to use them to get his political adversaries to bend to his will — with brazenly partisan use of emergency aid being a case in point.

 

Last year, Politico’s E&E News reported that during Trump’s first term, he had “on at least three occasions hesitated to give disaster aid to areas he considered politically hostile or ordered special treatment for pro-Trump states.”

 

The article quoted Mark Harvey, who had been Trump’s senior director for resilience policy on the National Security Council staff, as saying that after wildfires hit California in 2018, Trump was persuaded to release assistance only after being shown how many votes he had gotten in the impacted areas.

 

Trump is the latest in “a succession of presidents who have been increasingly high-handed in their assertions of executive power,” said Douglas Elmendorf, a former dean of Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government who headed the Congressional Budget Office from 2009 to 2015.

 

At the same time, Congress has grown more supine over the years in resisting these end-runs by Democratic and Republican presidents. The MAGA-fied House of Representatives can be expected to accelerate the trend. Already, Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana), echoing Trump, has said “there should probably be conditions” placed on federal money that is sent to fire-ravaged California, because “state and local leaders were derelict in their duty in many respects.”

 

All of this comes as Trump and his allies are spreading false information about the causes of the current wildfire spread — for instance, claiming that Southern California lacks water because of poor policy decisions, when actually its state-run reservoirs are full. It should also be noted that no strings were attached to the aid that Congress recently provided to red states ravaged by hurricanes.

 

As Rep. Salud Carbajal, a Democrat from Southern California, put it: “When this happens in Florida again — which it will happen; when it happens in the Carolinas; when it happens with tornadoes in Oklahoma or other places, we are going to provide them the aid that they need, because that is what Americans do.”

 

The appalling politicization of tragedy is just one sign of what lies ahead.

 

As James Madison wrote: “This power over the purse may, in fact, be regarded as the most complete and effectual weapon with which any constitution can arm the immediate representatives of the people, for obtaining a redress of every grievance, and for carrying into effect every just and salutary measure.”

 

Step up, Congress members. Make yourselves worthy of the trust the Founders placed in you.

 

BONDI two articles

 


Pam Bondi Puts Loyalty to Trump First

The disturbing priorities revealed in the attorney general nominee’s answers—and non-answers.

 

Kim Wehle

Jan 16, 2025

IF THESE WERE “NORMAL” TIMES, Pam Bondi almost certainly would not be confirmed as attorney general. But these are far from normal times, and with her leading the Department of Justice under a re-elected Donald Trump, the times are likely to get a whole lot less normal.

On Wednesday, the Senate Judiciary Committee began confirmation hearings for the former Florida attorney general Trump picked after the catastrophic collapse of his first choice for U.S. attorney general, former Rep. Matt Gaetz, because of an investigation by the House Ethics Committee into allegations that Gaetz paid for sex, including with a minor, and used illegal drugs while a member of Congress. Although it’s almost certain that Bondi will be confirmed, there are at least three disqualifying issues with her candidacy.

1. Potentially Grave Conflicts of Interest

Bondi is a career prosecutor who served as Florida’s 37th and first female attorney general from 2011 to 2019, after which she became a lobbyist for Ballard Partners in the firm’s Washington, D.C. office. Her thirty corporate and foreign clients included General Motors, Uber, Major League Baseball, and Carnival North America. The Department of Justice is currently investigating two of her other clients, Amazon and the GEO Group, the latter of which is a private prison company that stands to benefit heavily from mass deportations. Bondi’s firm also represents many other clients with business before DOJ, such as Boeing, Blackstone, and Google. Bondi also lobbied for a Kuwaiti firm and was registered as a foreign agent for the government of Qatar.

In her Senate nominee questionnaire, Bondi failed to disclose any of these potential conflicts of interest. Bondi nonetheless emphasized during her testimony that she will not play politics as attorney general. When pressed about acting as a registered foreign agent, she insisted that the $115,000 monthly retainer was spread across several people at the firm and that she is proud of the work she did for Qatar.

Bondi has yet to account for what is perhaps the biggest stain on her credibility as a rule-of-law prosecutor. In 2013, Trump’s charitable foundation donated $25,000 to And Justice for All, a PAC linked with Bondi. This donation came three days after a spokeswoman for the Florida attorney general’s office said that Bondi was reviewing allegations against get-rich-quick seminars associated with Trump contained in a lawsuit by the state of New York. The lawsuit alleged that Trump University and its affiliates were “sham for-profit” colleges and ripped off 5,000 consumers. Bondi subsequently declined to join the lawsuit against Trump University and backed Trump in defending the donation.

In 2016, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a complaint about the donation with the IRS. In response, the Trump Foundation claimed—implausibly—that it had made an error and that it had actually intended the donation to go not to Bondi’s And Justice for All PAC but rather to a similarly named Kansas-based anti-abortion nonprofit, Justice for All. In June 2016, as Bondi faced increased criticism over the issue, her spokesperson stated that Bondi had in fact solicited the donation from Trump several weeks before her office had announced their contemplation of joining the Trump University fraud lawsuit. In September 2016, the IRS determined that the donation violated laws against nonprofit organizations making political contributions and ordered Trump to pay a fine for the contribution and to reimburse the foundation for the sum that had been donated to Bondi. Neither Bondi nor her PAC were fined or criminally charged.

As Bondi well knows, Rule 1.7 of the American Bar Association’s Model Rules of Professional Conduct makes clear that “loyalty and independent judgment are essential elements in the lawyer’s relationship to a client” and that “concurrent conflicts of interest can arise from the lawyer’s responsibilities to another client, a former client or a third person or from the lawyer’s own interests.” Prosecutors pick and choose which cases to pursue and which to drop. The law and facts are rarely cut and dry. So far, Bondi has not adequately addressed concerns that she might put her foot on the gas or pump the brakes based on loyalty to corporate or foreign interests—or to the president-elect himself.

2. Adherence to the Big Lie

Bondi was repeatedly asked during the hearing whether Joe Biden was legitimately elected; she refused to answer, merely conceding that he is currently the president of the United States. When pushed, she hinted that the Pennsylvania election in 2020 had problems with fraud, a claim for which there is zero evidence. That she cannot admit that the law has spoken on that subject in her audition for the job of the nation’s top prosecutor is disturbing, to say the least.

All through the hearing, Bondi and Senate Republicans hammered the idea that DOJ has been politicized and that she’ll be the catalyst for much-needed reform. The undercurrent, of course, was that Trump was supposedly wrongly investigated and prosecuted by Special Counsel Jack Smith. By this metric, no politician could ever be legitimately held to account for violating criminal laws because to even suggest a politician committed a crime collides head on with politics. The argument also ignores the possibility that the facts and the law pointed to criminal activity, which the attorney general has a solemn duty to pursue.

3. Refusal to Disobey Illegal or Unconstitutional Directives

Worse, Bondi refused to answer whether she would refuse to follow illegal or unconstitutional orders, defensively declaring that she has no reason to believe Trump would ask such a thing. Nor would Bondi state that she’ll decline prosecutions of former Special Counsel Jack Smith or former Rep. Liz Cheney, who has been a vocal critic of Trump and was an outspoken member of the House January 6th Committee. When Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) pursued this line of questioning, Bondi talked over her, declaring with no sense of irony that the query itself only adds to the politicization of the criminal justice system.

When asked about Trump’s characterization of the January 6th insurrectionists as “hostages” and “patriots,” Bondi claimed she was not “familiar” with those statements. This is simply not credible. She also feigned ignorance regarding Trump’s assertion that immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country.”

In Bondi’s defense, nobody who dared answer these questions differently could possibly get the job. And she did make a few promising admissions—including that presidents can only serve two terms under the Twenty-second Amendment, and that there will be no “enemies list” at the DOJ (while vigorously endorsing Kash Patel for FBI director, despite his own well-known enemies list).

Bondi, like her incoming boss, knows full well that despite what she says under oath to Congress, she will enter the Trump administration effectively above the law. We can only hope that she adheres to the values of decency that go along with what she called her favorite part of the oath of office: “under God.”

 

Attorney general nominee Pam Bondi: Qualified but questionable

Ruth Marcus

 

Better than Matt Gaetz is not saying much.

January 16, 2025 at 3:27 p.m. ESTYesterday at 3:27 p.m. EST

 

The best thing about Pam Bondi is that she’s not Matt Gaetz, President-elect Donald Trump’s initial pick for attorney general, who blew up with supersonic speed. The second-best thing is that she’s not Kash Patel, Trump’s outlandishly irresponsible choice to head the FBI, who, based on Senate Republicans’ supine performance, looks likely to squeak through.

 

Bondi’s not-Gaetzness offers some comfort — but not much, judging by her testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday. Unlike the disgraced former congressman, Bondi, a former Florida attorney general, has the experience and demeanor to be the nation’s chief law enforcement officer.

 

Testifying at her confirmation hearing, Bondi said many of the things that a normal candidate for attorney general would say: that she won’t use the Justice Department to launch prosecutions of political opponents; that she will follow the facts and the law in bringing cases; that she will exercise independent judgment if confirmed as the nation’s 87th attorney general, which appears inevitable.

 

But, of course, Bondi is not a normal candidate for attorney general, because she is the choice of a president with a decidedly abnormal view of the Justice Department — specifically, that it should bend to his will and punish those who dare to oppose him. She is the choice of a president who values loyalty over all and who found himself so frustrated by the two men who served in the role during his first term that he fired one and denounced the other — a president who has proclaimed his “absolute right to do what I want with the Justice Department.”

 

Trump knows what he wants in an attorney general — someone who will do his bidding — and he chose Bondi, who represented Trump during his first impeachment hearing and in the aftermath of the 2020 election. The question Bondi could not convincingly answer was whether she would have the fortitude, the strength of character, to stand up to him.

The panel’s ranking Democrat, Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, framed the stakes. “At issue, I believe in this nomination hearing is not your competence nor your experience,” he told Bondi. “At issue is your ability to say no. More than any other Cabinet official, the attorney general has to be prepared to put the Constitution first and even tell the president of the United States, ‘You’re wrong.’”

 

Say no? Bondi couldn’t even tell Trump that he lost the 2020 election. Like so many other Trump acolytes, she has said no more than that Joe Biden was “duly sworn in” as president. Truth-avoidance has apparently become the price of admission to the Trump administration. But given that Trump’s attorney general during that election, William P. Barr, found no “fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election,” this coddling of Trump’s illusions is particularly concerning from a nominee for the same position.

 

Where Pete Hegseth, Trump’s nominee to head the Defense Department, parried question after question from his confirmation panel on the grounds that they were “anonymous smears,” Bondi’s go-to move was to profess ignorance.

 

What about Patel’s comments that he would shut down FBI headquarters on Day 1 and prosecute those who “helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections?” asked Connecticut Democrat Richard Blumenthal. “Senator, I am not familiar with all those comments,” Bondi replied.

 

Did she agree with Trump’s characterization of the Jan. 6, 2021, defendants as “hostages” and “patriots,” asked Hawaii Democrat Mazie Hirono.

 

Bondi: “I am not familiar with that statement, senator.

 

Hirono: “I just familiarized you with that statement. Do you agree with it?”

 

Bondi: “I’m not familiar with it, senator.”

 

When claims of ignorance didn’t suffice, Bondi dodged by claiming she was being asked hypotheticals. About a Trump directive to violate ethical or legal rules. About whether she would prosecute former special counsel Jack Smith or former congresswoman Liz Cheney.

 

“Senator, I will never speak on a hypothetical, especially one saying that the president would do something illegal,” she told Delaware Democrat Chris Coons.

 

But these are anything but hypothetical situations.

 

We know Trump pressured FBI director James B. Comey to drop a probe into his national security adviser, Michael Flynn, and fired Comey after he refused. We know Trump berated attorney general Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from a special counsel investigation and then fired him, as well. It says something about Trump’s hold on his people that Bondi could not bring herself to say straight out that she would stand up to such misconduct.

 

Trump has publicly called for Smith and Cheney to be jailed; no hypothetical there. Bondi herself called Smith a “rabid dog” and told the Judiciary Committee that “what I’m hearing on the news is horrible.” California Democrat Adam Schiff had every reason to ask whether she believes there is a factual predicate to launch a criminal probe.

 

She also evaded legitimate inquiry by simply rewriting history. Asked about Trump’s 2021 phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger pressing him to “find 11,780 votes,” Bondi disputed the premise. “Senator, I have not listened to the hour-long conversation, but it’s my understanding that is not what he asked him to do.” Seriously?

 

Read the transcript.

 

Bondi even rewrote her own chilling words: “At the Department of Justice, the prosecutors will be prosecuted, the bad ones,” she told Fox News in 2023. “The investigators will be investigated. Because the deep state, last term for President Trump, they were hiding in the shadows. But now they have a spotlight on them and they can all be investigated.” Bondi’s translation on Wednesday: “I said, prosecutors will be prosecuted, to finish the quote, if bad.” That’s slicing off a lot of red meat.

 

Bondi could be worse. Trump made sure to show us that. But we should not be satisfied with her. The Department of Justice and the country deserve better.


DAYS OF BLUNDER

 

Starting Monday: The Trump administration’s days of blunder

Talk of tattoos, Jesus, enemies lists and a war with California mark the week before inauguration.

January 17, 2025 at 7:30 a.m. ESTToday at 7:30 a.m. EST

 

 

At a forum this week hosted by Politico, former top Trump strategist and current MAGA loudmouth Steve Bannon said insiders have a name for the first days of the incoming Trump administration. “We refer to it right now as ‘Days of Thunder,’” he said. “And I think these Days of Thunder starting next week are going to be incredibly, incredibly intense.”

 

Why would President-elect Donald Trump’s advisers compare their return to power with a 35-year-old movie about NASCAR? This can only mean they are expecting a series of car wrecks. And, in fact, the pileups have already begun — a familiar mix of incompetence, defiance of the law, infighting and tilting at windmills. (“Windmills are an economic and environmental disaster. I don’t want even one built during my administration,” Trump announced on Wednesday.)

 

Bannon himself is publicly feuding with billionaire Elon Musk, who has attached himself, barnacle-like, to Trump. Bannon told an Italian newspaper that Musk is “a truly evil person” who has the “maturity of a child” (fact check: mostly true), and that “he should go back to South Africa,” where Musk grew up during apartheid. Musk, in turn, has called his MAGA critics “subtards” and “contemptible fools” (fact check: well, let’s not go there).

 

On the same day Bannon spoke about Days of Thunder, I was in a hearing room in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, watching the most extravagantly unqualified nominee I have ever seen. Pete Hegseth makes the closest runner-up, Harriet Miers, George W. Bush’s ill-fated Supreme Court nominee, look like Oliver Wendell Holmes. Hegseth has faced widespread and credible allegations of drunkenness on the job, financial mismanagement at the two small charities he ran, and sexual harassment and assault.

 

(He paid a woman who accused him of assault while denying the accusation.) A weekend host for Fox News, Hegseth never ran a large organization and held a junior rank in the military, and he has said women shouldn’t serve in combat and disparaged the Geneva Conventions, which govern the laws of war. He also appears to have no idea what he’s doing.

 

At Hegseth’s confirmation hearing on Tuesday, Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Illinois) sprung a pop quiz on him, asking the defense secretary-designate how many nations are in ASEAN, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. “I couldn’t tell you the exact amount of nations, but I know we have allies in South Korea and Japan and in AUKUS with Australia,” Hegseth ventured.

“None of those three countries that you’ve mentioned are in ASEAN,” Duckworth informed him.

 

 

President Joe Biden’s defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, has met annually with his counterparts in ASEAN, as did Trump defense secretaries Jim Mattis and Mark T. Esper before him. This is because ASEAN is crucial to the United States in its geopolitical struggle against China — and Hegseth doesn’t even know what it is.

 

The next day brought the confirmation hearing of Pam Bondi, whose main qualification to be attorney general is that she’s not Matt Gaetz. During her ferociously partisan appearance, she refused to acknowledge that Biden won the 2020 election, left on the table prosecuting Liz Cheney, Jack Smith and Merrick Garland, and delivered frequent taunts about Trump’s “overwhelming” victory in November. (He won by 1.5 percentage points and got less than 50 percent of the vote). “Look at the map of California,” she told California Democrat Adam Schiff. “It’s bright red, the popular vote, for a reason.” Trump lost California by 20 points.

 

The main driver of the car wrecks, of course, is the president-elect himself. Fresh from his news conference announcing that he would consider using military force to seize the Panama Canal and to take Greenland from NATO ally Denmark, he reposted a social media post this week from right-wing activist Charlie Kirk with a poll purporting to show that “Greenland wants independence from Denmark.”

 

Now, he’s getting ready to go to war with California. Trump fabricated a claim that Los Angeles doesn’t have enough water to fight wildfires because Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom (whom the president-elect calls “Gavin Newscum”) diverted water “to protect a tiny little fish,” the delta smelt: “And for the sake of a smelt, they have no water.” In reality, Los Angeles has enough water to fight the fires; hydrants have at times run dry because the city’s water system, like all municipal systems, isn’t equipped to fight forest fires. The state’s water policies have nothing to do with it.

 

Yet Trump keeps posting “RELEASE THE WATER” and, now, congressional Republicans are threatening to withhold disaster relief from California because of the president-elect’s bogus claims. After Trump’s (phony) accusation that the Biden administration had refused disaster assistance to Republican parts of storm-ravaged North Carolina, Republicans are now proposing to do exactly that to blue California unless it abandons its unrelated conservation policies. “We will follow the administration’s lead on this,” House Speaker Mike Johnson declared this week, joining in the false accusation that the fires came with the state’s “complicity” because of “deliberative policy choices.”

 

 

Trump, never one to stand still, has moved on to blaming the fires on migrants. He posted a claim this week that taxpayer “funds are diverted to illegal immigrants,” and then “an illegal immigrant comes and sets your house on fire and the fire department doesn’t have the resources to put it out.”

 

Trump is also considering, as one of his first acts in office, overturning by fiat a law duly passed by bipartisan majorities in Congress, signed into law by Biden, and on the verge of being upheld by the Supreme Court. The people’s representatives determined that China-owned TikTok poses a threat to national security. Trump’s own choice to be secretary of state, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Florida), said this week that China is “the most potent and dangerous near-peer adversary this nation has ever confronted.” But Trump has a higher priority: himself. He thinks TikTok is good for him politically. So, he’s getting ready to set aside the law — and he’ll be hosting TikTok’s CEO at his inauguration Monday.

 

The incoming administration is also poised to ignore the law and the Supreme Court on government spending. Congress in 1974 passed the Impoundment Control Act — which blocks a president from refusing to spend funds Congress appropriates because he doesn’t like a particular program — after the abuses of Watergate, and the Supreme Court upheld it. But Russell Vought, Trump’s pick to run the Office of Management and Budget, declared at his confirmation hearing this week that “I don’t believe it’s constitutional,” regardless of what the Supreme Court says. “The president ran on that view,” Vought said, and “the incoming administration is going to take the president’s view on this” — the law be damned.

 

Apparently, rules just won’t apply to the incoming administration. Extending Trump’s 2017 tax cuts, which Republicans plan to do, would add $4.6 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, according to the Congressional Budget Office. But Trump and Republicans have promised that, once in power, they would cut the national debt. So, as The Post’s Jacob Bogage reports, they have come up with a novel solution. They will simply decree, magically, that extending the tax cuts won’t increase the debt! Saying so doesn’t make it true, of course — but this is no longer a relevant consideration.

 

These coming car wrecks are in addition to the routine fender benders that Trump tends to produce almost hourly. He announced on social media this week that “I am today announcing that I will create the EXTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE to collect our Tariffs, Duties, and all Revenue that come from Foreign sources.” Evidently, he was unaware that Congress had already taken care of this, in 1789. It’s called “Customs.”

 

After the Justice Department this week released the final report of the special counsel investigating Trump’s antics on Jan. 6, 2021, Trump posted: “To show you how desperate Deranged Jack Smith is, he released his Fake findings at 1 a.m. in the morning.” Well, yes, 1 a.m. is “in the morning.” So is 1:52 a.m., when Trump posted his missive. But the report was clearly dated a week earlier, and Smith had already left the Justice Department. The report was released at that time because a Trump-allied judge had embargoed its release until midnight.

 

Such are the musings of the extremely stable genius. One moment, he was attacking NBC late-night host Seth Meyers. (“I feel an obligation to say how dumb and untalented he is.”) Another moment, he was sharing a picture of himself labeled “God’s gift to America.” And when Israel and Hamas reached their ceasefire deal, he naturally claimed sole credit. “We have achieved so much without even being in the White House,” he boasted.

Good point. Israel has reached ceasefires with Hamas and Hezbollah. Inflation has calmed. Violent crime, border crossings and opioid-overdose deaths have all plunged. The economy has added jobs for 48 straight months. Interest rates have fallen. The stock market has hit dozens of record highs. Maybe Trump should simply declare victory — and stay home at Mar-a-Lago.

 

After watching Bondi’s confirmation hearing this week, I must respectfully disagree with The Post’s Editorial Board, which gave her a thumbs-up and pronounced her qualified to be attorney general. She appeared to take pride in how little she knows.

 

What were her thoughts on Trump calling those who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, “hostages” and “patriots”?

“I am not familiar with that statement.”

 

How about the recording of Trump urging Georgia’s secretary of state to “find” him 11,780 votes?

“I’ve not heard it.”

 

Trump’s nominee to head the FBI, Kash Patel, saying he would “come after” journalists “who helped Joe Biden rig presidential elections”?

“I am not familiar with all those comments.”

 

Patel’s threats to prosecute political opponents, including some from the five-dozen-name enemies list published in an appendix to his book that labels them members of a “deep state”?

“I don’t believe he has an enemies list. He made a quote on TV, which I have not heard.”

 

 

Her feigned ignorance did not extend to the supposed “weaponization” of the government by Democrats, of which she was most certain. She and her Republican questioners brought it up two dozen times. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) observed to her that “no president had previously been prosecuted until the Biden-Harris White House came along, and in the last four years we’ve seen Donald Trump indicted and prosecuted not once, not twice, not three times, but four separate times.”

 

“And two assassination attempts,” Bondi added.

 

Thus did the incoming attorney general implicate the Biden White House in the attempted murder of Trump.

 

But if Bondi was only playing dumb, Hegseth seemed to come by this trait more earnestly. Even his supporters (which, thanks to Trump’s threats, include virtually every Senate Republican) felt a need to acknowledge his lack of credentials.

 

“Admittedly, this nomination is unconventional,” the Armed Services Committee chairman, Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi) allowed.

“Pete Hegseth is an out-of-the-box nominee,” submitted former senator Norm Coleman, introducing Hegseth.

 

Freshman Sen. Tim Sheehy (R-Montana) defended Hegseth’s thin résumé by saying “I don’t think any board in the world would’ve hired Steve Jobs or Elon Musk or Mark Zuckerberg when they founded their companies either.”

 

So now, we’re treating the 3-million-person U.S. military like a garage start-up?

 

Hegseth came armed with two strategies. The first was to say that all of the accusations of alcohol abuse and sexual and financial impropriety were fabricated by left-wing partisans. “What became very evident to us from the beginning: There was a coordinated smear campaign orchestrated in the media against us,” he spoke, using the royal “we.”

 

The second was to say that he has been “redeemed by my Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ” for all of the bad things he was falsely accused of doing by this left-wing smear campaign.

 

After the nominee’s third mention of Jesus, Sen. Markwayne Mullin, an Oklahoma Republican, informed the committee that “our Lord and Savior forgave me” — too, as did Mrs. Mullin. In fact, “the only reason why I’m here and not in prison is because my wife loved me, too,” he disclosed.

 

Mullin condemned Democrats as hypocrites, accusing his fellow senators of cheating on their wives and showing up drunk for votes. “The man’s made a mistake and you want to sit there and say that he’s not qualified? Give me a joke!” Mullin challenged.

Okay, Senator. A priest and a rabbi walk into a bar …

 

The real joke is going to be on the brave men and women of the military, who will soon be led by a man who has referred to military lawyers as “jagoffs” and who, at the hearing, left open the possibility that he would use the 82nd Airborne to conduct law enforcement in D.C. Hegseth was contemptuous of his questioners; he refused to meet with all but one of the Democrats, and Wicker restricted the questioning time over Democratic objections.

 

Instead, the secretary-designate engaged his bros on the GOP side in high-testosterone talk.

“How many push-ups can you do?” Sheehy asked.

 

“I did five sets of 47 this morning,” the nominee replied, in apparent homage to the 47th president.

 

He repeatedly vowed to return the “warrior ethos” and “warrior culture” and to rebuild the military after the “defense cuts under the Biden administration.” Defense spending grew nearly 15 percent under Biden from Trump’s final year in office, and the men and women of the military never stopped being the most powerful warriors on the planet.

 

But you wouldn’t know that from Hegseth and his Republican interlocutors, who spoke endlessly about the supposed “wokeness” in the military.

 

As an example of this wokeness, Hegseth claimed that he was not allowed to offer protection during Biden’s inauguration in 2021 because he has a Christian tattoo. Pointing to his chest, he said “it’s called the Jerusalem Cross,” or Crusader’s Cross. He did not mention that he also has a tattoo proclaiming “Deus Vult” — “God wills it” — which was displayed during the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville in 2017 and during the Jan. 6 insurrection.

 

It’s not clear whether the tattoos caused Hegseth to be rejected from security duty. But if they did, that happened before Biden took office, during the woke Trump administration.

Days of Thunder? More like days of blunder.

 

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