Week #24: April 30, 2017 |
Today (April 29, 2017) marks day 100 of the Trump regime. Despite the Republicans having control of the House and Senate, Trump has yet to tally a single legislative accomplishment. He was obsessive this week in pushing for Trumpcare 3 ahead of the 100-day mark; but the Resistance, which continues to grow in number and fervor, headed him off. And all the while, the drumbeat of Russia grows louder. This week, Speaker Ryan acknowledged Russian interference. Trump's involvement has evolved from a "Trump-Russia probe" to a "Trump-Russia scandal," and this week, to a "Trump-Russia cover-up." As this unfolds, concern grows that Trump will seek to distract attention by starting a war. The one constant throughout the weeks is Trump's attempts to enrich himself and his regime through a growing list of conflicts of interest and corruption. |
1. |
Speaker Ryan acknowledged that Russia interfered with our election, and said US probes could help our allies prevent similar interference. Read More About This |
2. |
As Le Pen advanced to the French presidential election runoff, Putin is using many of the tools successfully employed in the US to target France. Read More About This |
3. |
WikiLeaks released more top-secret CIA documents. Our media has by and large stopped covering the WikiLeaks document dumps. Read More About This |
4. |
A group of psychiatrists at a conference held at Yale Medical School cited a "Duty to Warn" about Trump being dangerously ill. Read More About This |
5. |
Of the ten items listed on Trump's contract with the American people for the first 100 days of his administration, he accomplished none of them. Read More About This |
6. |
The State Department and two US embassies promoted Mar-A-Lago on their website with a 400-word blog post. After public outrage, the post was removed. Read More About This; Click here, also |
7. |
NYT reported the State Department is likely to remain largely unstaffed into 2018. Trump has yet to fill 200 leadership jobs which require Senate confirmation. Tillerson is taking no action either. Read More About This; Click here, also |
8. |
Similarly, as the Trump regime launched its tax plan, the Treasury Department does not have a single confirmed appointee in positions tasked with reforming the tax code. Read More About This |
9. |
Trump's tax reform plan was launched with Mnuchin handing out a one-pager with broad details and no numbers. Read More About This |
10. |
Democrats, including former Obama ethics chief Norm Eisen noted Trump's tax reform could save him hundreds of millions of dollars. Without tax returns, it's impossible to know his total benefit. Read More About This |
11. |
Beyond State, the slow pace of nominations in the first 100 days has left cabinet agencies in limbo. Only 26 of the 556 senior positions which require Senate confirmation have been filled. Read More About This |
12. |
Haley was the only member of the Trump regime to condemn the abuse and killings of gay men in the Russian republic of Chechnya. Days later, the State Department said they want to clear her remarks in advance. Read More About This; Click here, also |
13. |
UN diplomats were invited to the WH, but Tillerson was not included. Haley was there, and Trump publicly threatened to fire her, "Does everybody like Nikki? Good, otherwise she could easily be replaced." Read More About This; Click here, also |
14. |
In his first 100 days, Trump has an unprecedented number (15) of appointees who got fired, withdrew or quit. Read More About This |
15. |
Carl Bernstein said there is a "serious belief" in the FBI and Congress that there is an active cover-up underway by the Trump regime of their involvement with Russia. Read More About This |
16. |
On Monday, Yahoo reported that the Senate Intelligence Committee's Russia probe had stalled due to lack of staffing and Sen. Burr's unwillingness to sign off on witness requests. Read More About This |
17. |
Democrats in the Senate Intelligence Committee hired April Doss, the former head of intelligence law at the NSA. Burr refused to bring on additional staffing, saying staffing levels were already sufficient. Read More About This; Click here, also |
18. |
Trump picked ally Dana Boente to take over the Justice Departmentunit's probe of Trump-Russia. Boente was last named by Trump as an interim acting-AG on the Monday Night Massacre (firing of Yates). Read More About This |
19. |
On Tuesday, POLITICO reported that Flynn's lobbying work for Turkey came to him via Dmitri Zairian, a Russian with ties to the Putin regime. Read More About This |
20. |
The White House denied a request by House Oversight Committee leaders Chaffetz and Cummings to release documents related to Flynn. Read More About This |
21. |
Shortly thereafter, Chaffetz and Cummings addressed the press, saying Flynn may have broken the law by not disclosing payments from Russia. Read More About This |
22. | The next day, Chaffetz posted an explanation on Facebook of why he was leaving office, citing a foot injury. His explanation was met with much skepticism. |
23. |
Friday, Cummings said the White House is "covering up" for Flynn. Sen. Blumenthal said there is "powerful, mounting, incontrovertible evidence" of a violation of criminal law. Read More About This; Click here, also |
24. |
The Pentagon's internal watch dog group opened an investigation into whether Flynn took payments from foreign governments after leaving the military. Read More About This |
25. |
Democrats on the House Oversight Committee released documents showing the Pentagon warned Flynn not to take foreign paymentswithout advance approval from the military. Flynn did not seek approval. Read More About This |
26. |
Spicer blamed Obama for Flynn having security clearance, neglecting the fact that Obama fired Flynn, and Trump appointed him to NSA. Read More About This |
27. |
NBC reported the Trump team did do a background check on Flynn as part of him becoming NSA. Despite their public denials, senior transition team members like Pence and Sessions would have seen the information. Read More About This |
28. |
Michael Cohen said he may sue Buzzfeed for publishing the Steele dossier, which includes allegations that Cohen traveled to Prague in August to meet with Russians. Read More About This |
29. |
The Guardian reported that Steele had also alerted the UK government with two memos about collusion between Trump and Russia. His contact in the US appears to have been with McCain, not Comey. Read More About This |
30. |
Steele's memo also reported that four members of the Trump regimetravelled to Prague for secret discussion with the Kremlin in August/September 2016 on how to pay hackers for penetrating the Democratic party computer systems. Read More About This |
31. |
Peter Severa, a Russian hacker whose wife said he was "linked to Trump's win" in Week 22, was indicted in Bridgeport, CT on eight counts related to the Kelihos botnet malware. Read More About This |
32. |
Rep. Ciciline, a ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee, requested the Inspector General open an investigation into the firings of Yates and Bharara. Yates will testify on May 8th in a Senate hearing. Read More About This |
33. |
Trump made 16 false claims in a bizarre interview with AP. He also made at least 15 comments which AP classified as "unintelligible." Read More About This; Click here, also |
34. |
Also in the AP interview, Trump bragged about getting highest ratingssince 9/11 coverage. Read More About This |
35. |
Trump said he planned to keep on his controversial press secretary, Spicer, because "the guy gets great ratings." Read More About This |
36. |
After a second EO was blocked, Trump said he would "absolutely" consider proposals to break-up the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. This threat was compared to the type of action of a dictator might take. Read More About This; Click here, also |
37. |
The Trump regime set up a VOICE (Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement) hotline for callers to report on immigrants. The hotline was flooded with calls with reports of space aliens. Read More About This |
38. |
A federal judge in San Francisco temporarily blocked the Trump regime efforts to withhold money from sanctuary cities. Read More About This |
39. |
WAPO reported on ICE data which shows half of the immigrants arrested had no criminal convictions or had committed traffic offenses. Read More About This |
40. |
Supreme Court Justice Roberts spoke out against Trump's immigration plan, describing the regime's interpretation as "prosecutorial abuse" for making it easy to strip citizenship for even lying about minor infractions. Read More About This |
41. |
Trump's Muslim Ban suffered another setback as the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals denied his request for an 11-member court review. Read More About This |
42. |
A report by the ADL revealed that anti-Semitic incidents in the US rose by 86% in the first three months of 2017, over the same period last year. Read More About This |
43. |
Trump proposed budget would strip all funding from a State Department bureau that promotes the rights of women around the world. Read More About This |
44. |
A Trump supporter stormed a cafeteria at a Kentucky university and asked about political affiliation, before stabbing two women. Read More About This |
45. |
Trump's USDA rolled back Michelle Obama's school nutrition standards. Read More About This |
46. |
Mnuchin said Trump will not release his tax returns, adding Trump "has given more financial disclosure than anybody else." Read More About This |
47. |
NYT reported that Kushner recently financed real-estate transactions in NYC through the Steinmetz family, who are under investigation for bribing a government official in Guinea to secure mining rights. Read More About This |
48. |
The investigator who found Florida AG Bondi did nothing wrong by accepting $25k of campaign cash and then dropping the investigation of Trump U, ignored key evidence already unearthed. Read More About This |
49. |
POLITICO reported that Lewandowki's DC firm is offering foreign clients in-person meetings with Trump, Pence and other senior regime members. Read More About This |
50. |
HuffPost's Christina Wilkie compiled a public spreadsheet to identify $107mm of donations to Trump inauguration. Discrepancies have been found, and the regime has yet to explain where unspent monies went. Read More About This |
51. |
Ivanka was booed for defending her father at a conference for female business leaders in Berlin. Read More About This |
52. |
WAPO reported that workers endured long hours and low pay working at factories used by Ivanka's company in China. Read More About This |
53. |
Facebook revealed fake accounts were used on its platform to sway the US election. Facebook also indicated its findings do "not contradict" the January 6 report issued by the US Director of National Intelligence. Read More About This |
54. |
Commerce Secretary Ross said the Trump regime would impose a 20% tariff on Canadian softwood lumber. Read More About This |
55. |
On Wednesday morning, Trump said he was considering withdrawing from NAFTA. By the evening, amidst confusion and without a reasonable explanation, he changed course and said the US would remain. Read More About This |
56. |
Trump ceremoniously summoned the entire US Senate onto a bus to the White House for a closed-door meeting on N Korea. To the Senators' frustration, nothing was offered beyond public information. Stagecraft. Read More About This |
57. |
Trump gave another disturbing 100-day interview to Reuters, for which the first headline to break was "there is a chance of a 'major, major conflict with North Korea."' Read More About This; Click here, also |
58. |
Trump also bemoaned to Reuters about missing his past life, and added, "This is more work than in my previous life. I thought it would be easier." Read More About This |
59. |
Trump brought a printed map handout to his Reuters interview to showcase his electoral win. Read More About This |
60. |
Trump also asked WAPO in his 100-day interview to put his electoral college handout on their front page. Read More About This |
61. |
The US economy grew at just 0.7% in the first quarter, the weakest showing in three years. Expectedly, Trump did not comment or tweet. Read More About This |
62. | The Resistance claimed another victory as Trumpcare 3 failed to muster support in the House, despite the GOP's 47 seat advantage. |
63. |
Fallout from the O'Reilly ouster continued, as CNN reported FoxNews is now under federal investigation by USPIS and the Justice Department for settlement payments and the overall environment at the network. Read More About This |
64. |
A new CNN/OCR poll found that 2/3 of Americans do not believe Trump is honest and trustworthy. Read More About This |
65. |
Koi, the restaurant in Trump Soho, became the latest Trump business to suffer a decline in business and close. Unlike Trump Hotel DC, Koi didn't have the benefit of foreign diplomats patronizing it to win favor. Read More About This |
66. |
The Trump regime announced Friday that the EPA website would be undergoing changes, and then removed climate science from public view. Read More About This |
67. |
The White House Correspondents' Dinner will go on without Trump tonight. He will instead hold a campaign rally in Pennsylvania. Read More About This |
Replicated from: https://medium.com/@Amy_Siskind/week-24-experts-in-authoritarianism-advise-to-keep-a-list-of-things-subtly-changing-around-you-so-2ecfe069542f