Politics
Russia’s Attack Rallies a Divided Nation: The United States
After two years of political divisions and financial disruptions bolstered by an endless pandemic, many Individuals say they’re coming collectively round a typical trigger: assist for Ukraine, a rustic underneath every day siege by Russian forces.
The uncommon second of solidarity is pushed, partially, by the notion of America as a steadfast world defender of freedom and democracy. Many Individuals say they see a lopsided battle pitting an ideal energy towards a weaker neighbor. They see relentless photographs of lifeless households and collapsed cities. They see Ukraine’s president pleading for assist.
In polls and interviews because the assault, Individuals throughout the political spectrum mentioned the nation has an obligation to answer President Vladimir V. Putin’s brazen invasion — even when which means feeling, at the very least within the quick time period, the pinch of excessive gasoline costs and inflation.
“I perceive we need to keep out of it, however what’s taking place is worse than anybody might think about. We will do with out gasoline when there are kids there being killed,” mentioned Danna Bone, a 65-year-old retiree in McMinnville, Ore., and a Republican. “It’s horrific what’s taking place there, and we should be doing our half. I want to see them doing extra. What that appears like, I actually don’t know.”
But interviews with greater than three dozen Individuals from Georgia to California present that, past broad consensus that Ukraine deserves assist, they’re unsettled and even divided on important questions: How far ought to America go to defend Ukraine with out thrusting the nation into one other Chilly Conflict? Does the battle demand U.S. army involvement?
The Biden administration has imposed an array of painful financial sanctions on Russia and blocked its oil, gasoline and coal imports. The administration has already accepted $1.2 billion in support to Ukraine, and President Biden is anticipated to announce one other $800 million in army help. Three weeks into the invasion, most Individuals in each political events assist U.S. support to Ukraine and overwhelmingly assist financial sanctions, a brand new Pew Analysis Heart survey discovered.
Already, the problem of America’s position in Ukraine is scrambling U.S. politics and reinvigorating the bond between the USA and its European allies.
A few third of Individuals mentioned the USA is offering the suitable quantity of assist to Ukraine, however a fair bigger share, 42 %, are in favor of the nation doing much more, the Pew survey confirmed. The identical ballot discovered, nevertheless, that about two-thirds of Individuals don’t assist army intervention.
In pockets throughout the nation, how folks noticed America’s world may and obligations was typically influenced by their very own particular person circumstances and financial stability. They typically drew a line, if a crooked one, between the battle and the crises at house. Conversations about Russian strikes and shellshocked refugees fleeing Ukraine shortly gave solution to dialogue in regards to the private price of gasoline and meals, a sputtering economic system and the enduring ache of the pandemic, the sort of grievances that may mood assist for Ukraine over time.
North of Detroit, the place Macomb and Oakland counties sit facet by facet however have been transferring in reverse political instructions in recent times — Macomb to the best, Oakland to the left — liberals and conservatives are united in a perception that what is occurring in Ukraine is improper and that the USA could possibly be doing extra. However they provided divergent opinions on the causes of the battle or whether or not Mr. Biden has been adept at dealing with the international coverage disaster.
“I name it Russia’s unfinished enterprise,” Roland Benberry Jr., 61, an artist and illustrator, mentioned of the invasion. Mr. Benberry served within the Air Drive within the early Nineteen Eighties when Russia was thought-about an imminent risk. Thirty years later, he’s experiencing déjà vu. “We thought we had been completed with that,” he mentioned. “We thought the Soviet Union was gone, and it mainly simply went underground for some time.”
Mr. Benberry, a Democrat, believes sanctions could possibly be probably the most highly effective and efficient instrument towards Russia, and that the U.S. army ought to solely get entangled immediately if the Ukrainian army is pressured to fall again. He noticed Mr. Putin as a lone demagogue appearing on his personal, towards the desire of lots of his personal residents.
Like Mr. Benberry, Natasha Jenkins, 34, a Democrat and a liberal arts scholar at a neighborhood faculty in Oakland County, mentioned she was keen to tolerate larger gasoline costs to punish Mr. Putin. However she mentioned she wished the president would additionally push for larger wages so that individuals might have a better time making ends meet. She sees firsthand the affect of America’s financial strains within the grocery retailer, the place she works the night time shift as a cashier. Dad and mom complain to her in regards to the costly costs of produce or the burdens of educating their kids at house amid the pandemic. Some provides shortages linger, and she will’t preserve all of the cabinets stocked.
Ms. Jenkins mentioned she was reluctant to see direct U.S. army involvement in Ukraine. She has a number of shut associates nonetheless scarred from America’s wars within the Center East, she mentioned, and she or he doesn’t need to see extra American troopers deployed to battle overseas.
Certainly, for a lot of Individuals, the assist for Ukraine firmly ends on the doorstep of army intervention. Historical past performs a task. The long-running battle and pullout from Afghanistan, together with reminiscences of the primary Chilly Conflict, has dampened the tolerance for a direct confrontation with Russia.
On a suburban avenue in Macomb County, Kathleen Pate, 75, has helped to prepare donated clothes and medicine to be despatched to Ukraine. Her son and her daughter-in-law, who’s from Ukraine, transformed their storage right into a makeshift donation hub.
“The assist is overwhelming,” mentioned Ms. Pate, a Republican who has spent her current days worrying about Ukrainian households. “I can’t sleep at night time. I can’t get it out of thoughts.”
She mentioned she helps establishing a no-fly zone over Ukraine and has been sad with the U.S. response to date. “I actually consider that it could possibly be doing extra to assist,” she mentioned. “It’s the humane factor to do.”
An Economist/YouGov survey performed in early March, confirmed that almost all of Individuals, about 73 %, sympathized extra with Ukraine than Russia. The ballot additionally confirmed that 68 % accepted of imposing financial sanctions, and barely much less accepted of sending monetary support or weapons. However solely 20 % favored sending American troops to battle Russians in Ukraine.
Alejandro Tenorio, 24, mentioned sanctions should be the first instrument to power Mr. Putin to again down, and perhaps encourage the Russian folks to behave.
“I feel these political sanctions ought to proceed. Let the folks from Russia take issues into their very own arms to perhaps attempt to change the federal government and alter their methods,” mentioned Mr. Tenorio, a tech assist specialist for an information firm who described himself as a “left-leaning reasonable.”
The Biden administration, mentioned Mr. Tenorio, who lives in Johns Creek, Ga., could possibly be a bit extra aggressive, with “extra issues to harm their economic system.”
“I feel that needs to be about it,” he mentioned. “I feel Biden is doing as a lot as he can, or as a lot as he’s allowed to do.”
Russia-Ukraine Conflict: Key Issues to Know
Others consider American troops on the bottom are a harmful however vital response.
Dan Cunha is a 74-year-old Vietnam veteran and retired small enterprise proprietor who lives in Anaheim, Calif. He describes himself as a political impartial, and wrote in John Kasich, the Republican former governor of Ohio, within the 2020 election.
“It breaks my coronary heart to see what is occurring there now, to see an autocrat rise to energy, and we’re not doing something to cease it,” he mentioned. “He’s nationalist within the excessive. If it had been as much as me, I might put troops there. Putin is a bully, and bullies should be slapped again.”
Mr. Cunha recurrently spends time on the native V.F.W. outpost, the place most of his associates are what he describes as “die-hard Republicans,” and mentioned that many argue that the battle wouldn’t have occurred in any respect if Donald J. Trump had been nonetheless president.
“The vast majority of the veterans I discuss to say the identical factor as I do — boots on the bottom,” he mentioned.
Whereas supportive of Ukraine’s plight, some Center Jap refugees and immigrants exterior of Detroit mentioned this battle feels completely different from these in Afghanistan and Iraq, as a result of the world is taking note of the struggling of white, European households in a method they felt that it had not with their very own.
“I grew up watching my nation get torn aside, ” mentioned Maria, a Syrian faculty scholar who requested that her full identify not be used for worry of endangering her household nonetheless within the nation. She emphasised that she felt and understood Ukrainians’ ache, and that she herself had been shocked to see Europeans go to battle. However she mentioned she hoped that Individuals would notice that that is what life has been like for folks in Syria and different Center Jap international locations for many years.
The battle feels private for Maryana Vacarciuc, 24, and her husband, Radion Vacarciuc, 25. The Ukrainian immigrants have been dwelling within the metro Atlanta space with their two kids for the final three years, however they nonetheless have kin in Ukraine.
In contrast to some Ukrainian immigrants who’re urgent for higher American involvement, they really feel unhealthy in regards to the predicament of their homeland and members of the family — and recall the final battle in 2014 — however mentioned they acknowledge the constraints of the U.S. authorities.
“I perceive what America’s doing. It doesn’t need to assist, no more, as a result of it doesn’t need to get into extra of a battle with Russia,” Ms. Vacarciuc mentioned.
Her husband added: “But when America will get too concerned, then we may be those leaving our children and going to battle the battle,” he mentioned. Requested if America has a task to play within the Ukraine battle, he mentioned no.
“America is its personal nation,” he mentioned. “Ukraine, Russia, they’re combating their very own battles.”
Politics
Column: Trump shoots his mouth off as L.A. burns. His claims about fire hydrants don’t hold water
SACRAMENTO — OK, I admit it. I’m biased. I hate it when an opportunistic politician capitalizes on other people’s miseries and tries to score political points.
I’m especially biased when it’s a president-elect who shoots off his mouth without regard for facts and blames a governor for fire hydrants running dry.
Not that Democrat Gavin Newsom is a perfect governor. But his California water policies had no more to do with Pacific Palisades hydrants drying up during a firestorm than did Republican Donald Trump’s turning on sprinklers at his golf course.
News reporters shouldn’t allow personal biases to seep into their stories, as Los Angeles Times owner Patrick Soon-Shiong has reminded us. Reporters have long strived to not do so and mostly succeeded. But I’m not a reporter. I’m a columnist who analyzes and opines. And yes, I’m biased — but on issues, not politics.
It has always been my view that liberals, moderates and conservatives all have good and bad ideas. Neither party has a monopoly on truth and justice — except in relating to Trump.
I wanted to give Trump the benefit of the doubt and watch whether he really intended — as promised — to be a president for all Americans. But the guy just can’t help himself.
When Trump blamed Newsom for water hydrants going dry as Pacific Palisades burned, it wasn’t something people should dismiss as just another Trumpism.
Here was a president-elect mouthing off and showing his ignorance in a barrage of vindictiveness and insensitivity as thousands of people fled for their lives and hundreds of homes blazed into ashes.
Yes, I’m biased against anyone who’s that uncivil, especially when he disrespects facts or — worse — is a pathological liar.
So, let’s recap what Trump did.
As scores of hydrants went dry while fire crews battled flames in Pacific Palisades, the president-elect instinctively went on social media to point the finger at his left coast political adversary, the Democrat he tastelessly derides as Gov. “Newscum.”
“Governor Gavin Newscum refused to sign the water restoration declaration put before him that would have allowed millions of gallons of water from excess rain and snow melt from the north to flow daily into many parts of California, including the parts that are currently burning in a virtually apocalyptic way,” Trump asserted.
“He wanted to protect an essentially worthless fish called a smelt … but didn’t care about the people of California. Now the ultimate price is being paid.
“I will demand that this incompetent governor allow beautiful, clean, fresh water to flow into California. He is the blame for this. On top of it all, no water for fire hydrants, not firefighting planes. A true disaster.”
True drivel, putting it politely.
First, what was this so-called water restoration declaration?
“There’s no such document,” responded Izzy Gardon, Newsom’s communications director. “That is pure fiction.”
Trump probably was referring to his policy differences with Newsom on water exports from the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta to farmlands in the San Joaquin Valley. In his first presidency, Trump wanted to drain more fresh water from the delta for irrigation in the valley. But both Govs. Jerry Brown and Newsom took a more centrist approach, striving for a balance between farms and fish.
Second, it’s not the demise of the tiny smelt — the Republicans’ favorite target — that’s so concerning to many conservationists. It’s the rapid decline of iconic salmon that previously provided world-class recreational angling in the delta and fed a healthy commercial fishery on the coast. Salmon fishing seasons have been closed recently to save what’s left of the fish.
Third, despite Trump’s claptrap, plenty of fresh delta water is being pumped south to fill fire hydrants and the tanks of firefighting aircraft. Hundreds of millions of gallons of water flow daily down the California Aqueduct. Major Southland reservoirs are at historically high levels. Anyway, much of L.A.’s water doesn’t even come from the Delta. It flows from the Owens Valley and the Colorado River.
Fourth, the hydrants went dry simply because there were too many fires to fight, the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power explained. Storage tanks went dry.
“We pushed the system to the extreme,” Janisse Quinones, DWP chief executive and chief engineer, said. “Four times the normal demand was seen for 15 hours straight.”
Yes, I’m biased against politicians who make up stuff.
But you’ve got to listen to Trump because he could follow through on what he’s bellowing about.
For example, Trump vowed during the presidential campaign to deny Newsom federal money to fight wildfires unless the governor diverted more water to farms.
That apparently wasn’t an idle threat.
Trump initially refused to approve federal wildfire aid in 2018 until a staffer pointed out that Orange County, a beneficiary, was home to many voters who supported him, Politico reported. And in 2020, the Federal Emergency Management Agency rejected an aid request during several California wildfires until Republicans appealed to Trump.
So, what’s Trump going to be like when he actually becomes president again and is wielding real power, not just running off at the mouth?
Will he try to annex Greenland? Seize the Panama Canal? When a reporter asked him whether he’d commit to not using “military or economic coercion” to achieve these goals, he immediately answered: “No.”
Will he keep calling Canada our “51st state?”
Yep. I’m biased against such immature and dangerous political leaders.
Politics
How a Phone Call Drew Alito Into a Trump Loyalty Squabble
Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. received a call on his cellphone Tuesday. It was President-elect Donald J. Trump, calling from Florida.
Hours later, Mr. Trump’s legal team would ask Justice Alito and his eight colleagues on the Supreme Court to block his sentencing in New York for falsifying business records to cover up a hush-money payment to a pornographic film actress before the 2016 election. And the next day, the existence of the call would leak to ABC News — prompting an uproar about Mr. Trump’s talking to a justice before whom he would have business with substantial political and legal consequences.
Justice Alito said in a statement on Wednesday that the pending filing never came up in his conversation with Mr. Trump and that he was not aware, at the time of the call, that the Trump team planned to file it. People familiar with the call confirmed his account.
But the fact of the call and its timing flouted any regard for even the appearance of a conflict of interest at a time when the Supreme Court has come under intense scrutiny over the justices’ refusal to adopt a more rigorous and enforceable ethics code.
The circumstances were extraordinary for another reason: Justice Alito was being drawn into a highly personalized effort by some Trump aides to blackball Republicans deemed insufficiently loyal to Mr. Trump from entering the administration, according to six people with knowledge of the situation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private conversations.
The phone call centered on William Levi, a former law clerk of Justice Alito’s who seemingly has impeccable conservative legal credentials. But in the eyes of the Trump team, Mr. Levi has a black mark against his name. In the first Trump administration, he served as the chief of staff to Attorney General William P. Barr, who is now viewed as a “traitor” by Mr. Trump for refusing to go along with his efforts to overturn his loss in the 2020 election.
Mr. Levi has been under consideration for several jobs in the new administration, including Pentagon general counsel. He has also been working for the Trump transition on issues related to the Justice Department. But his bid for a permanent position has been stymied by Mr. Trump’s advisers who are vetting personnel for loyalty, according to three of the people with knowledge of the situation.
As Mr. Trump puts together his second administration, Mr. Barr is among a handful of prominent Republicans who are viewed with such suspicion that others associated with them are presumptively not to be given jobs in the administration, according to people familiar with the dynamic. Republicans in that category include Mr. Trump’s former secretary of state Mike Pompeo and his former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley. To be called a “Pompeo guy” or a “Haley person” is considered a kiss of death in Mr. Trump’s inner circle. Resistance to such people can usually be overcome only if Mr. Trump himself signs off on their hiring.
Tuesday’s phone call took place against that backdrop. Several people close to the Trump transition team on Thursday said their understanding was that Justice Alito had requested the call. But a statement from Justice Alito framed the matter as the justice passively agreeing to take a call at the behest of his former clerk.
The disconnect appeared to stem from Mr. Levi’s role in laying the groundwork for the call in both directions. It was not clear whether someone on the transition team had suggested he propose the call.
Mr. Levi did not respond to a request for comment. The Supreme Court press office said it had nothing to add to the statement it put out from Justice Alito on Wednesday. In that statement, Justice Alito said that Mr. Levi “asked me to take a call from President-elect Trump regarding his qualifications to serve in a government position. I agreed to discuss this matter with President-elect Trump, and he called me yesterday afternoon.”
He added: “We did not discuss the emergency application he filed today, and indeed, I was not even aware at the time of our conversation that such an application would be filed. We also did not discuss any other matter that is pending or might in the future come before the Supreme Court or any past Supreme Court decisions involving the president-elect.”
During the call, according to multiple people briefed on it, Mr. Trump initially seemed confused about why he was talking to Justice Alito, seemingly thinking that he was returning Justice Alito’s call. The justice, two of the people said, told the president-elect that he understood that Mr. Trump wanted to talk about Mr. Levi, and Mr. Trump then got on track and the two discussed him.
A spokesman for Mr. Trump did not respond to an email seeking comment.
While it is unusual for an incoming president to speak with a Supreme Court justice about a job reference, it is routine for justices to serve as references for their former clerks. Justices traditionally treat their clerks as a network of protégés whose continued success they seek to foster as part of their own legacies.
Seemly or not, there is a long history of interactions between presidents and other senior executive branch officials and Supreme Court justices who sometimes will have a say over the fate of administration policies.
In 2004, a controversy arose when there was a lawsuit seeking disclosure of records about Vice President Dick Cheney’s energy task force meetings. One of the litigants, the Sierra Club, asked Justice Antonin Scalia to recuse himself from participation in the case because he had recently gone duck hunting with Mr. Cheney. Justice Scalia declined, issuing a 21-page memorandum that explained why he believed stepping aside was unjustified.
Part of Justice Scalia’s argument was that Mr. Cheney was being sued over an official action. That makes Mr. Trump’s pending attempt to block his sentencing for crimes that he was convicted of committing in his private capacity somewhat different, although the basis of Mr. Trump’s argument is that being sentenced and then fighting an appeal would interfere with his ability to carry out his official duties.
In trying to justify his decision not to recuse, Justice Scalia noted that justices have had personal friendships with presidents going back years, including some who played poker with Presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman but did not recuse themselves from cases challenging their administrations’ policies and actions.
Mr. Trump has long sought to pressure the Supreme Court, in some cases by publicly hectoring the justices on social media for decisions he disagrees with. Mr. Trump has often privately complained that the three justices he appointed in his first term — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett — had “done nothing” for him, according to a person who has discussed the matter with Mr. Trump.
One week after the 2018 midterm elections, Mr. Trump and the first lady, Melania Trump, had lunch with Justice Clarence Thomas and his wife, Virginia Thomas. Ms. Thomas, a longtime conservative activist, made suggestions about personnel shake-ups to Mr. Trump and later supported his efforts to try to overturn the 2020 election results.
In December 2020, Mr. Trump attacked the Supreme Court as “incompetent and weak” for refusing to address his legal team’s efforts to challenge the 2020 election. Two years later, he attacked the court again for giving Congress access to his tax returns.
The Supreme Court redeemed itself in Mr. Trump’s eyes last summer when the six Republican-appointed justices ruled that former presidents have broad immunity from being prosecuted over actions they took in their official capacity. That ruling threw into doubt how much of the indictment brought against Mr. Trump for his efforts to overturn the 2020 election could actually survive to go to trial — even after prosecutors filed a revised version trying to account for the court’s decision.
The Supreme Court’s intervention also seriously delayed the case’s progress, effectively making it impossible to get the charges to a jury before the election. And once Trump won the 2024 race, he could no longer face prosecution under Justice Department policy.
Kirsten Noyes contributed research from New York.
Politics
Appeals court will not block partial release of special counsel Jack Smith's Trump report
A federal appeals court rejected a bid to block the release of a portion of special counsel Jack Smith’s final report detailing his investigation and prosecution of President-elect Trump’s alleged 2020 election interference and alleged improper retention of classified records.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit denied a request from Walt Nauta, an aide to Trump, and Carlos de Oliveira, the former property manager at Mar-a-Lago, who were charged with obstructing a separate federal investigation into Trump’s handling of sensitive government records.
The court left a three-day hold on DOJ’s release of the report.
JUDGE GRANTS JACK SMITH REQUEST TO DISMISS JAN. 6 CHARGES AGAINST TRUMP, APPEAL DROPPED IN FLORIDA DOCS CASE
The Justice Department said it would proceed with plans to release the first of two volumes centered on the election interference case but would make the classified documents section of the report available only to the chairmen and ranking members of the House and Senate Judiciary Committees for their private review as long as the case against Trump’s co-defendants is ongoing.
It was not immediately clear when the election interference report might be released.
The election interference case was narrowed by a Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity, which ruled that former presidents have broad immunity from prosecution.
Following Trump’s presidential victory, Smith’s team abandoned both cases in November, citing Justice Department policy that prohibits federal prosecutions of sitting presidents.
TRUMP SAYS HE RESPECTS SUPREME COURT’S DECISION TO DENY HIS RESQUEST TO STOP SENTENCING, VOWS TO APPEAL
Justice Department regulations call for special counsels appointed by the attorney general to submit a confidential report at the conclusion of their investigations. It is then up to the attorney general to decide what to make public.
Attorney General Merrick Garland has made public in their entirety the reports produced by special counsels who operated under his watch, including Robert Hur’s report on President Joe Biden’s handling of classified information and John Durham’s report on the FBI’s Russian election interference investigation.
In a statement, Trump Communications Director Steven Cheung said that it was time to “put a final stop to the political weaponiziation of our Justice system.”
“Deranged Jack Smith was sent packing after losing both of his Witch Hunts against President Trump. Deranged was unconstitutionally appointed and paid for, so he cannot be allowed to do anything more in perpetuation of his election-interfering hoaxes, let alone prepare an unconstitutional, one-sided, falsehood-ridden screed,” he said.
“Today’s decision by the 11th Circuit keeps Judge Cannon’s injunction in place and prevents any report from being issued. It is time for Joe Biden and Merrick Garland to do the right thing and put a final stop to the political weaponization of our Justice system,” Cheung said. “The American People elected President Trump with a historic and overwhelming mandate, and we look forward to uniting our country in the new Administration as President Trump makes America great again.”
Fox News’ Brooke Signman and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
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