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  1. #76
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  2. #77
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    The ac ulative damage that Mr Trump is doing to America’s governing norms, it appears, has a counterpart in the damage he is doing, day by day, to his standing within the government and on the Hill, including among senior Republicans. The president never had many sincere supporters among elected Republicans. They backed him in fear of a vindictive tweet and the hope that he would sign conservative bills into law. But with the president’s approval rating plummeting and a diminishing prospect of the sorts of health-care and tax reforms they once dreamed of, both fear and hope are giving way to exasperation and contempt.

    Before this latest scandal, the president was looking forward to putting his troubles behind him on his first overseas trip; he is due to visit Saudi Arabia and Israel later this week, before attending meetings of NATO and the G7 in Belgium and Italy. But the Post’s allegations, if not disproved, seem likely to travel with him.
    http://www.economist.com/blogs/democ...a/2017/05/oops

    If there is anything that comes out of any investigation for impeachment, Trump has lost a lot of would-be allies.

  3. #78
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    I wonder if Trash will and whine about unfair media, or as the Muslims say"It Is Written", in the Saudi speech on Mohammedism.

  4. #79
    right about pizzagate Blake's Avatar
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  5. #80
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Article 1: Compromising the integrity of the presidency through continuing violation of the Cons ution’s Emoluments Clause.

  6. #81
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    There were honorable, serious, good-faith citizens serving under Nixon.

    40 years later of the VRWC ing America, we have Federal and many slave/red state govts peopled with political hacks who love ing America.


    It took heroes inside the administration to bring down Nixon. We should be so lucky in 2017

    http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed...______20170518

    McConnell, Ryan, and all the other Repug Congress assholes, esp the Repug Senate, can still keep Trash as President, House-impeached (not probable) but not Senate-convicted (equally not probable).




  7. #82
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Article 2: Violation of his cons utional oath to faithfully execute the duties of his office by disregarding U.S. interests and pursuing the interests of a hostile foreign power, to wit, Russia.

  8. #83
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Article 3: Impairment and obstruction of inquiries by the Justice Department and Congress into the extent of the Trump administration’s conflicts of interests and Russia ties.

  9. #84
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Article 4: Undermining of the American judicial system through felonious intimidation of potential witnesses.

  10. #85
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Article 5: Undermining of his office and the Cons ution through repeated assaults on the integrity of the federal judiciary and its officers.

  11. #86
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Article 6: Demeaning the integrity of government and its public servants, particularly the military and intelligence agencies, in contravention of his cons utional duties to serve as chief executive and commander in chief of the armed forces.

  12. #87
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    Article 7: Dereliction of his cons utional duty to faithfully execute the office of president by failing to timely appoint officers of the United States to administer the nation’s federal agencies.

  13. #88
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    http://www.slate.com/articles/news_a...d_j_trump.html

    First draft.

    Some of it weak, some of it, not so much.

  14. #89
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    Republican Strategist Tells White House Staffers To Dump Trump And Save Themselves

    Republican political strategist Rick Wilson, who knows a thing or two about D.C., has some rather terrifying advice for White House staffers. It's time to save yourselves.

    http://www.politicususa.com/2017/05/...iticus+USA+%29

  15. #90
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    Here’s What Potential Trump Articles of Impeachment Might Look Like (Spoiler Alert: Think Nixon)

    The first rule in legal writing is “never reinvent the wheel.”

    So, while there are a great many things about the presidency of
    Donald Trumpthat are truly unprecedented, his impeachment, should it happen, wouldn’t be nearly as fresh and unique.

    The House of Representatives has already drafted Articles of Impeachment against a President who

    grossly misused his authority,

    received illegal emoluments, and

    obstructed justice on a grand scale;

    those Articles never lived out their full potential though, because President
    Richard Nixon resigned before standing trial before the Senate.

    In an impeachment of President Trump, Congress could do the most efficient thing – and just redline the Articles of Impeachment (some that were adopted and others that were rejected) from 1974.

    With a little find-and-replace, and a few Trump-specific additions, the House will be good to go if they want to impeach.

    Click
    here for the full Articles of Impeachment brought against Richard M. Nixon, and check out these choice excerpts, which I’ve taken the liberty of editing appropriately:

    http://lawnewz.com/opinion/heres-what-potential-trump-articles-of-impeachment-could-look-like/


  16. #91

  17. #92
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    If Trump is brought down because he sought to obstruct justice, no one should be surprised. He came to the Presidency with no experience except in the art of fraud and deceit.
    As David Remnick notes, Trump as businessman was a disreputable con. He routinely stiffed contractors and workers. He screwed creditors. He violated casino regulations. He bragged of charitable contributions that he never made. He promoted scams such as Trump University.
    In the 1990s, as his bankruptcies mounted, he lost the ability to obtain credit from the largest and most reputable American banks. In foreign deals, he ignored his legal obligations to carry out due diligence and did deals with flagrantly corrupt business partners. In Azerbaijan, he was party to a deal whose only real enterprise might have been the laundering of money.
    Over the years, Trump has been the focus of investigations on housing discrimination, bribery, corruption, dealings with the mob, misleading earnings reports, fraud, and improper campaign contributions, and sexual predation. He has fought back with money to buy platoons of lawyers, but not with intelligence.
    Connect the dots and extend them to today and you see how only four months into his presidency, his deceptiveness is leading him into a deepening hole.

  18. #93
    Independent DMX7's Avatar
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    Bill Clinton was impeached not Trump
    And it resulted in nothing.... the vote failed... Trump's on the other hand....

  19. #94
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  20. #95
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    What Donald Trump Needs to Know About Bob Mueller and Jim Comey

    The two men who could bring down the president have been preparing their entire lives for this moment.

    Donald Trump, as it turns out, has stumbled into taking on two experienced Washington players on their home turf—in skirmishes that will play out in public Capitol Hill hearings with Comey even as Mueller slogs along with what is likely to be a quiet, tenacious and by-the-book investigation into the heart of the Trump campaign’s relationship with Russia.

    Robert Mueller might just be America’s straightest arrow—a respected, nonpartisan and fiercely apolitical public servant whose only lifetime motivation has been the search for justice.

    “His gift is that he’s decisive without being impulsive,” Comey told me several years back, recalling his years working alongside Mueller. “He’ll sit, listen, ask questions and make a decision. I didn’t realize at the time how rare that is in Washington.”

    That thoroughness and Mueller’s strong independence should terrify the Trump White House.

    President Trump impulsively fired Comey in the hope that it would shut down the Russia investigation; one week later, though, he finds himself facing not just one esteemed former FBI director but two: the first a wronged martyr for the bureau, and the second a legendary investigator without a hint of politics.

    What unfolds ahead will be territory all too familiar to both Comey and Mueller—the field of play where they have made their careers and risen to the highest levels of government—yet the way that a Washington scandal takes on a life of its own amid independent investigations and looming prosecutions is deeply unfamiliar to Trump and many associates around him. Few in Washington know this landscape better than Comey, who as deputy attorney general appointed his friend Patrick Fitzgerald as special prosecutor to lead the leak investigation surrounding Valerie Plame, a case that ultimately led to the dethroning of Cheney’s top aide, Scooter Libby.

    It is as if, after having an unrelated disagreement over movie trivia in a bar, Trump has challenged Usain Bolt to a 100-yard dash or John Cena to a cage match to the death.

    While Mueller technically reported to Comey as deputy attorney general, Comey, two decades his junior, treated Mueller as a close friend and almost mentor. The men had known each other for years as each rose into the small, elite fraternity of prosecutors at the top of the Justice Department.

    Both men were the crème de la crème of Justice:

    Mueller helped take on Manuel Noriega and the bombers of Pan Am Flight 103;

    Comey helped prosecute mafia boss John Gotti and Martha Stewart.

    In early 2001, when Mueller was deputy attorney general, he directed Saudi Arabia's Khobar Towers bombing prosecution to Comey, then a prosecutor in Virginia.


    They are alike in many ways. Both men possess a deep public service streak; both men had given up lucrative private-sector careers to become prosecutors.

    Both men are also smart inside fighters: They do ent everything, draft memos carefully and enlist allies who matter. Prosecutors are taught early on to write everything down, and the do entation culture is strong within both the FBI and the Justice Department, where words are recorded routinely as future evidence.

    http://www.politico.com/magazine/sto...ler-fbi-215154



  21. #96
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    As Russia Scandal Mushrooms, Trump Gives One Of The Worst Press Conferences In Recent History

    Trump's joint press conference with the Columbian president did severe damage to his presidency, as Trump bashed the special counsel investigation while trying to distance himself from the Russia scandal and offering delusional answers like everyone in America thinks the idea of impeaching him is ridiculous.

    Trump said,

    “The entire thing has been a witch hunt.

    There is no collusion between certainly myself and my campaign,

    but I can only speak for myself and the Russians. Zero.

    I think it divides the country.

    I think it divides the country between that and a lot of things.”

    The President denied asking Comey to drop the Flynn investigation:


    http://www.politicususa.com/2017/05/18/russia-scandal-mushrooms-trump-worst-press-conferences-history.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed &utm_campaign=Feed%3A+politicususa%2FfJAl+%28Polit icus+USA+%29

  22. #97
    I am that guy RandomGuy's Avatar
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    At the risk of actually asking you to read something:

    Conservative legal scholars debate: Can the president obstruct justice?

    WASHINGTON — On Wednesday morning, as the grave and unpleasant topic of impeachment entered the American political conversation, the leading conservative legal group convened its annual daylong meeting just blocks from the White House.

    The Federalist Society handed out media packets to reporters that included a 2014 news article about how the group was at that time discussing the possible impeachment of President Barack Obama for “cons utional excesses.”

    But when it came to the current White House occupant and the debate over possible obstruction of justice related to the FBI’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, one of the Federalist Society’s founding members was unequivocal in his support of President Donald Trump.

    “President Trump acted appropriately if he gave guidance to Director Comey on an investigation. It is important for us to step back and remember that under the Cons ution, the president has the authority and power to enforce the laws,” said David McIntosh, who is also the head of the Club for Growth, a pro-business conservative advocacy group.

    McIntosh defended Trump’s reported request of former FBI Director James Comey to drop an investigation into Russian contacts with Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn.

    “Presidents have wisely chosen to insulate the FBI from political interference,” McIntosh said, but “the president still has the power and authority to direct the FBI how to do their job.”

    A little later, another panelist at the Federalist Society meeting — former Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey — at first echoed McIntosh’s line of argument.

    “The president has power to direct that an investigation cease,” Mukasey said.

    But Mukasey, who served under Republican President George W. Bush, then went on to make a series of comments that were severely disapproving of Trump’s reported conduct.

    First, Mukasey said he was not sure Trump understood the implications of what he was doing.

    “As the story is told … it’s kind of informal: ‘Hey, would you cut this guy some slack? He’s a nice guy.’ And that kind of conversation about an ongoing proceeding, conducted in a manner that is extraordinarily informal … suggests complete unconsciousness of what it is that’s actually happening,” Mukasey said.

    He continued: “That conversation might be appropriate to a minor disciplinary matter at a big corporation. It’s not appropriate to a criminal investigation. The inability to distinguish the one from the other, I think, is extraordinary.”

    The implication in Mukasey’s comments seemed to be that President Trump does not understand the job he now holds. It’s a concern that was echoed by Bob Bauer, a former White House counsel to President Obama.

    “The missing piece here, alarmingly, is a conception of the presidency. He seems to be imagining that he is running one of his companies,” Bauer wrote Wednesday. “Where [former President Richard] Nixon put the government at risk with a misbegotten political morality, Trump is failing, badly, because he is vainly running on a certain marketplace morality, compatible with his temperament, that once won him money and attention.”

    One observer in the room at the Federalist Society meeting said he was surprised by the strength of Mukasey’s condemnation. And sources with expertise in the matter of presidential power said that Mukasey’s comment about the president’s legal authority to end an investigation is true as a technical matter but does not obviate the issue of obstruction of justice.


    A president can intervene in a situation where he or she believes there has been bad judgment on the part of prosecutors, legal experts said. But when a president’s personal interests or behavior are in question, and he involves himself, it raises the issue of obstruction.

    “If it’s obstruction of justice then he can’t do it,” one legal expert said, who asked not to be quoted by name given the sensitivity of the discussion.

    McIntosh, however, disagreed with that interpretation when interviewed by Yahoo News later in the day.

    “When the president has the authority to say what he said, it can’t possibly be obstruction of justice,” McIntosh said. “The president can direct any investigator, any legal authority how to do their job. If he does it in a way that the public feels is inappropriate, the remedy is the next election.”

    That’s an extreme view of how far executive power goes that’s unlikely to be widely adopted, but for any congressional Republicans looking for a rationale to cling to, it might suffice. McIntosh said Republicans in Congress should “stop trying to worry about what the press is doing,” pass legislation, and “don’t try to interfere with the president doing his job.”

    Yet in addition to concerns about obstruction of justice, there are also the “norms” that govern a president’s behavior when it comes to ongoing investigations, created and upheld to bolster confidence in the impartiality of the law. And in this matter both Mukasey and another former White House lawyer agreed that what Trump did in urging Comey to drop the Flynn matter was highly unusual and potentially damaging to the country.

    Mukasey said that never in his 15 months as attorney general did he see President Bush or anyone from the Bush White House involve themselves in any ongoing criminal investigation.

    “The norm was observed,” Mukasey said.

    Former White House counsel Neil W. Eggleston, who served under President Barack Obama for the last two and a half years of his second term, was on the panel with Mukasey. He stressed that Obama observed the same rule, and also steered clear of any prejudicial comments when responding to national tragedies such as violent mass shootings.

    “A really important norm that I spent an enormous amount of time policing when I was at the White House was that the White House stays out of criminal investigations, full stop. Full stop. Never did it. Full stop,” Eggleston said.

    “I would have him talk about the tragedy of the shooting but he would not conclude whether the shooter was guilty of something. Even Dylann Roof, he didn’t condemn Dylann Roof and say he should be punished for anything,” Eggleston said, referring to the convicted murderer who in 2015 shot and killed nine people in a Charleston, S.C., church.

    “[Obama] was empathetic to the families of the people who had been killed but he stayed out of ascribing guilt,” Eggleston said. “It was my view that the president of the United States … absolutely had to stay out of any criminal matter whatsoever.”

    “I think that’s a critical norm,” Eggleston said. “If people think it’s based on anything other than career prosecutors, then our society is in a difficult state.”

    Mukasey pushed back, reminding Eggleston that Obama had spoken out in October 2015 about Hillary Clinton’s use of private e-mail server when she was Secretary of State. “This is not a situation in which America’s national security was endangered,” Obama said then, even though the FBI was actively investigating the matter.

    News reports at that time noted that Obama’s comments angered the FBI, and on Wednesday, Eggleston confided that he had weighed in disapprovingly in a conversation with the president.

    “He [Obama] was talked to by the White House counsel after that,” Eggleston said.

    Obama also in 2012 weighed in on a similar matter involving former CIA Director David Petraeus, who was being investigated by the FBI for providing highly classified information to his biographer, also his mistress, and then lying to FBI investigators about it.

    Comey’s FBI recommended to Obama’s attorney general, Eric Holder, that Petraeus face felony charges and possible jail time, but the administration allowed the four-star general and adviser to Obama to plead guilty to a lesser charge that did not require him to serve a prison sentence.

    And there are other precedents. George W. Bush, before Mukasey’s time at the head of the Justice Department, said in 2005 that he believed former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, was innocent of money-laundering charges before his trial began.

  23. #98
    License to Lillard tlongII's Avatar
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    Trump president not Clinton.

  24. #99
    bandwagoner fans suck ducks's Avatar
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    Comey, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee on May 3, said — under oath — that he's never been pressured to close an investigation for political purposes.

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