Daily Archives: May 26, 2017

Why every smart liberal should read conservative philosopher Peter … – The Week Magazine

Posted: May 26, 2017 at 4:30 am

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When open-minded liberal and progressive friends ask me which contemporary conservative thinkers are worth reading and wrestling with, I usually tell them to read Peter Augustine Lawler.

Lawler died unexpectedly on Tuesday morning at the age of 65, which will likely inspire me to offer this advice even more urgently. Indeed, at a time when the post-Goldwater conservative movement finds itself increasingly eclipsed by right-wing populism, Lawler's distinctive vision and voice may be more pertinent than ever.

I first encountered Lawler in writing and in person in the late 1990s, at a time when I was wrestling with the moral challenge of the Socratic philosophy I absorbed in graduate school while studying with students of Leo Strauss. Lawler's respectful but deeply critical engagement with the thought of Strauss' great popularizer Allan Bloom an engagement that continued all the way down to his final essay, which was published the night before he died proved enormously fruitful to me. Lawler's equally searching books and essays on a range of other writers and topics Blaise Pascal, Richard Rorty, bioethics, Alexis de Tocqueville, Carl Sagan, transhumanism, David Brooks, Flannery O'Connor, John Courtney Murray, liberal education in an age of disruption, Francis Fukuyama's "end of history" thesis provided me with a model of intellectual reflection that was accessible to a wide audience while never sacrificing depth or ambition.

Lawler was a great champion of biblical (and specifically Christian) anthropology, with its portrait of human beings as pilgrims wandering in the world, continually, restlessly longing for a sense of completion, home, and belonging that can never be entirely fulfilled in this life. To grasp human beings in all their complexity, politics needs to be given its due as a crucially important mode in which people seek this fulfillment. But politics also needs to be placed in perspective, its limits continually revealed and examined. The philosophical pursuit of wisdom limits politics in this way, and so does the contemplation and worship of God both of which grow out of the elemental human experience of wonderment at the world and its grounds. That's why Lawler was fond of saying that the fundamental truth about the human soul is that we are fated to "wonder as we wander, and wander as we wonder."

The alternative is to lose ourselves in ersatz forms of satisfaction to delude ourselves into thinking that perfect fulfillment and completion are possible in the world. One example is the idea of moral progress that permeates so much of modern liberal and left-wing thinking. The promise of continual moral improvement eventually culminating in the achievement of perfect justice and reconciliation animates progressivism in all of its forms just as some forms of conservatism bleed over into a counter-narrative of moral decline. Lawler never tired of reminding his readers and students of the deeper truth that history is always becoming at once better and worse (in different respects), and that the effort to make us fully at home in the world has the paradoxical effect of making us feel more homeless than ever.

It's in this sense that Lawler embraced postmodernism, provided it was "rightly understood" as a critique of the progressive assumptions embedded in modern culture and politics, as well as in the decline narratives that often crop up in reaction to them. To be postmodern in the decisive respect is to be liberated from the modern prejudice in favor of unidirectional historical development. It is to embrace "realism" about the human soul which lives and thrives in relation to others, loves and hates with passionate intensity, and strives nobly for truth and wisdom.

In cultivating this postmodern realism, Lawler took novelist Walker Percy as an unlikely guide especially Percy's under-appreciated 1983 book Lost in the Cosmos. Lawler loved this quirky and brilliant book, which takes the form of an existentialist self-help manual. Unlike every other self-help book, which aims to provide pat, facile answers to life's perplexities, Percy's version does the opposite, revealing to readers that they are in fact mysteries to themselves, unsure of why they've set out in search of help in the first place, or even of what would count as helping. To read the book cover to cover, taking its seemingly endless series of amusing quizzes and tests, is to find oneself productively confused about the most basic of questions of human life. It is to come face to face with one's own ignorance about oneself.

And that's the best place the truest place from which to begin thinking about how to live, how to worship, how to engage in politics, and how to make sense of ourselves and the world around us. It's also the soundest starting point from which to achieve some modicum of wisdom about all of these crucially important topics.

Though Lawler was never my teacher in the strict sense, I learned an awful lot from him over the years. Thankfully, his writings remain to educate, edify, and provoke deep thinking. They are a gift to anyone who longs to understand what it means to be human.

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Brent Bozell: Attack on Hannity Part of ‘Liberal Strategy to Monopolize the Media’ – Breitbart News

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On Wednesday, a number of companies includingCars.com, Peloton, and Leesa Sleeppulled their ads from Hannity following pressure from left-wing activists over Hannitys pursuit of now-retracted claims made by Fox News that murdered DNC employee Seth Rich had contact with Wikileaks before his death.

In a series of tweets, Hannity accusedfigures including George Soros, David Brock of Media Matters, and failed presidential candidate Hillary Clinton of liberal fascism, after his advertisers were reportedly inundated with emails from left-wing groups asking them to stop advertising on the show.

Now Bozell, whose organizationthe Media Research Center analyzes liberal bias across the mainstream media, has accused advertisers ofjoining in the liberal cause and advancing the liberal strategy and becoming servants of the politically correct.

He also attacked the military financial services company USAA for succumbing to the pressure of left-wing extremists, adding that Hannity has for decades been a fierce supporter of the military at every turn.

Hannityis now the second Fox News show to have ads pulled this year, after over 90 companies droppedadvertising on Bill OReillys showThe OReilly Factor over allegations of sexual harassment, following pressure from left-wing activists. OReilly was eventually released by the network, despite being Americas highest-rated cable news host.

We have remained silent for far too long. A bridge has been crossed. Stay tuned, Bozell added.

You can follow Ben Kew on Facebook, on Twitter at @ben_kew,oremail him at bkew@breitbart.com

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Fox News’ Dueling Narratives: Journalism That Clashes With Fury Over ‘Liberal Media’ – Variety

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A little more than 24 hours before Guardian U.S. reporter Ben Jacobs was knocked to the ground, choked, and punched by GOP congressional candidate Greg Gianforte, Fox News host Sean Hannity tweeted that Liberal Fascism and the corrupt media were trying to silence him from reporting a debunked story about murdered Democratic National Committee staffer Seth Rich. Hannity has been doggedly pursuing the non-story for days now with increasingly irresponsible methods, even thoughhis own employer Fox News has retracted the story about Richs death that fueled the speculation. Indeed, byhis own admission, on May 23s Hannity, the host is avoiding the storyout of respect for the familys wishes. But since Tuesday, the conservative talking head has been methodically attacking the liberal media, corrupt media, and/or the Destroy Trump media for quashing his narrative, with well-trod detours that invoke the specters of liberals such asbillionaire George Soros and Media Matters for America founder David Brock as being involved in the effort to silence him. It is a performance of embattled integrity, when in fact, journalistic practice could not be further from his concerns.

As I wrote just a few days ago, Hannitys rapt embrace of the Seth Rich murder conspiracy showcases the conservative media machine at its most craven, creating a blatant distraction from the still-unfolding coverup of President Donald Trumps ties to Russia. The situation came to a head on Tuesday, as Fox News employees privately groused to reporters at CNN that focusing on the unsourced conspiracy theory lowered the standards of the entire network. Hours later, in a laudable move for the news organization, Fox News retracted the inciting story.

But Hannitys restraint in primetime has not stopped the conservative talking head from tweeting about the conspiracy theory all day and talking it up on his radio show. Indeed, on his national syndicated radio program on Tuesday, which is distributed by iHeartRadio and not associated with Fox, he stood by the debunked story: All of you in the liberal media: I am not Fox.com or FoxNews.com. I retracted nothing, he asserted.

Like other prominent conservative pundits, Hannity tends to point the finger at the liberal media while framing himself as a beleaguered outsider crusading for truth. But he is, according to the New York Observer, among the highest-paid TV and radio personalities in the country a cool $29 million a year from Fox News and his radio program. Sean Hannity is as much the media establishment as CNNs Anderson Cooper or MSNBCs Rachel Maddow or even CBS Stephen Colbert, all of whom Hannity regularly lambastes. Following almost a year of tumultuous firings and contentious departures from Fox News, Hannity has by force of attrition become the channels biggest star. Its irresponsible for him to act as if he does not have enormous influence. And it has been irresponsible to engage with the Rich non-story, which has caused the victims family so much grief.

As Jacobs assault has made clear, the language that Hannityand other conservative media pundits use with impunity about the fact-based news media has consequences. Wednesday evening in Bozeman, Mont.,Jacobs was assaulted by Gianforte, who is now facing a misdemeanor charge. The audio recording of the encounter indicates that Gianforte, angered by Jacobs question about the Republican healthcare bill currently moving through Congress, attacked the reporter rather than answer. Gianfortes campaign responded by labeling Jacobs a liberal journalist who created this scene with aggressive behavior. Every indication, including Gianfortes own statement, suggests that this aggressive behavior was holding a tape recorder close to Gianfortes face.

The past week has been an awful case study in just how much conservative rhetoric has endangered the fourth estate. Hannitys blatant disregard for journalism is mirrored by Gianfortes violence against Jacobs.

What is most interesting in this saga is that Fox News appears to have subtly broken away from Hannitys narrative. It is already surprising enough that the network issued a rare retraction of its original story, which was posted May 16 on its website. Its also intriguing that Hannity would continue to talk about this theory on his radio show and on Twitter but refrain from fanning the flames on his biggest platform.

Hannity denied any interference from the network in an interview with Huffington Posts Michael Calderone. Nobody tells me what to say on my show. They never have and frankly they never will. Im not that type of person you can say, Go on air and say this. Thats been the beauty of Fox News all these years. They leave me alone, he said. But given that both the hostand the network would have a vested interest in maintaining Hannitys image as an independent maverick, its hard to not conclude that theres more to Hannitys movement away from the Rich story than whats been made public.

After all, there are more sides to Fox News than just its primetime opinion hosts. The primary witnessesto Jacobsencounter with Gianforte included a trio of Fox News reporters who were setting up for an interview with the candidate. As conservative commentators Laura Ingraham (a frequent Fox News guest) sought to defend Gianforte and denigrate Jacobs using the convoluted argument that real men settled conflicts in certain ways Fox News Alicia Acuna published a candid, first-person story that corroborated Jacobs version of the encounter. (Indeed, Acunas version paints an even more violent picture than what was first reported online.)

It is absurd that an assault on a reporter is a partisan issue, but bipartisanship has deteriorated so much in this country that some conservatives are not-so-quietly applauding Gianforte for his violence against Jacobs. President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticized deeply sourced reporting from mainstream outlets simply because it counters his own interests. And the assault on Jacobs is just one in a series of escalating hostility against the members of the fourth estate, all tacitly sanctioned by Republicans in power.

Fox News is typically a media outlet that is deeply beholden to and supportive of those same Republicans in power. But with the Jacobs incident, the news channel is undercutting itself by offering competing narratives of the encounter. On Thursday morning, Fox & Friends contradicted Fox News own account of what happened by repeating the campaigns stance that Gianforte and Jacobs fell as if it were a mutual altercation instead of one man attacking the other. Thursday evening, a Fox contributor called Gianfortes actions Montana justice.

More than ever, it is clear that there is a side of Fox News that prioritizes strong reporting and fact-based commentary. But the opinion side of Fox News that was directed by Roger Ailes, popularized by Bill OReilly, and exploited by Roger Stone seems determined to stamp out any journalistic integrity that the network has to offer. In sowing so much distrust for the liberal media, Fox News runs the risk of convincing viewers that fact-based reporting is propaganda that cant be trusted. Unfortunately, the logical extension of that becomes a narrative in which Fox News core conservative viewers wont even trust Fox News for much longer.

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How Louise Mensch Became the Queen of the Liberal Lunatic Fringe – Slate Magazine

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May 24, 2017 Cover Story

You may have heard on the internet last week that, according to multiple sources close to the intelligence, justice, and law enforcement communities, the marshal of the Supreme Court had commenced the sacred impeachment-notification riteyou know, the one you learned about in civics class, in which the marshal marches to the White House in a cool costume and tells the president that proceedings for his removal have begun. The notification was given, as part of the formal process of the matter, in order that Mr. Trump knew he was not able to use his powers of pardon against other suspects in Trump-Russia cases, Louise Mensch explained on her website Patribotics. She added, Sources have confirmed that the Marshal of the Supreme Court spoke to Mr. Trump.

Earlier this month, Mensch and Claude Taylor had reported for Patribotics that separate sources with links to the intelligence and justice communities have stated that a sealed indictment has been granted against Donald Trump. While the Supremacy Clause of the U.S. Constitution forestalled Trumps immediate prosecution, Orrin Hatchthe federal governments designated survivorwas already receiving copies of security briefings to ensure a smooth transition of power. Meanwhile, Paul Ryan awaited arrest for racketeering.

For those of us who havent yet found a great hiding spot behind the gold curtains in the Oval Office, its impossible to know with certainty whats going on in the Trump administration. Menschs blog and Twitter feed, larded as they are with double secret indictments, SCOTUS marshals sounding the horn of impeachment, and Russian spies in every desk drawer, invite all of us into the White House through a side door, one thats accessible only via the 11th dimension. Sources with links to the intelligence, justice, and literary communities tell me that Menschs overheated, conspiratorial prose is very easy to mock. After her Supreme Court marshal scoop started to crawl across the web, pundits ridiculed it as the saddest fanfic ever and another hot scoop rooted in finely granular knowledge of how the U.S. government does not operate.

But Louise Mensch shouldnt be dismissed as a crank with a Wi-Fi connection. In March, she penned a widely publicized piece for the New York Times titled What to Ask About Russian Hacking. Her reportingwell, some of her reportinghas been confirmed by the Times and Washington Post, and she gets cited in tweets by celebrities, DNC staffers, and congresspeople. Last month, Keith Olbermann alluded to a bombshell shed dropped claiming Carter Page had ferried a tape from Washington to Moscowa recording that allegedly featured Trump reciting a series of promises to shift U.S. policy in a Putin-friendly manner in exchange for Russias helpful interference in the 2016 election.

Mensch is the paranoid bard of the age of Trump. While more sober outlets reel from the presidents madness and question whether the sky is blue, she deftly weaves plentiful, narcotic tales about Russian infiltration. She has become a new stock character in this shambolic White House opera: the liberal conspiracy theorist, remaking a certain corner of progressive discourse in the image of Breitbart News and Infowars. She is a mirror for the lefts Hitchcockian fantasies and an avatar of our political dysfunction, a symbol of how far off the deep end one has to travel to reach a land beyond believability. According to the Post, Russian propaganda may have beguiled James Comey into bungling the FBIs probe of Hillary Clintons private email server. If this is the reality of 2017, then where is the fringe? Its a place where Anthony Weiner is a Russian operative, and where Vladimir Putin pulls the strings of Black Lives Matter.

Menschs rightward tilt doesnt stop left-wing readers from ingesting her hatred like adrug.

On Twitter, where Mensch boasts 283,000 followers, her short-form musings flutter in a chamber of looniness alongside those of compatriots John Schindler (a former NSA spy who resigned from his teaching position at the Naval War College after a controversy involving a dick pic) and the aforementioned Claude Taylor (a D.C.based photographer with the username @TrueFactsStated). As Zack Beauchamp chronicled in Vox, the members of this febrile amen circle spur and amplify each other, sprinkling their fevered accusations with terms of art from the world of espionage, among them deza (short for dezinformatsiya, or disinformation) and Chekist (the word for former KGB officers who now enjoy political prominence in Putins Russia). On Menschs own feed, she chops up and remixes handles and hashtags to score her delirious mood music: Romanian hackers, @Yandex, #hostkey. @FBI, @GCHQ. Komprat? Agitprop. GLOMAR! Combative and righteous, she refers to Republican senators like Pat Toomey as douchebags. She posted that she hopes Trump will die in jail, at least stay there til the tertiary syphillis really kicks in :).

As Beauchamp observes, the through line of these florid conjectures is not so much a single conspiracy ( la birtherism) as a vision of insidious and saturating Russian influence. On the websites Heat Street and Patribotics, Mensch has suggested that Putin had Andrew Breitbart killed so Steve Bannon could take up his mantle, that a nightclub massacre in Istanbul was engineered by Russians posing as ISIS terrorists, and that the Kremlin lurked behind the Boston Marathon attacks. Her tapestry of GOPMoscow collusion evokes both the Cold War and Mission Impossible. A self-described conservative, Mensch calls herself a pronational security partisan and a patriot in the service of the intelligence community. If she despises the Republican Party, it is because she thinks it is abetting a hostile foreign power. Menschs rightward tilt doesnt stop left-wing readers from ingesting her hatred like a drug. The technical language and the multiple sources imply that a real doctor prepared the dose.

Mensch, who was born in London in 1971, has a talent for sexy narratives. She first made her name in the mid-1990s as a chick lit novelist, publishing steamy (yet feminist!) books with titles like Desire and Passion. In 2006, she was recruited to David Camerons Conservative bloc as part of an effort to strengthen the political presence of women and minorities. The glamorous fluffy bunny won election to parliament four years later, becoming a folk hero soon after thanks to her sharp, precise, coolly scornful interrogation of global media magnates Rupert and James Murdoch vis--vis their tabloids phone-hacking scandal. Mensch revealed her flair for the gotcha moment when she asked the elder Murdoch why, when the News of the Worlds misdeeds came to light, he didnt take the fall and resign. She later invoked that moment of glory in the New York Times, proposing questions the House Intelligence Committee might put to witnesses testifying about the Russia scandal. I have some relevant experience, she noted.

After leaving parliament and moving to the United Statesthe former president of Oxfords rock society, she wed the manager of Metallica and resettled with him in New Yorkthe British expat launched a new career in online journalism. Heat Street, which she founded in April 2016, was touted by the Daily Beast as Gawker for the right, a site that slung scoops about, for instance, the alleged financial misdeeds of Bernie Sanders wife Jane Sanders. A conspiracy theorist would note here that Heat Street was financed by none other than Rupert Murdoch. (Hey, were just asking questions!) The reality is that the hard-charging, publicity-savvy former MP always had the disposition of a U.K.style tabloid reporter. Her profile rose in the U.S. when she melded that journalistic approach with a flag-waving, America-first mission to smoke out the traitors in our midst.

Mensch, who told the Daily Beasts Lloyd Grove in May 2016 that she didnt fit neatly into the GOP, predicted at that stage that Ted Cruz would win the Republican nomination. My personal objection to Donald Trump, she said in her interview with Grove, is that he has said very racist things, is lying to the voters, and is a fairly radical left-wing Democrat. Yet on Heat Street, Mensch offered up a series of tepidly pro-Trump posts, chiding Democrats for puzzling over the TV stars electoral win and praising several of his Cabinet appointees. She saved her most vehement denunciations of the president for Twitter while churning out furious critiques of Putin on all possible platforms.

The night before Election Day, Mensch published a huge, Trump-related scoop. Two separate sources with links to the counter-intelligence community have confirmed to Heat Street that the FBI sought, and was granted, a FISA court warrant in October, giving counter-intelligence permission to examine the activities of U.S. persons in Donald Trumps campaign with ties to Russia, she proclaimed under a headline blaring EXCLUSIVE. The Washington Post and New York Times corroborated her reporting months later, revealing that the Justice Department had obtained permission to wiretap Trump adviser Carter Page.

Rather than push her toward Grey Ladyapproved fact-finding methods, Menschs brush with legitimacy seemed to encourage her to abandon the strictures of traditional journalism. She departed from Heat Street in January to focus on Patribotics, a new venture devoted to unraveling Vladimir Putins war on America. While her articles grew more monomaniacal in theme and tone, they also drew legitimacy from Menschs March piece in the Times and her rising profile as a television pundit. Even as she bathed in the presss fascination with her own project, Mensch blasted the hidebound Fourth Estate for its slow-footededness and criticized the Times and NBC for stealing her work (via screenshots extravagantly underlined in sensational red).

Menschs scoops defy common sense and make a mockery of U.S. institutions. But so doesTrump.

Meanwhile, as Voxs Beauchamp describes, political elites like former Democratic National Committee chair Donna Brazile and current DNC communications hand Adrienne Watson were tweeting her exclusives. Several Obama staffers, a constitutional law professor at Harvard, and Olbermann also cited Patribotics posts, clotted now more than ever with assurances about sources close to the intelligence community. A few weeks ago, Massachusetts Sen. Ed Markey apologized after propagating the Menschian whisper that a New York grand jury was investigating Trump and Russia. (Why, you might be wondering, would sources close to the intelligence community leak to the likes of Louise Mensch rather than a major newspaper? Because, as Mensch recently explained on Twitter, people linked to intel are impressed when patriot amateurs WORK and try to help.)

That push-pull between belief and dismissiveness hints at a crossroads for liberals in the age of Trump. Unlike the fringy right, which has long relied on sites like Infowars and Breitbart to ratify its dreams and fears, the left lacks a well-developed infrastructure for spreading toxic and intoxicating innuendo. But progressives are angry and scared. They do seek out the pleasures of outrage and worldview confirmation. No political moment since at least the Nixon presidency has provided such fertile ground for conspiracy theories. Leaks spill ceaselessly from the White House, the Justice Department, and the FBI, a drip drip drip thats as ceaseless as a ticking clock. (Five oclock or thereabouts has become the new political witching hour, when all manner of inversions and mischief might occur.) Menschs scoops defy common sense and make a mockery of U.S. institutions. But so does Trump. Even her most tenuously sourced, outrageous tales feel like theyre on the cusp of tipping over into truth.

Outside of her filter bubble, Mensch isnt taken particularly seriously. Yet to write her off entirely feels almost as nave as to buy her product. Whether or not she believes that Trump is a pawn of Moscow, Mensch has discovered an unmanned stall in the information marketplace and transformed it into a hub. We cant know the degree to which shes fueled by ideological commitment as opposed to savvy opportunism. We can, though, ponder how a taste of mainstream approval and enthrallment might have converted a libertarian into a left-wing crusader, and how our desire to make sense of this hallucinatory president may have enlisted an entrepreneurial British woman in a peculiarly American story. Louise Mensch fashions wares we didnt know we needed and delivers them to us through channels we didnt realize we had. We say we want nothing but the truth. Her cottage industry of conspiracies thrives because, like the best sleuths and salespeople, she sees right through us.

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Bob Goodlatte urges Sessions to seize money directed to Obama’s … – Washington Examiner

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Attorney General Jeff Sessions has a roadmap for recovering money that former President Barack Obama's team gave to Native American groups, a plan that was conceived of by a federal judge and is being championed by a top House Republican.

"[T]he Trump administration may have an opportunity to claw back $380 million for taxpayers, but it must act fast," House Judiciary Committee chairman Bob Goodlatte wrote to Sessions.

The money traces back to a settlement fund that the Obama administration used to compensate for racial bias against Native Americans allegedly committed by the Agriculture Department a deal that was struck even though the Justice Department was poised to win in the courts. But most of the people who received money in the settlements never claimed to have faced discrimination.

Moreover, the settlement was so large that there was money left over after making the payments, so the Obama administration sent that money to non-profit groups who were not a part of the lawsuit.

Goodlatte spent years trying to block the Justice Department from using a Judgment Fund to settle lawsuits and send the money to third-party groups. "Congress must not tolerate Justice Department political appointees using settlements to funnel money to their liberal friends," he said in January. "This is also an institutional issue. Once direct victims have been compensated, deciding what to do with additional funds recovered from defendants becomes a policy question properly decided by elected representatives in Congress, not agency bureaucrats or prosecutors."

Now he's gotten a boost from a federal judge. "This is not justice," Judge Janice Rogers Brown, who sits on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, wrote in a May 16 court document. "It is not even law."

Brown issued that criticism as part of a dissent to a circuit court ruling that affirmed the settlement could stand. But that lawsuit didn't involve a direct challenge to the settlement as a whole; instead, the plaintiff in that case argued that the extra money should have been used to increase the payments made to the Native American individuals, rather than to third-party groups. "In short, everyone apparently presumed a bloodied-shirt party could be thrown at the taxpayer's expense," Brown wrote. "Why risk Congress being a killjoy?"

As part of the dissent, she suggested that the Sessions-led Justice Department could void the agreement to send money to third-party groups. "The Justice Department can argue, as explained above, that the Executive Branch lacked the constitutional and statutory authority to enter into these [agreements]," Brown wrote. "The conduct of those in this case proves how little the Constitution will matter when good character ceases to be informed by adherence to one's oath of office, and is primarily defined by how generous you are willing to be with someone else's money."

That's music to Goodlatte's ears. "These settlements were an abuse of the discretion that Congress granted DOJ in creating the Judgment Fund," he wrote to Sessions, urging the new AG "to reverse some of the damage wrought by your predecessors."

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B.C. Liberals say they want to form minority government – Macleans.ca

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B.C. Liberal leader Christy Clark waves to the crowd following the B.C. Election in Vancouver, B.C., Wednesday, May 10, 2017. (Jonathan Hayward/Canadian Press)

VICTORIA British Columbia entered a new stage of political uncertainty Wednesday as the final vote count from an election held more than two weeks ago confirmed the provinces first minority government in 65 years.

But with the balance of power firmly in his grasp, Green Leader Andrew Weaver indicated he wants to end the confusion that has gripped the province since May 9 by trying to reach a deal with either the Liberals or the NDP on a minority government by next Wednesday.

Were committed to bring stability to this province and were committed to ensuring the decisions we make in the next few days are those that actually make government work in British Columbia, he told a news conference.

We recognize its important over the next week or so to give certainty to British Columbia and thats our target as we stand today.

Weaver said hes aiming for Wednesday or earlier to broker a working agreement with either the Liberals or the NDP, but hes open to an extension if required.

Its not a deal breaker if were so close and we still need more time, he said.

OPINION: What has become of my British Columbia?

The Liberals finished one seat short of a majority, with 43 seats in the 87-seat legislature. The NDP has 41 seats and the Greens have three a historic achievement for the party as it built on the lone seat held by Weaver before the election.

The focus during the final count was on the riding of Courtenay-Comox, which the NDP won by 189 votes after holding a slim nine-vote lead on election night. The Liberals had hoped to swing the riding in their favour once absentee ballots were counted.

Elections BC says none of the races finished close enough to trigger automatic applications for judicial recounts.

B.C. NDP Leader John Horgan watches election results on television at a hotel after the provincial election polls closed, in Vancouver, B.C., on Tuesday May 9, 2017. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Exploratory talks involving possible political collaborations with the Greens have been underway since the election, but the parties have said they were awaiting the final results to begin the talks in earnest on the shape of a minority government.

Premier Christy Clark issued a statement saying the Liberals intend to form a government.

With 43 B.C. Liberal candidates elected as MLAs, and a plurality in the legislature, we have a responsibility to move forward and form a government, she said.

The final result reinforces that British Columbians want us to work together, across party lines, to get things done for them.

The Liberals were trying to win their fifth successive majority government in the general election.

As the incumbent premier with the most seats, Clark would normally be given the first chance to form a minority government by the lieutenant-governor.

But NDP Leader John Horgan said the results of the election show voters want change and he believes he can work with Weaver to govern.

Christy Clark and the B.C. Liberals came up short and after 16 years, its time for a new government, Horgan told a news conference at the legislature.

RELATED: Why the B.C. Green Party should be wary of a coalition

The popular vote between the two major parties was absolutely split down the middle and this is an opportunity to build on a minority situation, to demonstrate, in my opinion, that people can have a government that works for them, can have a government that co-operates with like-minded people to bring in things like proportional representation, to finally ban the big money the B.C. Liberals have been so, so addicted to over the past 16 years.

The popular vote tightened as Elections BC finished counting almost 180,000 absentee ballots to finalize the results. The Liberals received just 1,566 more votes than the NDP from almost 1.8 million total ballots cast across the province.

Weaver has said the major demands his party will be seeking in a minority government include being granted party status in the legislature. The Greens fell one seat short of official status after the election.

The Greens also want reforms to the electoral system to allow for proportional representation and changes to party fundraising rules that currently allow unlimited donations from corporations, unions and individuals.

Michael Prince, a social policy expert at the University of Victoria, said Clark is gambling that British Columbians are not in the mood to head back to the polls and the longer she can stay in power, if she can reach a deal with the Greens, her chances of winning another election improve.

I think shell be hoping therell be no appetite for an instant election, he said. She can try to bring in a throne speech and a budget with a lot of green tinges.

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Greg Gianforte Blames ‘Liberal Journalist’ Reporter He Body-Slammed For ‘Aggressive Behavior’ – Mediaite

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The hotly contested Montana congressional race heated up last night, when GOP candidate Greg Gianforte body-slammed Guardian reporter Ben Jacobs and broke his glasses on the eve of the election.

The incident first reported by Jacobs on Twitter happened the night before Montanas election, and was disputed by Gianfortes campaign, in a statement on the incident, claiming Jacobs aggressively shoved a recorder in Gregs face and began asking badgering questions.

After asking Jacobs to leave, the statement claims that liberal journalist Jacobs grabbed Gregs wrist, forcing both to the ground.

But the aggressive behavior described in Gianfortes statement is contradicted by Jacobs, audio recording of the incident, and multiple witness accounts.

In a recording released by the Guardian, Gianforte is not heard asking Jacobs to leave, nor is Jacobs heard acting aggressively.

Gianforte asks Jacobs to refer a question to a spokesman, before the crash of the body-slam is heard. Then, Gianforte shouts at Jacobs: Im sick and tired of you guys! and Get the hell out of here! as Jacobs tells the candidate he had broken his glasses.

There were also witnesses: a Fox News crew, including reporter Alicia Acuna, who described the incident in a story:

Gianforte grabbed Jacobs by the neck with both hands and slammed him into the ground behind him. Faith, Keith and I watched in disbelief as Gianforte then began punching the reporter. As Gianforte moved on top of Jacobs, he began yelling something to the effect of, Im sick and tired of this!

Following the incident, Jacobs was treated at a local hospital and filed a police report. Gianforte was charged with misdemeanor assault, and will have to appear in court before June 7.

The election, between Gianforte and Democrat Rob Quist, will be held on Thursday aka TODAY!

[image via screengrab]

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AF rolls out fiscal 2018 space budget – Air Force Link

Posted: at 4:29 am

WASHINGTON (AFNS) --

Air Force leaders met with media to discuss specifics of the services fiscal 2018 space investment budget at the Pentagon May 24, 2017. The request totals $7.75 billion, an approximately 20 percent increase from fiscal year 2017.

Dr. David Hardy, the acting deputy undersecretary of the Air Force for space, and Maj. Gen. Roger Teague, the director of space programs for the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Acquisition, highlighted the importance of the fiscal 2018 space budget to the nations security and the Air Forces strategic understanding of the space environment.

According to Hardy, for decades, the U.S. has enjoyed unimpeded freedom of action in the space domain. However, the global space domain is evolving and in the not too distant future, near-peer competitors will have the ability to put U.S. space assets at risk.

As in every other domain, when an adversary understands that something provides a strategic advantage they do two thingsmirror our capabilities and work strenuously to figure out means by which they can deny us, said Hardy. You can summarize the progress we have made over the last three budget cycles by saying we really do have a much firmer understanding of all the component parts that are required to build an overall resilient enterprise.

The Air Forces fiscal 2018 space budget emphasizes investments and improvements in future technology in three major focus areas: space superiority, space support to operations and assured access to space.

Teague explained the focus areas emphasize developing the resilient capabilities the Air Force needs to negate adversary actions and ensure America maintains the critical space capabilities required for national security.

Space is increasingly congested and contested, he said. With this evolving and changing environment, its increasingly critical we must ensure that our capabilities, our future capabilities, outpace the advances in space threats.

To gain and maintain space superiority, the Air Force plans to increase investments in advanced space situational awareness, counterspace and command and control. In addition, the service is committed to the continuation of investments in the Space Fence.

All of these capabilities are going to continue to enhance our ability to understand our operational environment, Teague said. We need to be able to command and control our space forces and capabilities to preserve freedom of operations as well as freedom of maneuver.

The Air Forces space support to operations is integral to combat, mobility and nuclear forces. The budget reflects this role with support to programs including the Space-Based Infrared System, Space Modernization Initiative, Tech Maturation and Cyber Security, space-based environmental monitoring and modernization of protected satellite communications.

To ensure the Air Forces ability to continue to own the high ground, the space budget provides funding for infrastructure, studies and analysis for the three evolved expendable launch vehicle launch services, which are competitive launch opportunities. The Air Force has a total of six launches planned for fiscal 2018.

Teague said the Air Force will continue to evolve the space enterprise to be more flexible, survivable and resilient to ensure the capability to provide space superiority across the spectrum of conflict for tomorrow's highly contested environment.

We must, as the (chief of staff of the Air Force) has emphasized several times, normalize space as a warfighting domain and focus our efforts to outpace and defeat advanced, demonstrated and evolving threats, said Teague. (The) increases in investment will continue to be necessary to maintain our space superiority and our capabilities in FY 18 and in the future.

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Liberal fight against freedom turns violent – Marshalltown Times Republican

Posted: at 4:29 am

Intolerance, at times exploding into violence, is spreading throughout our society. And its coming from the political left.

Its happening on college campuses. Most recently, students walked out on Vice President Mike Pences commencement address at Notre Dame University.

Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos was interrupted by boos and jeers at her commencement address at historically black Bethune-Cookman University.

Conservative scholar Charles Murray was met with violent protests and physically assaulted at Middlebury College. Another conservative scholar, Heather MacDonald, was violently shut down in a presentation she was giving at Claremont McKenna College. These are just a couple examples.

Now its spreading off college campuses with reports of violence and threats toward Republican members of congress, and their families, as they hold town halls in their districts.

A column in The Hill newspaper bears the headline, Republicans fearing for their safety as anger, threats mount.

Whats happening?

A recent commentary in Forbes Magazine from a London School of Business professor calls this The Post-Truth World.

He describes a prevailing feeling of helplessness as individuals inhabit a world in which knowledge is, in general, exploding but each individual knows, relatively, less and less. And he points to a world in which business and politics are becoming increasingly interdependent.

New York University psychologist Jonathan Haidt attributes whats happening to a culture in which young people are not forced to deal with opposing viewpoints. This, says Haidt, is amplified by social media, which serves to reinforce existing biases.

But all this doesnt explain why the intolerance and violence is coming mainly from the political left.

A new survey from the Pew Research Center sheds light on this.

Sixty-six percent of Republicans compared to 29 percent of Democrats say that a person is rich because they worked harder than most people rather than because of having personal advantages in life. This 37 percent difference in attitudes of Republicans and Democrats about why some people are rich is 12 points larger today than where it stood just three years ago in 2014. Seventy-one percent of Democrats compared to 32 percent of Republicans say someone is poor because of circumstances beyond a persons control, rather than because of lack of effort. This 37 percent difference between Republicans and Democrats in attitudes regarding why someone is poor is 19 points larger than where it stood three years ago in 2014.

The nation is becoming increasingly polarized on the very fundamental question regarding the extent to which individuals have control over their own life.

Across the nations whole population, 53 percent feel poverty is the result of circumstances beyond an individuals control compared to 34 percent who see poverty as the result of lack of effort.

What is the meaning of freedom in a country where more than half its citizens feel fate rather than choice governs their life?

With Republicans now in power, trying to restore economic vitality and fiscal balance by limiting government and expanding personal freedom, the left sees this as a threat, not an opportunity.

Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

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These stocks could gain if Republicans get their act together – CNBC

Posted: at 4:29 am

The Trump trade in stocks may be down, but don't count it out, yet.

In the hours after President Donald Trump claimed victory last November, a group of infrastructure, financial, defense, and U.S.-focused stocks began to rise on hopes that his policies would boost fiscal spending and juice corporate profits with tax breaks. Small caps also gained.

But now many of them are lagging as traders worry Trump and Congress will be distracted from moving on his pro-growth policies by the investigation into the Trump campaign's ties to Russia.

Strategas says a case can be made for some, if not all, of those stocks to rally in coming months. The first group of stocks to make a comeback could those that benefit from actions Trump can make or has made without Congressional votes.

"There are stocks that are going to be impacted by regulatory changes that have nothing to do with Congress," said Daniel Clifton, head of policy research at Strategas.

Strategas has created a portfolio of 25 companies that would benefit from Trump's agenda on fiscal spending, deregulation and taxes. Clifton said companies that stand to benefit from regulatory changes and those that need Congressional action have all fallen in the portfolio. "There's a bit of bifurcation happening among the ones that sold off, related to Trump. There's going to be an opportunity in the short run on companies impacted by regulation, not legislation," he said.

Source: Strategas Research

For that reason, financials, up just 1.5 percent year-to-date, could gain because the regulatory changes possible without legislation, could help them. Regional banks would be particularly boosted by changes to some of the stress test requirements. Other sectors should benefit too, like energy infrastructure since Trump has cleared the way for more pipeline approvals.

The Trump administration also included infrastructure spending with its budget this past week, and Clifton said it's possible that there will be an initiative to push it through in some form, since it could have bipartisan support.

Infrastructure could ultimately be a political bargaining chip if Republicans need Democrats to avoid a debt ceiling crisis when the U.S. nears the limit this fall.

"It's likely to be a bi-partisan dealdefense for infrastructure for debt ceiling deal," said Clifton, adding he does see potential for infrastructure spending.

The Trump trade in individual sectors and small caps has faded, even as the broader stock market grinds to new highs. Many small companies pay a higher corporate tax rate than large companies do and would benefit if Congress was able to move forward with plans to significantly cut the corporate tax rate from 35 percent. Small caps also make most of their revenues in the U.S.

But those pro-Trump agenda trades are no longer hot, as it looks like even the Republicans can't see eye to eye on legislation, based on disagreements around the health care bill, which barely passed the House and won't pass the Senate in its current form. Without tax reform, there won't be the boost investors were hoping for any time soon. Those same concerns have taken the "Trump trade" out of the dollar, which has lost all the gains it made since Election Day.

The same can be seen in interest rates, as Treasury yields moved lower amid uncertainty and are well off their post-election highs.

Steven DeSanctis, equity strategist at Jefferies, looked specifically at how small caps have reacted to the Trump trade unwind. The small cap index, Russell 2000 is up just 1.8 percent year-to-date, versus 7.8 percent for the S&P 500.

"Every once in a while, it bounces back, and you see some of the groups perform better. But we've seen outflows from financialsoutflows from materials and industrialsThat is not Trumpesque," he said.

There was also the greatest divide between the best and worst performing small cap sectors to start the year, since 2009, he said. Earlier this week, small cap energy was down more than 19 percent and health care, including small cap biotech, up 11 percent.

"It just shows you that if you could pick sectors, you could do pretty well because the spread is a pretty big gap. Energy has been such a big laggard after such a good fourth quarter in 2016. People were bulled up on energy coming into this year and they really lost faith in the group," said DeSanctis. He said he likes financials and sees the selling as overdone. He too says the financial group could benefit from changes in regulation, but also interest rate hikes.

Source: Strategas Research

Clifton says there's one big motivating factor that could bring Republicans together to drive through tax reform. That is fear that they could lose their majority in the 2018 mid-term election.

"If Republicans can figure out a way to pass a FY 2018 budget, and put together a coherent tax plan, expectations may begin to reverse," Clifton notes.

Already, the Freedom Caucus has criticized spending in the president's budget, setting up for a battle between House. That could also carry through to a clash with some Senate Republicans who would rather work with Democrats

than see deep cuts.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has asked Congress to raise the debt ceiling to avoid a dramatic showdown in the fall, but the Freedom Caucus said it would not back it, and said the U.S. government would "spend into oblivion."

"The madness happening in May, June, July and August will create a path forward for legislative activity in September, October and possibly tax reform in the first quarter of 2018, and that's where the opportunity is going to be," said Clifton.

The Strategas Trump portfolio includes names in the defense sector, which has gained 2.5 percent this week, after Trump's visit to Saudi Arabia included major defense deals. Lockheed Martin is one name in the portfolio.

United Health is also included, since it could benefit if Republicans replace Obamacare. Martin Marietta Materials, an infrastructure play is another component, as well as some biotech names. There is also aluminum and steel, representing trade.

Quanta Services is an energy infrastructure play in the portfolio. Several companies with a lot of overseas cash were also included, since they would be encouraged by any corporate tax law changes to bring their money home and then be set to benefit from a lower corporate tax rate.

Watch: Trump's $2 trillion budget mystery

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