Tag: familiar

  • In Bragg v. Jordan, a familiar legal strategy emerges

    In Bragg v. Jordan, a familiar legal strategy emerges

    [ad_1]

    da bragg 25606

    The lawsuit echoes legal arguments advanced in 2016 and 2017 in another subpoena fight on a hot-button issue. At the time, New York’s attorney general, Democrat Eric Schneiderman, was investigating whether Exxon Mobil misled investors about the risks of climate change. A GOP-controlled House panel accused Schneiderman of having a political agenda and served subpoenas seeking documents from the probe. Bragg was a senior official in Schneiderman’s office, as was Leslie Dubeck, who was then counsel to the attorney general and is now Bragg’s general counsel.

    Congressional interference with state and local prosecutors is unusual and raises delicate questions about the balance of power between Congress and the states. So Schneiderman’s office resisted.

    Dubeck was the architect of Schneiderman’s approach. She led the attorney general’s refusal to comply, and she prepared to either sue the House committee or defend the attorney general’s office if the committee took the matter to court. The panel’s investigation, she wrote at the time, “oversteps the boundaries imposed by federalism” and violates New York’s sovereignty.

    The conflict ultimately fizzled when the subpoenas lapsed, but Bragg and Dubeck have now revived the strategy.

    “They know the cards that the House Republicans have to play in this situation,” Eric Soufer, who was a spokesman for Schneiderman during the Exxon case, said of Bragg and Dubeck.

    Bragg’s lawsuit replicates many of the arguments that Dubeck made in the Exxon matter. The lawsuit says the Pomerantz subpoena violates “basic principles of federalism and common sense” and accuses the House GOP of infringing on Bragg’s authority and New York’s sovereign interests.

    Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil, a Trump appointee, declined on Tuesday to issue an immediate order blocking the subpoena, and she scheduled an initial hearing for next Wednesday.

    The House GOP’s probe of Bragg’s investigation is led by Jordan (R-Ohio), Oversight Chair James Comer (R-Ky.) and Administration Chair Bryan Steil (R-Wis.). The Pomerantz subpoena is the first one they have issued.

    Though Bragg’s colleagues have said the first-term Democrat doesn’t have much of a taste for political warfare, his effort to combat the House inquiry received a warm reception from those interested in seeing the district attorney defend the institution.

    “The office should not capitulate to people with special interests,” said Joan Vollero, who handled communications and intergovernmental affairs for Bragg’s predecessor, Cyrus Vance Jr. “I think, ironically, the House Republicans on the Judiciary Committee are playing the same game of politics that they’ve accused the office of playing.”

    Congressional Republicans have criticized Bragg’s investigation of the former president as evidence of his political bias, arguing that the district attorney’s pursuit of Trump stands in contrast to his liberal-leaning criminal justice policies for minor offenses. In advance of Trump’s indictment, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy warned that charges against the former president would be “an outrageous abuse of power by a radical DA who lets violent criminals walk as he pursues political vengeance against President Trump.”

    Another irony in the case is that Bragg is borrowing some of the same arguments that Trump himself often used to resist congressional subpoenas when he was president. Trump frequently argued that Democrats’ probes into his finances were meant to harass him for political gain rather than promote a legitimate legislative purpose.

    Bragg is now taking a similar position about the House GOP inquiry. His lawsuit repeatedly cites a Supreme Court decision in a Trump subpoena fight, Trump v. Mazars, which suggested that congressional subpoenas against another branch of government can violate the separation of powers if they have an improper purpose.

    From an optics perspective, Soufer said, it is wise of Bragg to counterpunch. “If you let them politicize it the way they want to,” he said, “you’re going to lose in the court of public opinion.”

    Both sides are launching increasingly aggressive public appeals. On Monday, Jordan’s committee is planning to hold a “field hearing” in Manhattan on Bragg’s “pro-crime, anti-victim policies.” A spokeswoman for Bragg has called the event “a political stunt” and has highlighted crime statistics showing a decline in murders, shootings, burglaries and robberies.

    [ad_2]
    #Bragg #Jordan #familiar #legal #strategy #emerges
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • House Republicans are facing a familiar problem as they try to steer a high-profile package of border bills to the floor. Let’s call it the Lone Star State Standoff.

    House Republicans are facing a familiar problem as they try to steer a high-profile package of border bills to the floor. Let’s call it the Lone Star State Standoff.

    [ad_1]

    “If they try to jam them through, they’re gonna fail on the floor,” Rep. Tony Gonzales warned of the bills.

    [ad_2]
    #House #Republicans #facing #familiar #problem #steer #highprofile #package #border #bills #floor #Lets #call #Lone #Star #State #Standoff
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Trump’s first ’24 rally has a familiar feel: Anger and attacks on his tormentors

    Trump’s first ’24 rally has a familiar feel: Anger and attacks on his tormentors

    [ad_1]

    Trump went on to do a dramatic re-enactment of DeSantis pleading for his endorsement in the 2018 Florida governor’s race. The former president said that after he grudgingly backed DeSantis, the candidate “became like a rocket ship” and prevailed in the primary and general election — and argued that had he not backed him, DeSantis would have never won.

    The audience seemed game to stand for hours under the central Texas sun and listen to Trump’s litany of complaints. They and the event itself offered a vivid illustration of the fault lines that have quickly opened up in the very early GOP primary: in which fealty to Trump appears to be one of the main litmus tests for those running.

    Indeed, rallygoers here in Waco expressed disappointment that DeSantis had not gone further in his defense of Trump as he stares down a possible indictment from the Manhattan district attorney.

    Louise Negry from Lometa, Tex., said DeSantis “might be a traitor.”

    Her friend, Renee Alaniz, agreed, referencing the Florida governor’s implicit mocking of Trump for being involved in an alleged hush money payment to a porn star (which has been the central issue in his potential indictment).

    “His statement about the possible Trump arrest was a little questionable — quite a bit questionable. His choice to be so lax about it and not support Trump in any way,” Alaniz said.

    Chris Blunt, who wore a t-shirt with an image of the Trump NFT he purchased last year, called DeSantis a “Trump clone,” and said the governor should be “dropping the Covid stuff and moving past it.”

    “Trump likes to attack the person and not their character, but DeSantis is attacking Trump’s character and credibility,” Blunt said. “He needs to stop playing games because Trump is going to trounce you.”

    DeSantis was not the lone object of scorn in Waco on Saturday night. Trump also railed against Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan district attorney, who is investigating the $130,000 hush money payments to adult entertainer Stormy Daniels on Trump’s behalf. The jury in Manhattan had appeared to be wrapping up with the case and a decision on charges against Trump was widely expected to come last week. Now it does not appear any decision will come until at least early next week.

    Trump framed the investigations into him and the “weaponization of our justice system” as “the central issue of our time.” And he claimed the “biggest threat” to the U.S. isn’t China or Russia but “high level politicians that work in the U.S. government like McConnell, Pelosi, Schumer and Biden.”

    “You will be vindicated and proud the thugs and criminals who are corrupting our justice system will be defeated, discredited and totally disgraced,” Trump said.

    Trump’s first 2024 presidential campaign rally came at a pivotal time. While Bragg closes in on a likely indictment — which would be a first for a sitting or former president — Trump is also facing legal scrutiny over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election as well as his handling of classified White House documents.

    Trump, on Saturday, appeared to bet that he could turn the investigations into a political asset, casting himself once more as a victim of a federal government that was aligned against him.

    “Our opponents have done everything they can to crush our spirit and to break our will. But they failed. They’ve only made us stronger,” he said.

    The campaign and city of Waco had expected at least 15,000 people to attend Saturday’s rally. Wearing MAGA hats and Trump t-shirts, some waved official campaign signs saying “WITCH HUNT” and the entire crowd stood, hand to heart along with Trump, as a rendition of the “Star Spangled Banner” sung by the “J6 Choir” played, set to a video of protesters storming the U.S. Capitol.

    Trump ticked through a list of campaign promises that included mandating term limits, keeping “men out of women’s sports” and ending “the invasion at the Southern border.” And he once again vowed, without articulating how, that he would end the war in Ukraine and prevent “World War 3.”

    But the focus wasn’t primarily on the issues facing America, it was on the many issues facing him.

    The Trump campaign rolled out its Texas leadership team and endorsements for 2024 that included Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and twelve members of Congress, including Reps. Pete Sessions, the former NRCC chairman, and Roger Williams, chairman of the small business committee. Rep. Ronny Jackson — Trump’s former White House physician turned U.S. congressman from Texas — helped Trump’s campaign nail down endorsements and Trump personally called each, according to a campaign adviser.

    Notably, Gov. Greg Abbott and Sen. Ted Cruz weren’t included on the list, although the adviser said they expect more endorsements and Abbott and Cruz have both mulled 2024 runs of their own.

    Capitol Hill Trump allies like Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) warmed up the crowds with their own rally cries.

    Greene told the crowd to stop letting people from “blue states” move into Texas, and — in what has been a major pivot for the GOP — told people to embrace ballot harvesting.

    “We need to beat them at their own game and start harvesting ballots,” Greene said. “Except they’ll only come from legal registered voters who are U.S. citizens.”

    Trump seemed pleased with Greene’s speech in particular, and on stage encouraged her to run for Senate.

    Outside the venue, rallygoers wandered through a makeshift marketplace of Trump themed souvenirs that ranged from Trump and Melania Trump lifesize cutouts, MAGA bikinis and t-shirts with crude messages against President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris. One vendor said he was close to selling out a t-shirt that read, “I was there, where were you? God, Guns, Trump, in Waco, Texas.”

    Meridith McGraw reported from Waco, Texas; Alex Isenstadt reported from Washington, D.C.

    [ad_2]
    #Trumps #rally #familiar #feel #Anger #attacks #tormentors
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • It’s a familiar time of the year on Capitol Hill: Members are forming new caucuses left and right. 

    It’s a familiar time of the year on Capitol Hill: Members are forming new caucuses left and right. 

    [ad_1]

    ap23003788253867
    If you have an issue of interest, Congress probably has a caucus for that.

    [ad_2]
    #familiar #time #year #Capitol #HillMembers #forming #caucuses #left
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )