Ignores Supreme Court ruling allowing wall funding                                                  
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Feb. 20, 2020

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Retiring GOP Representative Mac Thornberry goes full Pelosi on wall funding reprogramming he voted for
Ranking House Republican on the House Armed Services Committee Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) joined Democrats in attacking President Trump’s choice to move $3.8 billion within the Defense Department approved spending from weapons programs into the counter-drug fund with the intention of using these monies for additional wall funding on the southern border. The Hill reports that the soon to be retired Thornberry claimed, “The re-programming announced today is contrary to Congress's constitutional authority, and I believe that it requires Congress to take action. I will be working with my colleagues to determine the appropriate steps to take.” Yet, Congress chose not to prevent the shifting of funds within the Pentagon to accommodate additional funding for the wall on the southern border, during the appropriations process with full knowledge that the Supreme Court had allowed the transfer of funds for the same purpose just a few months earlier by including the same exact language as before that allowed the transfer to take place. What makes it particularly embarrassing for House Armed Services Committee ranking member is that he voted in favor of the legislation which funded the Pentagon without the prohibitions that he now wants to imagine into it, stating in part in Division A, Title VIII, Section 8005 “Upon determination by the Secretary of Defense that such action is necessary in the national interest, he may, with the approval of the Office of Management and Budget, transfer not to exceed $4,000,000,000 of working capital funds of the Department of Defense or funds made available in this Act to the Department of Defense for military functions (except military construction) between such appropriations or funds or any subdivision thereof, to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes, and for the same time period, as the appropriation or fund to which transferred…” Maybe read the bill next time?

Video: Attorney General Barr oversees DOJ including sentence recommendations, even for Roger Stone
The complaint against President Donald Trump and Attorney General William Barr on the sentence recommendation is not based on any law being violated, but that in the execution of their legal authorities, they agreed that 9 years for Roger Stone was excessive. And apparently agreeing with the President about the horrible conduct of the Justice Department in 2016 with the phony Russia collusion witch hunt is a crime against the Washington, D.C. establishment. The argument appears to be that even if the sentence recommendation was excessive and Trump was right, because Stone is a friend of the President’s he must be punished far in excess of what the law prescribes because justice is “equal,” and neither the President nor the Attorney General have any role in supervising that process. Apparently, due process does not apply to supporters of the President because, like in Animal Farm, some are more equal than others.

Video: DOJ discord and Bloomberg battles Bernie
Can anything be done to reform our two-tiered “justice” system?

Gregg Jarrett: AG Barr was right in Stone case to overturn harsh sentencing recommendation – new trial needed
“[T]here is ample evidence that the foreperson, Tomeka Hart (who is also a lawyer), is a Democratic activist who has communicated a string of social media posts critical of Trump and actively engaged in protests against him. Before Hart was picked as a juror, she made specific comments about the Stone case, praised the Mueller investigation, and suggested that the president and his supporters (such as Stone) were racists. At one point, Hart referred to Trump with a hashtag of ‘klanpresident.’ When questioned during jury selection, Hart disclosed only her ties to the Democratic Party. It seems that she conveniently omitted her incendiary accusations of racism that would almost certainly have disqualified her from serving due to bias. In America, we expect jurors to be fair and impartial. Hart’s record demonstrates an acute prejudice against the defendant by virtue of his close association with President Trump. Hart should never have been permitted to sit in judgment of the case, much less to serve as the foreperson of the jury, who may have guided the convictions. Stone deserves a new trial. If Judge Jackson doesn’t recognize the obvious, then Clarence Darrow will again be proven correct when he concluded: ‘There is no such thing as justice – in or out of the court.’”


Retiring GOP Representative Mac Thornberry goes full Pelosi on wall funding reprogramming he voted for

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By Rick Manning

What a bunch of frauds.

Ranking House Republican on the House Armed Services Committee Mac Thornberry (R-Texas) joined Democrats in attacking President Trump’s choice to move $3.8 billion within the Defense Department approved spending from weapons programs into the counter-drug fund with the intention of using these monies for additional wall funding on the southern border.

The Hill reports that the soon to be retired Thornberry claimed, “The re-programming announced today is contrary to Congress's constitutional authority, and I believe that it requires Congress to take action. I will be working with my colleagues to determine the appropriate steps to take.”

Thornberry continued with the incredible charge that the reprogramming plan, “undermines the principle of civilian control of the military and is in violation of the separation of powers within the Constitution.”

To begin to deconstruct the absurdity of Thornberry’s comments, one must understand that in 2017, President Trump’s first year in office, the Defense Budget for military projects was $568.9 billion, rising to $600 billion, $683 billion in 2018, $653.9 in 2019 and to a projected $689.6 billion in 2020.  A massive increase over the first three years of the Trump presidency – an increase of $85 billion in just three years.  The $3.8 billion that the President is planning to move represents about two-thirds of 1 percent of the DoD funding for 2019.

What’s more, Congress chose not to prevent the shifting of funds within the Pentagon to accommodate additional funding for the wall on the southern border, during the appropriations process with full knowledge that the Supreme Court had allowed the transfer of funds for the same purpose just a few months earlier by including the same exact language as before that allowed the transfer to take place.

This simple fact makes the Thornberry separation of powers argument almost laughable on its face, but what makes it particularly embarrassing for House Armed Services Committee ranking member is that he voted in favor of the legislation which funded the Pentagon without the prohibitions that he now wants to imagine into it.

The law Thornberry voted for explicitly provides for reprogramming the funds, stating in part in Division A, Title VIII, Section 8005 “Upon determination by the Secretary of Defense that such action is necessary in the national interest, he may, with the approval of the Office of Management and Budget, transfer not to exceed $4,000,000,000 of working capital funds of the Department of Defense or funds made available in this Act to the Department of Defense for military functions (except military construction) between such appropriations or funds or any subdivision thereof, to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes, and for the same time period, as the appropriation or fund to which transferred…” Maybe read the bill next time?

To be fair, the legal question is still technically pending after the Supreme Court stayed an injunction by a district court against transferring the monies on the grounds that the party lacked standing to bring the complaint. The effect of the stay was to allow the funds, $2.5 billion, to be transferred and spent on the wall. The transfer authority is clear in the law, and so it becomes a political question with which the executive branch has discretion when a determination is made that expanding the border wall is in the national interest. Congress authorized that discretion.

And in response to Thornberry’s almost crazy idea that the shifting of the funds undermines the Constitutional requirement of civilian control over the Pentagon, perhaps the 23 years spent in the swamp has impacted the former House Armed Services Committees basic reasoning capacity, but even his lowliest press staffer should be able to follow this logical syllogism.  The President is the Commander and Chief of the military.  The President is a civilian.  Hence, the President taking the step to shift resources to better meet the nation’s security needs is the essence of “civilian control” of the military. 

While it may seem unfair to pick on Representative Thornberry over his poorly thought out complaints to the media, it cannot be lost that it is the House Republicans who have pushed hard for massive increases in defense spending over the past half-decade, breaking the budget sequestration deal with the Democrats in order to dramatically plus-up Pentagon spending.  In exchange for increased military spending, the Democrats demanded increases in non-defense discretionary spending be added to the baseline budget, whether it was needed or not.

This mutually agreed upon spending escalation has been a primary driver, along with increased mandatory spending, of the expanding budget deficit which Democrats seek to blame on the President. Democrats play this blame Trump game even as they and their conjoined defense hawk spending pigs keep adding more and more money to the appropriated spending bills, acting as if we are flush with cash rather than $23 trillion in the hole. 

The alleged rationale for massive Defense increases has been the need to meet our national security needs around the world which presumably includes at our own border.  The idea that a GOP Congressman from Texas doesn’t understand the challenges of an unsecured border when an Iraqi Al Qaeda leader had been arrested in Arizona just a few short weeks before is beyond absurd.  And while Thornberry represents the northern-most district in the state, the fact remains that Texas is a border state increasingly vulnerable due to its long, difficult to manage 1,241 shared miles with Mexico.

President Trump promised and has fought to secure the southern border, and it is unfortunate that in his last year in Congress, Mac Thornberry has chosen a fight that benefits the Beltway Bandits at the expense of our national security.

Rick Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.


Video: Attorney General Barr oversees DOJ including sentence recommendations, even for Roger Stone

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To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ua5fp8Aeq3o


Video: DOJ discord and Bloomberg battles Bernie

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To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xb1n6gO0wBM


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ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured column from Foxnews.com, Gregg Jarrett makes the case for Roger Stone to be awarded a new trial:

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Gregg Jarrett: AG Barr was right in Stone case to overturn harsh sentencing recommendation – new trial needed

By Gregg Jarrett

Toward the end of his life, the legendary criminal defense attorney Clarence Darrow gazed back on his long career and sadly observed to a reporter: “There is no such thing as justice – in or out of court.”

Darrow knew through experience that, all too often, prosecutors are willing to abandon their ethical duty that requires them to see that justice is done. Instead, emboldened by their immense powers and unlimited resources, they become consumed by a zeal to win, sometimes at any cost.

Fairness and justice become secondary to the goal of gaining a conviction and a harsh penalty. The law, Darrow concluded, had evolved into a “horrible business.”

Darrow was likely right. His thesis can be seen in the unduly harsh punishment of Donald Trump’s former adviser Roger Stone that was sought by trial prosecutors, compounded by the irrational demand of more than 2,000 former Justice Department employees that Attorney General William Barr resign for attempting to insert reasonableness into the process.

Stone was found guilty by a Washington jury of making false statements, obstruction and witness tampering in a case that arose from former Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation. The four trial prosecutors, two of whom worked for Mueller, requested a seven- to nine-year prison sentence for Stone.

Barr and other senior Justice Department officials felt the recommended sentence was “excessive” under the facts and circumstances of the case. In an interview with ABC News, Barr explained that “when people are working on one case, and devoting a lot to it, they can sometimes lose perspective.”

After consulting with senior lawyers at the Justice Department, Barr was under the impression that the trial prosecutors would back off their draconian recommendation. Instead, according to Barr, he expected the prosecutors would “let the judge decide and explain why a lower sentence could be justified.” Obviously, this did not happen.

Barr called it a “miscommunication.” When he learned that the line prosecutors had advocated to the judge a seven- to nine-year sentence, Barr notified his staff that corrective action would need to be taken the following morning “to amend and clarify what our position was.”

Importantly, this decision was made before President Trump tweeted a criticism of the sentencing recommendation as “horrible, unfair and a miscarriage of justice.”

The following exchange with ABC News removes all doubt about political interference by the president.

ABC News: So just to be clear, did you talk to the president at all about your decision regarding the recommendations?

Barr: The recommendations on this case? Never.

ABC News: Anybody from the White House call you to try to influence you?

Barr: No. Nope. I have not discussed the Roger Stone case at the White House.

ABC News: At all?

Barr: At all.

Barr insisted that he didn’t need anyone to tell him that seven to nine years was an overly harsh sentence. He then posed a rhetorical question: “You think I need the president’s tweet to tell me that seven to nine years is excessive?” Barr added that he would “not be bullied or influenced” by anyone on any case.

While Darrow’s cynical view of overzealous prosecutors was surely a product of the many injustices he witnessed as a defense attorney, Barr is still a practicing idealist.

The attorney general refused to allow an injustice to occur on his watch. “I came to the view as my colleagues did that I wouldn’t support affirmatively advocating what I thought was an excessive sentence,” Barr said.

There is no evidence that President Trump or anyone in the White House had any involvement in Barr’s decision to revise the sentencing recommendation in the Stone case to a more reasonable and appropriate level. But that did not stop the more than 2,000 former Justice Department staff members from signing an online petition urging the attorney general to resign.

Did any of them bother to consult the facts or Barr’s explanation of what happened before they demanded that he be banished from the Justice Department? Did any of them consider that, by any reasonable standard, the trial prosecutors were wrong in seeking an extreme sentence or that the attorney general was attempting to dispense justice fairly and equitably? Apparently not.

As law professor Jonathan Turley pointed out: “The critics have shown the very same disregard for the facts, the merits, and the process that they ascribe to Barr.” Indeed, they have.

Before passing judgment, shouldn’t these former Justice Department officials have withheld their condemnation until the attorney general offers his testimony on the matter before the House Judiciary Committee in March?

This would be prudent, notwithstanding the fact that Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., has already prejudged Barr by accusing him of “the misuse of our criminal justice system for political purposes.” 

Even more baffling, if not injudicious, is the move by the Federal Judges Association, which has reportedly called an emergency meeting to discuss the Justice Department’s intervention in the Stone case. Apparently these judges intend to disregard the same admonition they give to jurors that they must wait until all of the evidence is presented before reaching a conclusion.

This brings us to Tuesday’s decision by U.S. District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson who presided over the Stone trial. She has decided to proceed with the sentencing of the defendant on Thursday, despite compelling new evidence that the jury foreperson harbored extreme anti-Trump opinions which she may have concealed from the court during jury selection.

Jackson, an Obama appointee, expressed reluctance to hold a hearing to inquire about juror misconduct, although she said “I may decide to do it in an abundance of caution.” Fundamental fairness, not caution, demands that she hold such a hearing. Jackson’s failure to recognize this bodes poorly for Stone.

As I detailed in my recent column, there is ample evidence that the foreperson, Tomeka Hart (who is also a lawyer), is a Democratic activist who has communicated a string of social media posts critical of Trump and actively engaged in protests against him.                                                   

Before Hart was picked as a juror, she made specific comments about the Stone case, praised the Mueller investigation, and suggested that the president and his supporters (such as Stone) were racists.

At one point, Hart referred to Trump with a hashtag of “klanpresident.” When questioned during jury selection, Hart disclosed only her ties to the Democratic Party. It seems that she conveniently omitted her incendiary accusations of racism that would almost certainly have disqualified her from serving due to bias.

In America, we expect jurors to be fair and impartial. Hart’s record demonstrates an acute prejudice against the defendant by virtue of his close association with President Trump.

Hart should never have been permitted to sit in judgment of the case, much less to serve as the foreperson of the jury, who may have guided the convictions.

Stone deserves a new trial. If Judge Jackson doesn’t recognize the obvious, then Clarence Darrow will again be proven correct when he concluded: “There is no such thing as justice – in or out of the court.”

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