Longer process favors President Trump                                                               
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March 4, 2020

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Biden takes the lead after S.C. bounce, but potential convention showdown looms as Bernie wins Calif., Colo. and Utah
There was always an outside chance former Vice President Joe Biden would be able to come back after losing Iowa and New Hampshire, and now, with a bounce from South Carolina and wins in Texas, Virginia, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Alabama and Arkansas, he is the Democratic frontrunner to take on President Donald Trump in November. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, however, may still have enough momentum to force a showdown for the heart and soul of the Democratic Party at the convention in Milwaukee, after winning California, Colorado and Utah convincingly. After Super Tuesday, Biden leads in delegates 453 and 382, and next up are Idaho, Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, North Dakota and Washington on March 10. So far, the race is close enough that there is a high likelihood that neither Sanders nor Biden will accumulate enough delegates in time for the convention — benefitting none other than President Trump, who gets to spend the next several months highlighting the negatives of both opponents, and capitalizing on Democrats’ division in the 2020 landscape.

Video: Biden wins on Super Tuesday, but do Democratic voters really have confidence in him?
Joe BIden takes the lead for the Democratic nomination, but are Democrats merely overlooking his flaws in order to stop the socialist Bernie Sanders?

Sen. Mike Lee: It's time for Congress to bring accountability to intelligence community's surveillance power
“The FBI improperly spied on the Trump campaign in 2016. We must ensure the bureau can’t do it in 2020 or ever again. Because if the FBI can unfairly target a presidential campaign, imagine what it can do to regular Americans. Here’s how we know what happened. In December, Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz released a 478-page report detailing over a dozen ‘serious performance failures’ in the FBI's use of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to intercept the communications of President Trump’s campaign supporters. Horowitz identified ‘at least 17 significant errors or omissions’ in the applications to spy on Trump campaign official, Carter Page. We cannot let Congress forget. We must remember the FBI’s failure to respect Americans' right to privacy. More importantly, we must fix the problems with the FISA program so that these violations of United States citizens’ civil liberties never happen again. Our Founding Fathers knew well the danger of a government with the power to snoop through the private communications of law-abiding Americans. They included the Fourth Amendment in the Bill of Rights to limit the government’s ability to spy on its citizens. They required law enforcement to go to court and show probable cause for why a specific person or place should be searched or seized. Unfortunately, the federal government often justifies violations of privacy by claiming they need to protect us from foreign espionage and interference. While the threat of foreign espionage is very real, abuse of government’s surveillance powers is all too common.”


Biden takes the lead after S.C. bounce, but potential convention showdown looms as Bernie wins Calif., Colo. and Utah

 

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By Robert Romano

There was always an outside chance former Vice President Joe Biden would be able to come back after losing Iowa and New Hampshire, and now, with a bounce from South Carolina and wins in Texas, Virginia, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Alabama and Arkansas, he is the Democratic frontrunner to take on President Donald Trump in November.

It’s the greatest political comeback since 1992, when Bill Clinton was able to win the Democratic nomination after losing Iowa and New Hampshire.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, however, may still have enough momentum to force a showdown for the heart and soul of the Democratic Party at the convention in Milwaukee, after winning California, Colorado and Utah convincingly.

After Super Tuesday, Biden leads in delegates 453 and 382, and next up are Idaho, Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, North Dakota and Washington on March 10. Of those Sanders carried Michigan narrowly and North Dakota and Washington handily in 2016 against Hillary Clinton, who won Missouri narrowly and Mississippi overwhelmingly. For Sanders to remain competitive, he needs to repeat that success and at least hold what he won last time. To gain momentum, he needs to win in more areas he lost last time, like Missouri.

Both Biden and Sanders have the potential to once again divide Democrats no matter which candidate they select. Democrats in the east and south largely rejected Sanders’ socialism and deferred to Biden after Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobachur dropped out and backed him.

But a younger and more radical Democratic Party in the west dominated on behalf of Sanders, creating an effective check against the old establishment guard, who still feel betrayed by the party after Sanders’ 2016 loss.

So far, the race is close enough for Fivethirtyeight.com to project, at least as of now, the high likelihood that neither Sanders nor Biden will accumulate enough delegates in time for the convention — benefitting none other than President Trump, who gets to spend the next several months highlighting the negatives of both opponents, and capitalizing on Democrats’ division in the 2020 landscape.

Both candidates have obvious flaws, first and foremost, their age. Sanders is 78 and Biden 77. If elected, both will be in their 80s running for reelection in 2024, and as their second terms would end, nearing their 90s. Ridiculous. President Trump is only 73 years old in comparison.

Go with Sanders, and most Americans would probably reject socialism in the general election. Sanders has not proven he can unite his own party, let alone the entire country around that message.  

On the other hand. with Biden, enough Sanders supporters could stay home, or even vote for Trump owing to his renegotiating NAFTA and hitting China with tariffs, coupled with Biden’s past votes in favor of NAFTA, permanent normal trade relations with China and proposing the Trans-Pacific Partnership alongside President Barack Obama.

Biden’s greatest weakness may come from his role in the Obama White House at the very time the Justice Department and intelligence agencies were spying on the Trump campaign in 2016. Further revelations could come to haunt the former Vice President as a picture of an incumbent party willing to do anything to win emerges, including sabotaging the incoming Trump administration in 2017 with an unprecedented, top secret investigation into the new President. It’s a thorny issue for Biden.

Then, there’s Biden’s role in Ukraine, including helping to foment the civil war there when supported the overthrow of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych in 2014 — Biden bragged about it in his book — which led directly to Russia’s annexation of Crimea on his watch. All that, to get a trade deal between the European Union and Ukraine ratified.

Meanwhile, Biden’s role as Vice President helped get his son a sweetheart deal working for former Yanukovych minister Mykola Zlochevsky’s Burisma Holdings. Biden even helped get the prosecutor general there fired who says he was investigating Burisma at the time Hunter Biden served on the Board of Directors there. Ironically, these dealings were cemented in the minds of voters during the Democrats’ hapless attempt to impeach and remove President Trump from office earlier this year.

Either way, President Trump appears ready to capitalize on Biden and Sanders’ apparent weaknesses. The thing to watch will be the attacks Biden and Sanders make on each other, opening wounds the Trump campaign will surely exploit in the coming months. The longer the Democratic contest goes on and the more divided Democrats become, the more likely it will appear that President Trump is on his way to being reelected.

Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.


Video: Biden wins on Super Tuesday, but do Democratic voters really have confidence in him?

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


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ALG Editor’s Note: In the following featured oped from Foxnews.com, Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) makes the case for reforming FISA after the Justice Department and intelligence agencies improperly spied on the Trump campaign in 2016:

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Sen. Mike Lee: It's time for Congress to bring accountability to intelligence community's surveillance power

By Sen. Mike Lee

The FBI improperly spied on the Trump campaign in 2016. We must ensure the bureau can’t do it in 2020 or ever again. Because if the FBI can unfairly target a presidential campaign, imagine what it can do to regular Americans.

Here’s how we know what happened. In December, Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz released a 478-page report detailing over a dozen “serious performance failures” in the FBI's use of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to intercept the communications of President Trump’s campaign supporters. Horowitz identified “at least 17 significant errors or omissions” in the applications to spy on Trump campaign official, Carter Page.

We cannot let Congress forget. We must remember the FBI’s failure to respect Americans' right to privacy. More importantly, we must fix the problems with the FISA program so that these violations of United States citizens’ civil liberties never happen again.

Our Founding Fathers knew well the danger of a government with the power to snoop through the private communications of law-abiding Americans. They included the Fourth Amendment in the Bill of Rights to limit the government’s ability to spy on its citizens. They required law enforcement to go to court and show probable cause for why a specific person or place should be searched or seized.

Unfortunately, the federal government often justifies violations of privacy by claiming they need to protect us from foreign espionage and interference. While the threat of foreign espionage is very real, abuse of government’s surveillance powers is all too common.

As former White House Counsel Emmet T. Flood wrote to Attorney General William Barr nearly a year ago: “It would be well to remember that what can be done to a president can be done to any of us.” If the FBI can unfairly target a presidential campaign, imagine what they can do to regular Americans. This isn’t just a hypothetical — we’ve seen it happen.

In 1976, the Church Committee released a report showing that the FBI maintained files on one million Americans between 1960 and 1974, including public figures like Martin Luther King Jr. and Muhammad Ali. The report concluded that presidents from both political parties had “permitted, and sometimes encouraged, government agencies to handle essentially political intelligence.”

Congress responded to these systematic violations of the Fourth Amendment by passing the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in 1978. This law created a parallel system for federal law enforcement to utilize when protecting Americans from foreign intelligence activities. Among other items, the FISA program allows government agencies to monitor American citizens’ activities on an easier standard than a domestic law enforcement agency if the federal government first shows that the citizen is working with a foreign power.

This balancing act only works if the government agents running the system are unbiased and competent enough to balance the tradeoffs. Unfortunately, Inspector General Horowitz’s report obliterated that premise.

According to Horowitz’s report, the FBI team that investigated the Trump campaign was “hand-picked” for “one of the most sensitive FBI investigations.” These agents were supposed to be the brightest and best, of the highest character and professionalism, committed to protecting all Americans’ civil liberties. Yet Inspector General Horowitz found widespread failures including an outright lie to the FISA Court (FISC.)

We are faced with two possibilities.

Either these FBI agents intentionally used the power of the federal government to wage a political war against a presidential candidate they despised, or these agents were so incompetent that they allowed a paid, foreign political operative to weaponize FISA to spy on a rival political campaign.

Neither conclusion is acceptable. FISA must be reformed now. We believe that serious reform is necessary and should include the following elements.

1) End the Call Detail Records Program. The intelligence agencies shut down the program due to over-collection and basically have admitted that it cannot work in its current form.

2) Increase oversight of FISA applications. Current law requires the FISC to appoint an independent party (amicus) to provide oversight of FISA application only when there it involves a novel or significant interpretation of law. The FISC should be mandated to appoint an amicus in all cases involving any “sensitive investigative matter” such as the activities of a candidate and their staff, elected officials, political organizations or religious organizations. The amicus should advocate for the privacy and civil liberties of the person targeted. This provision would ensure that what happened to Carter Page can never happen again.

3) Force agencies to be fully honest with the FISC. Government agencies submitting a FISA application should be required to provide all information in their possession as part of the application, including any exculpatory evidence.

4) Strengthen protections on First Amendment activities. Law enforcement agencies are currently not allowed to seek surveillance on Americans based “solely” on their First Amendment activities. This standard should be raised to “significantly.”

5) Require a showing of probable cause. It should show that a known U.S. person is an agent of a foreign power or has been or will soon be involved in an act of terrorism or in clandestine intelligence activities in violation of the law for Section 215 warrants.

“If men were angels, no government would be necessary,” James Madison wrote in Federalist 51. “In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.“

In 1788, long before the establishment of a secret court to authorize the electronic surveillance of Americans, Madison understood that the fallible nature of men, especially those in power, made it incumbent that the government control itself.

These FISA reforms will check the federal government’s surveillance power making it great again.

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