July 24, 2020
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
Trump, Carson restore local control over zoning, end Obama-Biden war on suburbs—for now
President Donald Trump and Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
Secretary Ben Carson have finally ended the Obama-Biden era regulation
Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing from 2015 that conditioned receipt of $3
billion of annual community development block grants on rezoning neighborhoods
along racial and income guidelines. Now, under the new rule, called Preserving
Community and Neighborhood Choice, finalized on July 23, local control of
zoning has been restored. It states, "It must be local governments, not
HUD, that exercise control of administering local housing policies, including
zoning and development policies that are unique to a particular community.” This
is a victory for federalism, and restores local control over zoning — the way
it should be. So for now the battle is won, but longer term, the war to abolish
the suburbs will not end, especially if former Vice President Joe Biden gets
elected. If he wins, he’ll bring the regulation right back. From Biden’s
campaign website, “Biden will implement the Obama-Biden Administration’s
Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing Rule requiring communities receiving
certain federal funding to proactively examine housing patterns and identify
and address policies that have a discriminatory effect.” The question the
American people have to ask this year is if they want local responsibility to
govern their own communities — or want to abolish local government in favor of
faceless bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. to run your local town or city
council’s most important decisions.
Video: Will COVID-19 break the bank as debt jumps $3.3 trillion in 2020 and Congress considers phase four?
The national debt has skyrocketed $3.3 trillion, or 14.2 percent
in 2020, up to $26.5 trillion as Congress continues spending in response to the
COVID-19 state-led shutdowns, with phase four legislation still to come.
Don’t let liberal billionaires buy Arkansas
As they have in the past, liberal billionaires John and Laura
Arnold are once again scheming to throw their money around in other people’s
states and cities to produce the far left results that they want. For years,
the power couple has been on a mission “to change the country” and make things
happen “by whatever means necessary.” This time, their target is Arkansas, and
their goal is the passage of a state constitutional amendment to radically
transform the state’s primaries and voting system. Under current law, Arkansas
has open primaries; any registered Arkansas voter can vote in either party’s
primary. If no primary candidate receives a majority of the vote, then a runoff
primary election is held. In the general election, the candidate with the most
votes wins – as is the case in 48 other states. Under the Arnold’s scheme,
party primaries would end, and all candidates seeking a particular office would
run together in a “jungle primary.” Republicans, Democrats, and Independents
would all vote for the same pool of candidates. Out of this field, four
candidates would advance to the general election. In that election, voters
would rank the candidates according to their preference. If no candidate
secured a majority of the vote after the first-choice votes were counted, the
candidate with the lowest number of first-choice votes would be eliminated and
the votes for that candidate would be reallocated to the remaining candidates
based on the voters’ preferences. The vote-counting process would continue
until a candidate won a majority. The Arnolds’ jungle primary/ranked-choice
voting amendment is no minor tweak of the current system; it is an extreme, and
completely unnecessary, overhaul of state election laws.
Executive order on drug pricing would be disaster for future generations
Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning: “The
White House is considering an Executive Order on drug pricing which would be a
disaster for future generations. The
proposal being considered is known as IPI (International Price Index) and it
would tie U.S. drug prices to those paid in foreign, socialist countries. What the heck are they thinking? One of the
hallmarks of the Trump administration is to create an America First policy, and
now on drug pricing, the White House is considering tying the prices Americans
pay for medicines to foreign government dictates? Beyond the obvious
destruction of innovation by drug companies that will harm today’s seniors and
generations to come, one of the prime lessons from the Chinese-originated virus
crisis has been that America needs to bring the drug manufacturing sector home. Foreign fixed pricing incentivizes
pharmaceutical companies to skirt U.S. safety and cleanliness standards in
favor of cheap foreign manufacturing because if they are price controlled on
one end, they will need to cut costs on the other. Rather than decreasing our dependency on
foreign-made drugs, this will dramatically increase it. Just exactly the
opposite of what the President is hoping to accomplish with this critical
supply chain.”
Molie Hemingway: FBI notes refute NYT story, highlight media collusion in Russia hoax
“The FBI official who ran the investigation into whether the
Donald Trump campaign colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 presidential
election privately admitted in newly released notes that a major New York Times
article was riddled with lies, falsehoods, and “misleading and inaccurate”
information. The February 2017 story was penned by three reporters who would
win Pulitzers for their reporting on Trump’s supposed collusion with Russia. The
FBI’s public posture and leaks at the time supported the now-discredited
conspiracy theory that led to the formation of a special counsel probe to
investigate the Trump campaign and undermine his administration. ‘We have not
seen evidence of any individuals affiliated with the Trump team in contact with
[Russian Intelligence Officials]. . . . We are unaware of ANY Trump advisors
engaging in conversations with Russian intelligence officials,’ former FBI
counterespionage official Peter Strzok wrote of the Feb. 14, 2017 New York
Times story ‘Trump Campaign Aides Had Repeated Contacts With Russian
Intelligence.’ That story, which was based on the unsubstantiated claims of
four anonymous intelligence officials, was echoed by a similarly sourced CNN
story published a day later and headlined ‘Trump aides were in constant touch
with senior Russian officials during campaign.’”
Trump, Carson restore local control over zoning, end Obama-Biden war on suburbs—for now
By Robert Romano
President Donald Trump and Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Ben Carson have finally ended the Obama-Biden era regulation Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing from 2015 that conditioned receipt of $3 billion of annual community development block grants on rezoning neighborhoods along racial and income guidelines.
Now, under the new rule, called Preserving Community and Neighborhood Choice, finalized on July 23, local control of zoning has been restored. It states, "It must be local governments, not HUD, that exercise control of administering local housing policies, including zoning and development policies that are unique to a particular community.”
This is a victory for federalism and confirms local governments’ greatest responsibility to run its own communities — the way it should be. It also frees up municipalities from needless red tape when it comes to deciding where to build new affordable housing developments.
“After reviewing thousands of comments on the proposed changes to the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing (AFFH) regulation, we found it to be unworkable and ultimately a waste of time for localities to comply with, too often resulting in funds being steered away from communities that need them most,” said Secretary Carson in a statement outlining the changes.
Carson added, “Instead, the Trump Administration has established programs like Opportunity Zones that are driving billions of dollars of capital into underserved communities where affordable housing exists, but opportunity does not. Programs like this shift the burden away from communities so they are not forced to comply with complicated regulations that require hundreds of pages of reporting and instead allow communities to focus more of their time working with Opportunity Zone partners to revitalize their communities so upward mobility, improved housing, and home ownership is within reach for more people. Washington has no business dictating what is best to meet your local community’s unique needs.”
The 2015 Obama-Biden rule required adjusting local zoning in order to received federal funds: “This final rule, and Assessment Tools and guidance to be issued, will assist recipients of Federal funding to use that funding and, if necessary, adjust their land use and zoning laws in accordance with their existing legal obligation to affirmatively further fair housing.”
The old rule also required identifying disparities in ‘“access to public transportation, quality schools and jobs . . . [and] environmental health hazards” and “programs, policies, or funding mechanisms that affect disparities”.
But as the new Preserving Community and Neighborhood Choice regulation explains, this made the grant process all but impossible for municipalities to comply with: “The process for grantees was also overly burdensome and costly. The number of questions, the open-ended nature of many questions, and the lack of prioritization between questions made the planning process both inflexible and difficult to complete. Unsurprisingly, the rule required significant resources from grantees and its complexity and demands resulted in a high failure rate for jurisdictions to gain approval for their [Assessment of Fair Housing] in the first year of AFH submission. Grantees complained that it was extremely resource-intensive and complicated, placing a strain on limited budgets.”
Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning in a statement praised the Trump-Carson action and blasted the Obama-Biden predecessor, saying, “the Obama administration Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing regulation created an unfair presumption of discrimination based on zoning without any proof beyond Census maps. This was an absurd expansion of federal power and put the most important local government decisions in the hands of those with no stake in the outcome.”
The impact was to burden municipalities with regulation whose requirements were constantly shifting, since depending on changing economic circumstances, recessions or shifts in housing prices, the federal government could come back on an annual basis to demand further rezoning as a condition for receiving funds.
Which is why as soon as the Obama-Biden administration implemented the rule, Congress acted, first with the House of Representatives that adopted an amendment by U.S. Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) to defund implementation of the entire regulation.
Later, an amendment by Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) passed the Senate easily 87 to 9 in 2016 that barred the regulation from being used to affect local zoning.
The Collins amendment was ultimately included in the 2017 omnibus, the 2018 omnibus, the 2019 omnibus, and the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2020, stating: “None of the funds made available by this Act may be used by the Department of Housing and Urban Development to direct a grantee to undertake specific changes to existing zoning laws as part of carrying out the final rule entitled ‘Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing’ … or the notice entitled ‘Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing Assessment Tool’…”
Now, with the Trump-Carson action, the battle is won, but longer term, the war to abolish the suburbs will not end — especially if former Vice President Joe Biden gets elected. If he wins, he’ll bring the regulation right back. From Biden’s campaign website, “Biden will implement the Obama-Biden Administration’s Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing Rule requiring communities receiving certain federal funding to proactively examine housing patterns and identify and address policies that have a discriminatory effect.”
For this reason, Congress should leave the Collins amendment defund in place indefinitely.
Here, Biden is saying that local zoning is discriminatory in itself. He ignores that zoning does not tell people where to live. People can just move if they don’t like their neighborhood, such that you could rezone along income or racial guidelines, and find out five or ten years later that people shifted around and found new jobs in different towns, and so they moved. It’s overreach to believe that housing choices, especially the choice of where to live, can be dictated from on high in this manner.
Besides, under federal law, individual cases of housing discrimination have been prosecuted since the Fair Housing Act was adopted in 1968. None of that will change under the new rule.
The question the American people have to ask this year is if they want local responsibility to govern their own communities — or if they want want to abolish local government in favor of faceless bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. to run your local town or city council’s most important decisions. Here, Trump and Carson are saying that the American people and their local representatives will make better choices regarding housing and zoning than the federal government ever will or could.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government.
To view online: http://dailytorch.com/2020/07/trump-carson-restore-local-control-over-zoning-end-obama-biden-war-on-suburbs-for-now/
Video: Will COVID-19 break the bank as debt jumps $3.3 trillion in 2020 and Congress considers phase four?
To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ShWDMJ1Ty4I
Don’t let liberal billionaires buy Arkansas
By Rick Manning
As they have in the past, liberal billionaires John and Laura Arnold are once again scheming to throw their money around in other people’s states and cities to produce the far left results that they want. For years, the power couple has been on a mission “to change the country” and make things happen “by whatever means necessary.” This time, their target is Arkansas, and their goal is the passage of a state constitutional amendment to radically transform the state’s primaries and voting system.
Under current law, Arkansas has open primaries; any registered Arkansas voter can vote in either party’s primary. If no primary candidate receives a majority of the vote, then a runoff primary election is held. In the general election, the candidate with the most votes wins – as is the case in 48 other states.
Under the Arnold’s scheme, party primaries would end, and all candidates seeking a particular office would run together in a “jungle primary.” Republicans, Democrats, and Independents would all vote for the same pool of candidates. Out of this field, four candidates would advance to the general election. In that election, voters would rank the candidates according to their preference. If no candidate secured a majority of the vote after the first-choice votes were counted, the candidate with the lowest number of first-choice votes would be eliminated and the votes for that candidate would be reallocated to the remaining candidates based on the voters’ preferences. The vote-counting process would continue until a candidate won a majority.
So far, the Arnolds’ organization, Action Now Initiative, has dumped over $3 million into Arkansas, and these funds have been used to advance this effort as well as to change how Arkansas handles redistricting. In addition to the Arnolds, Hollywood celebrities support the jungle primary/ranked-choice amendment (through the organization Represent.Us).
This new electoral system would create a lot of work for voters to be able to cast an informed vote. With each major election, general election voters could literally have dozens of candidates to sift through: up to four Congressional candidates, up to four U.S. Senate candidates, up to four state representative candidates, up to four state senate candidates, up to four gubernatorial candidates, and up to 24 more candidates for the six other statewide offices. Billionaires, like the Arnolds, might have enough free time to vet dozens of candidates and rank them, but many average citizens do not.
Because some voters might not understand ranked-choice voting, they might continue to vote for their favorite candidate and not rank any of the others. If too many Republicans made this mistake, it could allow a Democrat to sneak into office. Conversely, even if a Republican won, it could be a very moderate one who simply managed to pick up the vast majority of Democrat votes.
If approved, the amendment would take effect next year and quickly require significant changes for local governments. For example, passage of the amendment would force county governments to buy new voting machines and completely overhaul their training for election officials. Unfortunately, these costs would be borne by state taxpayers and not by the out-of-state interests so determined to pass the amendment.
To be sure, it is unclear whether the ranked-choice amendment will make it to the ballot this year. First of all, the Secretary of State ruled that the petitions submitted in support of the amendment were insufficient. Secondly, the Board of Election Commissioners found the proposed ballot title for the amendment to be misleading and voted 5-1 against certifying it.
The current system of open party primaries followed by the general election is well-understood by voters and has worked just fine for Arkansas. There is no need to make a change to a new electoral system – especially not such a radical change as this is. It should be noted that no other state has a system such as the one described in this proposed amendment. So Arkansas would be the Arnolds’ guinea pig.
The Arnolds’ jungle primary/ranked-choice voting amendment is no minor tweak of the current system; it is an extreme, and completely unnecessary, overhaul of state election laws. This scheme is complicated and makes no sense – unless one is trying to confuse voters in hopes of electing liberals. If the measure makes it to the ballot, Arkansans should vote NO on the amendment and send the message to out-of-state billionaires and Hollywood celebrities that Arkansas cannot be bought.
Rick Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.
To view online: http://dailytorch.com/2020/07/dont-let-liberal-billionaires-buy-arkansas/
Order on drug pricing would be disaster for future generations
July 23, 2020, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government President Rick Manning today issued the following statement urging President Donald Trump not to issue an executive order on drug pricing for the International Price Index:
“The White House is considering an Executive Order on drug pricing which would be a disaster for future generations. The proposal being considered is known as IPI (International Price Index) and it would tie U.S. drug prices to those paid in foreign, socialist countries. What the heck are they thinking?
“One of the hallmarks of the Trump administration is to create an America First policy, and now on drug pricing, the White House is considering tying the prices Americans pay for medicines to foreign government dictates? Beyond the obvious destruction of innovation by drug companies that will harm today’s seniors and generations to come, one of the prime lessons from the Chinese-originated virus crisis has been that America needs to bring the drug manufacturing sector home. Foreign fixed pricing incentivizes pharmaceutical companies to skirt U.S. safety and cleanliness standards in favor of cheap foreign manufacturing because if they are price controlled on one end, they will need to cut costs on the other. Rather than decreasing our dependency on foreign-made drugs, this will dramatically increase it. Just exactly the opposite of what the President is hoping to accomplish with this critical supply chain.
“What’s more, if you ever wanted to create a pathway to socialized medicine then offshoring domestic drug prices to foreign governments will certainly take the market out of a major part of the health equation. When combined with the Democrats attempt to create one-sized fits all health care rates across the nation under the guise of ‘Surprise Medical Billing’ the impediments to a complete federal takeover of our nation’s health care system will have been paved.
“If the Trump administration wants to actually help flatten or lower prescription drug costs, they should engage in a full review of the Food and Drug Administration regulations which empower bureaucrats to impose millions of dollars of costs on prospective new drugs simply because they can. In 2014, Tufts University found that the average cost of bringing a new drug to market is $2.6 billion. With patent lengths of approximately twenty years, the long, drawn out FDA approval process eats up approximately twelve years from the laboratory to the pharmacy shelf, and once the patent life starts ticking, the drug developer is in a race against the clock to be able to recoup their costs and make a profit. While this is a little bit apples to oranges, a twenty year patent life and a twelve year timeline to get to market provide less than a decade for the drug inventor to make it worthwhile to have spent a lifetime developing a cure.
“To cut drug costs, the administration should mandate a comprehensive review of FDA approval requirements with a focus on those that drive the cost of bringing drugs to the market through the roof. Small, innovative drug manufacturers simply cannot compete when there is a regulatory-driven $2.6 billion cost to bring their cures and treatments to market. The answer to high drug prices is not found in foreign socialist government pricing models but instead in making the cost for new drug development dramatically so there will be more competition in the marketplace.”
To view online: https://getliberty.org/2020/07/order-on-drug-pricing-would-be-disaster-for-future-generations/
ALG Editor’s Note:
FBI notes refute NYT story, highlight media collusion in Russia hoax
By Mollie Hemingway
The FBI official who ran the investigation into whether the Donald Trump campaign colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 presidential election privately admitted in newly released notes that a major New York Times article was riddled with lies, falsehoods, and “misleading and inaccurate” information. The February 2017 story was penned by three reporters who would win Pulitzers for their reporting on Trump’s supposed collusion with Russia.
The FBI’s public posture and leaks at the time supported the now-discredited conspiracy theory that led to the formation of a special counsel probe to investigate the Trump campaign and undermine his administration.
“We have not seen evidence of any individuals affiliated with the Trump team in contact with [Russian Intelligence Officials]. . . . We are unaware of ANY Trump advisors engaging in conversations with Russian intelligence officials,” former FBI counterespionage official Peter Strzok wrote of the Feb. 14, 2017 New York Times story “Trump Campaign Aides Had Repeated Contacts With Russian Intelligence.” That story, which was based on the unsubstantiated claims of four anonymous intelligence officials, was echoed by a similarly sourced CNN story published a day later and headlined “Trump aides were in constant touch with senior Russian officials during campaign.”
Strzok’s notes are the latest factual debunking of these stories, which were previously shown to be false with the release of Robert Mueller’s special counsel report finding no evidence whatsoever in support of the Hillary Clinton campaign assertion that Trump affiliates colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 election. A report from the Department of Justice Office of Inspector General on just one aspect of the investigation into Russia collusion — FBI spying on Trump campaign affiliates — also debunked these news reports.
Former FBI Director James Comey admitted under oath in June 2017 that the reporting was “false,” something his deputy director Andrew McCabe privately acknowledged to the White House earlier that year but refused to admit publicly. Efforts by the White House to get the FBI to say publicly what they were admitting privately were leaked to the media in order to suggest the White House was obstructing their investigation. “Obstruction” of the Russia investigation would form a major part of the special counsel probe, and media and Democrat efforts to oust the president.
As for the merits of the explosive New York Times story alleging repeated contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials before the election, Strzok said it was “misleading and inaccurate… no evidence.” Of the unsubstantiated claim that former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort was on the phone calls with Russian intelligence officials, Strzok said, “We are unaware of any calls with any Russian govt official in which Manafort was a party.” And of the New York Times claim that Roger Stone was part of the FBI’s inquiry into Russian ties, Strzok said, “We have not investigated Roger Stone.”
The Times report, which came hours after National Security Advisor Michael Flynn was ousted due to criminal leaks against him, was one of the most important articles published by major media as part of their campaign to paint Trump as a Russian operative. Widely accepted by the media and political establishment, it did as much to cement the false and damaging Russia conspiracy theory as CNN’s story legitimizing the now-discredited Christopher Steele dossier or the Washington Post’s now-discredited suggestion that Flynn was a secret Russian operative who was guilty of violating an obscure 1799 law called the Logan Act.
The New York Times declined to retract or correct the article three years ago, even after Comey testified it was false, on the grounds that the anonymous sources who fed the false information remained pleased with the initial story.
The damage this false story caused the Trump administration can not be underestimated. It’s a story worth recounting here.
Leaks Real, News Fake
“The leaks are real, the news is fake,” President Donald Trump said on February 16, 2017, when ABC News’ Jonathan Karl asked him at a press conference to respond to The New York Times’ explosive report. As other reporters asked more questions related to the New York Times story, he went on to deride the media for writing negative and false stories based on anonymous sources.
The response was roundly mocked by a media class that asserted it was unimaginable that intelligence officials might be leaking anything but the most accurate information. CNN’s Jake Tapper, echoing other Democrat activists, called the press conference “unhinged.”
“I guess I don’t understand,” said CNN’s Jim Acosta, asking, “How can the stories be fake?” Numerous other reporters, presumably all college-educated, publicly claimed to wonder the same thing. The few reporters who were skeptical of the anonymously sourced reports on Russia were also mocked.
If someone associated with an intelligence agency had been granted anonymity to claim without evidence that Donald Trump — Donald Trump — had been a secret Russian agent for decades, or had for some reason paid prostitutes to urinate on a Moscow hotel bed President Obama once slept in, or had arranged clandestine meetings in Prague with top-level Kremlin operatives in a grand dirt-and-dollars-and-election-support scheme, it simply had to be true! Who was to say otherwise? Who was to demand evidence for the absurd conspiracy theory that had, it turned out, been manufactured as part of a Clinton campaign operation?
The response to Trump’s claim that the leaks from anonymous intelligence officials were producing fake news was one of many indicators that U.S. political media would be in no position to think critically or skeptically about whether they were being used by a politically motivated cabal of intelligence officials. The smarter ones might have known they were being used but simply determined they would be more than happy to play an important role in the operation.
Trump was right that the leaks were real but the news was false. Trump campaign aides did not have repeated contacts with Russian intelligence, contrary to what Michael S. Schmidt, Mark Mazzetti, and Matt Apuzzo breathlessly reported. Flynn was not a secret Russian agent. Neither was former Sen. Jeff Sessions.
Published At The Right Moment
The New York Times story was completely false, but the damage it caused the Trump administration was very real.
The false story was published mere hours after intelligence officials had successfully ousted Trump’s National Security Advisor Flynn following weeks of criminal and selectively edited leaks about his benign communications with the Russian ambassador to the United States. CNN “confirmed” the New York Times’ false reporting hours later.
The Wall Street Journal’s Shane Harris and Carol E. Lee reported based on anonymous sources two days later that the CIA was withholding important national information from Trump because of supposedly legitimate concerns over his ties to Russia. Then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo debunked that reporting immediately. The Washington Post openly talked about the “cloud of Russia” hanging over the Trump administration.
Still, the combination of stories and resulting hysteria was enough to lead Trump to hold a press conference in the East Room to address the growing Russia collusion narrative. It was there he described the “real” leak, “fake” news phenomenon he was dealing with.
As a reminder, Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee had secretly bought and paid for the conspiracy theory to be manufactured, disseminated in the press, and seeded to the U.S. government. It failed to take off as much as they hoped before the election — and yes, contrary to popular reporting, Clinton’s Russia operation was absolutely deployed before the election, and resurrected by the Clinton campaign in the hours after her stunning defeat.
Then corporate media, humiliated by their failure to accurately report on the 2016 campaign, latched onto the conspiracy theory as a way to explain away their failure. Obama intelligence officials worked to give credence to the theory by leaking about Russia’s long-standing efforts to meddle in U.S. elections and attempting to insinuate Trump’s collusion with same.
At the time the New York Times story ran, it was received credulously by nearly the entire political and media class and received no meaningful pushback from them. “BREAKING: Minutes ago, NY Times bombshell– Trump campaign officials in contact w/Russian intelligence for full year,” tweeted Michael Moore. “Flynn was the appetizer. This is the meal,” tweeted Washington Post columnist Brian Klaas.
“Yes, this is as bad as it looks,” the Democratic National Committee stated. “If not a smoking gun, this is a very hot pistol,” opined Paul Begala. “The trail linking Trump to Russian interference in the election is getting closer and closer,” wrote Robert Reich. “Way beyond Flynn!” wrote an excited Sen. Amy Klobuchar, asking for support for a bill investigating Trump.
“Big NYT scoop,” bragged New York Times editor Cliff Levy. Slate’s Ashley Feinberg said, “it is [expletive deleted] insane that trump is not being impeached.” Rolling Stone senior writer Jamil Smith said, “This story is a mother[expletive deleted]. We have crossed the Rubicon, folks.” “Whoa,” said Twitter enthusiast Bill Kristol.
“It’s all starting to unravel. This won’t be over soon and we must be relentlessly disciplined in how we discuss it,” said Russia hoaxer Susan Hennessey. “There are some important caveats in NYT story on Russia and Trump. But harder to see how Republicans resist probe,” lobbied Los Angeles Times White House reporter Chris Megerian.
“Holy moly,” said the Los Angeles Times’ Matt Pearce. “Oh wow,” wrote the Washington Post’s Abigail Hauslohner. “Boom,” wrote Der Spiegel’s Matthieu von Rohr. “Words just fail me,” said NPR’s Neela Banerjee. “Blockbuster story has been out 24 hrs & Trump has provided no explanation or refutation. Instead attacks leakers,” said Washington Post-enabled Max Boot. “Siren,” wrote Politico’s Blake Hounshell. “Can’t overstate the importance of a diligent, independent press that protects sources,” wrote Mallory Busch about the anonymously — and erroneously — sourced account.
“This is one of the biggest scandals in American history. Where will it end?” asked American Federation of Teachers union president Randi Weingarten. “Are there any constitutional redresses if the President of the US proves to be the Muscovian Candidate?” asked Foreign Policy senior correspondent Michael Hirsh.
The story was tweeted by Rachel Maddow, lead reporter Michael Schmidt, the New York Times’ Nate Cohn, Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, CNN’s Jake Tapper, Times reporter Jeremy Peters, AP bureau chief Michael Tackett, and rabid Democratic activist and CNN White House correspondent John Harwood,
Democrats
pounced. “The need for an independent commission to investigate grows more
urgent by the hour. Where is the GOP?,” lobbied Sen. Dick Durbin. “When is enough going to be enough for my
GOP colleagues to allow a vote on independent investigation of White House?”
asked Rep. Susan Davis. “It’s time for a full, in-depth, bipartisan
investigation into the Trump administrations ties to #Russia,” wrote Colorado Democrats. “We need full investigation into
connection between
@realDonaldTrump campaign & Russia. Too many unanswered questions,” was a
popular refrain from House Democrats such as Ann McLane Kuster.
The comments went on and on and on. Each time the story has been debunked, this received little to no coverage from the same corporate media that trumpeted it.
Fighting the False Story Was Treated As Obstruction
Television news the week The New York Times published it false report was non-stop Russia hysteria. It dominated the Sunday shows. When White House chief of staff Reince Priebus told CBS’ John Dickerson “I think that the media should stop with this unnamed source stuff,” The New York Times’ Maggie Haberman — who would also win a Pulitzer for her perpetuation of the false and dangerous Russia collusion hoax — claimed he was demanding that the media stop using anonymous sources.
When the New York Times story came out, FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe asked to speak privately with Priebus, according to reporting in Howard Kurtz’s book “Media Madness.” McCabe told Priebus that “everything” in the story was “bulls–t.” Priebus motioned to the bank of televisions showing that the media was taking it seriously and talking about it non-stop. He asked McCabe if he could say something publicly to push back. McCabe said he’d check with his colleagues and get back to him.
McCabe called back to say he couldn’t do anything. Comey also called Priebus to claim there was nothing they could say publicly. (McCabe admitted in his book “The Threat: How the FBI Protects America in the Age of Terror and Trump,” that he declined to say publicly that the report was false.)
What the FBI was willing to do, however, was leak to CNN that the “FBI refused White House request to knock down recent Trump-Russia stories.” That report made it seem like the reporting from The New York Times was legitimate and that the White House was obstructing a legitimate investigation, which, again, became a major theme of the Mueller investigation and attempts to impeach the president.
Comey did offer to brief congressmen and senators that the New York Times report was completely false. When those members said publicly that the New York Times report was false, that too was characterized as something nefarious.
“Trump administration sought to enlist intelligence officials, key lawmakers to counter Russia stories,” was how the Washington Post’s Greg Miller spun that effort. Miller noted that the FBI declined to comment on whether they had told the White House that the New York Times story was completely false. Miller would also win a Pulitzer for his role in perpetuating the Russia collusion hoax.
In his book, McCabe said there was a disinformation campaign in the conservative blogosphere to suggest he had animus toward the president and had gleefully pursued Flynn, both of which he claimed were false. Of the reports, he said, “The stories may be fictional and the information false, but the consequences of this strategy are real.”
Whether or not McCabe’s denials are plausible, how much more powerful is the strategy when it’s not unread blogs but the most powerful media outlets in the world that are willing to spread fictional and false information.
To view online: https://thefederalist.com/2020/07/23/new-fbi-notes-re-debunk-major-nyt-story-highlight-media-collusion-to-produce-russia-hoax/