From American Oversight <[email protected]>
Subject News Roundup: Let the Records Show
Date April 29, 2022 2:54 PM
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** News Roundup: Let the Records Show
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* Questionable Trump Administration Pandemic Loan
* Scrapped Plan to Host the G7 Summit at Trump Resort
* Threats to Election Officials

[link removed]

Whether it’s text messages showing ([link removed]) the Trump White House’s courting of conspiracy theories and vote-overturning schemes after the 2020 election or audio recordings ([link removed]) that refute congressional leaders’ denials that they had called for accountability after Jan. 6, records are vital for telling the story that government officials won’t.

That’s why American Oversight is fighting so hard for the release of public records that can shed light on the ongoing efforts to cast doubt on U.S. democracy. This week came the news ([link removed]) that the partisan election investigation in Wisconsin — which had been set to end Saturday — will go on for yet more weeks.
* Details of the extension, including whether ([link removed]) it will require more taxpayer funding, have yet to be revealed, but we’ll continue fighting for the release — and preservation ([link removed]) — of related public records.
* Assembly Speaker Robin Vos’ announcement of Gableman’s investigation extension came after former President Trump threatened to support a primary challenge ([link removed]) to Vos, an echo of the pressure he had exerted before Vos announced the investigation last June.


In another court win in one of our lawsuits this week, an Arizona judge ruled that ([link removed]) former Cyber Ninjas CEO Doug Logan and his wife were personally responsible for records from the discredited “audit” of Maricopa County’s 2020 election — records that multiple times have been ruled public.
* “[Logan] needs to turn over everything,” Judge Michael Kemp said, as quoted in the Arizona Republic ([link removed]) . “The issue of public records has been clearly resolved. These are public records. There is no more dispute over that. That is the law of the case. Period.”


New information has also emerged this week about the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and about the plots by Trump allies in the weeks after the 2020 election to overturn the former president’s loss. Evidence filed in court late last week by the House select committee investigating Jan. 6 reveals more information about the lawmakers who assisted in those plots.
* Politico reported ([link removed]) that members of Congress “traded theories about ways to push then-Vice President Mike Pence to single-handedly stop Biden’s election, they parried with the White House Counsel’s Office on the boundaries of the law regarding presidential electors and they met directly with Pence’s staff to encourage him to take direct action on Jan. 6, when Congress convened to count electoral votes.”


The select committee said on Thursday that it would hold eight hearings in June ([link removed]) that Rep. Bennie Thompson, the committee chair, told reporters “will tell the story about what happened.”
* The committee is also focusing ([link removed]) on discussions among Trump allies after the election about using emergency powers like the Insurrection Act or the declaration of martial law to thwart the transfer of power.
* Former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani is expected to appear ([link removed]) before the committee next month. The panel has also spoken with multiple staffers ([link removed]) from the Republican National Committee regarding the party’s fundraising in the weeks after the election.


Local election officials face an increasing number of threats, and even increased penalties ([link removed]) for technical infractions, thanks to new laws enacted in support of baseless voter-fraud allegations. And as the Big Lie’s influence continues to spread, Reuters has identified eight incidents ([link removed]) in which activists and partisan officials “have plotted to gain illegal access to balloting systems, undermining the security of elections they claim to protect.” Here are other related headlines:
* Lawsuit seeks to ban ballot-counting machines in Arizona (Capitol Media Services ([link removed]) )
* Building the ‘Big Lie’: Inside the creation of Trump’s stolen election myth (ProPublica ([link removed]) )
* Lawmakers to look at Supreme Court ethics changes after Ginni Thomas' election texts stirred debate (USA Today ([link removed]) )
* GOP concocts fake threat: voter fraud by undocumented immigrants (New York Times ([link removed]) )
* Meadows texts shine new light on Trump effort in Georgia (The Hill ([link removed]) )
* Rep. Andy Biggs said to push early for alternate electors, bypassing 2020 election results (Arizona Republic ([link removed]) )
* ‘Blurring of lines’: Private lawyer plays starring role in taxpayer-funded election probe (Wisconsin Watch ([link removed]) )


The Coronavirus Pandemic

New data from the CDC show that at the end of February, nearly 60 percent ([link removed]) of Americans — including three-quarters of children — had been infected with Covid-19, up from just one-third before the winter’s omicron surge. Officials and public health experts warn that this does not indicate immunity from the virus, as the likelihood of reinfection is unclear ([link removed]) .
* While Anthony Fauci said that the U.S. is moving from ([link removed]) a “full-blown” pandemic into a “transitional” and “more controlled phase,” he later clarified ([link removed]) that “by no means does that mean the pandemic is over.”
* A Washington Post analysis ([link removed]) found that unvaccinated people are no longer the overwhelming majority of Covid deaths, with the virus taking a growing toll on elderly people, especially those without boosters.


Case counts continued to increase ([link removed]) over the past week. Hospitalizations are at a daily average of about 15,000, having increased in a few states. Deaths are decreasing and at a daily average of about 350.
* Moderna is asking the FDA to authorize its vaccine for children under 6 ([link removed]) .
* Vice President Kamala Harris tested positive ([link removed]) on Tuesday. Her office announced that she would be taking the Pfizer antiviral pill Paxlovid ([link removed]) .
* More than 2,000 people are expected to gather at this weekend’s White House Correspondents’ Association dinner ([link removed]) . As of Friday morning, President Biden was expected to attend part of the event but skip the dinner.
* Deborah Birx, the former White House coronavirus response coordinator, said that Trump’s April 2020 suggestion of injecting disinfectants to combat the virus was a “tragedy on many levels.” Birx, who has faced criticism for not doing more to push back against Trump’s misinformation, is promoting a new book about her time in the administration.
* The Post reported ([link removed]) on Friday that Trump White House officials in May 2020 overrode public health officials’ advice that churches hold virtual religious services.


Lack of government funding has led health care providers to end or scale back treatment ([link removed]) for uninsured individuals, threatening to widen disparities for low-income people. Black and Hispanic individuals are the least likely to have insurance.
* Unionized nursing homes ([link removed]) saw lower infection rates among both workers and residents than their non-unionized counterparts.
* Philadelphia reversed its mask mandate ([link removed]) just days after reinstating it.
* An investigation ([link removed]) by WNYC and Gothamist raises concerns about the efficacy of air purifiers that New York City public school officials purchased from a startup that began lobbying officials in 2020. The investigation found that schools that rely on open windows and portable air purifiers saw higher rates of Covid-19 among students and staff than those with stronger ventilation systems.

On the Records

Questionable Trump Administration Pandemic Loan
New documents released by Congress show that in 2020, Trump administration officials pushed through a $700 million pandemic loan ([link removed]) to defense contractor Yellow Corp (formerly YRC Worldwide) that was meant for companies “critical to maintaining national security.”
* According to House Democrats ([link removed]) , career Defense Department officials had decided not to certify the company as such, but Defense Secretary Mark Esper granted the certification anyway following a phone call with Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.
* The House pandemic subcommittee, which had been investigating the loans, previously cited documents obtained by American Oversight ([link removed]) that included communications between Trump officials discussing the announcement of the loan.


Scrapped Plan to Host the G7 Summit at Trump Resort
In the fall of 2019, Trump announced he would hold the 2020 G7 summit at ​​his Trump National Doral resort in Miami, Fla., a plan that was eventually scrapped. We obtained Secret Service communications ([link removed]) regarding the plan, including emails about site research and threat assessments.
* The records appear to indicate that the law firm Michael Best & Friedrich coordinated site research for the summit. Trump’s first chief of staff Reince Priebus had become president ([link removed]) of the firm after he left the White House in 2017. Learn more about these records on Twitter ([link removed]) .


Threats to Election Officials
In June 2021, the Justice Department announced ([link removed]) it was creating a task force to address the deluge of threats against election officials across the country. We obtained 27 pages of records ([link removed]) that shed light on incidents the task force has been investigating. Many of the reported incidents involve people demanding so-called “audits” of the 2020 election results.

Other Stories We're Following

National News
* Federal judge temporarily blocks Biden administration from ending Title 42 Covid border restrictions for migrants (CNN ([link removed]) )
* Donald Trump held in contempt for failing to provide business records (Washington Post ([link removed]) )
* Elon Musk and Twitter reach deal for sale (New York Times ([link removed]) )
* House panel to explore impeachment, judicial ethics in wake of Ginni Thomas texts (The Hill ([link removed]) )
* Climate activists sue USPS to block purchase of gas-guzzling trucks (Washington Post ([link removed]) )
* Massive wildfires helped fuel global forest losses in 2021 (Washington Post ([link removed]) )
* How it became normal for public officials to attack journalists (Washington Post ([link removed]) )


In the States
* Seven times Texas leaders misled the public about Operation Lone Star (ProPublica ([link removed]) )
* Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill creating election police force (CBS News ([link removed]) )
* Missouri lawmakers consider extending proposed ban on gender-affirming care to adults (The Hill ([link removed]) )
* DeSantis signs new congressional map into law as groups sue over redistricting (Politico ([link removed]) )
* Oklahoma legislature approves ban of abortions after six weeks of pregnancy (Washington Post ([link removed]) )
* Teachers in Southlake, Texas, asked to sign ‘non-disparagement’ agreements (NBC News ([link removed]) )

Donate to American Oversight ([link removed])
Thank you again for following our latest news. We are grateful for your support and for helping us hold government accountable.

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