Widget Image
Follow PPD Social Media
Thursday, February 6, 2025
HomeStandard Blog Whole Post (Page 397)

A Metropolitan police officer stands guard at the scene of a "terrorist incident" near the UK Parliament. (Photo: Reuters)

A Metropolitan police officer stands guard at the scene of a “terrorist incident” near the UK Parliament. (Photo: Reuters)

At least 3 people are dead, including a cop and the alleged assailant, and at least 40 people are injured following a terror attack near the UK Parliament. British Prime Minister Theresa May called the terror attack a “sick and depraved” action.

(UPDATE – READ MORE: Terrorist ID’ed as Khalid Masood, death toll and number of wounded revised down.)

(UPDATE – READ MORE: British Prime Minister Theresa May confirmed the man behind the terrorist attack at the UK Parliament was previously investigated for Islamic extremism.)

Acting Metropolitan Police Deputy Commissioner and Head of Counter Terrorism Mark Rowley said authorities believe the attacker was “inspired by international terrorism.”  The terror attack took place on the first anniversary of the attacks on Brussels in Belgium.

He said the 48-year-old police officer fatally wounded in his brave defense of the public was Keith Palmer.

“One of those who died was a police officer from our Parliamentary and Diplomatic Protection Command who had 15 years service,” Mr. Rowley said.

Police said a vehicle mowed down pedestrians on London’s Westminster Bridge, leaving more than a dozen with injuries described as catastrophic. Mr. Rowley said the car crashed near the UK Parliament, and one man armed with a knife went on the attack and tried to enter the government building where lawmakers were in session. The knife-wielding terrorist proceeded to stab the police officer and was shot on the grounds outside the UK Parliament.

“U.S. President Donald J. Trump spoke today with Prime Minister Theresa May of the United Kingdom to offer his condolences on today’s terror attack in London and his praise for the effective response of security forces and first responders,” the White House said in a statement. “He pledged the full cooperation and support of the United States Government in responding to the attack and bringing those responsible to justice,” the White House said in a statement.

Meanwhile, London Mayor Sadiq Khan created a political firestorm when he said prior to the tragedy terrorist attacks are “part and parcel” of living in a big city. He previously tweeted that President “Trump’s ignorant view of Islam could make both our countries less safe.”

London Mayor Trump Tweet

Donald J. Trump Jr. fired back on Twitter, posting an article from the Independent with his comments.

“You have to be kidding me?! Terror attacks are part of living in the big city, says London Mayor Sadiq Khan,” Trump Jr. said in his tweet.

Five people are dead, including a cop

George Soros, the Nazi sympathizer, collaborator and billionaire socialist. (Photo: AP)

George Soros, the Nazi sympathizer, collaborator and billionaire socialist. (Photo: AP)

I received a tweet the other day that was blocked, informing me that the material was “possible insensitive and offensive.” After clicking to unmask the tweet, the supposedly dangerous content read, “It’s no longer capitalist versus communist, It’s nationalist versus globalist.”

This was just one example of many where the Left-wing, “progressive” media apparatus is attempting to brand anyone opposed to their agenda as “In Putin’s pocket.” The latest broadside in this increasingly coordinated and aggressive campaign from our Marxist mainstream propaganda outlets was a piece this morning in Politico.

The article starts with this— As Lee and other senators put it in a March 14 letter to Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Soros’ Open Society Foundations are trying “to push a progressive agenda and invigorate the political left.” The piece goes on to basically say the entire thing is engineered by Russia and nationalist politicians like Lee, Trump, or Cruz are simply puppets for the Kremlin and doing Moscow’s bidding.

This narrative is dangerous if not confronted as nothing could be further from the truth. The facts are Soros has been pushing a Marxist, globalist agenda in Eastern Europe as well as here in these United States. American ambassadors, appointed by and doing Obama’s bidding, have overstepped their bounds, picking one side of the other in a sovereign nation. They have done this by cancelling visas of the opposition in once case in Albania. Of course, liberals always point to the ends justify the means for this type of improper behavior.

For Politico, the Soros agenda is all puppies and ice cream, open societies and all. They mention nothing about the destruction of Europe’s culture and security by the massive migration that Soros has championed. As terror attacks unfold in London, they willfully ignore the consequences of Soros’ actions. They also mention nothing about the thousands of deaths caused by the drug trade that Mr. Soros supports by pushing legalization. In fact, in Albania, where the Soros- and Obama-backed American ambassador sided with the leftist government, the regime has been accused of running the lucrative drug trade in-country.

Politico goes on to denigrate news outlets that don’t push their narrative, such as Fox and Alex Jones, using the words conspiracy, right-wing, and so on.

The fact is it is ok to be an American nationalist. It is ok to want secure borders. It is OK to want a State Department that doesn’t push a cultural Marxist agenda. It is OK to want to prevent your tax dollars from being used overseas to push the Leftist cause.

This doesn’t make you a Russian puppet. It doesn’t put you in Putin’s pocket, anymore than liberals who wanted government-run healthcare during Soviet times put them in Brezhnev’s pocket.

Yes, the end goal of getting Mr. Soros off the international stage my align with the Kremlin’s but that doesn’t make nationalist Americans traitors.

The simple fact is, the fight is now between globalists who want to destroy America as we knew her and those who want to fight for our national identity. That is not offensive or insensitive content. It is the truth.

Copyright © 2017 The Washington Times, LLC. Click here for reprint permission.

[social-media-buttons]

[mybooktable book=”lost-bastards” display=”summary” buybutton_shadowbox=”true”]

The left-wing, “progressive” globalist media apparatus is

Donald-Trump-vs-Barack-Obama

Billionaire real estate mogul Donald Trump, left, and President Barack Obama, right.

House intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif., confirmed “incidental collection” of intelligence on members of the Trump transition team under the Obama Administration. However, the intelligence community engaged in what is being characterized as legal surveillance operations.

“I recently confirmed on numerous occasions the intelligence community incidentally collected intelligence,” Chairman Nunes said, adding he was “alarmed” and didn’t understand “why people would need to know that about President-elect Trump and his transition team.”

He told House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., earlier Wednesday and going to tell the White House later in the afternoon.

“There’s a lot of questions that need to get asked,” White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said in response.

Chairman Nunes also said he was unsure if then President-elect Donald J. Trump was himself captured by the surveillance, which occurred in November, December and January. However, it produced “dozens” of intelligence reports that eventually unmasked the identities of “several individuals,” which were eventually widely disseminated.”

When asked if he thought President Trump was spied on, he said: “I’m not gonna get into legal definitions here, but clearly I have a concern.” He was also unsure if the surveillance occurred at Trump Tower.

The chairman’s announcement confirms weeks of reporting by People’s Pundit Daily, which indicated officials and lawmakers were playing word games denying the Obama Administration “wiretapped” Trump Tower.

Mr. Comey and Mr. Rogers, as anticipated, said during a hearing before the House Intelligence Committee this week that there’s no evidence to back up President Trump’s claim that Barack Obama wiretapped Trump Tower.

“I have no information that supports those tweets,” Mr. Comey said. “We are obsessive about FISA in the FBI.”

That’s technically true, as it relates to a “wiretap.”

“Incidental collection” refers to information learned during the course of another counter-intelligence operation, in this case being the transactions of a Russian bank in Trump Tower. What concerns some lawmakers and supporters is that it is also a way for surveillance to be conducted on an individual or individuals without obtaining the proper warrant.

As People’s Pundit Daily has also reported, the Justice Department has not yet approved a FBI request for additional tools to thoroughly probe the leaks of highly sensitive classified information. Congressional sources familiar with the briefings the FBI has already given to lawmakers say the Bureau has requested additional authorities to properly conduct a criminal probe, including the power to issue subpoenas and impanel grand juries.

However, as of Monday, the Bureau had not yet received that approval from the Justice Department, resulting in increased frustration among congressional and FBI investigators. According to sources, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity, the FBI has already put together a “comprehensive but limited” list of government officials who had access to the specific classified information that was leaked, including the content of the phone call between Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

Lt. Gen. Flynn was fired following what the White House called a “gradual erosion of trust” after he misled Vice President Mike Pence. President Trump has vowed to expose the identify of the leakers and bring them to justice, which is a process the FBI is attempting to commence. But they cannot launch an effective investigation until the DOJ approves their request.

[social-media-buttons]

House intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes, R-Calif.,

pending-home-sales-reuters

Existing and pending home sales reported by the National Association of Realtors. Photo: Reuters)

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) fell in February after starting the year at a decade-high pace, though it still remained above year ago levels. Total existing-home sales 1, which are completed transactions that include single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, retreated 3.7 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.48 million in February from 5.69 million in January. Despite last month’s decline, February’s sales pace is still 5.4 percent above a year ago.

“Realtors are reporting stronger foot traffic from a year ago, but low supply in the affordable price range continues to be the pest that’s pushing up price growth and pressuring the budgets of prospective buyers,” Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist said. “Newly listed properties are being snatched up quickly so far this year and leaving behind minimal choices for buyers trying to reach the market.”

The median existing-home price 2 for all housing types in February was $228,400, up 7.7% from February 2016 ($212,100). February’s price increase was the fastest since last January (8.1%) and marks the 60th consecutive month of year-over-year gains.

“A growing share of homeowners in NAR’s first quarter HOME survey said now is a good time to sell, but until an increase in listings actually occurs, home prices will continue to move hastily.”

Regional Breakdown

February existing-home sales in the Northeast slumped 13.8% to an annual rate of 690,000, but are still 1.5% above a year ago. The median price in the Northeast was $250,200, which is 4.1% above February 2016.

In the Midwest, existing-home sales fell 7.0% to an annual rate of 1.20 million in February, but are still 2.6% above a year ago. The median price in the Midwest was $171,700, up 6.1% from a year ago.

Existing-home sales in the South in February rose 1.3% to an annual rate of 2.34 million, and are now 5.9% above February 2016. The median price in the South was $205,300, up 9.6% from a year ago.

Existing-home sales in the West decreased 3.1% to an annual rate of 1.25 million in February, but are 9.6 percent above a year ago. The median price in the West was $339,900, up 9.6% from February 2016.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) fell

A Metropolitan police officer stands guard at the scene of a "terrorist incident" near the UK Parliament. (Photo: Reuters)

A Metropolitan police officer stands guard at the scene of a “terrorist incident” near the UK Parliament. (Photo: Reuters)

A policeman was stabbed, a suspected terrorist shot and several people injured on Wednesday during a “terrorist incident” near the UK Parliament. David Lidington, the leader of the House, said in the chamber that an assailant who stabbed a policeman had been shot by police.

UPDATE: A second person is confirmed dead and officials says they have opened a full counterterrorism investigation into the attack outside the UK Parliament.

“Officers – including firearms officers – remain on the scene and we are treating this as a terrorist incident until we know otherwise,” London’s Metropolitan Police said in a statement.

Though information is still murky, it appears the attack unfolded in several locations, including on the iconic Westminster bridge where visitors take pictures of Big Ben and other tourist attractions. Witnesses are reporting a car rampage, police say an attacker had a knife and at least one lawmaker said he heard gun shots.

British lawmaker Grant Shapps said on Twitter that he was walking through the cloisters of the House of Commons to vote when he heard four gunshots. Police told lawmakers to get down on the ground and crawl to cover.

The House of Commons, which was in session at the time, was immediately suspended and lawmakers were asked to stay inside.

The law enforcement source said officials believed there was a suspect vehicle outside the UK Parliament with a suspicious package inside, but People’s Pundit Daily could not immediately confirm that report. A junior doctor confirmed at least one women is dead.

The incident took place on the first anniversary of attacks on Brussels in Belgium.

Britain is on its second-highest alert level of “severe” meaning an attack by militants is considered highly likely.

U.S. President Donald J. Trump told reporters at the White House he has been briefed on the attack in London and the State Department is monitoring the situation very closely.

A policeman was stabbed, a suspected terrorist

Housing-Market-Real-Estate-Signs

Mortgage lenders and real estate agents flood the housing market. (Phone: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)

The FHFA seasonally adjusted monthly House Price Index (HPI) was flat in January, but showed house prices were up 5.6% year-over-year. The FHFA monthly HPI gauges home sales price information from mortgages sold to, or guaranteed by, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

This information is obtained by reviewing repeat mortgage transactions on single-family properties whose mortgages have been purchased or securitized by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac since January 1975.

For the nine census divisions, seasonally adjusted monthly price changes from December 2016 to January 2017 ranged from -2.0% in the East South Central division to +0.6 percent in the Pacific division. The 12-month changes were all positive, ranging from +3.5% in the East South Central division to +8.3% in the Mountain division.

[social-media-buttons]

The FHFA seasonally adjusted monthly House Price

Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney (L) listens to U.S. President Donald Trump speak during a ''strategic initiatives'' lunch at the White House in Washington, U.S., February 22, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney (L) listens to U.S. President Donald Trump speak during a ”strategic initiatives” lunch at the White House in Washington, U.S., February 22, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

The annual budget for our bloated and sclerotic federal government consumes about $4 trillion of America’s economic output, yet President Trump so far has not proposed to reduce that overall spending burden by even one penny.

A few programs are targeted for cuts, to be sure, but I explained last week, that “taxpayers won’t reap the benefits since those savings will be spent elsewhere, mostly for a bigger Pentagon budget.” More worrisome, I also pointed out that his budget proposal is “silent on the very important issues of tax reform and entitlement reform.”

All things considered, you would think that statists, special interest groups, and other denizens of the D.C. swamp would be happy with Trump’s timid budget.

Not exactly. There’s so much wailing and screaming about “savage” and “draconian” budget cuts, you would think the ghost of Ronald Reagan is haunting Washington.

Much of this whining is kabuki theater and political posturing as various beneficiaries (including the bureaucrats, lobbyists, contractors, and other insiders) make lots of noise as part of their never-ending campaigns to get ever-larger slices of the budget pie.

And nothing demonstrates the vapidity of this process more than the imbroglio over the Meals on Wheels program. Based on news reports, the immediate assumption is that Trump’s budget is going to starve needy seniors by ending delivery of meals.

Here’s how CNN characterized the proposal.

The preliminary outline for President Donald Trump’s 2018 budget could slash some funding for a program that provides meals for older, impoverished Americans.

“Slash”? That sounds ominous. Sounds like a cut of 40 percent, 50 percent, or 60 percent!

And a flack for Meals on Wheels added her two cents, painting a picture of doom and despair for hungry seniors.

…spokeswoman Jenny Bertolette said, “It is difficult to imagine a scenario in which they will not be significantly and negatively impacted if the President’s budget were enacted.”

Oh no, “significantly and negatively impacted” sounds brutal. How many tens of thousands of seniors will starve?

Only near the bottom of the story do we learn that this is all nonsense. All that Trump proposed, as part of his plan to shift some spending from the domestic budget to the defense budget, is to shut down a pork-riddled and scandal-plagued program at the Department of Housing Development. However, because a tiny fraction of community development block grants get used for Meals on Wheels, interest groups and leftist journalists decided to concoct a story about hungry old people.

In reality, the national office (appropriately) gets almost all its money from private donations and almost all the subsidies to the local branches are from a separate program.

About 3% of the budget for Meals on Wheels’ national office comes from government grants (84% comes from individual contributions and grants from corporations and foundations)… The Older Americans Act, as a function of the US Department of Health and Human Services, …covers 35% of the costs for the visits, safety checks and meals that the local agencies dole out to 2.4 million senior citizens, Bertolette said.

In other words, CNN engaged in what is now known as fake news, publishing a story designed to advance an agenda rather than to inform readers.

My colleague Walter Olson wrote a very apt summary for National Review.

The story that Trump’s budget would kill the Meals on Wheels program was too good to check. But it was false. …it wouldn’t have taken long for reporters to find and provide some needed context to the relationship between federal block grant programs, specifically Community Development Block Grants (CDBG), and the popular Meals on Wheels program. …From Thursday’s conversation in the press, it was easy to assume that block grant programs — CDBG and similar block grants for community services and social services — are the main source of federal funding for Meals on Wheels. Not so.

And if you want some accurate journalism, the editorial page of Investor’s Business Daily has a superb explanation.

What Trump’s budget does propose is cutting is the corruption-prone Community Development Block Grant program, run out of Housing and Urban Development. Some, but not all, state and local governments use a tiny portion of that grant money, at their own discretion, to “augment funding for Meals on Wheels,” according to the statement. …So what’s really going on? As Meals on Wheels America explained, some Community Development Block Grant money does end up going to some of the local Meals on Wheels programs. But it’s a small amount. HUD’s own website shows that just 1% of CDBG grant money goes to the broad category of “senior services.” And 0.17% goes to “food banks.” …All of this information was easily available to anyone reporting on this story, or anyone commenting on it, which would have prevented the false claims about the Meals on Wheels program from spreading in the first place. But why bother reporting facts when you can make up a story…?

The IBD editorial then shifted to what should be the real lesson from this make-believe controversy

…this fake budget-cutting story ended up revealing how programs like Meals on Wheels can survive without federal help. As soon as the story started to spread, donations began pouring into Meals on Wheels. In two days, the charity got more than $100,000 in donations — 50 times more than they’d normally receive. Clearly, individuals are ready, willing and eager to support this program once they perceive a need. Isn’t this how charity is supposed to work, with people donating their own time, money and resources to causes they feel are important, rather than sitting back and expecting the federal government to do it for them?

At the risk of being flippant, Libertarian Jesus would approve that message.

But to be more serious, IBD raises an important point that deserves some attention. Some Republicans think the appropriate response to CNN‘s demagoguery is to point out that Meals on Wheels gets the overwhelming share of its federal subsidies from the Older Americans Act rather than CDBG.

In reality, the correct lesson is that the federal government shouldn’t be subsidizing Meals on Wheels. Or any redistribution program that purports to help people on the state and local level.

There’s a constitutional argument against federal involvement. There’s a fiscal argument against federal involvement. There’s a diversity argument against federal involvement. And there’s a demographic argument against federal involvement.

But there’s also a common-sense argument against federal involvement. And that gives me an excuse to introduce my Third Theorem of Government. Simply stated, it’s a recipe for waste to launder money through Washington.

In Best Trump Budget Cuts, Part III,

IMF HQ

International Monetary Fund (IMF) headquarters. (Photo: Reuters)

I’ve looked at some of the grim fiscal implications of demographic changes the United States and Europe.

Now let’s look at what’s happening in Asia.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has a recent study that looks at shortfalls in government-run pension schemes and various policies that could address the long-run imbalances in the region. Here are the main points from the abstract.

Asian economies are aging fast, with significant implications for their pension system finances. While some countries already have high dependency ratios (Japan), others are expected to experience a sharp increase in the next couple of decades (China, Korea, Singapore). …This has…implications. …pension system deficits can increase very quickly, limiting room for policy action and hampering fiscal sustainability. …This paper explores how incorporating Automatic Adjustment Mechanisms (AAMs)—rules ensuring that certain characteristics of a pension system respond to demographic, macroeconomic and financial developments, in a predetermined fashion and without the need for additional intervention— can be part of pension reforms in Asia.

More succinctly, AAMs are built-in rules that automatically make changes to government pension systems based on various criteria.

Incidentally, we already have AAMs in the United States. Annual Social Security cost of living adjustments (COLAs) and increases in the wage base cap are examples of automatic changes that occur on a regular basis. And such policies exist in many other nations.

But those are AAMs that generally are designed to give more money to beneficiaries. The IMF study is talking about AAMs that are designed to deal with looming shortfalls caused by demographic changes. In other words, AAMs that result in seniors getting lower-than-promised benefits in the future. Here’s how the IMF study describes this development.

More recently, AAMs have come to the forefront to help address financial sustainability concerns of public pension systems. Social insurance pension systems are dominated by defined benefit schemes, pay-as-you-go financed, with liabilities explicitly underwritten by the government. …these systems, under their previous contribution and benefit rules, are unprepared for population aging and need to implement parametric reform or structural reforms in order to reduce the level or growth rate of their unfunded pension liabilities. …Automatic adjustments can theoretically make the reform process politically less painful and more likely to succeed.

Here’s a chart from the study that underscores the need for some sort of reform. It shows the age-dependency ratio on the left and the projected increase in the burden of pension spending on the right.

I’m surprised that the future burden of pension spending in Japan will only be slightly higher than it is today.

And I’m shocked by the awful long-run outlook in Mongolia (the bad numbers for China are New Zealand are also noteworthy, though not as surprising).

To address these grim numbers, the study considers various AAMs that might make government systems fiscally sustainable.

Especially automatic increases in the retirement age based on life expectancy.

One attractive option is to link statutory retirement ages—which seem relatively low in the region—to longevity or other sustainability indicators. This would at the very least help ameliorate the impact of life expectancy improvements in the finances of public pension systems. … While some countries have already raised the retirement age over time (Japan, Korea), pension systems in Asia do not yet feature automatic links between retirement age and life expectancy. …The case studies for Korea and China (section IV) suggest that automatic indexation of retirement age to life expectancy can indeed help reduce the pension system’s financial imbalances.

Here’s a table showing the AAMs that already exist.

Notice that the United States is on this list with an “ex-post trigger” based on “current deficits.”

This is because when the make-believe Trust Fund runs out of IOUs in the 2030s, there’s an automatic reduction in benefits. For what it’s worth, I fully expect future politicians to simply pass a law stating that promised benefits get paid regardless.

It’s also worth noting that Germany and Canada have “ex-ante triggers” for “contribution rates.” I’m assuming that means automatic tax hikes, which is a horrid idea. Heck, even the study acknowledges a problem with that approach.

…raising contribution rates can have important effects on the labor market and growth, it would be important to prioritize other adjustments.

From my perspective, the main – albeit unintended – lesson from the IMF study is that private retirement accounts are the best approach. These defined contribution (DC) systems avoid all the problems associated with pay-as-you-go, tax-and-transfer regimes, generally known as defined benefit (DB) systems.

The larger role played by defined contribution schemes in Asia reduce the scope for using AAMs for financial sustainability purposes. Many Asian economies (Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, Malaysia and Indonesia) have defined contribution systems, …under which system sustainability is typically inherent.

Here are the types of pension systems in Asia, with Australia and New Zealand added to the mix.

For what it’s worth, I would put Australia in the “defined contribution” grouping. Yes, there is still a government age pension that serves as a safety net, but there also are safety nets in Singapore and Hong Kong as well.

But I’m nitpicking.

Here’s another table from the study showing that it’s much simpler to deal with “DC” systems compared with “DB” systems. About the only reforms that are ever needed revolve around the question of how much private savings should be required.

By the way, even though the information in the IMF study shows the superiority of DC plans, that’s only an implicit message.

To the extent the bureaucracy has an explicit message, it’s mostly about indexing the retirement age to changes in life expectancy.

That’s probably better than doing nothing, but there’s an unaddressed problem with that approach. It forces people to spend more years working and paying into systems, and then leaves them fewer years to collect benefits in retirement.

That idea periodically gets floated in the United States. Here’s some of what I wrote in 2011.

Think of this as the pay-for-a-steak-and-get-a-hamburger plan. Social Security already is a bad deal for workers, forcing them to pay a lot of money in exchange for relatively meager retirement benefits.

I made a related observation about this approach back in 2012.

…it focuses on the government’s finances and overlooks the implications for households. It is possible, at least on paper, to “save” Social Security by cutting benefits and raising taxes. But such “reforms” force people to pay more and get less – even though Social Security already is a very bad deal, particularly for younger workers.

The bottom line is that the implicit message should be explicit. Other nations should copy jurisdictions such as Chile, Australia, and Hong Kong by shifting to personal retirement accounts.

A study by the International Monetary Fund

FBI Director James Comey testifies before the House intelligence Committee during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. on Monday, March 20, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

FBI Director James Comey testifies before the House intelligence Committee during a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. on Monday, March 20, 2017. (Photo: Reuters)

When pressed by Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., on whether the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is attempting to locate and prosecute officials who illegally leaked classified information to the media, Director James Comey refused to confirm or deny a Bureau investigation.

“I hope people watching know how seriously we take it,” he told Rep. Gowdy, who was less than impressed by his answers. “But I don’t want to confirm it by saying that we’re investigating it.”

In a series of pointed questions, the former prosecutor-turned-congressman elicited information from Director Comey that revealed former Obama Administration officials—including several at the White House—would have had authority to “unmask” former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn in information several news organizations published.

“I’m not gonna comment on those particular articles, because I don’t want to in any circumstance compound the criminal act by confirming that it was classified information,” Comey said. “But in general, yes, it’s a serious crime, and it should be.”

Multiple congressional and agency sources have confirmed to People’s Pundit Daily the Justice Department has not yet approved a FBI request for additional tools to thoroughly probe the leaks of highly sensitive classified information. Congressional sources familiar with the briefings the FBI has already given to lawmakers say the Bureau has requested additional authorities to properly conduct a criminal probe, including the power to issue subpoenas and impanel grand juries.

However, as of Monday, the Bureau had not yet received that approval from the Justice Department, resulting in increased frustration among congressional and FBI investigators. According to sources, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity, the FBI has already put together a “comprehensive but limited” list of government officials who had access to the specific classified information that was leaked, including the content of the phone call between Lt. Gen. Flynn and Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

Adm. Mike Rogers, the director of the National Security Agency, told members of the House Intelligence Committee that 20 people in his agency alone had the authority to “unmask” a U.S. citizen whose identity normally would be protected by law. Mr. Comey testified that the number at the FBI with that authority likely would be higher.

Lt. Gen. Flynn was fired following what the White House called a “gradual erosion of trust” after he misled Vice President Mike Pence. President Donald J. Trump has vowed to expose the identify of the leakers and bring them to justice, which is a process the FBI is attempting to commence. But they cannot launch an effective investigation until the DoJ approves their request.

According to sources, the apparent slow-walking of approval is being blamed on the president not yet filling posts for high-level political appointments. Because Democrats pushed for and got a recusal by Attorney General Jeff Sessions, the responsibility to approve the FBI’s request falls to Obama Administration holdovers, whom congressional sources note could very well be on the list.

“After eight months of investigating Russian meddling in our election, Director Comey has evidence of only one crime. The leaks,” a congressional source familiar with the requests told PPD. “And absent Attorney General Sessions, no one at the Justice Department seems to have any interest in doing their job.”

[social-media-buttons]

Multiple sources have confirmed the FBI asked

President Donald Trump 45 Graphic

President Donald Trump 45 Graphic

President Donald J. Trump’s approval remains solid and is highest among likely voters in states in the Midwest Rust Belt and South, the PPD Big Data Poll finds.

The PPD Poll, which conducted the most accurate polling in 2016, finds 50% of likely voters nationwide approve of the job President Trump is doing, while 43% disapprove. Support for the president has slipped nationally, but in key Midwest battlegrounds–including Ohio (58/39), Michigan (52/47) , Pennsylvania (51/48), and Iowa (59/39)–the president is above water and viewed more favorably juxtaposed to the nation as a whole.

Nationwide, 49% of voters view the president favorably–59% of whites, 12% of blacks, and 31% of Hispanics–while 45% view him unfavorably.

(See full demographics and historical favorability rating data)

Generally speaking, the South is the other region of the country where majorities of voters widely approve of the president’s job performance. In Florida, the nation’s largest battleground and President Trump’s second home state, 51% approve and 47% disapprove.

(See full demographics and historical approval rating data)

In Georgia, which is frequently characterized by the media as “the new” battleground, 56% approve and only 42% disapprove. Tracking for PPD Battleground State Likely Voter Profiles continues to show Democrats with a stubborn ceiling at roughly 46% in the Peach State.

The exception to the southern rule is the state of Virginia, the only battleground state tracked thus far where President Trump’s approval is underwater. Only 41% of likely voters approve of the president in the Old Dominion, while 45% disapprove. In fact, it’s looking more like the New Dominion every year. Virginia is the only battleground state where Democrats have expanded their advantage in partisan affiliation.

The PPD Big Data poll pegged President Trump’s victories on on the statewide level in all but two states within tens of percentage points, including Florida, North Carolina, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

The PPD Poll follows level 1 AAPOR standards of disclosure and WAPOR/ESOMAR code of conduct. The national poll was conducted from March 11 to March 18 and are based on 1422 interviews of likely voters participating in the PPD Internet Polling Panel. The PPD Battleground State Likely Voter Metrics are collected in separate state-wide samples.

The PPD Poll has a 95% confidence interval and is not weighted based on party affiliation (party ID), but rather demographics from the U.S. Census Current Population Survey–i.e. age, gender, race, income, education and region. The sample identified a partisan split of 34% Democrat, 33% Republican and 33% Independent/Other. Read about methodology here.

President Donald J. Trump's approval remains solid

People's Pundit Daily
You have %%pigeonMeterAvailable%% free %%pigeonCopyPage%% remaining this month. Get unlimited access and support reader-funded, independent data journalism.

Start a 14-day free trial now. Pay later!

Start Trial