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Voting, elections and state polls concept: Ballot box with state flag in the background - Louisiana. (Photo: AdobeStock)
Voting, elections and state polls concept: Ballot box with state flag in the background – Louisiana. (Photo: AdobeStock)

Democratic Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards eked out a 51.3% to 48.7% win against Republican Eddie Rispone on Saturday in the Louisiana runoff election. The race pitted a popular conservative Democratic incumbent against a Baton Rouge businessman backed by an even more popular president.

The early vote for the governor was not at all impressive. But two things gave him the added juice to put him over the top, albeit barely.

First, John Bel Edwards significantly underperformed against his 2015 vote shares in all but 7 parishes. But the “where” sometimes matters more than the “how many” in elections, particularly close elections.

In Orleans, he ran 3.27% ahead of his 2015 vote share and carried 89.8% of the vote. The governor spent the remaining days of the campaign focused on increasing turnout and shares in the parish, and it worked, no doubt assisted by the president’s geographic choices on where to hold rallies.

ParishTotal VotesEdwardsRisponeDEM ∆ vs. 2015
Acadia1974428.10%71.90%-14.56%
Allen624337.40%62.60%-17.53%
Ascension4073947.70%52.30%-4.54%
Assumption867252.80%47.20%-11.12%
Avoyelles1346944.60%55.40%-19.32%
Beauregard1151627.70%72.30%-16.52%
Bienville552351.70%48.30%-7.27%
Bossier3635533.80%66.20%-3.57%
Caddo7663358.30%41.70%-3.34%
Calcasieu5597248.10%51.90%-10.46%
Caldwell353025.10%74.90%-13.48%
Cameron252524.70%75.30%-24.44%
Catahoula432834.40%65.60%-10.06%
Claiborne564647.10%52.90%-6.66%
Concordia666045.50%54.50%-8.01%
De Soto1058045.60%54.40%-8.22%
East Baton Rouge15744166.10%33.90%-1.50%
East Carroll270469.70%30.30%3.17%
East Feliciana834156.70%43.30%-9.84%
Evangeline1226638.70%61.30%-18.19%
Franklin758736.60%63.40%-6.73%
Grant637625.50%74.50%-11.96%
Iberia2400938.40%61.60%-9.53%
Iberville1312467.00%33.00%-5.81%
Jackson565437.00%63.00%-10.47%
Jefferson12672857.00%43.00%6.36%
Jefferson Davis983435.50%64.50%-18.96%
Lasalle595317.70%82.30%-11.65%
Lafayette7817740.30%59.70%-6.86%
Lafourche2975535.80%64.20%-8.55%
Lincoln1326448.80%51.20%-4.31%
Livingston3980729.60%70.40%-10.12%
Madison398965.00%35.00%-1.96%
Morehouse850451.40%48.60%-4.60%
Natchitoches1234351.40%48.60%-7.01%
Orleans12785389.80%10.20%3.27%
Ouachita5052545.50%54.50%-3.66%
Plaquemines723047.40%52.60%-1.82%
Pointe Coupee997457.50%42.50%-12.52%
Rapides4344643.40%56.60%-9.02%
Red River358750.90%49.10%-5.50%
Richland742643.10%56.90%-6.55%
Sabine788521.20%78.80%-10.16%
St. Bernard1028554.30%45.70%-1.28%
St. Charles1852550.70%49.30%0.10%
St. Helena527272.10%27.90%-8.77%
St. James975367.20%32.80%-2.71%
St. John The Baptist1533674.10%25.90%3.00%
St. Landry3026651.70%48.30%-11.67%
St. Martin2009038.70%61.30%-14.92%
St. Mary1630444.50%55.50%-6.50%
St. Tammany9063040.10%59.90%0.77%
Tangipahoa3903352.70%47.30%-7.65%
Tensas208562.40%37.60%-1.04%
Terrebonne3032636.40%63.60%-5.53%
Union781831.50%68.50%-7.34%
Vermilion1881725.10%74.90%-15.15%
Vernon1104423.50%76.50%-15.70%
Washington1289248.20%51.80%-6.63%
Webster1342842.20%57.80%-10.39%
West Baton Rouge1132457.40%42.60%-8.73%
West Carroll414626.20%73.80%-9.08%
West Feliciana491956.60%43.40%-10.51%
Winn438734.40%65.60%-7.66%

Second, the governor did better than expected on Election Day. The conservative social positions held by John Bel Edwards clearly helped him buck the vote trend in Southern Catholic Louisiana and, even to some extent, Northern Protestant Louisiana.

Worth noting, on the presidential level, Democratic candidates are nowhere near that socially conservative.

In Jefferson Parish, John Bel Edwards ran 6.36% ahead of his 2015 vote share and carried it 57% to 43% against Eddie Rispone. Donald Trump carried Jefferson against Hillary Clinton 55.3% to 40.7% and the president remains popular in that parish today.

Those are not results the president should take lightly when reviewing how his visits may have or may not have impacted the vote for his preferred candidates. The base-only strategy is not working everywhere.

Big Picture Takeaway

Corporate big media and their favorite pundits will want to make Saturday a narrative negative to Donald Trump and — to a lesser extent — Republicans in general moving into 2020. But as is often the case, it would be an overly simplistic angle.

In the first round of voting, Republican candidates won 68.1% and 66.2% of the statewide vote in the elections for Lieutenant Governor and Attorney General, respectively. In each race, Democrats carried only 4 parishes.

In gubernatorial elections, all politics really are local and candidates matter. That’s not to say there aren’t lessons for Donald Trump and Republicans to learn. But as the Decision Desk rightly noted, Saturday was about Louisiana, not Donald Trump.

Overall, nearly half of voters said Donald Trump was not a factor in their vote. Just under 60% of nonpartisans said he would not be a factor. 

According to their “non-exit exit poll” of the electorate, Donald Trump was above water by 16 points among gubernatorial voters, who by a 20-point margin say they’ll choose him over the Democrat in 2020.

Eddie Rispone is from Baton Rouge and yet neither he nor Donald Trump focused on what could’ve been a natural base of support. It was a lost opportunity to at least cut into the margins and pad against a lack of turnout in other favorable parishes.

History provided a warning beforehand. Democratic candidates typically run about 5 points stronger in runoff elections than in the first round jungle primary. It’s a direct result of increased African American turnout in Orleans and elsewhere.

John Bel Edwards was forced into a runoff by earning just under 47% of the vote a month prior. Tempting the trustworthiness of historic vote trends is always a foolish strategy and the margin was just too close to ignore.

As a result of taking a base-only strategy, Eddie Rispone didn’t earn the support of all voters who support Donald Trump. Even though the president wasn’t on the ballot, they both paid for it.

How and why Democratic Louisiana Governor John

Marie Yovanovitch, the former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine, left, and a graphic illustration of the U.S. State Department as seen on a mobile device in Kiev. (Photo: State Department/AdobeStock)
Marie Yovanovitch, the former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine, left, and a graphic illustration of the U.S. State Department as seen on a mobile device in Kiev. (Photo: State Department/AdobeStock)

Marie Yovanovitch, the former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, testified she was the victim of a “smear campaign” conducted by Rudy Giuliani and his allies in media. House Democrats used the testimony to argue Ms. Yovanovitch was removed because she was an anti-corruption champion.

While Democratic lawmakers on the House Intelligence Committee repeatedly echoed the allegation and treated it as fact, they were light on specific details to justify the allegation.

Generally speaking, the accusation was backed by not-so veiled references to reports published by John Solomon, which were published at The Hill and featured on Fox News, most frequently by Sean Hannity.

Lack of specificity in disputing unfavorable reports was a tactic frequently employed to support the false Russia Collusion narrative. Specifics are often left out because the central facts in those reports are true, not smears.

In a similar fashion, the “smear campaign” against Ms. Yovanovitch appears little more than a series of negative, but well-sourced reports. They’re not factually inaccurate “smears” but rather unflattering accounts of her behavior while serving in her former role.

Which reported allegations were “smears”? Here are the vaguely cited and referenced accusations, which ultimately are characterized as being part of the smear campaign.

Lobbying Ukraine to Drop Investigations

The so-called “smear campaign” alleged Ms. Yovanovitch lobbied Ukraine to drop investigations against the “Anti-Corruption Action Center”, an organization bankrolled and founded by billionaire leftist George Soros.

A letter from George Kent to the Prosecutor General’s Office in Ukraine, which was dated April 4, 2016, confirms they did. The letter couches a tie to financial assistance in terms of an anti-corruption agenda.

Put simply, “we gave you the money and don’t approve of who you’re investigating.”

Violating Geneva, Losing Favor in Ukraine

On March 5, 2019, Ms. Yovanovitch delivered remarks at the 5th Anniversary of the Ukraine Crisis Media Center’s Founding. The timing of the remarks is significant given it was only a few weeks before the presidential election.

In her speech, she called for the firing of a special ant-corruption prosecutor. It was reported that her remarks caused outrage among some in Ukraine and potentially violated the Geneva Convention.

“To ensure the integrity of anticorruption institutions, the Special Anticorruption Prosecutor must be replaced,” she said in the speech. “Nobody who has been recorded coaching suspects on how to avoid corruption charges can be trusted to prosecute those very same cases.”

Without prejudice to their privileges and immunities, it is the duty of all persons enjoying such privileges and immunities to respect the laws and regulations of the receiving State. They also have a duty not to interfere in the internal affairs of that State.

Chapter III. Privileges and Immunities, Diplomatic and Consular Relations, etc. Title 3. Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations. Article 41.1 Vienna 18 April 1961

Article 41.1 clearly states diplomats “have a duty not to interfere in the internal affairs” of a host state. Even if Ukrainians didn’t view Ms. Yovanovitch as an ally of Petro Poroshenko, it is easy to see how one could construe those remarks as interference.

Under Secretary David Hale was called to account for the remarks when he arrived in Kiev only a few days later. He defended Ms. Yovanovitch. But many in the host country had already begun to view her as an activist meddling in the internal affairs of their state.

Yuriy Lutsenko and the “Do Not Prosecute List”

Democratic members of the House Intelligence Committee specifically referenced the allegation that Ms. Yovanovitch delivered a “do not prosecute list” to former Ukrainian Prosecutor General Yuriy Lutsenko.

But that accusation didn’t originate from Mr. Giuliani. It was leveled by Mr. Lutsensko himself during an interview with Mr. Solomon for Hill.tv.

“Unfortunately, from the first meeting with the U.S. ambassador in Kiev, [Yovanovitch] gave me a list of people whom we should not prosecute,” he said. “My response of that is it is inadmissible. Nobody in this country, neither our president nor our parliament nor our ambassador, will stop me from prosecuting whether there is a crime.”

House Democrats repeatedly referred to the allegation as “debunked,” claimed Mr. Lutsensko was himself corrupt and had “recanted.” Their allies in Democrat-dominated corporate big media regurgitate both claims.

However, Larysa Sargan, the press secretary for Mr. Lutsensko, released a statement disputing only that there was a written list and cited “translation challenges” for the confusion. She did not dispute the central allegation, which is that Ms. Yovanovitch cited 13 names the Obama Administration did not want prosecuted.

The “list” largely consisted of former officials loyal to the Poroshenko government and Valeriya Hontareva, the corrupt former head of National Bank of Ukraine.

The New York Times also reported that Mr. Lutsensko didn’t “recant” but rather clarifying there was no physical “do not prosecute list” of names.

Smear or No Smear?

While it is certainly possible and, indeed likely, that Rudy Giuliani sourced or helped to source these reports, it doesn’t make them untrue. Nor does a series of unflattering reports about someone constitute a smear.

Was Marie Yovanovitch, the former U.S. ambassador

Barr Accuses the Left of Sabotage, Warns of Permanent Damage to Presidency, U.S. Constitution

Attorney General William Barr delivered a blistering rebuke of the “resistance” in an address at the Federalist Society’s 2019 National Lawyers Convention. The address, transcribed below, was delivered for the 19th Annual Barbara K. Olson Memorial Lecture.


Good Evening.  Thank you all for being here.  And thank you to Gene [Meyer] for your kind introduction.

It is an honor to be here this evening delivering the 19th Annual Barbara K. Olson Memorial Lecture.  I had the privilege of knowing Barbara and had deep affection for her.  I miss her brilliance and ebullient spirit.  It is a privilege for me to participate in this series, which honors her. 

The theme for this year’s Annual Convention is “Originalism,” which is a fitting choice — though, dare I say, a somewhat “unoriginal” one for the Federalist Society.  I say that because the Federalist Society has played an historic role in taking originalism “mainstream.”  While other organizations have contributed to the cause, the Federalist Society has been in the vanguard.

A watershed for the cause was the decision of the American people to send Ronald Reagan to the White House, accompanied by his close advisor Ed Meese and a cadre of others who were firmly committed to an originalist approach to the law.  I was honored to work with Ed in the Reagan White House and be there several weeks ago when President Trump presented him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.  As the President aptly noted, over the course of his career, Ed Meese has been among the Nation’s “most eloquent champions for following the Constitution as written.” 

I am also proud to serve as the Attorney General under President Trump, who has taken up that torch in his judicial appointments.  That is true of his two outstanding appointments to the Supreme Court, Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh; of the many superb court of appeals and district court judges he has appointed, many of whom are here this week; and of the many outstanding judicial nominees to come, many of whom are also here this week.

***********

I wanted to choose a topic for this afternoon’s lecture that had an originalist angle.  It will likely come as little surprise to this group that I have chosen to speak about the Constitution’s approach to executive power.

I deeply admire the American Presidency as a political and constitutional institution.  I believe it is, one of the great, and remarkable innovations in our Constitution, and has been one of the most successful features of the Constitution in protecting the liberties of the American people.  More than any other branch, it has fulfilled the expectations of the Framers. 

Unfortunately, over the past several decades, we have seen steady encroachment on Presidential authority by the other branches of government.  This process I think has substantially weakened the functioning of the Executive Branch, to the detriment of the Nation.  This evening, I would like to expand a bit on these themes.

I.

First, let me say a little about what the Framers had in mind in establishing an independent Executive in Article II of the Constitution.

The grammar school civics class version of our Revolution is that it was a rebellion against monarchial tyranny, and that, in framing our Constitution, one of the main preoccupations of the Founders was to keep the Executive weak.  This is misguided.  By the time of the Glorious Revolution of 1689, monarchical power was effectively neutered and had begun its steady decline.  Parliamentary power was well on its way to supremacy and was effectively in the driver’s seat.  By the time of the American Revolution, the patriots well understood that their prime antagonist was an overweening Parliament.  Indeed, British thinkers came to conceive of Parliament, rather than the people, as the seat of Sovereignty. 

During the Revolutionary era, American thinkers who considered inaugurating a republican form of government tended to think of the Executive component as essentially an errand boy of a Supreme legislative branch.  Often the Executive (sometimes constituted as a multi-member council) was conceived as a creature of the Legislature, dependent on and subservient to that body, whose sole function was carrying out the Legislative will.  Under the Articles of Confederation, for example, there was no Executive separate from Congress. 

Things changed by the Constitutional Convention of 1787.  To my mind, the real “miracle” in Philadelphia that summer was the creation of a strong Executive, independent of, and coequal with, the other two branches of government.

The consensus for a strong, independent Executive arose from the Framers’ experience in the Revolution and under the Articles of Confederation.  They had seen that the War had almost been lost and was a bumbling enterprise because of the lack of strong Executive leadership.  Under the Articles of Confederation, they had been mortified at the inability of the United States to protect itself against foreign impositions or to be taken seriously on the international stage.  They had also seen that, after the Revolution, too many States had adopted constitutions with weak Executives overly subordinate to the Legislatures.  Where this had been the case, state governments had proven incompetent and indeed tyrannical.

From these practical experiences, the Framers had come to appreciate that, to be successful, Republican government required the capacity to act with energy, consistency and decisiveness.  They had come to agree that those attributes could best be provided by making the Executive power independent of the divided counsels of the Legislative branch and vesting the Executive power in the hands of a solitary individual, regularly elected for a limited term by the Nation as a whole. As Jefferson put it, ‘[F]or the prompt, clear, and consistent action so necessary in an Executive, unity of person is necessary….”

While there may have been some differences among the Framers as to the precise scope of Executive power in particular areas, there was general agreement about its nature.  Just as the great separation-of-powers theorists– Polybius, Montesquieu, Locke – had, the Framers thought of Executive power as a distinct specie of power.  To be sure, Executive power includes the responsibility for carrying into effect the laws passed by the Legislature – that is, applying the general rules to a particular situation.  But the Framers understood that Executive power meant more than this.

It also entailed the power to handle essential sovereign functions – such as the conduct of foreign relations and the prosecution of war – which by their very nature cannot be directed by a pre-existing legal regime but rather demand speed, secrecy, unity of purpose, and prudent judgment to meet contingent circumstances.  They agreed that – due to the very nature of the activities involved, and the kind of decision-making they require – the Constitution generally vested authority over these spheres in the Executive.  For example, Jefferson, our first Secretary of State, described the conduct of foreign relations as “Executive altogether,” subject only to the explicit exceptions defined in the Constitution, such as the Senate’s power to ratify Treaties.

A related, and third aspect of Executive power is the power to address exigent circumstances that demand quick action to protect the well-being of the Nation but on which the law is either silent or inadequate – such as dealing with a plague or natural disaster.  This residual power to meet contingency is essentially the federative power discussed by Locke in his Second Treatise.

And, finally, there are the Executive’s powers of internal management.  These are the powers necessary for the President to superintend and control the Executive function, including the powers necessary to protect the independence of the Executive branch and the confidentiality of its internal deliberations.  Some of these powers are express in the Constitution, such as the Appointment power, and others are implicit, such as the Removal power.

One of the more amusing aspects of modern progressive polemic is their breathless attacks on the “unitary executive theory.”  They portray this as some new-fangled “theory” to justify Executive power of sweeping scope. In reality, the idea of the unitary executive does not go so much to the breadth of Presidential power.  Rather, the idea is that, whatever the Executive powers may be, they must be exercised under the President’s supervision.  This is not “new,” and it is not a “theory.”  It is a description of what the Framers unquestionably did in Article II of the Constitution.

After you decide to establish an Executive function independent of the Legislature, naturally the next question is, who will perform that function?  The Framers had two potential models. They could insinuate “checks and balances” into the Executive branch itself by conferring Executive power on multiple individuals (a council) thus dividing the power.  Alternatively, they could vest Executive power in a solitary individual.  The Framers quite explicitly chose the latter model because they believed that vesting Executive authority in one person would imbue the Presidency with precisely the attributes necessary for energetic government.  Even Jefferson – usually seen as less of a hawk than Hamilton on Executive power – was insistent that Executive power be placed in “single hands,” and he cited the America’s unitary Executive as a signal feature that distinguished America’s success from France’s failed republican experiment.

The implications of the Framers’ decision are obvious.  If Congress attempts to vest the power to execute the law in someone beyond the control of the President, it contravenes the Framers’ clear intent to vest that power in a single person, the President.  So much for this supposedly nefarious theory of the unitary executive.

II.

We all understand that the Framers expected that the three branches would be jostling and jousting with each other, as each threatened to encroach on the prerogatives of the others.  They thought this was not only natural, but salutary, and they provisioned each branch with the wherewithal to fight and to defend itself in these interbranch struggles for power.

So let me turn now to how the Executive is presently faring in these interbranch battles.  I am concerned that the deck has become stacked against the Executive.  Since the mid-60s, there has been a steady grinding down of the Executive branch’s authority, that accelerated after Watergate.  More and more, the President’s ability to act in areas in which he has discretion has become smothered by the encroachments of the other branches. 

When these disputes arise, I think there are two aspects of contemporary thought that tend to operate to the disadvantage of the Executive. 

The first is the notion that politics in a free republic is all about the Legislative and Judicial branches protecting liberty by imposing restrictions on the Executive.  The premise is that the greatest danger of government becoming oppressive arises from the prospect of Executive excess.  So, there is a knee-jerk tendency to see the Legislative and Judicial branches as the good guys protecting society from a rapacious would-be autocrat.

This prejudice is wrong-headed and atavistic.  It comes out of the early English Whig view of politics and English constitutional experience, where political evolution was precisely that.  You started out with a King who holds all the cards; he holds all the power, including Legislative and Judicial.  Political evolution involved a process by which the Legislative power gradually, over hundreds of years, reigned in the King, and extracted and established its own powers, as well as those of the Judiciary.  A watershed in this evolution was, of course, the Glorious Revolution in 1689.

But by 1787, we had the exact opposite model in the United States.  The Founders greatly admired how the British constitution had given rise to the principles of a balanced government.  But they felt that the British constitution had achieved only an imperfect form of this model.  They saw themselves as framing a more perfect version of separation of powers and a balanced constitution.

Part of their more perfect construction was a new kind of Executive.  They created an office that was already the ideal Whig Executive.  It already had built into it the limitations that Whig doctrine aspired to.  It did not have the power to tax and spend; it was constrained by habeas corpus and by due process in enforcing the law against members of the body politic; it was elected for a limited term of office; and it was elected by the nation as whole.  That is a remarkable democratic institution – the only figure elected by the Nation as a whole.  With the creation of the American Presidency, the Whig’s obsessive focus on the dangers of monarchical rule lost relevance.

This fundamental shift in view was reflected in the Convention debates over the new frame of government.  Their concerns were very different from those that weighed on 17th century English Whigs.  It was not Executive power that was of so much concern to them; it was danger of the legislative branch, which they viewed as the most dangerous branch to liberty.  As Madison warned, the “legislative department is everywhere extending the sphere of its activity, and drawing all power into its impetuous vortex.”  And indeed, they viewed the Presidency as a check on the Legislative branch. 

The second contemporary way of thinking that operates against the Executive is a notion that the Constitution does not sharply allocate powers among the three branches, but rather that the branches, especially the political branches, “share” powers.  The idea at work here is that, because two branches both have a role to play in a particular area, we should see them as sharing power in that area and, it is not such a big deal if one branch expands its role within that sphere at the expense of the other.

This mushy thinking obscures what it means to say that powers are shared under the Constitution.  Constitution generally assigns broad powers to each of the branches in defined areas.  Thus, the Legislative power granted in the Constitution is granted to the Congress.  At the same time, the Constitution gives the Executive a specific power in the Legislative realm – the veto power. Thus, the Executive “shares” Legislative power only to the extent of the specific grant of veto power.  The Executive does not get to interfere with the broader Legislative power assigned to the Congress.

In recent years, both the Legislative and Judicial branches have been responsible for encroaching on the Presidency’s constitutional authority.  Let me first say something about the Legislature.

A.

As I have said, the Framers fully expected intense pulling and hauling between the Congress and the President.  Unfortunately, just in the past few years, we have seen these conflicts take on an entirely new character.

Immediately after President Trump won election, opponents inaugurated what they called “The Resistance,” and they rallied around an explicit strategy of using every tool and maneuver available to sabotage the functioning of his Administration.  Now, “resistance” is the language used to describe insurgency against rule imposed by an occupying military power.  It obviously connotes that the government is not legitimate.  This is a very dangerous – indeed incendiary – notion to import into the politics of a democratic republic.  What it means is that, instead of viewing themselves as the “loyal opposition,” as opposing parties have done in the past, they essentially see themselves as engaged in a war to cripple, by any means necessary, a duly elected government.  

A prime example of this is the Senate’s unprecedented abuse of the advice-and-consent process.  The Senate is free to exercise that power to reject unqualified nominees, but that power was never intended to allow the Senate to systematically oppose and draw out the approval process for every appointee so as to prevent the President from building a functional government.

Yet that is precisely what the Senate minority has done from his very first days in office.  As of September of this year, the Senate had been forced to invoke cloture on 236 Trump nominees — each of those representing its own massive consumption of legislative time meant only to delay an inevitable confirmation.   How many times was cloture invoked on nominees during President Obama’s first term?  17 times.  The Second President Bush’s first term?  Four times.  It is reasonable to wonder whether a future President will actually be able to form a functioning administration if his or her party does not hold the Senate. 

Congress has in recent years also largely abdicated its core function of legislating on the most pressing issues facing the national government.  They either decline to legislate on major questions or, if they do, punt the most difficult and critical issues by making broad delegations to a modern administrative state that they increasingly seek to insulate from Presidential control.  This phenomenon first arose in the wake of the Great Depression, as Congress created a number of so-called “independent agencies” and housed them, at least nominally, in the Executive Branch.  More recently, the Dodd-Frank Act’s creation of the Consumer Financial Protection Branch, a single-headed independent agency that functions like a junior varsity President for economic regulation, is just one of many examples.

Of course, Congress’s effective withdrawal from the business of legislating leaves it with a lot of time for other pursuits.  And the pursuit of choice, particularly for the opposition party, has been to drown the Executive Branch with “oversight” demands for testimony and documents.  I do not deny that Congress has some implied authority to conduct oversight as an incident to its Legislative Power.  But the sheer volume of what we see today – the pursuit of scores of parallel “investigations” through an avalanche of subpoenas – is plainly designed to incapacitate the Executive Branch, and indeed is touted as such.  

The costs of this constant harassment are real.  For example, we all understand that confidential communications and a private, internal deliberative process are essential for all of our branches of government to properly function.  Congress and the Judiciary know this well, as both have taken great pains to shield their own internal communications from public inspection.  There is no FOIA for Congress or the Courts.  Yet Congress has happily created a regime that allows the public to seek whatever documents it wants from the Executive Branch at the same time that individual congressional committees spend their days trying to publicize the Executive’s internal decisional process.  That process cannot function properly if it is public, nor is it productive to have our government devoting enormous resources to squabbling about what becomes public and when, rather than doing the work of the people.

In recent years, we have seen substantial encroachment by Congress in the area of executive privilege.  The Executive Branch and the Supreme Court have long recognized that the need for confidentiality in Executive Branch decision-making necessarily means that some communications must remain off limits to Congress and the public.   There was a time when Congress respected this important principle as well.  But today, Congress is increasingly quick to dismiss good-faith attempts to protect Executive Branch equities, labeling such efforts “obstruction of Congress” and holding Cabinet Secretaries in contempt.

One of the ironies of today is that those who oppose this President constantly accuse this Administration of “shredding” constitutional norms and waging a war on the rule of law.  When I ask my friends on the other side, what exactly are you referring to?  I get vacuous stares, followed by sputtering about the Travel Ban or some such thing.  While the President has certainly thrown out the traditional Beltway playbook, he was upfront about that beforehand, and the people voted for him.  What I am talking about today are fundamental constitutional precepts.  The fact is that this Administration’s policy initiatives and proposed rules, including the Travel Ban, have transgressed neither constitutional, nor traditional, norms, and have been amply supported by the law and patiently litigated through the Court system to vindication.

Indeed, measures undertaken by this Administration seem a bit tame when compared to some of the unprecedented steps taken by the Obama Administration’s aggressive exercises of Executive power – such as, under its DACA program, refusing to enforce broad swathes of immigration law.

The fact of the matter is that, in waging a scorched earth, no-holds-barred war of “Resistance” against this Administration, it is the Left that is engaged in the systematic shredding of norms and the undermining of the rule of law.  This highlights a basic disadvantage that conservatives have always had in contesting the political issues of the day.  It was adverted to by the old, curmudgeonly Federalist, Fisher Ames, in an essay during the early years of the Republic. 

In any age, the so-called progressives treat politics as their religion.  Their holy mission is to use the coercive power of the State to remake man and society in their own image, according to an abstract ideal of perfection.  Whatever means they use are therefore justified because, by definition, they are a virtuous people pursing a deific end.  They are willing to use any means necessary to gain momentary advantage in achieving their end, regardless of collateral consequences and the systemic implications.  They never ask whether the actions they take could be justified as a general rule of conduct, equally applicable to all sides. 

Conservatives, on the other hand, do not seek an earthly paradise.  We are interested in preserving over the long run the proper balance of freedom and order necessary for healthy development of natural civil society and individual human flourishing.  This means that we naturally test the propriety and wisdom of action under a “rule of law” standard.  The essence of this standard is to ask what the overall impact on society over the long run if the action we are taking, or principle we are applying, in a given circumstance was universalized – that is, would it be good for society over the long haul if this was done in all like circumstances?

For these reasons, conservatives tend to have more scruple over their political tactics and rarely feel that the ends justify the means.  And this is as it should be, but there is no getting around the fact that this puts conservatives at a disadvantage when facing progressive holy far, especially when doing so under the weight of a hyper-partisan media.

B.

Let me turn now to what I believe has been the prime source of the erosion of separation-of-power principles generally, and Executive Branch authority specifically.  I am speaking of the Judicial Branch. 

In recent years the Judiciary has been steadily encroaching on Executive responsibilities in a way that has substantially undercut the functioning of the Presidency.  The Courts have done this in essentially two ways:  First, the Judiciary has appointed itself the ultimate arbiter of separation of powers disputes between Congress and Executive, thus preempting the political process, which the Framers conceived as the primary check on interbranch rivalry.  Second, the Judiciary has usurped Presidential authority for itself, either (a) by, under the rubric of “review,” substituting its judgment for the Executive’s in areas committed to the President’s discretion, or (b) by assuming direct control over realms of decision-making that heretofore have been considered at the core of Presidential power.  

The Framers did not envision that the Courts would play the role of arbiter of turf disputes between the political branches.  As Madison explained in Federalist 51, “the great security against a gradual concentration of the several powers in the same department, consists in giving to those who administer each department the necessary constitutional means and personal motives to resist encroachments of the others.”  By giving each the Congress and the Presidency the tools to fend off the encroachments of the others, the Framers believed this would force compromise and political accommodation.

The “constitutional means” to “resist encroachment” that Madison described take various forms.  As Justice Scalia observed, the Constitution gives Congress and the President many “clubs with which to beat” each other.  Conspicuously absent from the list is running to the courts to resolve their disputes.

That omission makes sense.  When the Judiciary purports to pronounce a conclusive resolution to constitutional disputes between the other two branches, it does not act as a co-equal.  And, if the political branches believe the courts will resolve their constitutional disputes, they have no incentive to debate their differences through the democratic process — with input from and accountability to the people.  And they will not even try to make the hard choices needed to forge compromise.  The long experience of our country is that the political branches can work out their constitutional differences without resort to the courts. 

In any event, the prospect that courts can meaningfully resolve interbranch disputes about the meaning of the Constitution is mostly a false promise.  How is a court supposed to decide, for example, whether Congress’s power to collect information in pursuit of its legislative function overrides the President’s power to receive confidential advice in pursuit of his executive function?  Nothing in the Constitution provides a manageable standard for resolving such a question.  It is thus no surprise that the courts have produced amorphous, unpredictable balancing tests like the Court’s holding in Morrison v. Olson that Congress did not “disrupt the proper balance between the coordinate branches by preventing the Executive Branch from accomplishing its constitutionally assigned functions.”

Apart from their overzealous role in interbranch disputes, the courts have increasingly engaged directly in usurping Presidential decision-making authority for themselves.  One way courts have effectively done this is by expanding both the scope and the intensity of judicial review.

In recent years, we have lost sight of the fact that many critical decisions in life are not amenable to the model of judicial decision-making.  They cannot be reduced to tidy evidentiary standards and specific quantums of proof in an adversarial process.  They require what we used to call prudential judgment.  They are decisions that frequently have to be made promptly, on incomplete and uncertain information and necessarily involve weighing a wide range of competing risks and making predictions about the future.  Such decisions frequently call into play the “precautionary principle.”  This is the principle that when a decision maker is accountable for discharging a certain obligation – such as protecting the public’s safety – it is better, when assessing imperfect information, to be wrong and safe, than wrong and sorry.

It was once well recognized that such matters were largely unreviewable and that the courts should not be substituting their judgments for the prudential judgments reached by the accountable Executive officials.  This outlook now seems to have gone by the boards.  Courts are now willing, under the banner of judicial review, to substitute their judgment for the President’s on matters that only a few decades ago would have been unimaginable – such as matters involving national security or foreign affairs.

The Travel Ban case is a good example.  There the President made a decision under an explicit legislative grant of authority, as well has his Constitutional national security role, to temporarily suspend entry to aliens coming from a half dozen countries pending adoption of more effective vetting processes.  The common denominator of the initial countries selected was that they were unquestionable hubs of terrorism activity, which lacked functional central government’s and responsible law enforcement and intelligence services that could assist us in identifying security risks among their nationals seeking entry.  Despite the fact there were clearly justifiable security grounds for the measure, the district court in Hawaii and the Ninth Circuit blocked this public-safety measure for a year and half on the theory that the President’s motive for the order was religious bias against Muslims.  This was just the first of many immigration measures based on good and sufficient security grounds that the courts have second guessed since the beginning of the Trump Administration.

The Travel Ban case highlights an especially troubling aspect of the recent tendency to expand judicial review.  The Supreme Court has traditionally refused, across a wide variety of contexts, to inquire into the subjective motivation behind governmental action.  To take the classic example, if a police officer has probable cause to initiate a traffic stop, his subjective motivations are irrelevant.  And just last term, the Supreme Court appropriately shut the door to claims that otherwise-lawful redistricting can violate the Constitution if the legislators who drew the lines were actually motivated by political partisanship. 

What is true of police officers and gerrymanderers is equally true of the President and senior Executive officials.  With very few exceptions, neither the Constitution, nor the Administrative Procedure Act or any other relevant statute, calls for judicial review of executive motive.  They apply only to executive action.  Attempts by courts to act like amateur psychiatrists attempting to discern an Executive official’s “real motive” — often after ordering invasive discovery into the Executive Branch’s privileged decision-making process — have no more foundation in the law than a subpoena to a court to try to determine a judge’s real motive for issuing its decision.  And courts’ indulgence of such claims, even if they are ultimately rejected, represents a serious intrusion on the President’s constitutional prerogatives.

The impact of these judicial intrusions on Executive responsibility have been hugely magnified by another judicial innovation – the nationwide injunction.  First used in 1963, and sparely since then until recently, these court orders enjoin enforcement of a policy not just against the parties to a case, but against everyone.  Since President Trump took office, district courts have issued over 40 nationwide injunctions against the government.  By comparison, during President Obama’s first two years, district courts issued a total of two nationwide injunctions against the government.  Both were vacated by the Ninth Circuit. 

It is no exaggeration to say that virtually every major policy of the Trump Administration has been subjected to immediate freezing by the lower courts.  No other President has been subjected to such sustained efforts to debilitate his policy agenda. 

The legal flaws underlying nationwide injunctions are myriad.  Just to summarize briefly, nationwide injunctions have no foundation in courts’ Article III jurisdiction or traditional equitable powers; they radically inflate the role of district judges, allowing any one of more than 600 individuals to singlehandedly freeze a policy nationwide, a power that no single appellate judge or Justice can accomplish; they foreclose percolation and reasoned debate among lower courts, often requiring the Supreme Court to decide complex legal issues in an emergency posture with limited briefing; they enable transparent forum shopping, which saps public confidence in the integrity of the judiciary; and they displace the settled mechanisms for aggregate litigation of genuinely nationwide claims, such as Rule 23 class actions.

Of particular relevance to my topic tonight, nationwide injunctions also disrupt the political process.  There is no better example than the courts’ handling of the rescission of DACA.  As you recall, DACA was a discretionary policy of enforcement forbearance adopted by President Obama’s administration.  The Fifth Circuit concluded that the closely related DAPA policy (along with an expansion of DACA) was unlawful, and the Supreme Court affirmed that decision by an equally divided vote.  Given that DACA was discretionary — and that four Justices apparently thought a legally indistinguishable policy was unlawful —President Trump’s administration understandably decided to rescind DACA. 

Importantly, however, the President coupled that rescission with negotiations over legislation that would create a lawful and better alternative as part of a broader immigration compromise.  In the middle of those negotiations — indeed, on the same day the President invited cameras into the Cabinet Room to broadcast his negotiations with bipartisan leaders from both Houses of Congress — a district judge in the Northern District of California enjoined the rescission of DACA nationwide.  Unsurprisingly, the negotiations over immigration legislation collapsed after one side achieved its preferred outcome through judicial means.  A humanitarian crisis at the southern border ensued.  And just this week, the Supreme Court finally heard argument on the legality of the DACA rescission.  The Court will not likely decide the case until next summer, meaning that President Trump will have spent almost his entire first term enforcing President Obama’s signature immigration policy, even though that policy is discretionary and half the Supreme Court concluded that a legally indistinguishable policy was unlawful.  That is not how our democratic system is supposed to work. 

To my mind, the most blatant and consequential usurpation of Executive power in our history was played out during the Administration of President George W. Bush, when the Supreme Court, in a series of cases, set itself up as the ultimate arbiter and superintendent of military decisions inherent in prosecuting a military conflict – decisions that lie at the very core of the President’s discretion as Commander in Chief.

This usurpation climaxed with the Court’s 2008 decision in Boumediene.  There, the Supreme Court overturned hundreds of years of American, and earlier British, law and practice, which had always considered decisions as to whether to detain foreign combatants to be purely military judgments which civilian judges had no power to review.  For the first time, the Court ruled that foreign persons who had no connection with the United States other than being confronted by our military on the battlefield had “due process” rights and thus have the right to habeas corpus to obtain judicial review of whether the military has a sufficient evidentiary basis to hold them.

In essence, the Court has taken the rules that govern our domestic criminal justice process and carried them over and superimposed them on the Nation’s activities when it is engaged in armed conflict with foreign enemies.  This rides roughshod over a fundamental distinction that is integral to the Constitution and integral to the role played by the President in our system.

As the Preamble suggests, governments are established for two different security reasons – to secure domestic tranquility and to provide for defense against external dangers.  These are two very different realms of government action.

In a nutshell, under the Constitution, when the government is using its law enforcement powers domestically to discipline an errant member of the community for a violation of law, then protecting the liberty of the American people requires that we sharply curtail the government’s power so it does not itself threaten the liberties of the people.  Thus, the Constitution in this arena deliberately sacrifices efficiency; invests the accused with rights that that essentially create a level playing field between the collective interests of community and those of the individual; and dilutes the government’s power by dividing it and turning it on itself as a check, at each stage the Judiciary is expressly empowered to serve as a check and neutral arbiter.

None of these considerations are applicable when the government is defending the country against armed attacks from foreign enemies.  In this realm, the Constitution is concerned with one thing – preserving the freedom of our political community by destroying the external threat.  Here, the Constitution is not concerned with handicapping the government to preserve other values.  The Constitution does not confer “rights” on foreign enemies. Rather the Constitution is designed to maximize the government’s efficiency to achieve victory – even at the cost of “collateral damage” that would be unacceptable in the domestic realm. The idea that the judiciary acts as a neutral check on the political branches to protect foreign enemies from our government is insane.

The impact of Boumediene has been extremely consequential.  For the first time in American history our armed forces is incapable of taking prisoners.  We are now in a crazy position that, if we identify a terrorist enemy on the battlefield, such as ISIS, we can kill them with drone or any other weapon.  But if we capture them and want to hold them at Guantanamo or in the United States, the military is tied down in developing evidence for an adversarial process and must spend resources in interminable litigation.

The fact that our courts are now willing to invade and muck about in these core areas of Presidential responsibility illustrates how far the doctrine of Separation of Powers has been eroded.

III.

In this partisan age, we should take special care not to allow the passions of the moment to cause us to permanently disfigure the genius of our Constitutional structure. As we look back over the sweep of American history, it has been the American Presidency that has best fulfilled the vision of the Founders.  It has brought to our Republic a dynamism and effectiveness that other democracies have lacked.

At every critical juncture where the country has faced a great challenge –

          – whether it be in our earliest years as the weak, nascent country combating regional rebellions, and maneuvering for survival in a world of far stronger nations;

          – whether it be during our period of continental expansion, with the Louisiana Purchase, and the acquisition of Mexican territory;

          – whether it be the Civil War, the epic test of the Nation;

          – World War II and the struggle against Fascism;

          – the Cold War and the challenge of Communism;

          – the struggle against racial discrimination;

          – and most recently, the fight against Islamist Fascism and international terrorism.

One would have to say that it has been the Presidency that has stepped to the fore and provided the leadership, consistency, energy and perseverance that allowed us to surmount the challenge and brought us success.

In so many areas, it is critical to our Nation’s future that we restore and preserve in their full vigor our Founding principles.  Not the least of these is the Framers’ vision of a strong, independent Executive, chosen by the country as a whole.

Attorney General William Barr delivered a blistering

The U.S. Census Bureau reported U.S. retail sales for October came in at $526.5 billion, a 0.3% (±0.4%) monthly gain. Retail and food service sales are now 3.1% (±0.7%) year-over-year.

Total U.S. retail sales for the August through October were up 3.8% (±0.5%) from the same period a year ago. The month of September was unrevised at down 0.3% (±0.2%).

Retail trade sales also gained 0.3% (±0.4%) from September to October and 2.9% (±0.7%) from last year.

Nonstore retailers were up 14.3% (±1.4%) from October 2018, while gasoline stations were down 5.0% (±1.2%) from last year.

The U.S. Census Bureau reported U.S. retail

Initial jobless claims came in at a seasonally adjusted 225,000 for the week ending November 9, about 10,000 higher than forecasts expected. The 4-week average came in at 217,000.

Forecasts ranged from a low of 214,000 to a high of 215,000. The consensus forecast was 215,000.

Lagging Unemployment Claims Data

The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate remained unchanged at a very low 1.2% for the week ending November 2.

The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment came in at 1,683,000 for the week ending November 2, a decline of 10,000 from the previous week’s upwardly revised level (1,693,000). The 4-week moving average came in at 1,687,750, unchanged from the previous week’s revised 1,687,750.

No state was triggered “on” the Extended Benefits program during the week ending October 26.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending October 26 were in Alaska (2.1), Puerto Rico (2.0), New Jersey (1.8), California (1.6), Connecticut (1.5), Pennsylvania (1.5), West Virginia (1.5), the Virgin Islands (1.4), Illinois (1.3), Massachusetts (1.3), and Washington (1.3).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending November 2 were in Illinois (+2,398), Colorado (+1,263), Pennsylvania (+1,030), Wisconsin (+916), and Montana (+762), while the largest decreases were in California (-1,749), Virginia (-1,517), Georgia (-1,048), New Jersey (-440), and Oregon (-235).

Initial jobless claims came in at a

Uncertainty Declines, Though Historically High Ahead of Election

The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) Small Business Optimism Index gained 0.6 to 102.4 in October, slightly beating the consensus forecast. While the Uncertainty Index fell 4 points on fewer recession concerns, it remains historically high heading into an election year.

Forecasts ranged from a low of 100.5 to a high of 102.5. The consensus forecast was 102.0.

“A continued focus on a recession by policymakers, talking heads, and the media clearly caused some consternation among small businesses in previous months, but after shifting their focus to other topics, it’s become clear that owners are not experiencing the predicted turmoil,” said NFIB President and CEO Juanita D. Duggan.

“Small business owners are continuing to create jobs, raise wages, and grow their businesses, thanks to tax cuts and deregulation, and nothing is stopping them except for finding qualified workers.”

Fifty-nine percent (59%) reported capital outlays, a gain of 2 points from September. Of those making expenditures, 40% reported spending on new equipment (+2), 24% acquired vehicles (+1), and 18% improved or expanded facilities (+ 4).

Seven percent (70%) bought new buildings or land for expansion and 14% spent money for new fixtures and furniture, both unchanged.

The skills gap — or, “finding qualified labor” — continues to be the top concern and is helping to fuel higher compensation for workers.

“Labor shortages are impacting investment adversely – a new truck, or tractor, or crane is of no value if operators cannot be hired to operate them,” said NFIB Chief Economist William Dunkelberg. “The economy will likely remain steady at its current level of activity for the next 12 months as Congress will be focused on other matters, and an election cycle will limit action.”

“Any significant change in trade issues will impact financial markets more than the real economy during this period. Adjustments to a new set of ‘prices,’ such as tariffs, will take time.”

A net 30% of all firms reported higher worker compensation, an increase of 1 point to a historically high reading. Plans to raise compensation rose 4 points to a net 22%. Further, small business owners are still not passing on higher compensation costs to consumers. Only 10% reported higher selling prices.

“The economy is doing well given the labor constraints it faces. Unemployment is very low, incomes are rising, and inflation is low. That’s a good economy,” Dunkelberg concluded.

The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index gained

Flag waving at a Veterans Day parade. (Photo: AdobeStock)
Flag waving at a Veterans Day parade. (Photo: AdobeStock)

Veterans Day originated as “Armistice Day” on November 11, 1919, which marked the first anniversary of the end of World War I.

Of the 4.7 million who served — including 4.1 million in the U.S. Army and 600,000 in the U.S. Navy — the Defense Department official death toll for the period from 1 April 1, 1917 to December 31, 1918 stands at 116,516. The U.S. lost more soldiers and sailors to disease (63,114) than combat (53,402).

In 1926, the U.S. Congress passed a resolution establishing an annual observance, and November 11 became a national holiday beginning in 1938.

In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed legislation to change the name to Veterans Day as a way to honor those Americans who served in all wars, in all U.S. armed forces. The day honors military veterans with parades and speeches across the nation and a ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.

The following statistics are sourced by the U.S. Census Bureau.

Veteran Share of the U.S. Population

There are an estimated 17,964,242 veterans in the United States of America, representing 7.1% of the total population.

Veterans By Gender

Of those 17,964,242 in total, 1,652,798 are female veterans, or 9.2%. The remaining 90.8% totaling 16,311,444, are male.

Veterans By Era

Vietnam era veterans are the largest single bloc at 6,384,412, or 35.5%. World War II and Korean War veterans now only represent 2.7% and 7.3% of the total veteran population, respectively. There are 3,803,899 Gulf War (8/1990 to 8/2001) veterans, or 21.2%, and 3,764,194 Gulf War (9/2001 or later) veterans, or 21.0%.

Veterans By Race

There are 14,698,804 white veterans (81.8%), including 13,783,229 or 76.7% who are not Hispanic or Latino. White veterans represent a higher share of the total civilian population at 73.8%.

Hispanic or Latino veterans total 1,284,854, or 7.2% of the veteran population. That’s significantly less than the 16.2% share of the total civilian population.

Black veterans, totaling 2,150,689 or 12.0%, closely reflect the overall share of total civilian population at 12.3%. The 141,438 veterans who are American Indian and Alaska Native (alone) also mirror the share of the total civilian population at 0.8%.

While Asians represent 5.9% of the total civilian population, the 308,983 Asian veterans represent 1.7% of the total veteran population.

The total civilian population identified as two or more races is 2.4%, closely reflecting the 2.1% of the veteran population for that racial group.

Veterans By Age

At 4,752,276, veterans 65 to 74 years old represent the largest age bloc, at 26.5%. Veterans 75 years and over total 4,238,431 and represent 23.6%. The third largest are 35 to 54 years old, at 4,158,398 or 23.1%.

There are 3,183,388 veterans 55 to 64 years old, or 17.7%. Unsurprisingly, 18 to 34 years old represent 29.8% of the total civilian population, but only 9.1% of the veteran population.

Veterans Day originated as “Armistice Day” on

Mark S. Zaid, the lawyer for the “anonymous whistleblower” who sparked the impeachment inquiry in the U.S. House, bragged on Twitter about getting “clearances for guys who had child porn issues.”

The tweet, which remains undeleted and live as of this article being published, was first uncovered by Mike Cernovich. He called it a “shocking admission on Twitter about the nature of some members of the intelligence community.”

It was sent in response to a story published by Slate on former White House Staff Secretary Rob Porter, who was forced to resign amid allegations of domestic abuse.

As People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) previously reported, unrelated questions surrounding Mr. Zaid have been raised, as well. He tweeted only 10 days after Inauguration Day that the “#coup has started” and that “#impeachment will follow ultimately.”

In 2011, U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley, R-Ia., revealed thousands of intelligence community, defense department officials and contractors had been flagged for purchasing child pornography.

The revelation was the result of Project Flicker, a sting operation that started in 2006. But the results were “overlooked” and it was only years later that the findings were uncovered.

According to Senator Grassley, the report identified 5,200 defense department employees who had purchased child pornography and only 3,500 were cross-checked. The remaining 1,700 were not investigated and prosecutions have been scarce.

On July 7, 2011, Senator Grassley wrote a letter to then-Attorney General Eric Holder questioning the decision not to prosecute and delay disciplinary action. At least according to the public record, Mr. Holder took no additional action.

The rarely discussed issue of members of the intelligence community and other government employees viewing child pornography is less uncommon than most would like to believe. More concerning, few are ever investigated and even fewer are ever prosecuted.

In 2011, the Justice Department (DOJ) Inspector General found an Assistant U.S. Attorney was viewing child pornography and other adult content on his government computer. The U.S. Attorney’s office declined to prosecute the case.

On August 13, 2019, former Foreign Service Officer Steven Hadley Hassan, 52, of Frederick, Maryland, was sentenced to 40 years in federal prison, followed by lifetime supervised release, for sexually abusing minors to produce child pornography and transporting those images to the United States.

On October 19, 2018, Skydance MacMahon, 45, a Digital Media Administrator at the Foreign Services Institute of the U.S. Department of State in Arlington, Virginia, was sentenced for conspiring with an adult in Canada to produce over a thousand sexually explicit images and videos of minor children in Canada.

On October 4, 2019, Air Force Colonel Mark Visconi, 48, of Fairfax, Virginia, plead guilty to receiving and attempting to receive child pornography.

UPDATE: People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) reviewed webarchives from Mr. Zaid, including his professional website and a previously linked YouTube channel.

Mark S. Zaid, the lawyer for the

Suspected “Whistleblower” Tied to DNC Operative, Russia Collusion Narrative, Staffers for Adam Schiff

Editor’s Note: People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) has decided to print the name of the suspected whistleblower due to the public interest in knowing the identify and background of the individual central to an effort to remove a duly-elected President of the United States. This article will not be posted to social media due to deplatforming threats. If readers share it on social media, they risk violating unclear community guidelines and account removal.

Donald Trump over a graphic concept of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
Donald Trump over a graphic concept of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

The suspected “whistleblower” who sparked the impeachment inquiry has ties to the Democratic operative tasked with digging up dirt on Donald Trump in Ukraine during the 2016 election. Further, his tenure at the White House not only ended in controversy but also established ties to staffers for Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., the man leading the impeachment inquiry.

The identity of the so-called anonymous whistleblower has been a rare, and well-kept open secret in Washington, D.C., despite his name being known to major media outlets.

A Twitter account under @GregRubini first circulated the name and details of his political relationships on October 17. Paul Sperry revealed the name of the suspected whistleblower in an article published at RealClearInvestigations.

People’s Pundit Daily (PPD) has independently confirmed a number of details surrounding his work history, political and professional relationships.

Eric Ciaramella, 33, a registered Democrat and analyst at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), left the White House for Langley under a cloud of suspicion in mid-2017. He was accused of high-level leaks meant to politically damage President Trump.

Big media initially disputed those accusations, which originated from reporting by Mike Cernovich. Big media now argue the leaks — including those meant to advance demonstrably false claims — were justified.

According to a classified dossier circulating on Capitol Hill, the suspected whistleblower himself participated in the effort to advance the false “Russian Collusion” narrative. He played a central role in disseminating the “Putin fired Comey” narrative.

He leaked and filed at least one related complaint outside the chain of command.

The CIA officer specializes in Ukraine and Russia, and worked closely with the most vocal Trump critics from the Obama Administration. That includes former CIA director John Brennan, former national security advisor Susan Rice and former vice president Joe Biden.

He also has connections to Alexandra Chalupa, a Ukrainian-American political operative for the Democratic National Committee (DNC).

A lot more coming down the pipe. I spoke to a delegation of 68 investigative journalists from Ukraine last Wednesday at the Library of Congress – the Open World Society’s forum – they put me on the program to speak specifically about Paul Manafort and I invited Michael Isikoff whom I’ve been working with for the past few weeks and connected him to the Ukrainians. More offline tomorrow since there is a big Trump component you and Lauren need to be aware of that will hit in next few weeks and something I’m working on you should be aware of.

Email sent from Ali Chalupa to Luis Miranda, Communications Director Democratic National Committee, on Tuesday, May 03, 2016 11:56 PM Subject: Re: You saw this, right?

The Open World Society was founded by George Soros.

Ms. Chalupa, along with Mr. Brennan, are now in the crosshairs of U.S. Attorney John Durham. The U.S. Attorney from Connecticut is leading a criminal investigation into potential wrongdoings at the genesis of and during the Russia probe.

As PPD previously reported, Mr. Durham’s investigation has uncovered evidence of apparent criminal misconduct.

RealClearInvestigations reported documents confirm Ms. Chalupa attended at least one White House meeting with Mr. Ciaramella in November 2015. PPD confirmed Ms. Chalupa attended the meeting with a number of Ukrainian officials to lobby on behalf of the All-Ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizations.

The group wanted “the U.S. government to play a greater role in delivering aid to the millions in Ukraine in dire need of humanitarian assistance as the season’s freezing temperatures set in.”

Federal records show that Mr. Biden’s office invited Mr. Ciaramella to a state luncheon the vice president hosted for Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi in October 2016. Mr. Brennan, Mr. Comey and then-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper were also present.

All are central figures in the genesis of the failed effort to link members of the Trump Campaign to Russia. Mr. Durham and Attorney General William Barr recently traveled to Italy to investigate the nation’s role in spying on members of the Trump Campaign.

Rep. Schiff, the Chairman of the Intelligence Committee who falsely claimed to have evidence of “collusion” for nearly three years, came under fire in September for lying about his contact with and knowledge of the whistleblower. He has also been criticized for leading a largely secret, and overtly partisan impeachment inquiry.

The impeachment resolution passed by Democrats granted Chairman Schiff expansive powers in the inquiry. No transcripts will be released, no rebuttal witnesses are to be called and no minority subpoenas are to be issued without his permission.

The identity of the suspected whistleblower raises serious questions about his potential role in the crafting of the complaint that sparked the inquiry. The complaint surrounds a telephone conversation between President Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy from July 25, 2019.

The inquiry was announced before the president declassified and released the unredacted transcript of the conversation.

On August 28, Chairman Schiff tweeted a Politico article along with a claim that President Trump was “withholding vital military aid to Ukraine, while his personal lawyer seeks help from the Ukraine government to investigate his political opponent.”

It was a clear reference to Rudy Giuliani pursuing evidence of potential crimes by Mr. Biden, and clearly indicates he did in fact have prior knowledge.

Natasha Bertrand, who reported the story cited by Chairman Schiff, wrote about the president ensuring the funds were in U.S. interests. While she did attempt to tie it to reports the president advocated the G7 reinstate Russia, Ms. Bertrand did not mention Mr. Giuliani.

Shortly after the story broke in September, Chairman Schiff claimed to have no prior knowledge of the complaint.

“We have not spoken directly with the whistleblower,” he said on September 17. “We would like to.”

It was later revealed — and documents confirm– at least one member of his staff had spoken to the whistleblower before his complaint was submitted on August 12. Even the leftwing Washington Post fact-checker stated he “clearly made a statement that was false.”

Mr. Ciaramella worked closely with Mr. Biden while serving as Director for Baltic and Eastern European Affairs at the National Security Council (NSC) under Mr. Obama. He was promoted to Acting Senior Director for European and Russian Affairs at NSC by then-National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster.

Worth noting, the NSC under General McMaster was a constant source of leaking at the White House, leaks meant to politically damage President. Trump. He was removed amid a shakeup meant to move the Trump Administration back toward “principled realism” and economic nationalism.

In those roles, Mr. Ciaramella worked alongside at least two other holdovers from the Obama Administration, who just so happen to now work for Chairman Schiff.

Abigail Grace, 36, worked at the NSC from 2016 to 2018. Her purview was U.S.-China relations, a notable area given President Trump’s stance on trade. Ms. Grace went to work for Chairman Schiff on the House Intelligence Committee in February 2019.

She was specifically tasked with investigating the Trump Administration. In her role, she was privy to information still protected under executive privilege.

“Abby is obligated not to disclose privileged information,” a source told PPD. “It’s a conflict concern. She has not been given authorization to reveal anything to the committee.”

Sean Misko, 37, served as the Director for the Gulf States at the NSC from 2015 to the end of 2017, outlasting Mr. Ciaramella. Mr. Misko went to work for Chairman Schiff in August 2019, the very same month documents show the committee received the complaint.

He previously worked at the State Department under former deputy chief of staff Jake Sullivan, who later served as the top foreign policy advisor on the Clinton Campaign.

Sources who spoke with PPD accused Mr. Misko of leaking after contentious NSC meetings, at which his arguments and policy positions ultimately didn’t prevail. Put plainly, Mr. Misko leaked as political retribution when his foreign policies were not adopted.

They also accused him of unilaterally editing documents just before sending them to the national security advisor for his signature.

Ms. Grace and Mr. Misko were both close allies of General McMaster at the NSC. The McMaster wing of the NSC consistently argued for prolonged military involvement and unqualified foreign aid, while loyalists advocated for the tenets of principled realism.

In his first address to the United National General Assembly (UNGA) in September 2017, the president introduced “principled realism” as the Trump Doctrine. It demands allies pay their fair share of foreign aid, ties corruption to aid, and defined the U.S. as a nation reluctant but not unwilling to use its massive military power.

“The United States will forever be a great friend to the world and especially to its allies,” he said. “But we can no longer enter into a one-sided deal where the U.S. gets nothing in return.”

McMaster and his allies in the NSC were constantly at odds with the president’s loyalists over military intervention and foreign aid.

Initially, Chairman Schiff conceded the whistleblower must be called to testify before the committee, albeit in secret. But as more details have become public and the prospect of disclosure has grown, he has reversed his position and now argues his appearance and testimony aren’t necessary.

Mark S. Zaid, the attorney for the whistleblower, offered to have his client provide answers to written questions only, under oath. It was a bid to pacify Republicans while still ensuring his client’s identity and the details surrounding his political relationships, remained a secret.

Most recently, questions surrounding Mr. Zaid have been raised, as well. He tweeted only 10 days after Inauguration Day that the “#coup has started” and that “#impeachment will follow ultimately.”

Mr. Zaid was responding to the firing of then-Acting Attorney General Sally Yates, an Obama holdover who refused to enforce the president’s executive order implementing a travel ban. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the travel ban, ruling the action was “squarely within the scope of Presidential authority.”

in July 2017, Mr. Zaid tweeted, “I predict @CNN will play a key role in @realDonaldTrump not finishing out his full term as president.” That same month, he tweeted, “We will get rid of him, and this country is strong enough to survive even him and his supporters.”

The aforementioned tweets were posted shortly after then-Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein appointed Special Counsel Robert Mueller to investigate alleged ties between Russia and members of the Trump Campaign.

Recently obtained emails revealed Mr. Rosenstein and Mr. Mueller were secretly in contact with one another in the days before, during and after the latter met with President Trump. Mr. Mueller testified under oath on July 24 that he did not seek the position of FBI director during the meeting on May 16, 2017.

However, emails indicate Mr. Rosenstein appointed Mr. Mueller after the president refused to give him the job.

“I am with Mueller. He shares my view. Duty calls,” Mr. Rosenstein wrote to Mark Filip, an attorney at Kirkland & Ellis LLP on May 16, 2017. “Sometimes the moment chooses us.”

Ultimately, the special counsel investigation did not find evidence to support allegations of collusion, “despite multiple offers” now under scrutiny by Mr. Durham.

House Democrats initially intended to justify opening an impeachment proceeding on a charge of obstruction of justice. Volume II of the special counsel report — which was written by Andrew Weissmann as a roadmap to impeachment — cited 10 potential acts of obstruction.

But the effort soon collapsed after House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., and Mr. Mueller put on poor, politically disastrous performances during the public hearing.

Mr. Mueller initially stated no charging determination was made by his office on obstruction due to an opinion by the Office of Legal Counsel. It states no sitting president could be indicted.

However, Mr. Mueller told Attorney General Barr and Mr. Rosenstein the OLC opinion had no weight on the decision in a meeting on March 5, a statement corroborated by witnesses. Mr. Mueller was forced to walk back the claim, asking to “correct the record” at the start of a second hearing before the Intelligence Committee.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., found Chairman Nadler to be ineffective. Mr. Mueller, who appears to have perjured himself, was confused and repeatedly contradicted himself.

It prompted the speaker to break with historical precedent on impeachment. Public hearings held by Judiciary were replaced with the secrecy of the House Intelligence Committee. Mr. Mueller and collusion/obstruction were replaced with the whistleblower and Ukraine.

The effort to remove Donald Trump as President of the United States began in Ukraine, not Russia. That effort now has come full circle.

The suspected "whistleblower" who sparked impeachment worked

Labor Market Continues to Defy Expectations, Slowdown Predictions

Initial jobless claims fell 8,000 to a seasonally adjusted 211,000 for the week ending November 2, easily beating the consensus forecast. The 4-week average ticked only slightly higher by 250 to 215,250.

Forecasts ranged from a low of 215,000 to a high of 225,000. The consensus forecast was 215,000.

Lagging Data

The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate remained unchanged at a very low 1.2% for the week ending October 26.

The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending October 26 was 1,689,000, a decline of 3,000. The 4-week moving average was unchanged at 1,686,750.

Statewide Data

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending October 19 were in Alaska (2.0), Puerto Rico (2.0), New Jersey (1.8), California (1.6), Connecticut (1.5), Pennsylvania (1.5), the Virgin Islands (1.4), West Virginia (1.4), Illinois (1.3), and Washington (1.3).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending October 26 were in California (+1,890), Georgia (+1,824), Virginia (+1,669), Ohio (+1,106), and New York (+975), while the largest decreases were in Tennessee (-776), Michigan (-609), Oregon (-282), Kentucky (-216), and Nevada (-188).

Initial jobless claims fell 8,000 to a

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