10 Things in Politics: Trump faces a tsunami of legal peril
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Brent D. Griffiths
Feb 16, 2021, 20:22 IST
President Donald Trump addresses guests at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on January 20, 2021, his last day in office.Alex Edelman/AFP via Getty Images
1. FULL COURT PRESS: Former President Donald Trump survived impeachment by being out of office. But the same status could prove to be a future detriment. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and other GOP senators who voted to acquit Trump say the court system is the best suited to potentially charge Trump over the Capitol insurrection. Other prosecutors have pledged to investigate. This, combined with ongoing probes, could escalate into a legal tsunami.
Why is this happening now?: A longstanding Justice Department tradition calls for not prosecuting sitting presidents. Presidents can also argue they are too busy to cooperate with lawsuits. And finally, there are a number of ways to bend the bureaucracy in your favor, as Trump found out when the DOJ intervened in a defamation suit against him. All of these protections are now gone.
What might be on the docket?: The list ranges from before Trump even entered office to his final days trying to cling to power.
The investigations that left the headlines: Southern District of New York prosecutors named Trump as "Individual-1" in their investigation of the hush-money scheme to silence Stormy Daniels. Also, DC Attorney General Karl Racine is investigating whether Trump's inauguration included improper payments to his private businesses. There's also Trump's years-long audit fight with the IRS.
The most recent issues: Prosecutors in Fulton County, Georgia, are investigating Trump's efforts to pressure the state's secretary of state to "find" votes for him. The Capitol riots also open the former president to other liabilities far beyond what impeachment would have imposed on him.
The situation in Texas is particularly dire: 2 million Texans are without power. Some in the state, including in Austin, are experiencing outages that lasted overnight, the Texas Tribune reports. A particularly severe cold snap is stressing the grid, made worse by limited gas supplies and frozen wind turbines.
3. Liz Cheney faces a brutal fight: The Wyoming Republican is used to clashing with parts of the GOP, but the heat from her colleagues is spreading back home. She is already facing a primary challenger over her vote to impeach Trump. Former Sen. Alan Simpson, a long-time ally, told my colleague Kayla Epstein that Cheney maintains a more quiet base of supporters in the state that will outnumber the more vocal, pro-Trump "zealots."
4. Biden wants to reverse the federal employee exodus: Government employees were "gutt[ed]" under Trump, someone who worked on the Biden transition said, per my colleague Robin Bravender in her exclusive report. Extremely thin ranks could hamper Biden's ambitious agenda. His goal of reorienting foreign policy will run into a depleted State Department, and bold climate actions face an EPA that lost an average of 219 scientists per year while Trump was in power.
5. The top things for your calendar, all times Eastern:
11:30 a.m.: Jen Psaki holds the White House's daily news briefing.
5:30 p.m.: The Senate holds a procedural vote on Linda Thomas-Greenfield's nomination to be Ambassador to the UN.
8:00 p.m.: Biden speaks during a live CNN town hall from Wisconsin.
6. Virus cases are dropping across the country: While possibly influenced by the holiday weekend, Monday saw the lowest number of new COVID-19 cases since October. "[T]he seven-day average, considered a more reliable measure, has dipped below 90,000 a day for the first time since early November," per The Washington Post. Experts disagree on the exact reason for the drop, but attribute it to a combination of more vaccines, fewer tests, and some seasonal patterns typical with similar viruses.
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7. Parler is back online: The preferred social media of far-right has returned with a Tea Party co-founder serving as interim CEO. The site was previously offline after Amazon Web Services dropped it on January 11.
8. Gov. Andrew Cuomo accepts some blame for nursing home scandal:The New York Democrat admitted a "void" was created by failing to respond to journalists' and state lawmakers' requests for more data on COVID-19 related deaths in nursing homes. But Cuomo refused to express any further contrition as bipartisan calls grow for further investigations, and to strip him of some of his powers.
9. Biden's lawyers told the vice president's niece to stop selling merch featuring her aunt:Transition team lawyers told Meena Harris to stop producing products using Vice President Kamala Harris' name and image. "Behavior needs to change," a White House official told the Los Angeles Times of the ethics issues arising from such sales. But Meena Harris has remained defiant on social media.
10. Forget sheep or stars, one Twitch user is counting the commas: Asian Andy is among the influencers making money on "sleep streams." Andy pocketed $16,000 for a stream that enabled text-to-speech recognition so viewers could play music and issue commands. And he's far from the first to find a way to make money in his sleep.
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