Republican strategist Karl Rove
doesn’t see Thursday’s Mueller report release as the end of a the
Trump-Russia collusion narrative, he sees it as “the beginning of the
next chapter”
“I wish I believed it was their last gasp. I think tomorrow is the beginning of the next chapter,” Rove said on “Hannity.”
Attorney General William Barr is set to hold a 9:30 a.m. news conference
Thursday accompanied by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein ahead of
the Justice Department's planned release of a redacted version
of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report on Russian interference in
the 2016 presidential election
“I
think it is going to be first and foremost focusing on… they want the
entire document and that's going lead then to charges that he obstructed
justice and then it's going to be ‘Katie bar the door.’”
Rove added, “It's going to be months and months in my opinion of demanding a completely unredacted copy of it.”
President Trump has reportedly prepared a retort and Democrats including Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi are unhappy with roll out.
“AG
Barr has thrown out his credibility & the DOJ’s independence with
his single-minded effort to protect @realDonaldTrump above all else. The
American people deserve the truth, not a sanitized version of the
Mueller Report approved by the Trump Admin,” Nancy Pelosi tweeted
Wednesday.
Rove noted that Democrats will not be satisfied with tomorrow’s redacted report and will continue to promote their narrative.
“People
like Adam Schiff and Jerry Nadler are going to be calling for the
immediate and total release of everything. You see it in the language of
Nancy Pelosi who says that Barr is usurping the responsibility of
Congress. Congress is supposed to be the judge and jury, not our legal
system,” Rove told Sean Hannity.
Democrats in Congress attacked Attorney General William Barr Wednesday evening ahead of the Justice Department's planned release of a redacted version of Special Counsel Robert Mueller's report
on Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and
allegations of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian
officials.
Barr is set to hold a 9:30 a.m. news conference
Thursday accompanied by Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who
oversaw the Mueller investigation after the special counsel's
appointment in May 2017. Neither Mueller nor other members of his team
will attend, according to special counsel spokesman Peter Carr.
Democrats have criticized the timing of the news conference, saying that
Barr would get to present his interpretation of the Mueller report
before Congress and the public see it.
At a news conference
Wednesday evening, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler,
D-N.Y., said the panel was expected to receive a copy of the report
between 11 a.m. and noon, "well after the attorney general's 9:30 a.m.
press conference. This is wrong."
"The attorney general appears to
be waging a media campaign on behalf of President Trump, the very
subject of the investigation at the heart of the Mueller report," Nadler
told reporters. "Rather than letting the facts of the report speak for
themselves, the attorney general has taken unprecedented steps to spin
Mueller’s nearly two-year investigation."
Hakeem Jeffries, another
member of the Judiciary Committee and the chairman of the House
Democratic Caucus, accused Barr -- whom Jeffries dubbed the "so-called
Attorney General" of "presiding over a dog and pony show.
"Here is
a thought," Jeffries added. "Release the Mueller report tomorrow
morning and keep your mouth shut. You have ZERO credibility."
House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., tweeted that Barr "has thrown out his
credibility & the DOJ’s independence with his single-minded effort
to protect @realDonaldTrump above all else. The American people
deserve the truth, not a sanitized version of the Mueller Report
approved by the Trump Admin."
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said, "The process is poisoned before the report is even released."
"Barr
shouldn't be spinning the report at all, but it's doubly outrageous
he's doing it before America is given a chance to read it," Schumer
added.
Democrats were further angered Wednesday by a New York
Times report which said Justice Department officials have had "numerous
conversations with White House lawyers" about Mueller's conclusions,
which have aided the president's legal team as it prepares a rebuttal to
the special counsel's report. The Times report has not been
independently confirmed by Fox News.
Late Wednesday, Nadler and
four other Democratic committee chairs released a joint statement
calling on Barr to cancel the Thursday morning news conference, calling
it "unnecessary and inappropriate."
"He [Barr] should let the full
report speak for itself, read the statement from Nadler, Adam Schiff,
D-Calif., Elijah Cummings, D-Md., Maxine Waters, D-Calif., and Eliot
Engel, D-N.Y. "The Attorney General should cancel the press conference
and provide the full report to Congress, as we have requested. With the
Special Counsel’s fact-gathering work concluded, it is now Congress’
responsibility to assess the findings and evidence and proceed
accordingly."
In court filings in the case against Roger Stone on
Wednesday, the Justice Department also said it planned to provide a
"limited number" of members of Congress and their staff access to a copy
of the Mueller report with fewer redactions than the public version.
Nadler claimed Wednesday evening that the Judiciary Committee "has no
knowledge of this and this should not be read as any agreement or
knowledge or assent on our part."
Nadler added that he would
"probably find it useful" to call Mueller and members of his team to
testify after reading the version of the report Barr releases.
The
report is expected to reveal what Mueller uncovered about ties between
the Trump campaign and Russia that fell short of criminal conduct. And,
it likely will lay out the special counsel's conclusions about formative
episodes in Trump's presidency, including his firing of FBI Director
James Comey; his request of Comey to end an investigation into Trump's
first national security adviser, Michael Flynn; his relentless badgering
of former Attorney General Jeff Sessions over his recusal from the
Russia investigation; and his role in drafting an explanation about a
meeting his oldest son took at Trump Tower with a Kremlin-connected
lawyer.
The report is not expected to place the president in legal
jeopardy, as Barr made his own decision that Trump shouldn't be
prosecuted for obstruction. But it is likely to contain unflattering
details about the president's efforts to control the Russia
investigation
Overall,
Mueller brought charges against 34 people — including six Trump aides
and advisers — and revealed a sophisticated, wide-ranging Russian effort
to influence the 2016 presidential election. Twenty-five of those
charged were Russians accused either in the hacking of Democratic email
accounts or of a hidden but powerful social media effort to spread
disinformation online.
Five former Trump aides or advisers pleaded
guilty and agreed to cooperate in Mueller's investigation, including
former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort, former national security
adviser Michael Flynn and his former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen.
Stone is awaiting trial on charges including false statements and
obstruction. Fox News' Jake Gibson, Chad Pergram and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Conservative commentator Ann Coulter
said she could support Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT, in 2020 and even
floated the idea of working in his administration if he returned to his
earlier stance on immigration.
In a preview clip of PBS’s “Firing
Line with Margaret Hoover” released Wednesday, host Margaret Hoover
asked Coulter how she viewed the progressive senator. She asked whether
she would support him if he campaign on “getting rid of low-skilled
workers” to ensure higher wages.
“If
he went back to his original position, which is the pro-blue-collar
position. I mean, it totally makes sense with him," she said. If he went
back to that position, I’d vote for him. I might work for him. I don’t
care about the rest of the socialist stuff. Just-- can we do something
for ordinary Americans?”
Coulter was apparently referencing Sanders’ policy position
from 2007 where he opposed an immigration reform bill that he feared
would drive down wages for lower-income workers. He co-authored a
restrictive immigration amendment with Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-IA. The
bill ultimately failed to pass the Senate.
Sanders rejected the idea of having open borders while speaking at a campaign event earlier this month.
“What
we need is comprehensive immigration reform. If you open the borders,
my God, there's a lot of poverty in this world, and you're going to have
people from all over the world. And I don't think that's something that
we can do at this point. Can't do it. So that is not my position,”
Sanders said.
Coulter, who authored the book “In Trump We Trust”
ahead of the 2016 election, was an early supporter of Donald Trump but
has since become a vocal critic of the president for not keeping his
campaign promise of building a wall at the southern border.
Nearly two years of fevered speculation surrounding Special Counsel Robert Mueller's
Russia probe will come to a head in a dramatic television finale-like
moment on Thursday morning at 9:30 a.m. ET, when Attorney General
William Barr and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein are set to hold a press conference to discuss the Mueller report's public release.
It
was not immediately clear exactly when on Thursday the DOJ
would release the redacted version of the nearly 400-page investigation
into Russian election meddling, but the document was expected to be
delivered to lawmakers and posted online by noon. With just hours to go
until that moment, hopes for finality amid a deep national divide -- and
persistent accusations of far-flung conspiracies -- are all but certain to remain unrealized.
Although Barr has already revealed that Mueller's report absolved the Trump team of illegally colluding with Russia, Democrats have signaled that
the release will be just the beginning of a no-holds-barred showdown
with the Trump administration over the extent of report redactions, as well as whether the president obstructed justice during the Russia investigation. FOX NEWS POLL: TRUMP POPULARITY HOLDING STEADY AFTER MUELLER SUMMARY RELEASE
Trump’s
legal team is preparing to issue a comprehensive rebuttal report on
Thursday, to challenge any allegations of obstruction against the
president, Fox News has learned.
The
lawyers originally laid out their rebuttal in response to written
questions asked by Mueller’s team of the president last year, according
to a source close to Trump's legal team.
Special Counsel Robert Mueller drives away from his Washington
home on Wednesday. Outstanding questions about the special counsel's
Russia investigation have not stopped President Donald Trump and his
allies from declaring victory. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)
Barr has said redactions in the report's release are
legally mandated.to protect four broad areas of concern: sensitive grand
jury-related matters, classified information, ongoing
investigations and the privacy or reputation of uncharged "peripheral"
people.
Those individuals, Barr said, did not include Trump. "No,
I'm talking about people in private life, not public officeholders," the
attorney general said at a hearing last week.
In a filing in the ongoing Roger Stone prosecution
on Wednesday, the DOJ revealed that certain members of Congress will be
able to see the Mueller report "without certain redactions" in a secure
setting. Stone, a longtime confidant of the president, is awaiting
trial on charges including giving false statements and obstructing
justice.
Barr and Rosenstein are expected to take questions at the
Thursday press conference, which was first announced in a radio
interview by Trump and confirmed by the DOJ, and they'll likely be
pressed on the precise nature of the final redactions.
The
chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, Democrat New York Rep.
Jerrold Nadler, has said he is prepared to issue subpoenas "very
quickly" for the full report if it is released with blacked-out
sections, likely setting in motion a major legal battle.
Grand
jury information, including witness interviews, is normally off limits
but can be obtained in court. Some records were eventually released in
the Whitewater investigation into former President Bill Clinton and an
investigation into President Richard Nixon before he resigned.
Attorney General William Barr reacts as he appears before a Senate
Appropriations subcommittee to make his Justice Department budget
request, Wednesday, April 10, 2019, in Washington. Barr said Wednesday
that he was reviewing the origins of the Trump-Russia investigation. He
said he believed the president's campaign had been spied on and he was
concerned about possible abuses of government power. (AP Photo/Andrew
Harnik)
Both of those cases were under somewhat different
circumstances, including that the House Judiciary Committee had
initiated impeachment proceedings. Federal court rules state that a
court may order disclosure "preliminary to or in connection with a
judicial proceeding," but prominent Democrats -- including House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi -- have dismissed suggestions that Trump should face impeachment.
Another
major area of scrutiny will be Barr's decision, along with Deputy
Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, that Mueller had not uncovered
sufficient evidence to prosecute Trump for obstruction of justice.
In his four-page summary of Mueller's findings released late last month,
Barr stated definitively that Mueller did not establish evidence that
Trump's team or any associates of the Trump campaign had conspired with
Russia to sway the 2016 election -- "despite multiple offers from
Russian-affiliated individuals to assist the Trump campaign."
But
on obstruction, Barr wrote that Mueller had laid out evidence on "both
sides" of the issue, even as he acknowledged that it would be more
difficult to prosecute an obstruction case without evidence of any
underlying crime. That evidence, on Thursday, will go under the
microscope.
The
report may also contain unflattering details about the president's
efforts to exert control over the Russia investigation. And it may paint
the Trump campaign as eager to exploit Russian aid and emails stolen
from Democrats and Hillary Clinton's campaign.
The report's
release will also be a test of Barr's credibility, as the public and
Congress judge the veracity of a letter he released relaying what were
purported to be Mueller's principal conclusions.
Barr, who was
unanimously confirmed by the Senate to the role of attorney general in
1991 before reclaiming the role in February, has endured withering criticism from Democrats who say he is covering for the president.
After
Barr announced plans for the Thursday press conference, Nadler quickly
charged that Barr "appears to be waging a media campaign" on behalf of
Trump.
In a statement joined by several other Democrat committee
chairs late Wednesday, Nadler called for Barr to cancel the press
conference.
"This press conference, which apparently will not
include Special Counsel Mueller, is unnecessary and inappropriate, and
appears designed to shape public perceptions of the report before anyone
can read it," the Democrats wrote. "[Barr] should let the full report
speak for itself. The Attorney General should cancel the press
conference and provide the full report to Congress, as we have
requested. With the Special Counsel’s fact-gathering work concluded, it
is now Congress’ responsibility to assess the findings and evidence and
proceed accordingly.”
Mueller is known to have investigated
multiple efforts by the president over the last two years to influence
the Russia probe or shape public perception of it.
In addition to
examining former FBI Director James Comey's firing, Mueller scrutinized
the president's reported request that Comey end an investigation into
Trump's first national security adviser; his relentless attacks on
former Attorney General Jeff Sessions over his recusal from the Russia
investigation; and his role in drafting an incomplete explanation about a
meeting his oldest son took at Trump Tower with a Kremlin-connected
lawyer.
But this week, Trump, who has long said that voicing his
opinions about the "witch hunt" against him wasn't a crime -- showed no
signs of backing down.
"Wow! FBI made 11 payments to Fake Dossier’s discredited author,
Trump hater Christopher Steele," Trump wrote on Wednesday. "The Witch
Hunt has been a total fraud on your President and the American people!
It was brought to you by Dirty Cops, Crooked Hillary and the DNC.
On
Monday, he wrote: "Mueller, and the A.G. based on Mueller findings (and
great intelligence), have already ruled No Collusion, No Obstruction.
These were crimes committed by Crooked Hillary, the DNC, Dirty Cops and
others! INVESTIGATE THE INVESTIGATORS!"
Republicans, including House Intelligence Committee ranking member Devin Nunes, have pushed aggressively for answers into the origins of the Mueller probe, which began shortly after Trump fired Comey in May 2017.
Trump
cited several justifications for terminating Comey, including what the
president called his mismanagement of the Hillary Clinton email probe,
and Comey's refusal to publicly announce that the president was not
under investigation.
The former FBI head acknowledged in testimony in December that
when the bureau initiated its counterintelligence probe into
possible collusion between Trump campaign officials and the Russian
government in July 2016, investigators "didn't know whether we had
anything."
An op-ed in The Washington Post earlier
in the week, entitled "Admit it: Fox News has been right all along,"
pointed to the role in the media in spreading the Russia collusion
narrative.
Justice Department legal opinions say that a sitting
president cannot be indicted, but Barr said he did not take that into
account when he decided the evidence was insufficient to establish
obstruction.
That conclusion was perhaps not surprising given
Barr's own unsolicited memo to the Justice Department from last June in
which he said a president could not obstruct justice by taking actions —
like the firing of an FBI director — that he is legally empowered to
take.
Overall, Mueller brought charges against 34 people —
including six Trump aides and advisers — and revealed a Russian effort
to influence the 2016 presidential election.
Twenty-five
of those charged were Russians accused either in the hacking of
Democratic email accounts or of a hidden but powerful social media
effort to spread disinformation online.
Five former Trump aides or
advisers pleaded guilty to charges unrelated to collusion and agreed to
cooperate in Mueller's investigation, including former Trump campaign
chairman Paul Manafort, former national security adviser Michael Flynn
and his former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen. Fox News' Brooke Singman, Jake Gibson and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
The Texas House
of Representatives has preliminarily approved a measure that says any
doctor who does not care for an infant born alive after an abortion will
be fined hundreds of thousands of dollars and possibly serve prison
time in cases of gross negligence, a report said.
The “Born Alive” act passed 93 to 1 mostly along party lines, the Dallas Morning News reported and will now advance to the state Senate. Democrat Harold Dutton cast a “no” vote while 50 other Democrats voted “present, not voting.”
Did former first lady Michelle Obama mean to demean divorced fathers?
Obama,
in an interview with late-night host Stephen Colbert, compared America
to a teenager and life under President Trump to living with a divorced
father.
“Sometimes you spend the weekend with a divorced dad. That
feels like fun but then you get sick," Obama told Colbert. "That is
what America is going through. We’re kind of living with divorced dad.”
Fox News’ Sean Hannity said Tuesday that Obama's comments were "demeaning and insulting."
Hannity was upset with the characterization and discussed it with Fox News’ Geraldo Rivera and Tammy Bruce.
Rivera agreed with Hannity that the comments were “demeaning and insulting” but called the comments a “rare misstep.”
“She's
equating, she's reduced us to a sexist stereotype with a bad parent who
gives candy and lets the kids watch too much TV because we have a
guilty conscience about the breakup of the marriage. I think it's a rare
misstep though Sean, in fairness,” Rivera said.
“No passes here on that,” Hannity said.
Bruce called out Obama for using gender stereotypes and not only insulting to divorced fathers but women as well.
“The
problem here is it's not just insulting to men and for every woman and
man out in that audience who didn't quite know why she was insulting
them but it relies also on the other side of the coin which is the
gender stereotype of women that all women are supposed to be either
great mothers or only women can raise children or only women can be good
parents,” Bruce said.
President Trump
offered his thoughts Tuesday night on which two Democratic contenders
he thinks will be left standing in the 2020 Democratic presidential
primary.
Out of the crowded pool of contenders, Trump predicted on Twitter that former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders will be the final two in the battle to be the party’s nominee.
“I
believe it will be Crazy Bernie Sanders vs. Sleepy Joe Biden as the two
finalists to run against maybe the best Economy in the history of our
Country (and MANY other great things)!” he wrote. “I look forward to
facing whoever it may be. May God Rest Their Soul!”
While Sanders, I-Vt., confirmed in February that he would be running again for president, Biden has yet to formally enter the race.
The president’s prediction came after he targeted Sanders in a separate tweet, speaking about the lawmaker’s finances.
“Bernie
Sanders and wife should pay the Pre-Trump Taxes on their almost
$600,000 in income,” Trump wrote. “He is always complaining about these
big TAX CUTS, except when it benefits him. They made a fortune off of
Trump, but so did everyone else - and that’s a good thing, not a bad
thing!”
Shortly ahead of a Fox News town hall Monday night, Sanders’ presidential campaign released
his 2018 returns. According to the figures, Sanders and his wife Jane
paid a 26 percent effective tax rate on $561,293 in income, and made
more than $1 million in both 2016 and 2017. Nearly $400,000 of his
income last year came from book sales.
Sanders later fired back at the president for his remarks, tweeting that Trump seemed “scared of our campaign.”
“He should be,” he continued. Fox News’ Jennifer Earl and Paul Steinhauser contributed to this report.
Cook County State's Attorney Kim Foxx speaks at a news
conference, in Chicago. Foxx has asked the county's inspector general to
review how her office handled "Empire" actor Jussie Smollett's criminal
case. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File)
Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx described “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett as
a “washed up celeb who lied to cops” in texts messages released Tuesday
by her office in response to a public-records request by the Chicago
Tribune.
Foxx compared Smollett’s case to her office’s pending
indictments against R&B singer R. Kelly in text messages to Joseph
Magats, her top assistant, on March 8, the paper reported
“Pedophile
with 4 victims 10 counts. Washed up celeb who lied to cops, 16
(counts),” she wrote. “… Just because we can charge something doesn’t
mean we should.”
"On a case eligible for deferred prosecution I
think it’s indicative of something we should be looking at generally,”
Foxx continued.
Smollett, who is openly gay, was indicted on 16
counts of disorderly conduct on suspicion of staging a Jan. 29 hate
crime attack on himself. He claimed two men beat and shouted slurs at
him and wrapped a noose around his neck.
Foxx
and Magats continued to communicate via text message about aspects of
the investigation. On March 3, Magats reported that he gave Foxx’s phone
number to Michael Avenatti, who had joined the case, according to text
messages.
“……..
so Michael Avenatti reached out. Apparently he’s coming in to represent
the Nigerian brothers in Smollet. I gave him your office number,”
Magats wrote.
Foxx issued a statement on Feb. 19 recusing herself
from high-profile case. Prosecutors, last month, argued that Foxx never
formally recused herself amid questions over her office’s decision to
drop the charges against Smollett.
That decision created a firestorm of protest from local officials.
The
communication between Foxx and Magats raised questions of whether she
continued to take a role in the case after stepping away. In a statement
Tuesday night, Foxx defended her messages to Magats.
“After the
indictment became public, I reached out to Joe to discuss reviewing
office policies to assure consistencies in our charging and our use of
appropriate charging authority,” Foxx said in a statement obtained by USA Today.
“I was elected to bring criminal justice reform and that includes
intentionality, consistency, and discretion. I will continue to uphold
these guiding principles.”
A representative for Smollett did not immediately return a Fox News request for comment Tuesday night.
The
text messages also appeared to show that prosecutors notified Chicago
police moments before the charges were dropped against Smollett, the
Tribune reported.
“Eddie just called. (He) needed to know how to
answer questions from press,” Foxx texted Magats, referring to Chicago
Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson. She said Johnson seemed “satisfied”
with her explanation that Smollett had completed community service and
turned over his $10,000 bond money to the city.
John and Mayor Rahm Emanuel held a news conference that morning blasting the prosecutor’s decision, calling it a “whitewash of justice.”
The city has sued Smollett for the $130,000 in police overtime spent investigating the alleged hoax.