China is threatening to take aggressive action against Canada if the
country fails to release Huawei’s CFO from custody and obeys a U.S.
extradition request.
“For Canada, if they do not correctly
handle this matter there will be serious consequences. You asked, what
kind of serious consequences would these be? I can tell you in one
sentence – it is totally up to Canada.” — Lu Kang, Chinese Foreign
Ministry spokesman
China’s foreign ministry also said, according to an agreement between
China and Canada, the Canadian government should have told the Chinese
consulates and embassies Meng was going to be arrested. However, that
didn’t happen.
China’s foreign ministry also cited human rights concerns surrounding Meng’s detention.
“During Ms. Meng Wanzhou’s detention, certain measures, including
inhumane measures used against her, the provision of medical treatment
necessary for her and measures for her basic well-being, were not in
place at all,” stated Kang. “We think this is inhumane and has breached
her human rights.”
People
hold a sign at a Vancouver, British Columbia courthouse prior to the
bail hearing for Meng Wanzhou, Huawei’s chief financial officer on
Monday, December 10, 2018. Meng Wanzhou was detained at the request of
the U.S. during a layover at the Vancouver airport on Dec. 1, 2018.
(Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press via AP)
Attorneys for Meng cited health concerns during a bail hearing
Friday. They said she was taken to a hospital for hypertension treatment
after being detained.
46-year-old Meng, the daughter of Huawei’s founder, remains in
custody in Vancouver over U.S. allegations she misled multi-nation banks
about Huawei’s control of a company operating in Iran. This put the
banks at risk of violating U.S. sanctions and incurring the associated
penalties.
Recent reports have already detailed two financial institutions,
British-based Standard Chartered and HSBC, as allegedly among the banks
misled by Huawei.
Huawei reportedly used a third party intermediary, the Hong
Kong-based firm Skycom, to channel payments between the tech giant and
Iran.
Both banks have faced past scrutiny from global regulators for past
money laundering violations and have had federal monitors in place to
watch for these types of transactions. Neither bank has been accused of
wrongdoing at this time.
In the meantime, while China has denounced the arrest, it hasn’t
linked it to trade talks with the U.S. as experts say it doesn’t want to
undermine the prospects for a trade deal.
On Sunday, White House officials said Meng’s arrest and extradition
request was “solely a law enforcement matter, “and would not derail the
talks with China.
While China’s foreign ministry has been vocal on the arrest, the
Commerce Ministry, who is engaged in the trade talks, has yet to comment
on the situation.
Vice President Pence's chief of staff, Nick Ayers, who was considered
a front-runner to replace John Kelly as White House chief of staff,
announced Sunday: "I will be departing at the end of the year."
Ayers
revealed the news in a tweet. Its full text read: "Thank you
@realDonaldTrump, @VP, and my great colleagues for the honor to serve
our Nation at The White House. I will be departing at the end of the
year but will work with the #MAGA team to advance the cause. #Georgia" The Wall Street Journal
originally reported that Trump and Ayers could not reach agreement on
Ayers' length of service and that he would instead assist the president
from outside the administration.
Ayers and Trump had discussed the
job for months. The new hire was to be key to a West Wing reshuffling
to shift focus toward the 2020 reelection campaign and the challenge of
governing with Democrats in control of the House.
Officials said
Trump and Ayers could not agree on his length of service, but Trump
wants his next chief of staff to hold the job through the 2020 election.
Ayers, who has young triplets, had long planned to leave the
administration at the end of the year, and reportedly discussed taking
the job on an interim basis only through next spring.
Trump said
Saturday that he expected to announce a replacement for Kelly in a day
or two, and it was not immediately clear whether he had a new favorite
for the post.
Sources told Fox News on Sunday evening there have
been “conversations” about Rep. Mark Meadows, R-N.C., becoming chief of
staff. Meadows serves as chairman of the influential House Freedom
Caucus.
Trump reportedly is considering four candidates for the
post, including Office of Management and Budget director Mick Mulvaney,
The Associated Press added.
Sunday night, Trump took a potshot at
the media, while also tweeting his next steps: “I am in the process of
interviewing some really great people for the position of White House
Chief of Staff. Fake News has been saying with certainty it was Nick
Ayers, a spectacular person who will always be with our #MAGA agenda. I
will be making a decision soon!”
Trump had developed confidence in
Ayers, in part by watching the effectiveness of Pence's largely
independent political operation. Ayers also earned the backing of Ivanka
Trump and Jared Kushner, the president's daughter and son-in-law and
senior advisers, for taking on the new role, White House officials said.
President Donald Trump's top pick to replace chief of staff John
Kelly, Nick Ayers, apparently took himself out of the running for the
job Sunday. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
Ayers, 36, would have been the youngest chief of staff since 34-year-old Hamilton Jordan served under Jimmy Carter.
Kelly is 68.
Ayers
instead will be leaving the administration to run a pro-Trump super
PAC, The Associated Press reported citing a person familiar with his
plans who was not authorized to discuss them by name.
Pence thanked Ayers for his service in a tweet early Sunday evening.
Its
full text read: “.@nick_ayers has done an outstanding job as my Chief
of Staff and I will always be grateful for his friendship, dedication to
the @VP team and his efforts to advance the @POTUS agenda. Thank you
Nick! Karen and I wish you, Jamie and the kids every blessing in the
years ahead.” GOP RUSHES TO PASS BORDER WALL LEGISLATION, JUSTICE REFORM BEFORE DEMS TAKE HOUSE
Trump announced Saturday that Kelly would leave around year's end.
Kelly,
whose last day on the job is set to be Jan. 2, had been credited with
imposing order on a chaotic West Wing after his arrival in June 2017
from his post as homeland security secretary. However, he also alienated
some longtime Trump allies, and over time he grew increasingly
isolated, with an increasingly diminished role.
Former FBI Director James Comey said Sunday in an interview that
President Trump, if it's proved that he directed illegal hush-money
payments to women, would be in violation of campaign finance laws, but
he is lucky that the rule of the Justice Department remains that a
sitting president cannot be indicted.
“I don’t know,” Comey replied to an MSNBC host at the 92nd Street Y in New York City,
when asked if Trump is now an “unindicted co-conspirator” in the case
of Trump's former personal lawyer, Michael Cohen. “Not in the formal
sense that he’s been named in an indictment. ... But if he’s not there,
he’s certainly close given the language in the filing that the crimes
were committed at his direction.” In filings Friday, prosecutors in New York linked
Trump to a federal crime of illegal payments to buy the silence of two
women during the 2016 campaign. Special Counsel Robert Mueller's office
also laid out contacts between Trump associates and Russian
intermediaries, and suggested the Kremlin aimed early on to influence
Trump and his Republican campaign by playing to his political and
personal business interests.
In the legal filings, the Justice
Department stopped short of accusing Trump of directly committing a
crime. However, it said Trump told Cohen to make illegal payments to
adult-film actress Stormy Daniels and former Playboy model Karen
McDougal, both of whom claimed to have had affairs with Trump more than a
decade ago.
When asked if anyone other than a president were
implicated in the way that Trump has been, Comey responded: “Well, that
person would be in serious jeopardy of being charged.” He continued,
“because the government wouldn’t make that sponsoring allegation if they
weren’t seriously contemplating going forward with criminal charges.”
Comey added, “Now where it stands here, I can’t say.” SCHIFF: DEMS WANT COHEN BACK ON CAPITOL HILL AFTER THEY RETAKE HOUSE
In
separate filings, Mueller's team detailed how Cohen spoke to a Russian
who "claimed to be a 'trusted person' in the Russian Federation who
could offer the campaign 'political synergy' and 'synergy on a
government level.'" Cohen said he never followed up on that meeting.
Mueller's team also said former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort
lied to them about his contacts with a Russian associate and Trump
administration officials, including in 2018.
Multiple Trump
associates, including Trump campaign foreign policy adviser George
Papadopoulos, former national security adviser Michael Flynn and Cohen,
have pleaded guilty to lying about their interactions with Russians
during the campaign and presidential transition period. Manafort's
foreign dealings, including to an associate the U.S. says has ties to
Russian intelligence, also have attracted law enforcement scrutiny. COMEY IS A DISGRACE TO THE FBI, FORMER ASSISTANT DIRECTOR SAYS
Trump, who fired Comey in May 2017, has denied wrongdoing and has compared the investigations to a "witch hunt."
The
president repeatedly has portrayed Comey and Mueller as exceptionally
close as part of a long-running effort to undermine the investigation
and paint the lead figures in the probe as united against him.
An expert campaign finance lawyer said in an interview published Monday
that he is not impressed with the Department of Justice's evidence that
effectively links President Trump to campaign finance violations after
the recent release of the Michael Cohen sentencing memo.
Dan
Backer, the lawyer, told Forbes that there appears to be no evidence to
corroborate the DOJ’s apparent assertion of any illegality on Trump's
part. Cohen admitted
to violating federal campaign finance laws by arranging hush-money
payments to porn star Stormy Daniels and Playboy model Karen McDougal in
the weeks leading up to the election of then-candidate Trump, according
to the plea.
Prosecutors in New York, where Cohen pleaded guilty
in August to campaign finance crimes in connection with those payments,
wrote in the filing, "With respect to both payments, Cohen acted with
the intent to influence the 2016 presidential election. Cohen
coordinated his actions with one or more members of the campaign,
including through meetings and phone calls, about the fact, nature, and
timing of the payments. In particular, and as Cohen himself has now
admitted, with respect to both payments, he acted in coordination with
and at the direction of Individual-1.”
The filing does not name Trump, but references "Individual-1," who became president in 2017. Trump has not been charged.
Trump's lawyers have downplayed the severity of campaign finance crimes, but some Democrats consider it an impeachable offense.
Backer, a
veteran campaign counsel, said it is common practice for high-profile
individuals and companies to take part in these kinds of payment
arrangements. He said Trump is a brand, he has carried out similar
payments for years and these so-called "hush-buys" will likely continue.
"Brand protection is not a campaign contribution," he told the magazine.
"The
notion that every penny a candidate personally or professionally spends
is somehow reportable to the FEC is utter nonsense," he continued.
On
Sunday, Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul told NBC's "Meet the Press"
that the web of federal and state campaign finance laws is so complex
that it presents fairness issues.
"There are thousands and
thousands of rules. It’s incredibly complicated, campaign finance," Paul
said. "We have to decide whether or not really criminal penalties are
the way we should approach campaign finance."
Cohen's plea does
not necessarily indicate that prosecutors could have successfully
prosecuted a campaign finance case against Cohen or Trump.
Andrew C. McCarthy, a senior fellow at the National Review Institute, wrote on FoxNews.com that Trump is very likely to be indicted for violating campaign finance laws.
"If
the president was not implicated, I suspect they would not have
prosecuted Cohen for campaign finance violations at all. Those charges
had a negligible impact on the jail time Cohen faces, which is driven by
the more serious offenses of tax and financial institution fraud,
involving millions of dollars,” he wrote.
Cohen is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 12.
Jerome Corsi, the conservative author accused of lying under oath to
Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigators, filed a federal lawsuit
late Sunday accusing Mueller of leaking grand jury items and various
constitutional violations, including illegal surveillance, reports said. Politico reported
that the newly filed suit claims that Mueller tried to get Corsi to
give testimony that Corsi said is false. He is reportedly seeking $100
million in actual damages and $250 million in damages due to injury to
his reputation. The CIA, FBI, and the National Security Agency were
also named in the suit.
The author has theorized
that investigators hoped that he would admit to a connection with
WikiLeaks' Julian Assange. The connection would bolster their Russian
collusion investigation, he said. A link between Corsi and Assange would
make it easy to tie in President Trump's former adviser Roger Stone, he
said.
American intelligence agencies have assessed that Russia
was the source of hacked material released by WikiLeaks during the 2016
election that damaged Hillary Clinton’s campaign. Mueller’s office is
trying to determine whether Stone and other associates of President
Trump had advance knowledge of WikiLeaks’ plans.
Corsi, the former
Washington bureau chief of the conspiracy theory outlet InfoWars,
rejected a deal with investigators that would have required him to plead
guilty to perjury. He said he could not lie to something he knew to be
false, even if it meant living out his life in prison.
The Justice Department did not immediately respond to Fox News for comment.
The
suit was filed in the U.S. District Court in Washington and named
Mueller as the defendant. The suit claims that Mueller and his team
“demanded” that Corsi falsely testify that he acted as a liaison between
Stone and Assange. Politico reported that the suit accuses Mueller of
unconstitutional surveillance through the NSA program that was exposed
by Edward Snowden, PRISM.
"Defendants Mueller, DOJ, NSA, CIA, and
FBI have engaged in ongoing illegal, unconstitutional surveillance on
Plaintiff Corsi, in violation of the Fourth Amendment and the USA
FREEDOM Act as well targeted ‘PRISM’ collection under Section 702 of the
Foreign Sovereignties Immunity Act at the direction of Defendant
Mueller," the suit said, according to Politico.
National security
lawyer Bradley P. Moss has pointed the lawsuit's apparent misciting of
"the Foreign Sovereignties Immunity Act" rather than "the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Act."
"Larry Klayman (Corsi's lawyer) is
alleging 4A violations by Mueller against Jerome Corsi in reliance upon
section 702 of the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act," Moss tweeted. "He
meant the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. He wrote FSIA."
In the days after Hillary Clinton’s defeat, the two people who seemed
like the Democratic Party’s most obvious 2020 candidates, then-Vice
President Joe Biden
and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, hinted that Clinton had gone too far
in talking about issues of identity. “It is not good enough for somebody
to say, ‘I’m a woman; vote for me,’” Sanders said. Other liberals lamented that the party had lost white voters in such states as Ohio and Iowa who had supported Barack Obama, and they said Democrats needed to dial back the identity talk to win them back.
But that view never took hold among party activists. Liberal-leaning
women were emboldened to talk about gender more, not less, after the
2016 election. We’ve had women’s marches and women running for office in greater numbers than ever — all while emphasizing their gender. President Trump’s moves kept identity issues at the forefront, too,
and gave Democrats an opportunity both to defend groups they view as
disadvantaged and to attack the policies of a president they hate.
The Democratic Party hasn’t simply maintained its liberalism on
identity; the party is perhaps further to the left on those issues than
it was even one or two years ago. Biden and Sanders are still viable
presidential contenders. But in this environment, so is a woman who is
the daughter of two immigrants (one from Jamaica and the other from India); who grew up in Oakland, graduated from Howard and rose through the political ranks of the most liberal of liberal bastions, San Francisco; who was just elected to the Senate in 2016 and, in that job, declared that “California represents the future” and pushed Democrats toward a government shutdown last year
to defend undocumented immigrants; and who regularly invokes slavery in
her stump speech. (“We are a nation of immigrants. Unless you are
Native American or your people were kidnapped and placed on a slave
ship, your people are immigrants.”)
Sen. Kamala Harris has not officially said she is running in 2020, but she hasn’t denied it, either, and she’s showing many of the signs of someone who is preparing for a run, including campaigning for her Democratic colleagues in key races and signing a deal to write a book. The Californian ranks low in polls
of the potential Democratic 2020 field, and she doesn’t have the name
recognition of other contenders. (Her first name is still widely
mispronounced — it’s COM-ma-la.) But betting markets have her near the top, reflecting the view among political insiders that Harris could win the Democratic nomination with a coalition of well-educated whites and blacks, the way Obama did in 2008.
Whatever happens later, the rise of Harris and her viability for 2020 tell us something about American politics right now: We are in the midst of an intense partisan and ideological battle over culture and identity;
the Democrats aren’t backing down or moving to the center on these
issues; and politicians who want to lead in either party will probably
have to take strong, clear stances on matters of gender and race.
An opportunity
Harris, who went from district attorney of San Francisco to attorney general of California, was a heavy favorite
in her 2016 Senate race. But once elected, she was expected to become a
virtually powerless freshman senator in Hillary Clinton’s Washington.
In fact, she might have been only the second most important person in
Washington from her family, since her younger sister, Maya, was a top Clinton policy adviser on the campaign and in line for a senior White House job.
But Clinton’s loss created an opportunity for Harris. The Democrats
had the normal leadership vacuum of a party without control of the White
House but also a specific void of people who were well-versed in
immigration issues and were willing to take the leftward stances on them
that the party base wanted as Trump tried to push U.S. immigration policy right. Meanwhile, Biden and Sanders were not natural figures to defend Planned Parenthood when, as part of the repeal of Obamacare, the GOP sought to bar patients from using federal funds at the nonprofit’s clinics. African-American activists went from being deeply connected to the White House to basically shut out of it, as Trump had few blacks in his Cabinet or in top administration posts.
And, electorally, while Sanders or Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren
were obvious potential presidential candidates for the populist wing of
the party that backed the Vermont senator in the 2016 Democratic
primaries, the coalition of minorities and more establishment-oriented Democrats1
who had backed Clinton didn’t necessarily have an obvious
standard-bearer, particularly with the uncertainty over Biden’s status
as a candidate in 2020.
While veteran party leaders like Biden may have wanted the party to move to the center on identity issues, Democratic voters
had moved decidedly to the left, a process that was happening under
Obama but may be accelerating under Trump. For example, a rising number
of Democrats say that racial discrimination is the main factor holding blacks back in American society, that immigration is good for America and that the country would be better off if more women were in office.
“The Democrats are the party of racial diversity, of gender equality — and there’s no going back from that,” said Lee Drutman,
a political scientist at the think tank New America, who has written
extensively about the growing cultural divide between the parties.
Harris has seized the opportunity. From attending the annual civil rights march in Selma to pushing legislation that would get rid of bail systems that rely on people putting up cash to be released from jail,
she has seemed to try to lead on issues that disproportionately affect
black Americans and to position herself as their potential presidential
candidate. She was one of the earliest critics on Capitol Hill
of the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration policies, and her
push for a government shutdown over the Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals program delighted party activists (even if the strategy ultimately failed). Harris was among the first Senate Democrats to call for Minnesota’s Al Franken to resign amid allegations that he groped several women, and she has been a strong defender of Planned Parenthood.
A different moment
You might be thinking, “Didn’t we just have a biracial person (who
was often described as and embraced being a ‘black’ politician) who was
fairly liberal on cultural issues as a major national political figure?
Wasn’t he president of the United States?”
Well, yes. But here’s the big difference: Obama didn’t emerge as a
presidential candidate by highlighting his strong stands on these
divisive, complicated cultural issues, as Harris is attempting to do. In
fact, his rise was in large part because he implied that America was
not as divided on those issues as it seemed — and that those divides were diminishing. The 2004 Democratic National Convention speech
that launched him to the national stage seems, now that we are in the
Trump era, almost crazily optimistic. (“There’s not a liberal America
and a conservative America; there’s the United States of America,” he
said back then. “There’s not a black America and white America and
Latino America and Asian America; there’s the United States of
America.”)
Whatever the reality of such statements, the political strategy
behind them made sense: It’s hard to imagine that America a decade ago
would have embraced a nonwhite politician who wasn’t downplaying
cultural divides and emphasizing unity. Back then, someone regularly
talking about his or her ancestors being kidnapped and enslaved probably
had no chance at being elected president.
But 2018 is much different than 2004 or 2008 in terms of the national
debate on identity issues. For example, compared with a decade ago, a much higher percentage of Americans,
particularly Democrats, see racism as a major problem. Over the past
decade, Americans went through the birther movement, shootings of
African-Americans by police captured on video, Black Lives Matter
protests, Trump’s racial and at times racist rhetoric and Clinton’s “basket of deplorables”
remark. And it’s not just race — think about #MeToo, the legalization
of gay marriage and new debates on the rights of people who are
transgender.
Harris can’t take the Obama “Kumbaya” route to the White House — I’m
not sure at this point that a white Democrat could, either. By the end
of his term, Obama didn’t sound particularly hopeful about America getting beyond its cultural divides. Clinton spoke more directly about race and racism in 2016 compared with Obama in 2004 and 2008. Sanders and other white Democrats are already talking taking fairly liberal stances on these issues, and I expect that to continue into next year.
I’m not sure Harris had much choice anyway. She is a Democratic senator from heavily Latino California
with Trump as president, so it’s a virtual job requirement for to her
to take leftward stances on immigration issues. She is a minority woman
at a time when minorities and women are trying to gain more power in national politics, particularly within the Democratic Party — and she is the only black female senator.
In other words, Kamala Harris and Barack Obama are, of course,
different people. But they also arrived on the national scene at much
different political moments.
“When you speak truth, it can make people quite uncomfortable,”
Harris told a group of Democratic activists earlier this year in a
speech in Henderson, Nevada.
“And for people like us who would like to leave the room with everyone
feeling lovely, there’s sometimes a disincentive to speak truth.
“But this is a moment in time in which we must speak truth.”
This is a bit longer than our normal Secret Identity column, so let’s
skip “What else you should read.” But please contact me at perry.bacon@fivethirtyeight.com for your thoughts on this piece or ideas for upcoming ones.