The Wall Avenue Journal printed a bombshell report Thursday, based mostly on interviews with almost 50 individuals educated of the operations of the Biden White Home. The story particulars the extent to which the president’s age has posed a difficulty all through his presidency, together with from the very begin, and the lengths to which aides went to hide it.
President Biden, now 82, was 78 years previous when he took workplace, and the Journal stories that administration officers started to note indicators of his age “in simply the primary few months of his time period,” as he would develop “drained if conferences went lengthy and would make errors.”
Those that met with the president had been reportedly informed that “exchanges ought to be quick and targeted.” Conferences had been strategically scheduled and, typically, if Biden “was having an off day,” they had been merely canceled. A former aide recalled a nationwide safety official saying, concerning one rescheduled assembly, “He has good days and dangerous days, and at present was a nasty day so we’re going to handle this tomorrow.”
The Journal reported that lawmakers, Cupboard members, and the general public all appeared to have much less face time with the president than in earlier administrations and that senior advisers had been “usually put into roles that some administration officials and lawmakers thought Biden ought to occupy.” Specifically, administration officers like Jake Sullivan, Steve Ricchetti, and Lael Brainard steadily functioned as intermediaries for the president.
Home Armed Companies Committee Chair Adam Smith reportedly sought to achieve Biden forward of his withdrawal from Afghanistan “however couldn’t get on the telephone with him.” Smith famous that he was extra steadily in contact with Barack Obama when he was president, although he wasn’t then the Home Armed Companies chair. Consultant Jim Hines, rating member on the Home Intelligence Committee, equally informed the Journal, “I actually had no private contact with this president. I had extra private contact with Obama, which is type of unusual as a result of I used to be much more junior.”
As for Biden and his Cupboard members, the Journal stories that interactions “had been comparatively rare and infrequently tightly scripted.” One reportedly gave up on attempting to request calls with him altogether “as a result of it was clear that such requests wouldn’t be welcome.” The report reveals too that Biden struggled to “recall strains that his group had beforehand mentioned with him” as he ready for his interview with particular counsel Robert Hur—who was investigating whether or not Biden mishandled categorised materials and in February decided {that a} jury would take into account him “a sympathetic, well-meaning aged man with a poor reminiscence.”
On the 2024 marketing campaign path, the report says, Biden’s group usually vetted questions from occasion attendees upfront. Pollsters for the marketing campaign had been additionally seemingly stored at arm’s size: The Journal stories that “Biden’s pollsters didn’t meet with him in individual and noticed little proof that the president was personally getting the information that they had been sending him,” because the president usually appeared unaware of the ample polling displaying he was trailing Trump.
Years of such incidents culminated in Biden’s disastrous June 27 debate efficiency. President-elect Donald Trump will, like Biden, be 78 at his inauguration and 82 by the tip of his time period.
The Georgia appeals court docket’s resolution to disqualify Fulton County District Legal professional Fani Willis from prosecuting the 2020 election interference case in opposition to Trump has launched the continuing case into chaos. State officers should now discover somebody to fill her position, a course of that would, at greatest, carry issues to a screeching halt—or kill the case altogether.
The court docket introduced Thursday that it had overturned a choice by Decide Scott McAfee permitting Willis to stay on the case after she confronted accusations of getting an improper relationship with Nathan Wade, her particular prosecutor. McAfee stated Willis may stay on the case if she reduce ties with Wade.
Trump and eight of his 18 co-defendants had appealed the ruling, and the Georgia appeals court docket determined that the “look of impropriety” was simply an excessive amount of. Whereas the indictment wouldn’t be dismissed, Willis’s “disqualification is remitted and no different treatment will suffice to revive public confidence within the integrity of those proceedings,” in line with Thursday’s court docket submitting.
The appeals court docket’s resolution doesn’t simply knock Willis out of the motive force’s seat, although—it disqualifies her total workplace from attempting the case.
Willis’s workplace filed a discover Thursday afternoon indicating that it intends to attraction the court docket’s resolution, which, if taken up, may transfer the case to Georgia’s Supreme Courtroom.
Within the meantime, Pete Skandalakis, govt director of the nonpartisan Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, might be answerable for figuring out who will take up the duty of prosecuting the president-elect and his co-defendants, Lawfare’s senior editor Anna Bower wrote on X. However she warned that’s simpler stated than achieved.
“Realistically, will probably be fairly troublesome to seek out one other prosecutor who could be prepared to tackle this case. *If* the appeals court docket resolution isn’t overturned by the GA Supreme Courtroom, this seemingly spells the tip of the prosecution in opposition to Trump and others in Fulton County,” Bower wrote.
Trump is dashing to remind the media that he’s the captain of the GOP, not Elon Musk.
The “President Musk” rhetoric gained steam amongst Democrats after the billionaire helped kill the persevering with decision to maintain the federal government open, voicing his opposition lengthy earlier than the president-elect did.
However Trump desires the world to know he’s nonetheless the one calling the photographs.
“As quickly as President Trump launched his official stance on the CR, Republicans on Capitol Hill echoed his perspective. President Trump is the chief of the Republican Celebration. Full cease,” stated Trump spokesperson Karoline Leavitt, as reported by Enterprise Insider’s Bryan Metzger.
The assertion could also be an indication of rising friction between Trump and the world’s richest man, who backed his return to the White Home.
Musk has been threatening Republicans, together with Home Speaker Mike Johnson, in regards to the spending invoice, even because the prospect of a authorities shutdown looms. “Any member of the Home or Senate who votes for this outrageous spending invoice deserves to be voted out in 2 years!” the SpaceX CEO and Division of Authorities Effectivity co-lead posted on Wednesday.
“It’s not Donald Trump asking for this, it’s very clearly President Elon Musk asking for this,” Consultant Dan Goldman stated Wednesday on The Final Phrase With Lawrence O’Donnell. “The truth that Donald Trump has been fully AWOL throughout these negotiations to the purpose the place solely after Elon Musk publicly tweets about his displeasure about this finances deal, impulsively, Donald Trump, chief of workers to Elon Musk, comes trotting in and blows up the deal.”
There’s no telling simply but how a lot of a rift this has precipitated between the 2 males, as Musk appears to be a long-term fixture in Trump’s internal circle. But when this type of public one-upping continues, who is aware of how lengthy this bromance will final.
Extra on the rhetoric round this:
Donald Trump’s protection secretary choose Pete Hegseth nonetheless isn’t within the clear simply but—and now even Republicans wish to see the receipts.
No less than 12 senators have requested to evaluate the FBI’s background test on Hegseth, in line with Politico. Whereas Hegseth’s nomination was believed to be secure earlier this month after a media blitz by his mom and some laps across the Senate, this stunning growth suggests in any other case.
Hegseth’s background test was initially delayed by Trump’s refusal to signal key transition paperwork however is now more likely to be accomplished earlier than Hegseth’s affirmation listening to on January 14.
“It will be useful, given the allegations which were lodged in opposition to Mr. Hegseth, to have the ability to see the FBI background test,” Republican Senator Susan Collins informed Politico.
“I’m going to see it,” stated Republican Senator Tommy Tuberville.
Normally two senators deal with this type of test, however the litany of allegations in opposition to Hegseth has prompted extra consideration on his affirmation.
The previous Fox & Associates host is accused of sexual assault, harassment, monetary mismanagement of two completely different veterans’ teams, and office misconduct, together with intoxication and sexism.
Extra on how the Trump transition goes:
Consultant Marjorie Taylor Greene has thrown her weight behind Senator Rand Paul’s ridiculous proposal that Elon Musk be elected the speaker of the Home of Representatives.
“The Speaker of the Home needn’t be a member of Congress,” Paul posted Thursday morning on X. “Nothing would disrupt the swamp greater than electing Elon Musk … give it some thought … nothing’s not possible. (to not point out the enjoyment at seeing the collective institution, aka ‘uniparty,’ lose their ever-lovin’ minds).”
Quote-tweeting Paul’s proposal approvingly, Greene wrote that she could be “open to supporting” Musk for the speakership.
“DOGE can solely actually be completed by reigning [sic] in Congress to enact actual authorities effectivity,” Greene wrote, referring to the austerity agenda of Trump’s Division of Authorities Effectivity, an advisory panel to be co-led by Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy. “The institution must be shattered similar to it was yesterday. This could possibly be the way in which.”
On Thursday afternoon, in line with Each day Mail reporter Jon Michael Raasch, Greene emailed her constituents a survey asking if they might help Musk as Home speaker. “DOGE may turn into the legislative department,” the accompanying message says. The congresswoman posed the identical query in a ballot on Musk’s platform, X, which has garnered over 57,000 votes by the point of writing—82.7 p.c of that are in favor of him getting the gavel.
If Paul and Greene had been to have it their manner, Musk could be the primary nonmember to carry the speakership.
Musk has been crusading in opposition to Republican Home Speaker Mike Johnson’s bipartisan spending invoice to avert a authorities shutdown. On Wednesday, the billionaire despatched over 100 tweets on X railing in opposition to the invoice—with “plenty of deceptive or outright false claims,” per Politico—and expressing indifference in regards to the prospect of a shutdown.
Musk’s efforts culminated in President-elect Trump popping out in opposition to the invoice, dealing “a probable deathblow” to finances negotiations, per the Related Press. As Trump and Musk ship the federal government hurtling towards a shutdown, many observers have criticized elected officers for taking marching orders from an unelected billionaire.
Amid this wrangling, the right-wing populist Home Freedom Caucus, of which Greene is a member, expressed its dissatisfaction with the proposed invoice, touting as a substitute Consultant Chip Roy’s proposed DOGE Act, which might slash federal spending—although not, after all, the Pentagon finances.
There’s scarcely a greater illustration of Greene’s phony model of populism than her help for putting in the world’s richest man to, as she put it, reign within the individuals’s elected physique.
This story has been up to date.
Home Speaker Mike Johnson has begun the regular descent out of Donald Trump’s favor.
A supply near Trump informed NOTUS Thursday that the president-elect initially supported Johnson’s plan to maintain the federal government funded, however was stunned to seek out that the whopping 1,547-page invoice was full of plans to spend billions of {dollars} on Democratic priorities, farmers, and catastrophe reduction.
Senator Josh Hawley informed CNN Wednesday that Trump had stated Johnson had not informed him every little thing within the huge spending invoice.
Trump has been a staunch ally of the Louisiana Republican, together with in Could when Consultant Marjorie Taylor Greene tried to have him faraway from the speakership. Johnson has remained cozy with the president-elect, however all of that would change within the wake of his persevering with decision, which is especially unpopular with unofficial, unelected co-President Elon Musk.
Trump’s defection may spell bother for Johnson, who must be speedily reelected subsequent yr in order that Congress can go on to certify the outcomes of the presidential election.
Trump spoke with Fox Digital Thursday and indicated that Johnson would don’t have any bother getting reelected … as long as he is ready to clear up the spending invoice.
“If the speaker acts decisively, and hard, and eliminates the entire traps being set by the Democrats, which is able to economically and, in different methods, destroy our nation, he’ll simply stay speaker,” Trump stated.
In the meantime, members of Johnson’s personal celebration seem to have already moved on. Consultant Thomas Massie stated Wednesday night time he wouldn’t vote for Johnson as speaker in January, and a few lawmakers are even suggesting Musk as a possible alternative.
Learn extra in regards to the spending invoice battle:
Trump floated fully abolishing the debt ceiling on Thursday, stunning Democrats and Republicans alike.
The surprising demand comes because the president-elect revealed his opposition to the bipartisan spending invoice, bringing the federal authorities one other step nearer to a shutdown.
Trump informed NBC Information over the telephone that it could be the “smartest factor” Congress may do.
“I might help that completely.… The Democrats have stated they wish to do away with it. In the event that they wish to do away with it, I might lead the cost,” Trump stated.
He went on to claim that the debt ceiling is a frivolous, imaginary idea supposed to scare individuals into abiding by it. “It doesn’t imply something, besides psychologically,” he stated.
This isn’t essentially new for Trump, who signed legal guidelines to carry the debt ceiling three separate instances throughout his first time period whereas additionally suggesting the debt ceiling be killed off in 2017. “It complicates issues, it’s actually not mandatory,” he stated of the debt ceiling then.
Nonetheless, it goes in opposition to the remainder of his celebration, as Republicans usually marketing campaign in opposition to elevating the debt ceiling, not to mention abolishing it completely. That’s not the case with Democrats. Pennsylvania Democratic Consultant Brendan Boyle has been advocating for his Debt Ceiling Reform Act since 2023, a regulation that may weaken Congress’s skill to make use of shutdown as a menace to cross laws. The invoice at present has 55 Democratic Celebration co-sponsors.
Already, no less than one Democrat has backed Trump’s demand.
“I agree with President-elect Trump that Congress ought to terminate the debt restrict and by no means once more govern by hostage taking,” Senator Elizabeth Warren wrote on X.
Extra on the way it’s getting in Congress:
President-elect Donald Trump and Consultant Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez had a peculiar trade after the progressive lawmaker misplaced a bid to turn into her celebration’s rating member on the Home Oversight Committee. The interplay appeared laden with sarcasm however maybe additionally revealed one thing deeper about shifts in American politics.
“Actually too dangerous that AOC misplaced the Battle for the Management Seat within the Democrat Celebration. She ought to hold attempting. Sometime, she might be profitable!” Trump posted on Fact Social Wednesday afternoon. Ocasio-Cortez replied Wednesday, in a put up adopted by a laughing-crying emoji, “Rattling you already know it’s dangerous when even Trump is feeling dangerous for me.”
The 35-year-old Ocasio-Cortez misplaced her management bid to 74-year-old Consultant Gerry Connolly—whose problem to the favored younger congresswoman was boosted by Democratic energy dealer former Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
Ocasio-Cortez’s loss was, for a lot of, an indication that the Democratic Celebration discovered few classes from the 2024 election, remaining wedded to the sclerotic previous guard and unwilling to embrace the favored change brokers for whom America has an obvious urge for food.
Whereas Ocasio-Cortez seems to be taking the loss on the chin, plenty of MAGA social media customers accused her of failing to comprehend that Trump’s reward was tongue-in-cheek (apparently lacking that the congresswoman’s reply was itself sarcastic).
However different customers weren’t so positive Trump’s reward was insincere.
Corey Moss-Pech, a sociologist at Florida State College, tweeted, “What Donald Trump understands and Dem elites don’t is younger individuals transferring away from Dems is why he gained. Because of this he stated this and why he stated Dems couldn’t get pupil loans canceled. He desires younger individuals disillusioned with Dems. And the celebration is completely satisfied to conform!”
Moss-Pech’s idea appears possible. In 2016 and 2020, Trump tried to attraction to Bernie Sanders supporters disillusioned with the political institution by calling the celebration’s nomination course of rigged.
This election cycle, Trump heaped honest reward on Ocasio-Cortez in an analogous method. And, notably, he selected to take action throughout what New York journal referred to as his “Gen-Z pivot.”
In his look on web character Adin Ross’s livestream in August, Trump was requested his opinion on plenty of celebrities and politicians. When it got here to Ocasio-Cortez, he initially stated, “Faux,” however shortly modified course, veering into reward and evaluating her favorably to former Argentine first woman Eva Perón.
“However in all equity, look, however she is aware of it. She’s received a factor going. It’s a very good factor—good factor for her,” Trump informed Ross. “She’s received a spark that’s fairly superb, truly. She’s received a very good spark. So, I’ll change it. I’ll say spark.… She’s received numerous sizzle.”
Following Election Day, Ocasio-Cortez solicited the opinions of voters who supported each herself and Trump within the 2024 election, looking for to grasp split-ticket Trump-AOC voters. Many respondents indicated that they preferred Trump and Ocasio-Cortez as a result of each, to them, signified actual change.
Extra on this Pelosi snub:
Rand Paul thinks the richest man on this planet ought to be speaker of the Home.
The Republican senator advised on X that Musk take the place, after he helped kill Speaker Mike Johnson’s spending invoice, pushing the federal authorities nearer to shutdown.
“The Speaker of the Home needn’t be a member of Congress,” Paul posted on Thursday. “Nothing would disrupt the swamp greater than electing Elon Musk … give it some thought … nothing’s not possible. (to not point out the enjoyment at seeing the collective institution, aka ‘uniparty,’ lose their ever-lovin’ minds).”
The speaker of the Home doesn’t must be an elected official, though it at all times has been previously. Nonetheless, the probability of this MAGA fantasy coming to fruition appears low, as President-elect Trump himself informed Fox Information Thursday that Johnson would stay speaker as long as he “acts decisively and hard” on the upcoming spending package deal.
Even with out the speakership, Musk’s affect on the president-elect and the larger Republican Celebration is simple. He has already been appointed to co-lead the Division of Authorities Effectivity and has been a relentless presence at Mar-a-Lago. His oversize position was referred to as into query lately after he and Trump publicly disagreed on elevating the debt ceiling.
“It’s not Donald Trump asking for this, it’s very clearly President Elon Musk asking for this,” Consultant Dan Goldman informed The Final Phrase With Lawrence O’Donnell. “The truth that Donald Trump has been fully AWOL throughout these negotiations to the purpose the place solely after Elon Musk publicly tweets about his displeasure about this finances deal, impulsively, Donald Trump, chief of workers to Elon Musk, comes trotting in and blows up the deal.”
Georgia’s Courtroom of Appeals disqualified Fulton County District Legal professional Fani Willis Thursday from prosecuting the 2020 election interference case in opposition to Donald Trump and his co-defendants over a battle of curiosity.
Willis’s workplace filed a discover Thursday afternoon indicating that it intends to attraction the court docket’s resolution, which, if taken up, would transfer the case to Georgia’s Supreme Courtroom.
Trump and eight of his 18 co-defendants filed an software with Georgia’s appeals court docket in March, asking it to rethink Decide Scott McAfee resolution to permit Willis to proceed to prosecute the case after she was accused of getting an improper relationship along with her particular prosecutor, Nathan Wade. McAfee had allowed her to remain on the grounds that she reduce ties with Wade.
“After fastidiously contemplating the trial court docket’s findings in its order, we conclude that it erred by failing to disqualify DA Willis and her workplace,” Decide E. Trention Brown wrote within the appeals court docket majority opinion.
“The treatment crafted by the trial court docket to stop an ongoing look of impropriety did nothing to handle the looks of impropriety that existed at instances when DA Willis was exercising her broad pretrial discretion about who to prosecute and what prices to carry.”
“Whereas we acknowledge that an look of impropriety typically isn’t sufficient to help disqualification, that is the uncommon case through which disqualification is remitted and no different treatment will suffice to revive public confidence within the integrity of those proceedings,” Brown wrote.
The court docket affirmed, nevertheless, that the indictment in opposition to Trump shouldn’t be dismissed.
“The appellants contend that the trial court docket erred in denying their motions to dismiss the indictment. The State responds that the appellants have failed to point out that the trial court docket erred find that the appellants had not proven ‘that [their] due course of rights have been violated or that the problems concerned prejudiced [them] in any manner,’” Brown wrote.
He famous that dismissing the indictment could be an “excessive sanction” and will solely be used for “illegal authorities conduct.”
The Fulton County district legal professional’s workplace indicted Trump, alongside 18 others, in 2023 on felony prices in a large-scale racketeering case for trying to intervene in Georgia’s state election. It’s unclear what precisely Willis’s disqualification will imply for the case.
Trump’s legal professionals had argued in a authorized submitting two weeks in the past that the case should be tossed “properly earlier than” he was sworn in as president, and that each the state and district court docket “lack jurisdiction to entertain any additional prison course of in opposition to President Trump because the continued indictment and prosecution of President Trump by the State of Georgia are unconstitutional.”
Fulton County Chief Senior Assistant District Legal professional F. McDonald Wakeford hit again on the legal professionals’ request, arguing that the “Appellant doesn’t specify or articulate how the attraction—or certainly, another facet of this case—will constitutionally impede or intervene along with his duties as soon as he assumes workplace,” implying that the case would proceed no matter Trump’s return to the White Home.
This story has been up to date.
However the case may nonetheless go on: