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Donald Trump’s legal and political fortunes diverge, Sean Penn makes a Zelenskyy move, and the House͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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June 12, 2023
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Principals

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Steve Clemons
Steve Clemons

“If even half of it is true, he’s toast.” So said Donald Trump’s former attorney general Bill Barr, who had the quote of the weekend on the indictment now facing the former president. As Benjy Sarlin writes this morning, the criminal case may well have changed everything legally for Trump, but politically much remains the same. He maintains a daunting lead in the GOP primary, and in a CBS News poll, 75% of Republican voters said the indictment either wouldn’t change their view of him or would even improve it.

And in the movie theaters, Morgan Chalfant caught a screening of Superpower focused on the heroism under fire of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The film was produced by filmmaker Aaron Kaufman and actor Sean Penn and includes active war zone footage documenting Russia’s invasion and the comedian-turned-leader’s defiance and resistance.

Plus, Morgan Chalfant got one good text with University of Michigan law school professor Barbara McQuade on all the ways a judge might be able to impact the classified documents trial.

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Priorities

☞ White House: President Biden’s response to questions about the Trump indictment was exactly what we said it would be: no comment. The president will meet with outgoing NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg today.

☞ Senate: The Senate is on track to wrap up work on several nominations this week, including Jared Bernstein, Biden’s pick to serve as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors. Minority Leader Mitch McConnell has still not weighed in on Trump’s indictment; Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer issued a joint statement with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries saying that the indictment should move through the legal process “without any outside political or ideological interference.”

☞ House: Republicans put the legislation blocking a federal ban on gas stoves back on the House calendar for this week, signaling they’ll try again to pass it after angry conservatives blocked it last week and effectively shut down business on the chamber’s floor in protest of the debt ceiling deal. House leaders also announced the chamber will consider Georgia Rep. Andrew Clyde’s resolution blocking the Biden administration’s rule on pistol stabilizing braces, an effort to appease conservatives who had asked for a vote on it.

☞ Outside the Beltway: Part of I-95 in Philadelphia collapsed yesterday after a truck caught fire underneath an overpass. Pennsylvania’s Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro is expected to issue a disaster declaration. Biden, who the White House said was briefed on the collapse, is supposed to go to Philadelphia for a political event on Saturday.

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Need to Know
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

Jack Smith and his team already appear to have caught an unlucky break, after their case against Trump was assigned to Judge Aileen Cannon, the same Trump appointee who controversially granted the former president’s request for a “special master” to review files seized by the FBI from his Mar-a-Lago estate. That ruling was tossed out by 11th Circuit, which determined Cannon had no jurisdiction to intervene over the investigation.

Trump will appear in court on Tuesday and plans to deliver remarks and host a fundraiser at his golf club in Bedminster, N.J., later that evening. He offered a glimpse of his rhetorical defense in two speeches over the weekend, assailing the Justice Department and special counsel Jack Smith and dismissing the indictment as “baseless” and “election interference.” The Trump aide Walt Nauta who the special counsel charged alongside Trump is also scheduled to appear in court tomorrow at the same time as Trump.

Liberal billionaire and philanthropist George Soros is turning over control of his Open Society Foundations to his 37-year-old son Alex, who told the Wall Street Journal that he’s “more political” than his father.

After initially denying the reports, the Biden administration confirmed that China has been using a spy base on Cuba to collect intelligence on the U.S. but said that it was an issue Biden officials “inherited.” The revelations quickly attracted congressional scrutiny, and Florida lawmakers have asked for a briefing on it.

North Carolina Republicans voted by a two-to-one margin to censure Sen. Thom Tillis during the state GOP convention over the weekend, arguing his votes in Washington were out of step with GOP priorities, according to The News & Observer. Tillis has been a key negotiator on several bipartisan deals with Democrats, including on infrastructure, guns, and gay marriage.

Silvio Berlusconi has died at age 86. The louche billionaire media mogul and former Italian prime minister, known for his “bunga bunga” parties and many corruption scandals, led a right-wing populist movement that in many ways seemed to presage the global rise of leaders like Donald Trump.

Morgan Chalfant and Jordan Weissmann

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Beltway Newsletters

Punchbowl News: House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s standoff with his Freedom Caucus critics hadn’t been resolved as of Sunday evening, leaving in question whether votes will resume in the chamber. Punchbowl writes that McCarthy needs to smooth things over not only with the Freedom Caucus members but also his No. 2, Steve Scalise.

Playbook: McCarthy’s conservative critics want him to ensure funding bills are written at fiscal year 2022 levels, below the deal the speaker made with Biden.

The Early 202: There hasn’t been any discussion over the weekend between House leaders and conservatives on how to move forward after last week’s impasse. Rep. Ken Buck, R-Colo., one of the members protesting the debt ceiling deal, told the Washington Post: “I don’t think there’s a lot of people that have been swayed by leadership.”

Axios: Fox News sent a “cease and desist” letter to ex-host Tucker Carlson after he launched his new series on Twitter. The network says that its contract with Carlson states that his content is exclusive to Fox through next year.

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Benjy Sarlin

Trump’s split screen

REUTERS/Jonathan Drake

As the country digested the Donald Trump indictment over the weekend, two clear takeaways emerged. Legally, his path to avoiding conviction has never been narrower. Politically, his path to the nomination looks wider than ever.

First, the politics. Trump has been leading in polls of Republican primary voters despite months of indictments, court losses, and investigations that his 2024 rivals have largely joined him in condemning as politically motivated. So far, everything looks to be playing out the same.

A CBS/YouGov poll taken partly after the indictment showed Trump with a commanding lead among Republican primary voters, with 61% of the vote to second-place Ron DeSantis’ 23%. Not only that, some 76% said they were more disturbed by fears that “the indictment was politically motivated” than that Trump’s behavior was a “national security risk” (12%).

DeSantis, the only candidate able to rally any significant bloc of conservatives against Trump at the moment, complained in a speech on Friday of a “different standard” in which Hillary Clinton was not indicted, and said he saw “one faction of society weaponizing the power of the state against factions that it doesn’t like.”

Mike Pence, who launched his campaign just last week promising to hold Trump accountable for betraying the Constitution on January 6th, mostly pleaded for time. He called on Attorney General Merrick Garland to publicly justify the indictment, and “stop hiding behind the special counsel.

Nikki Haley condemned “prosecutorial overreach, double standards, and vendetta politics” while also promising to “move beyond the endless drama and distractions.” It was an interesting two-step: Yes, there may be a vast partisan conspiracy to destroy the former president, but do we really have to dwell on it?

To the extent there was any ray of light for Trump’s rivals in the CBS/YouGov poll it was that some Republican voters seemed to agree with Haley: 61% of Republicans said they’d prefer Trump not discuss the investigations against him, even as the vast majority took his side against the charges.

If any Republicans decide they did want to go on the attack, they’d have some backup. The early consensus among legal experts was that the charges were more serious for Trump, and the evidence more direct, than almost anyone expected before last week.

“If even half of it is true, then he’s toast,” Trump’s former attorney general Bill Barr said on Fox News, characterizing suggestions that Trump is the victim of a witch hunt as “ridiculous.”

It was a strong contrast from the Manhattan DA case, which many of the same legal commentators — including Barr — had dismissed as weak or overly partisan. Trump called Barr a “gutless pig” on Truth Social in response.

Trump’s defenders, for now, seemed caught off guard. In some cases, their arguments referred to older talking points that the indictment had seemingly overtaken.

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio told CNN’s Dana Bash that Trump had declassified the documents in question, for example, then tried to bully his way past Bash’s response that the argument “doesn’t make sense on its face” because prosecutors provided transcripts and accounts of Trump explicitly telling people he had not.

“Caught on tape destroying the legal argument he has been content to farm out to his loudest defenders for months: That’s our Trump,” wrote Jeffrey Blehar, one of several contributors for National Review who condemned Trump after the indictment.

Two conservative commentators separately suggested Trump should only have been charged if he had sold or transferred the documents to a shady source or foreign power, moving the goalposts to a new stadium several cities away.

There were hints of potential legal responses for Trump. Trump attorney Alina Habba told Fox News that his team would invoke the Presidential Records Act as part of his defense. She offered no real details on how, but conservative commentators including the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board fleshed out more of what that argument might look like.

“The Presidential Record Act allows a President access to documents, both classified and unclassified, once he leaves office. It allows for good-faith negotiation with the National Archives,” the paper wrote. “Yet the indictment assumes that Mr. Trump had no right to take any classified documents.”

One of his until-recent attorneys, Tim Parlatore, acknowledged to CNN’s Jake Tapper the charges were serious, and that there were “problematic” parts of the indictment he was “not aware of” beforehand, namely evidence Trump tried to deceive his own attorneys by ordering boxes moved before they could search them in response to a subpoena.

But he also suggested some possible defenses: Maybe it was “bluster” and Trump didn’t have the classified document referred to in the smoking gun transcript; maybe a judge would throw out testimony that he argued breached attorney-client privilege; and maybe Trump’s team could get somewhere arguing over a reported allegation of prosecutorial misconduct.

Most public defenses of Trump, however, rested on the purported unseemliness of a current administration charging a political opponent, and virtually all of them invoked comparisons to Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden’s classified document cases. Sen. Lindsey Graham R-S.C. told ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos that he was “not justifying his behavior” but thought the charges went too far, especially the use of the Espionage Act. “Most Republicans believe that the law now is a political tool,” he said.

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Foreign Influence
REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

On the day of Russia’s invasion, the filmmaker Aaron Kaufman and actor Sean Penn were on the ground in Kyiv, interviewing Volodymyr Zelenskyy. The pair proceeded to travel back and forth from the country, shooting from its war zones in order to eventually finish “Superpower,” their documentary about the Ukrainian president.

Kaufman spent years as a Hollywood producer, putting out films like “Sin City: A Dame to Kill For” and “Flock of Dudes,” before recently turning to documentary directing. So during a recent interview, I had to ask: Did filming in a tinderbox like Ukraine make him nervous?

“Don’t get the wrong idea that I am some kind of tough guy — because I am not,” he said. “I wasn’t really thinking in those terms. You’re just kind of in the moment. It wasn’t until we got out of the country, and I ended up in Paris after, and it kind of hit me with a ton of bricks there.”

I caught the documentary at a screening last week hosted by Humanity For Freedom, a new nonprofit Kaufman and political strategist Dane Waters launched to advocate for Ukraine support and fight authoritarianism. The film, which Penn premiered at the Berlin Film Festival earlier this year, portrays Zelenskyy as a heroic wartime leader and offers a sobering glimpse into the conflict.

Humanity for Freedom is using the screenings to help raise awareness about the organization, which Waters told me plans to pursue global awareness and mass education campaigns about the global machinations of paramilitary Russia’s Wagner group as well as Russian kidnappings of Ukrainian children.

“We’re going to get down and dirty into the trenches,” Waters said. “We’re like guerrilla warfare.”

Morgan Chalfant

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One Good Text

Barbara McQuade is a University of Michigan law professor, an MSNBC legal analyst, and a former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan nominated by then-President Obama. We asked her about the impact the judge can have on Trump’s classified documents prosecution.

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Blindspot

Stories that are being largely ignored by either left-leaning or right-leaning outlets, according to data from our partners at Ground News.

WHAT THE LEFT ISN’T READING: Jon Wang, an Asian-American high school student from Florida, said he was rejected from six top-tier colleges despite having scored a 1590 on the SAT. Wang blamed affirmative action.

WHAT THE RIGHT ISN’T READING: A weeks-long Republican walkout in Oregon over measures to expand access to abortion and gender-affirming care is raising doubts about passing funding for schools and other state programs.

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