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"When you see important societal actors — be it university presidents, media outlets, C.E.O.s, mayors, governors — changing their behavior in order to avoid the wrath of the government,
that’s a sign that we’ve crossed the line into some form of authoritarianism,”

said #Steven #Levitsky,
a professor of government at Harvard and the co-author of the influential 2018 book
“How Democracies Die.”

nytimes.com/2025/03/06/us/poli

The New York Times · Fearing Retribution, Trump Critics Muzzle ThemselvesBy Elisabeth Bumiller

In recent months, Voice of America’s parent organization, the U.S. Agency for Global Media, has opened human-resources investigations into Voice of America journalists
-- for reporting on criticism of Trump
-- or for making comments that were perceived as critical of him.

At least a couple of articles that included criticism of Trump and his administration were not published or were watered down after publication in recent months

And on Friday, the Agency for Global Media informed one of Voice of America’s highest-profile journalists,
#Steven #Herman,

@w7voa
@newsguy.bsky.social

that he was being placed on an extended “excused absence” pending a human resources investigation.

Mr. Herman confirmed receiving the letter, which said the investigation was into whether his “social media activity has undermined V.O.A.’s audiences’ perceptions of the objectivity and/or credibility of V.O.A. and its news operations.”

nytimes.com/2025/02/28/busines

Journalists at Voice of America said they had faced scrutiny for some of their public comments.
The New York Times · Voice of America Journalists Face Investigations for Comments About TrumpBy David Enrich
Continued thread

Others in the Trump inner circle who made their fortunes via privately held ventures include treasury secretary
#Steven T. #Mnuchin, who got a great deal during the financial crisis on IndyMac, a mortgage lending bank,
thanks to our government’s penchant for the socialization of risk and privatization of profit when entities considered “too big to fail” go into a state of distress.

Mnuchin and his fellow investors, a group that included liberal donor and hedge-fund honcho George Soros, changed the company name to #OneWest and began to aggressively foreclose on homeowners.
The bank earned Mnuchin and his partners a profit of $1.6 billion in its first year of operation,
even as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was preparing to take a hit of nearly $11 billion “on bad loans that the Pasadena institution made before it was sold last March and renamed OneWest Bank,” according to E. Scott Reckard of the Los Angeles Times.

Then there’s commerce secretary #Wilbur #Ross, worth $2.5 billion according to Forbes, who started a second career in 2000 with the creation of his eponymous investment company,
which he later sold to Invesco for a reported $375 million.

#Reed #Cordish, special assistant to the president for intragovernmental and technology initiatives, is a scion of the family that owns privately held Cordish Companies,
involved in gaming and entertainment.
He’s said to be tight with Jared Kushner.

#Sonny #Perdue, Trump’s secretary of agriculture, founded the private company Perdue Inc., a trucking outfit,
with his wife, Mary, who was reported in 2005 to be the company’s sole shareholder.
(An official at Perdue Inc. declined to confirm to The Baffler whether this is still the case.)

And, while not a rich guy himself, CIA director #Mike #Pompeo founded a private company called #Thayer #Aerospace in the late 1990s with help from Koch Venture Capital, an arm of Koch Industries.
A Pompeo aide told the Washington Post that the Koch investment amounted to only 2 percent,
but there’s no way to really know, since the transaction took place between two privately held companies.
He later became president of #Sentry #International, another private company, before his 2010 run for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, which he won, again with an assist from the Koch brothers.
He’s also a climate-change denier—an appealing trait in a public official if you’re a fossil fuels magnate looking to buy one

The two finalists to become Trump’s Treasury Secretary
— the person will have a major hand in cutting taxes for the wealthy and raising tariffs so everyone pays more
— are #Howard #Lutnick, who’s CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald and Trump’s co-transition chair,

and #Steven #Bessent, the founder of the investment firm Key Square Capital Management.

Lutnick had been in the lead but a few days ago, according to the The Wall Street Journal, he heard from Trump’s allies that he might not get the nod.

So Lutnick turned for help to #Elon #Musk, who now calls himself Trump’s “First Buddy.”

Bessent’s supporters also reached out to Musk to endorse Bessent, which tells you alot about the palace intrigue going on now in Mar-a-Lago, and how much power Musk is now wielding.

Yesterday, Musk, posted on his X that Lutnick would be a better choice for treasury secretary than Bessent:
“My view fwiw is that Bessent is a business-as-usual choice, whereas @howardlutnick will actually enact change. Business-as-usual is driving America bankrupt, so we need change one way or another.”

Musk’s and Trump’s criterion for filling high-level positions
(besides unbridled fealty to Trump):

⚠️The picks don’t need to know anything or share any large vision of the public good.
They just have to be bomb-throwers who’ll shake things up.

The worst that can be said of any candidate is he’ll govern as usual.

🔥Trump is well on his way to “crush the system,” as he promised
— which most Americans appear to want because the “as usual” system has for decades been rewarding big-money donors, monopolists, CEOs living off government contracts (like Musk)
and fat-cat denizens of Wall Street (like Lutnick and Bessent)
— all of whom have been siphoning off most economic gains for themselves.

🆘 But if the new system that Trump installs
(with or without Musk’s help)
siphons off even more of the gains for those at the top, while destroying what’s left of our democracy,
most Americans will find themselves even worse off and more resentful.
robertreich.substack.com/p/tru

Robert Reich · Trump’s “First Buddy” is in deep shitBy Robert Reich

Trump taps combative aide for top press job as Cabinet picks face scrutiny

Donald Trump on Friday chose one of his most combative advisers as his next White House communications director,
doubling down on his years-long confrontational approach to the news media
as his team defends two controversial Cabinet picks facing new scrutiny over allegations of sexual misconduct.

Trump tapped #Steven #Cheung,
the communications director of his campaign, to lead his White House press shop,
elevating a loyal spokesman and former Ultimate Fighting Championship staffer
known for lobbing crude insults on social media.

Although many of Trump’s press aides aggressively criticize the news media and relish taunting Democrats,
Cheung stands out.

His selection suggests Trump’s approach to the news media will be just as contentious in his second term as it was in his first,
when White House press briefings often grew heated — if they happened at all.

washingtonpost.com/politics/20

The Washington Post · Trump taps combative aide for top press job as Cabinet picks face scrutinyBy Hannah Knowles

One of the most satisfying aspects of covering biotech as long as I have
is the opportunity to report on the long arc of drug development, from start to finish.
It’s not always pretty, and more often than not, it ends badly.

But #KarXT, now #Cobenfy, is one of those drug stories with a happy ending.
I remember talking to #Steven #Paul in 2019 for a story about the phase 2 results,
which were pretty remarkable.
Paul was excited about what KarXT might mean for people with #schizophrenia,
but he was cautious because, as he warned me at the time,
clinical trials for psychiatric conditions are extraordinarily difficult to replicate.
Let’s wait to see what KarXT does in Ph3 trials, he said.
Now, we know.

It’s been cool to follow and report on the KarXT story all these years.
From PureTech to Karuna to Bristol Myers Squibb,
and now, to #approval, where Cobenfy will have a meaningful impact on people living with schizophrenia ...

-- Adam Feuerstein
x.com/adamfeuerstein/status/18

X (formerly Twitter)Adam Feuerstein ✡️ (@adamfeuerstein) on XOne of the most satisfying aspects of covering biotech as long as I have is the opportunity to report on the long arc of drug development, from start to finish. It's not always pretty, and more often than not, it ends badly. But KarXT, now Cobenfy, is one of those drug stories

Donald Trump’s campaign said Saturday that some of its internal communications had been hacked.
The acknowledgment came after POLITICO began receiving emails from an anonymous account with documents from inside Trump’s operation.
The Trump campaign blamed “foreign sources hostile to the United States,”

POLITICO has not independently verified the identity of the hacker or their motivation,
and a Trump campaign spokesperson, #Steven #Cheung, declined to say if they had further information substantiating the campaigns’ suggestion that it was targeted by Iran.

Cheung said:
“These documents were obtained illegally from foreign sources hostile to the United States, intended to interfere with the 2024 election and sow chaos throughout our Democratic process”
-- exactly like the Russian "Wikileaks" documents used by the 2020 Trump campaign

politico.com/news/2024/08/10/t


Judge #Aileen M. #Cannon’s stunning dismissal this week of the most serious charges faced by Donald Trump put her on shaky legal ground, according to experts,

who say she is🔸 on track to be reversed on appeal
🔸 and could even be removed from the case
— an extraordinary, but not unheard of step.

Because of the political calendar, however, any legal repercussions could be short-lived.

Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified national security records and obstruction of government efforts to retrieve the material
🔸may not matter if the former president and current Republican nominee is elected in November.

If he gets back to the White House, Trump could pressure his Justice Department to close the case.

He could also promote Cannon to the very appeals court that will soon examine her decision to toss the case.

Cannon’s finding that special counsel #Jack #Smith was improperly appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland to investigate Trump
conflicts with numerous past court decisions and the nation’s long history
— during both Democratic and Republican administrations
— of allowing #independent #prosecutors to handle high-profile instances of alleged wrongdoing.


⭐️Smith has filed notice of his plans to appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit,
which reviews decisions from the Florida district where Cannon,
a relatively inexperienced judge appointed by Trump in 2020, sits.

⭐️The court has already rebuked her twice for her handling of other aspects of the classified documents case,
sending what Yale Law School professor Akhil Amar described as a message that her decisions had been “way out of line.”

The question now, Amar said, is
💥how quickly and dramatically the appeals court acts on the latest ruling, 💥
which dismissed the entire indictment for Trump and his two co-defendants.

“They may not want to stick their head in a #buzz #saw if they can just let the case take its slow, deliberative course,” he said.

In her 93-page decision, Cannon said there is no specific statute authorizing the attorney general to appoint a special counsel.

She also said the Constitution requires someone with Smith’s authority to be confirmed by the Senate.

The judge acknowledged the tradition of special-attorney-like figures in moments of political scandal involving high-level government officials,
from #Watergate to #Iran-#contra to Russia’s attempts to #interfere in the 2016 election.

But Cannon said the practice of appointing such independent prosecutors has been inconsistent and based on a “spotty historical backdrop.”

Smith, she wrote, is “a private citizen exercising the full power of a United States Attorney, and with very little oversight or supervision.”

Conservative legal groups have long questioned the constitutionality of special counsel appointments.

Cannon repeatedly cited Justice #Clarence #Thomas, who raised the issue in a solo opinion this month as part of the Supreme Court’s decision granting Trump broad immunity from prosecution for official acts.

That Supreme Court case focused on Smith’s separate election interference prosecution of Trump in D.C.

She also embraced the arguments in a law review article by #Gary #Lawson of Boston University School of Law and #Steven G. #Calabresi, a Northwestern law professor and 🔸a co-founder of the Federalist Society, with which Cannon is affiliated.

Other legal experts, however, have joined former Justice Department officials and Smith’s legal team in saying
her ruling ignores the history of special counsel appointments and flouts Supreme Court precedent.

Most notably, the high court in 1974 unanimously required President Richard M. #Nixon to hand over recordings to a special prosecutor as part of the #Watergate investigation.

In that opinion, the justices endorsed the office, citing several statutes under which the attorney general had
“delegated the authority to represent the United States in these particular matters to a Special Prosecutor with unique authority and tenure.”

While lower-court judges are bound to follow the Supreme Court’s lead,
🔸Cannon took the unusual step of finding she was not required to abide by that aspect of the high court’s opinion in U.S. v. Nixon,
🔸saying the case did not directly address the validity of the office of special counsel.

Michael J. Gerhardt, a University of North Carolina law professor who teaches about constitutional conflicts between presidents and Congress, said
Cannon cannot just brush aside a unanimous high court ruling.

“For a trial judge to ignore it is judicial malpractice,” he said, describing her most recent decision as
part of a “pattern of bias that leads her to endorse wacky or unfounded arguments,
and that’s a problem if you’re a judge.”
washingtonpost.com/politics/20

The Washington Post · Tossing Trump’s case was risky for Judge Cannon — at least for nowBy Ann E. Marimow

If Donald Trump returns to the White House, close allies want to dramatically change the government's interpretation of #Civil #Rights-era laws to💥 focus on "anti-white racism" 💥rather than discrimination against people of color.

Trump's Justice Department would push to #eliminate or #upend programs in government and corporate America that are designed to counter racism that has favored whites.

Targets would range from decades-old policies aimed at giving minorities economic opportunities, to more recent programs that began in response to the pandemic and the killing of George Floyd.

Trump campaign spokesperson #Steven #Cheung told Axios: "As President Trump has said, all staff, offices, and initiatives connected to Biden's un-American policy will be immediately #terminated."

Longtime aides and allies preparing for a potential second Trump administration have been laying legal groundwork with a flurry of lawsuits and legal complaints — some of which have been successful.

A central vehicle for the effort has been #America #First #Legal, founded by former Trump aide #Stephen #Miller, who has called the group conservatives' "long-awaited answer to the ACLU."

America First cited the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in February in a lawsuit against CBS and Paramount Global for what the group argued was discrimination against a white, straight man who was a writer for the show "Seal Team" in 2017.

In February, the group filed a civil rights complaint against the NFL over its "Rooney Rule."

The rule — named for Dan #Rooney, late owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers — was instituted in 2003 and expanded in 2022.
It requires NFL teams to interview at least two minority candidates for vacant general manager, head coach and coordinator positions.

American First argued that "given the limited time frame to hire executives and coaches after the season, this results in fewer opportunities for similarly situated, well-qualified candidates who are not minorities."

In 2021, Miller's group successfully sued to block the implementation of a $29 billion pandemic-era program for women- and minority-owned restaurants, saying it discriminated against white-owned businesses.

"This ruling is the first, but crucial, step towards ending government-sponsored racial discrimination," Miller said then.

Other Trump-aligned groups are preparing for a future Trump Justice Department to implement — or challenge — policies on a broader scale.

The #Heritage #Foundation's well-funded "#Project2025" envisions a second Trump administration ending what it calls "affirmative discrimination."

Part of the plan, written by former Trump Justice Department official #Gene #Hamilton, argues that "advancing the interests of certain segments of American society ... comes at the expense of other Americans — and in nearly all cases violates longstanding federal law."

Hamilton is America First Legal's general counsel.

Such groups have gained momentum with the #Supreme #Court's turn to the right
— most notably its recent rejection of affirmative action in college admissions.

The court ruled that programs designed to benefit people of color and address past injustices discriminate against white and Asian Americans.

In 2021, a federal judge blocked a $4 billion program to help Black farmers

axios.com/2024/04/01/trump-rev

Photo illustration of Donald Trump with photos of Lyndon B. Johnson and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. during the signing of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
Axios · Exclusive: Trump allies plot anti-racism protections — for white peopleBy Alex Thompson