Wednesday, December 20, 2023

It's beginning to look like... 1968?


According to news reports, President Biden is increasingly frustrated with dismal poll numbers:   

For months, the president and first lady Jill Biden have told aides and friends they are frustrated by the president’s low approval rating and the polls that show him trailing former president Donald Trump, the front-runner for the Republican nomination -- and in recent weeks, they have grown upset that they are not making more progress.

I feel your pain, Mr. President, but you made some bad decisions and the polls are just how voters express their concerns.  

Is the President's team talking Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. seriously? Maybe they should, because he could be the biggest story of Election Day 2024. Kennedy could be the Wallace of 2024 -- the candidate who elected Nixon in 1968.

According to the RCP average, this is what election day could look like:   

Trump  --  40.6

Biden   --  35.4

Kennedy -- 13.2

What does that mean in the Electoral College?  It probably means that Trump wins over 300 electoral votes and competes in places like New York, Minnesota, and other blue states.  

So can Kennedy keep up these numbers?  Time will tell, but these numbers have been consistent for a couple of months.   

Another consideration is whether Kennedy runs against Biden or Trump.  My guess is that he goes after Biden and looks for disenchanted Democrats.  

So it's all a big guess today, but the Democrats made a big mistake when they threw Kennedy under the bus.  Kennedy will come back to bite them on election day.

Mr. President, it’s Robert Kennedy who will spoil your election night party.



X22, And we Know, and more- December 20

 




Escaping the Cycle of Authoritarianism: A New Path Forward for Conservatives and Libertarians


Over the past decade, we have seen a rising willingness on the part of progressives to use the government as a weapon against their political opponents. Rather than pushing their ideas through debate, they seek to compel the rest of the country to adhere to their ideology through the force of the state.

This has prompted some on the right to suggest that responding in kind is the key to stopping the Marxist crowd from weaponizing the government. However, there is a better way to accomplish this objective.

We find ourselves in an era in which the left has been using the government against folks on the right to push their agenda. The State Department has paid private companies to censor right-leaning voices on Big Tech platforms. The Justice Department tried to label concerned parents protesting at school board meetings as “domestic terrorists.” The government is brutally punishing those who committed the crime of being present at the U.S. Capitol building on J6. It is locking people up for protesting at abortion clinics. On top of that, leftists are using the government to prosecute former President Donald Trump in order to influence the outcome of the 2024 election.

It is not hard to understand why folks on the right believe responding in kind is the solution.

Last week, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) introduced a measure that would create a one-time six percent excise tax on endowments to elite universities. The aim of this measure is to punish these institutions for promoting “woke” ideology and allowing the expression of blatantly antisemitic ideas on campus.

The move is a response to the proliferation of far-leftist “woke” ideology and rising antisemitism on college campuses. According to a statementreleased by the senator, “This tax will take money from wealthy colleges pushing woke ideologies and redirect it to more pressing national concerns.”

The tax applies to (1) secular institutions with endowments of at least $12.2 billion and (2) secular institutions with endowments of at least $9 billion that also operate a state contract college.

And what would those “pressing” concerns be?

The revenue generated by the tax would be allocated to fund Ukraine, Israel, and border security. The universities affected include Harvard, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, Cornell, and a number of others. It is estimated that the tax would rake in a whopping $15.4 billion for Uncle Sam.

This is an obvious example of using the state to attack private organizations brd on ideology. It would not be surprising to see even more legislation of this type being proposed by Republicans. But it would only make the situation worse.

Libertarian podcaster and commentator Dave Smith discussed this issue during a recent exchange on X, formerly known as Twitter. When asked about defending against progressivism, he replied:

The NAP is a moral principles. Principles themselves don’t defend anything. Men with guns do.

The conservative defense against progressivism has largely been to become progressives. Abolishing their institutions and ensuring they’re not recreated is a better approach.

That’s not a critique, it’s a question. The NAP is a moral principles. Principles themselves don’t defend anything. Men with guns do.

The conservative defense against progressivism has largely been to become progressives. Abolishing their institutions and ensuring they’re not… https://t.co/MDqK1DTO1l
— Dave Smith (@ComicDaveSmith) December 19, 2023

The Mises Caucus also responded, noting that conservative leaders “helped build up and conserve State power any time & every time they could in the post-WW2 era” and rejected “the libertarianism of the Old Right to create ‘a totalitarian bureaucracy within our shores’ to fight communism around the world.”

Now that said bureaucracy has hollowed out the culture they care about and is being weaponized against them by leftists whose ideology is far more compatible with State power, they refuse to recognize that building said bureaucracy at all was a mistake and insist on reforming & wielding State power instead of cutting & abolishing it. They then blame the libertarians whose warnings they expressly rejected all along and are still rejecting.

Conservatives cope with their utter failure to halt progressivism (at best) by claiming they just didn't wield State power effectively because libertarians convinced them State Power Bad & thus they ceded it to the Left. This goes against the empirical reality that they helped…

— Mises Caucus (@LPMisesCaucus) December 19, 2023

Taking this into account, it seems clear to me that the answer is not to focus on winning control of the government to weaponize it against progressives. Doing so only perpetuates a vicious authoritarian cycle in which power is the central currency, and every political victory becomes merely a means to impose one’s will on the opposition. While it may feel good when your party is in power, it is only a matter of time before the pendulum swings the other way, and you find yourself once again in the crosshairs.

Moreover, pursuing this strategy ignores what is supposed to be a foundational principle of conservatism and libertarianism: Limited government.

If the state can be compared to a giant gun, which is a fitting analogy, seeking to control the firearm and pointing it at the enemy is a foolhardy endeavor, considering the reality that the gun will inevitably fall into the hands of your adversary. The better strategy would be to take the gun and jettison the rounds it contains, rendering the gun ineffective. This would ensure that the firearm cannot be used to impose one’s will on the rest of the population, regardless of which team is holding it at the moment.

If Americans are going to have any chance at enjoying liberty, it will only come when the government is weakened to the point that it matters little which party is in charge. As farfetched as this idea sounds, the only way to safeguard our natural rights is to unload the gun instead of wielding it against political opposition. The question is: Will we ever get to a point where enough Americans demand the shrinking of government instead of only seeking power?



Tucker: I Would Vote Against Trump If He Picked Nikki Haley As VP



Tucker Carlson said he will not vote for Donald Trump in the 2024 general election if he chooses Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley as his running mate.

Carlson first expressed support for Trump 2024 on Roseanne Barr’s podcast in November. He claimed to have “always agreed with Trump’s policies” but admitted that he only became an “active Trump supporter when they raided Mar-a-Lago.”

The former Fox News host’s newfound support for the candidate leading primary and general polls, he promised this week during a live recording of “Timcast IRL” at Turning Point USA’s AmericaFest 2023, will be threatened if Trump chooses the wrong running mate.

“Would you vote for Trump if he chose Nikki as VP?” Host Tim Pool asked

The question stems from Lara Trump’s refusal during a TV interview earlier this week to dismiss Haley as a VP prospect.

“I would not only not vote for that ticket, I would advocate against it as strongly as I could,” Carlson told the AmFest audience, receiving several shocked “wows” from his fellow panelists.

According to Carlson, adding Haley to the Trump ballot would be “poison” to his campaign.

“I mean, here’s someone who’s actively opposed to the interests of the country I grew up in, who endorsed the BLM riots, and who is not left, but is neoliberal in the darkest, most — speaking of nihilist — nihilistic way, and has no real popular supporters, is a creature of the oligarchs,” Carlson explained. “So yeah, that would be reason to oppose the ticket.”

When Pool asked once again if “even Trump-Haley is a no-go?” Carlson doubled down.

“I just can’t imagine a world where that could happen,” he said. “That would be so crazy. Anything could happen of course, but picking Nikki Haley, who’s utterly treacherous and utterly dismissive of like, the interest of Americans, yeah.”

Another panelist suggested that Trump would “get assassinated immediately.” His suggestion that the deep state would be willing to knock off Trump to install Haley as president recalls Carlson’s exchange with the former president in August, in which Carlson mused that “Indictment is not working … do they have to kill you now?”

Pool asked his guests who they thought Trump should pick as a running mate. Turning Point USA’s Charlie Kirk recommended Carlson.

“I don’t think I’d be that great at it,” Carlson said.

Instead, he suggested Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy would make a good choice because he has “gotten much more sincere.”

“I watch him with Nikki Haley and I’m like, this is a guy who’s very offended by her views, like for real,” Carlson concluded. “He’s not attacking her because she’s a woman, he’s attacking her because he actually thinks her views are terrible for the country he lives in. And I love that.”



Batten Down the Hatches! Economist Harry Dent Predicts Major Crash in 2024


2024 is close at hand, a Presidential election is underway, and those contests, as we've seen time and again, can turn sharply on the economy. It's generally considered (by those of us aging Boomers who remember it) that the stagflation of the late '70s cost Jimmy Carter his 1980 re-election, and Joe Biden (assuming he's the candidate, which remains to be seen) may well see his re-election effort turn on that same pivot. In 1992, Bill Clinton ran on the message, "It's the economy, stupid," and that was a message that worked. The GOP may find themselves ideally suited to run on a similar message in 2024 if they are savvy enough to pick up on it (assuming facts are not in evidence).

Economist, analyst, and stormy petrel Harry Dent has bad news for Joe Biden and his Democrat allies; he predicts a major economic crisis beginning in early 2024.

"Since 2009, this has been 100% artificial, unprecedented money printing and deficits; $27 trillion over 15 years, to be exact. This is off the charts, 100% artificial, which means we're in a dangerous state," Harry Dent told Fox News Digital. "I think 2024 is going to be the biggest single crash year we'll see in our lifetimes."

"I'm the guy that's praying for a crash while everybody else is not. We need to get back down to normal, and we need to send a message to central banks," he continued. "This should be a lesson I don't think we'll ever revisit. I don't think we'll ever see a bubble for any of our lifetimes again."

Getting "back down to normal" when the federal government has run up a debt of $33 trillion will not be easy or painless. The price of a  new house or a new car is now out of reach for much of the American middle class, thanks to years of feckless economic policies on which the Biden administration has doubled down at every turn. And it's not just the federal government that has been spending like drunken sailors — an unfair comparison, I know, as drunken sailors are spending their own money.

There are three ways out of this debt crisis. We can grow our way out of it, which, at this point, seems unlikely; things have just gone too far. We can inflate our way out of it, but that would yield Weimar-Republic-era results. And finally, we can simply repudiate the debt, which would set off the major crisis that Harry Dent is warning us about.

Still, a major recession — or even a depression, which Harry Dent does not rule out — could be a (yes, I know) reset button for the economy. 

"Depressions are different from recessions. They go much deeper, and they end up in deflation," he further explained. "It's going to bring down a lot of consumer price inflation, and especially housing… When this asset bubble bursts and the price of everything, especially housing, comes back down to reality, imagine, not only can you buy the house you want at half-off... you can buy twice as nice a house here for the same mortgage you were going to get before. How's that for a Christmas present?"

The effects on the housing market would be welcome; I've written before about our four daughters, how the older two were able to buy homes because they live in a small eastern Iowa town where real estate prices are low; the younger two, however, live in a suburb of Denver and have lost all hope of being able to buy a home in the near future. There are millions like them, Millennials who are losing confidence in our political class and losing hope of achieving the American Dream. But what costs will there be to see this housing bubble burst? What other effects might we see in a major economic crisis?

A depression may be like a summer thunderstorm. When I was a kid back in northeast Iowa, late July and early August would often bring us those dreadfully hot, muggy days, where it was impossible to move about without breaking into a sweat; if you went into a cornfield, you could actually hear the corn creaking and popping as it grew, the air was so thick and still. Then a summer thunderstorm would come, and for a few hours, there would be thunder and lightning, wind and rain, the cold downpour lashing the corn, the grass, the trees, and turning the rivers and creeks silver with raindrop splashes. Then it would pass, and the heat and humidity would be broken, ushering in a few cool, comfortable days.

There's a problem with that as a metaphor; in a really big thunderstorm, it's entirely possible that you might get hit by lightning or just plain be flooded out. I remember very well the flood of 1977, a thousand-year flood when we spent weeks clearing away a pile of dead trees that had washed up against the enormous stone chimney on the upstream side of our house. A lot of damage was done to a lot of people in that flood — and a year later, the creek was renewed, with the silt washed away and the clean gravel exposed, ideal for brooding trout to make their redds.

Yes, another economic depression may be like that. 

Being something of a stormy petrel myself, I've been saying for some time that we are in the final stage of this cycle:

  • Hard times make tough people.
  • Tough people make good times.
  • Good times make weak people.
  • Weak people make hard times.  (<--- You are here)

Our current economic mess is due in large part to this. We have in Washington and our several state capitals a breed of pols who auction votes by promising the electorate an ever-more-generous cornucopia of Free Stuff, paid for by a constant debasing of our fiat currency; that fiat currency that is only worth anything because the government says it is, and for only as long as people believe that the government will stand behind it. A major economic crisis may damage, if not eliminate, that faith. 

An economic collapse may well be the culmination of a Fourth Turning, the "crisis," which will result in major political, societal, and economic changes — in other words, moving us to the hard times that will make tough people. Hopefully, then, those new tough people will go on to make good times. But that won't happen unless the current path changes dramatically; government spending must be reined in, politicians must be brought in check, economic policies must once more favor enterprise and growth, and the currency must once more mean something tangible.

As always, Stein's Law applies. What can't continue, won't. The fiscal trajectory we're on can't continue. And it won't. One way or another, it won't.



The Drive-By Smears Of Clarence Thomas Never End

Innuendo masquerading as reporting is the point. Its purposeful implication is that Clarence Thomas can be bought.



Most Clarence Thomas hit pieces can’t stand up to perfunctory scrutiny. But the newest doesn’t even make any sense.

In a new five-person-bylined article, anti-Supreme Court outfit ProPublica takes a decades-old offhand complaint the justice made about his salary and spins it into a nefarious conspiracy. In 2000, Thomas apparently groused about his pay to “vocal conservative” Rep. Cliff Stearns. (The justice was hardly alone. It was a big issue in the 2000s.)

This interaction, we are informed, “set off a flurry of activity across the judiciary and Capitol Hill.” By “flurry of activity,” ProPublica means a single memo in which the possibility of raising justices’ salaries was discussed.

Like all SCOTUS smears, the piece is loaded with performative journalistic jargon — “newly unearthed documents,” for instance — meant to make it look like ProPublica is engaging in acts of reporting rather than activism.

Thomas, for example, doesn’t merely have rich friends like every other important person in D.C., he hangs out with a “coterie of ultrarich men.” Thomas doesn’t attend policy gatherings like every other important person in Washington, he jets off to “off-the-record” conferences at a “five-star beach resort” and sails on a “162-foot yacht” — alternatively known as a “superyacht.”

Painting completely innocuous and standard behavior as weird and scurrilous is a hallmark of the constant effort to smear Thomas. Hey, look at Thomas and his “high-end RV” and look at that “elite circle” he’s running with. Oh, sure, they give out scholarships to thousands of kids, but everyone knows what it’s really about: Thomas is a puppet of wealthy white folks.

“Precisely what led so many people to offer Thomas money and other gifts remains an open question,” notes ProPublica. This is the key sentence in the article. What “precisely” led anti-SCOTUS dark money groups to send ProPublica millions is not an open question.

Innuendo masquerading as reporting is the point. Its purposeful implication is that Thomas can be bought. By my estimation, at least two-thirds of the article rehashes the outlet’s previous stories about Thomas’s relationship with Harlan Crow, who never had a case in front of the justice.

The hit lacks any evidence Thomas engaged in unethical behavior to benefit anyone, much less himself. Nothing prohibits justices from attending conferences. Nothing prohibits them from having friends. Nothing prohibits them from taking out loans to buy a house or an RV. Nothing prohibits them from whining about their salaries. If anything, the story only confirms that Thomas, one of the least wealthy members of the court, would rather grouse about a lack of money-making opportunities than seek them out unethically.

But it’s also important to remember that no single story about “conservative” SCOTUS justices really matters in and of itself. The quality of the journalism isn’t the point. The quality sucks. The point is flooding the zone.

Much like the Russia collusion hoax, this is a compounding smear. The point is to sell the effort as an emerging story and organic journalism. The payoff never comes.

It all allows establishment media outlets to casually mention the “ethics” “controversies” that “surround” or “swirl around” Thomas. It allows anti-court pundits, who have no problem with Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson pulling in millions in book deals from billion-dollar corporate entities, to pretend that “democracy” is under threat from the court. It allows half-wit senators to spin conspiracy theories and thousands of full-blown nitwits to get “Clarence Thomas” trending on X. It helps Democrats delegitimize the high court, the purpose of the entire project.

All non-leftist justices have been the target of these sloppy hits, but there is a fervent disdain for Thomas, who’s committed the gravest sin of defying the left’s racial stereotypes. He shows contempt for a media that’s been trying to destroy him for more than 30 years by remaining consistently “conservative.”

His enemies have yet to offer any instance where this justice has deviated from his long-held legal philosophy of adherence to the Constitution as written. And that’s the real problem.



Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson Facing Ethics Complaint Over Failure to Disclose Income


Jeff Charles reporting for RedState 

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson is facing an ethics complaint over alleged failures to disclose details about her income. A conservative group filed the complaint, bringing these allegations to light.

Yet, the mainstream press has almost completely ignored the story even after a laser-like focus on Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’ alleged ethics violations.

Jackson’s complaint centers on her alleged failure to disclose her husband’s income.

The conservative Center for Renewing America expressed the complaint in a letter to the Judicial Conference. The complaint alleges that Jackson did not report some of her husband's income for more than a decade. The letter urges the group to refer the matter to Attorney General Merrick Garland to begin an ethics investigation.

The letter claims that Jackson "repeatedly failed to disclose that her husband received income from medical malpractice consulting fees."

"We know this by Justice Jackson’s own admission in her amended disclosure form for 2020, filed when she was nominated to the Supreme Court, that ‘some of my previously filed reports inadvertently omitted' her husband’s income from ‘consulting on medical malpractice cases,’" it continues.

The letter says that Jackson gave "the vague statement that 'some' of those past disclosures contained material omissions."

The crux of the matter lies in the rules mandating that justice disclose any income exceeding $1,000 under the Ethics in Government Act of 1978. The group notes that while she disclosed two of her husband’s clients in 2011, subsequent filings did not include this information. During her 2020 nomination to the court, the justice acknowledged that some of her husband’s income had been “inadvertently omitted” in prior disclosures.

Adding to the matter are concerns about Jackson’s reporting of the source of funding for her 2022 Supreme Court investiture celebration, according to the Center for Renewing America.

Second, there is reason to believe that Justice Jackson may have failed to report the private funding sources of her massive investiture celebration at the Library of Congress in her most recent financial disclosure. The Conference should open an investigation to determine if Justice Jackson needs to remedy this potential omission. Given the need to ensure the equal application of the law and the tendency of these violations to create serious recusal issues and conflicts of interest, the Conference’s prompt attention is of paramount public importance.

This development draws parallels with other reports homing in on Justice Thomas, scrutinizing him for his relationship with a wealthy real estate tycoon. These reports have prompted calls for the judge’s resignation from Democrats. Of course, it is worth noting that the reports and subsequent criticisms coming from the left are clearly motivated by politics, and their decision to ignore the complaint against Jackson essentially proves it.

If the media were truly concerned about ethics among members of the Supreme Court, they would have focused on both stories and given equal attention to other justices regardless of their ideological leaning. But, since Jackson is a progressive, they can’t bother to examine her with the same microscope they apply to Thomas or any other conservative justice.



Tensions in White House Flare As Concerns of Joe Biden's Health Rage


Bonchie reporting for RedState 

Joe Biden's physical and mental decline over the last several years has been steep and impossible to ignore. If he's not producing an endless stream of embarrassing moments while giving public speeches, he's tripping and falling at such a high rate that his handlers have forced him to start using the short stairs on Air Force One. 

According to a new report, that decline is causing tensions to boil over inside the White House. Biden's senior aides and Jill Biden are pushing him to pace himself, but he's not listening.

President Biden's reluctance to acknowledge his physical limitations at age 81 is causing some tension on his team, as senior aides and First Lady Jill Biden push him to rest more and be vigilant about his health going into 2024.

Why it matters: Current and former aides say Biden is extraordinarily energetic for his age. But his repeated insistence that he feels so young can draw eye rolls: Some current and former aides believe Biden doesn't realize how old he can come across.

  • In conversations with aides and friends, Biden frequently says some version of: "I feel so much younger than my age."
  • Managing Biden's schedule and energy has become crucial to his re-election campaign, given widespread voter concerns about his ability to do the job until January 2029, when he'll be 86.

This is an Axios article so you have to ignore their attempted spin, but the underlying argument going on is what counts. Notice the inherent contradictions in the above excerpt. If Biden is "extraordinarily energetic for his age," yet they are still concerned that a normal workload for a president is too much for him, then he's not that extraordinarily energetic, is he? 

The fact that the president appears completely delusional about his condition only makes matters worse. If he's not self-aware enough to realize he's got serious issues, then he's not self-aware enough to make decisions for the most powerful nation on earth. 

Zoom in: Current and former Biden aides say he often pushes to do more travel and events than they think he should.

  • Biden pushing up against his limits sometimes creates a cycle in which he wears himself out, then appears fatigued during public events — which can increase concerns about his age, even when he's taking on a rigorous schedule.
  • "He is his own worst enemy when it comes to his schedule," a former Biden aide said.

Jill Biden and her team are deeply involved in the president's day-to-day schedule. 

I have to quibble with the language used above. It's not that Biden "appears fatigued during public events." It's that he is fatigued during those events. He quite literally can't read a teleprompter without exposing his senility at this point. 

I'm also curious who the president is. Is it Joe Biden or Jill Biden? Because it sure seems like she's controlling every aspect of her husband's life, up to and including his diet and rest schedule. I find it extremely odd that the press is reporting on her intricate involvement but doesn't find anything objectionable about it. If it were reported that Melania Trump was having to micromanage her husband because he's so far gone physically and mentally, do you think Axios (or any other mainstream press outlet) might mention that as a broader problem?

That any of this is even a discussion is disqualifying, and to be clear, this is not the same as having a president who uses a wheelchair or has some other physical disability. Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas doesn't need special rest consideration because he's so old and declining. Any president who does need to be coddled like that should not be president.



How A Left-Wing Appeals Panel Is Rigging Trump’s J6 Case Through Bogus Fast-Track Process


Election interference isn’t incidental to this prosecution. It’s the entire point.



For Democrats to succeed with their 2024 presidential campaign strategy of imprisoning the current front-runner in the race, they need a massive assist from key judges.

District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan has done everything in her power to speed up the process for one of the complicated cases Democrats have filed against former President Donald Trump. Whereas the standard federal fraud and conspiracy case takes about two years to get to trial, controversial Special Counsel Jack Smith and Chutkan have worked in concert to get the trial started in March, a breathtaking seven months after Trump’s indictment.

Likewise, D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Florence Pan is doing her part to assist the effort to give Trump far less time than other defendants to prepare for a trial against him. Last week, she led a panel to fast-track an appeal in order to facilitate Smith’s goal of securing a quick conviction before one of Washington, D.C.’s notoriously partisan juries.

“Any fair-minded observer has to agree” that Smith and Chutkan are acting based on the election schedule, conceded former federal prosecutor and left-wing pundit Elie Honig. “Just look at Jack Smith’s conduct in this case. The motivating principle behind every procedural request he’s made has been speed, has been getting this trial in before the election.”

Election interference isn’t incidental to this prosecution, then, it’s the entire point.

While hundreds of defendants in the relatively simple Jan. 6 cases brought by the Department of Justice have had a few years to prepare for trial, Trump and his attorneys have to prepare for one of the most complicated and unprecedented cases in American history in just a matter of months. “Donald Trump is being given far less time to prepare than other defendants,” Honig said.

In September, Trump’s legal team asked Chutkan to recuse herself due to her personal bias against the former president and his supporters. Chutkan, the foreign-born “scion of Marxist revolutionaries,” has received attention for her partisan and incendiary commentary against Trump and his supporters. She denied the request. In October, Trump’s attorneys asked for the suit to be dismissed on multiple grounds, including presidential immunity, violation of the freedom of speech clause, violation of the double jeopardy clause and due process clause of the Fifth Amendment, and several other issues. By Dec. 1, Chutkan ruled against Trump in each case.

A week later, Trump announced his plan to appeal Chutkan’s ruling. The next court to hear the case would be the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.

On Dec. 11, Smith did two things. He asked the D.C. Circuit to expedite Trump’s appeal, and he asked the Supreme Court to expedite an appeal as well. He explained to the lower court that while the Supreme Court is considering the petition, the D.C. Circuit has jurisdiction. The singular goal of rushing the process is to make sure that one way or another, Democrats can ram through the trial and conviction of their main political opponent to control the outcome of the election.

In the D.C. Circuit Court, Smith asked that Trump’s attorneys be forced to prepare and file their opening brief within 10 days, that the government get an additional week to respond, and that Trump’s attorneys have three days to respond to that government brief.

Trump’s team was given two days to prepare an argument against Smith’s request for this shockingly abbreviated schedule. In its 16-page response, Trump’s legal team noted that the case was among the most complex and unprecedented in history, that it presented serious constitutional questions, and that rushing the process would violate Trump’s due process and Sixth Amendment rights. Trump’s lawyers also noted how the issues in this trial would affect every president, not just the one Democrats are consumed with hatred toward.

“Could President George W. Bush face criminal charges of defrauding the United States and obstructing official proceedings for allegedly giving Congress false information about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, to induce war on false premises? Could President Obama be charged with murder for allegedly authorizing the drone strike that killed Anwar Al-Awlaki and his sixteen-year-old son, both U.S. citizens?” Trump’s attorneys asked.

The team noted how rarely the circuit court expedites such legal procedures, and never in cases even close to the sensitivity of this one. Trump’s attorneys said Chutkan’s speed contributed to her making sloppy mistakes and failing to give thoughtful consideration to arguments.

Citing the court’s own “handbook of practice and internal procedures,” Trump’s attorneys said the court should set a reasonable schedule of providing Trump 40 days to serve and file his initial brief, 21 days to file a reply brief, and 45 days to prepare for oral argument.

“Anything less would result in a heedless rush to judgment on some of the most sensitive and important issues that this Court may ever decide,” Trump’s attorneys wrote.

Instead, the three judges on the D.C. Circuit did precisely what Smith asked them to. They gave Trump until Saturday, Dec. 23 to file his initial brief.

Liberal Panel Lassos the Case for Itself

Each month, the D.C. Circuit has a panel of three judges who consider motions that come before the court. The panel changes each month. While many of the motions that come before the court are simple and administrative, others relate to complicated cases that will require hearings and other court actions. The panel of judges that begins hearing appeals usually keeps the case as it progresses.

This is important because the December panel is particularly left-wing, even for the left-leaning D.C. Circuit. Karen Henderson, the 79-year-old appointee of George H.W. Bush, is on the panel. More importantly, two relatively young Biden appointees named J. Michelle Childs and Florence Pan are also on the panel.

Panels in the coming months will reportedly not be as left-wing as the December panel. The scheduling question, then, becomes one of how hostile the panel of judges will be to Trump’s appeal.

By setting an aggressive schedule, the December panel can keep with the case and help ensure Democrats can get their conviction in time for it to affect the election.

Judge Florence Pan has shown a particular interest in lassoing the case for herself. Appointed in 2022, Pan is the wife of Max Stier, a longtime associate of Bill and Hillary Clinton. Stier is also known for being one of the Democrats eager to join the smear campaign against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Stier and Kavanaugh had been on opposite sides of the Whitewater investigation in the late 1990s. When Democrats ran their unseemly attack on Kavanaugh, Stier told the FBI and two anti-Kavanaugh reporters at The New York Times a weird story about how freshmen at Yale might have done something to an inebriated Kavanaugh and a young woman that was inappropriate. The woman, for her part, told friends she has no recollection of what Stier claimed.

“Stier has always held himself out as a consummate civil servant and above politics, but he provided information wildly irrelevant but calculated to inflame the situation. He’s a malign actor,” said one attorney about the stunt.

Pan is also the judge who wrote the D.C. Circuit’s opinion upholding the reinterpretation of an obscure financial crimes statute to imprison Republican protesters for years. The Supreme Court announced it would be hearing an appeal of her decision in the current term. Many constitutional scholars agree with the dissent, which stated the government’s use of the statute to go after protesters is “implausibly broad and unconstitutional.”

On December 18, the D.C. Circuit announced it was scheduling oral argument for January 9, another example of the way Democrats are rushing to give Trump less time to prepare for argument than other defendants receive. Judge Henderson, the lone Republican appointee on the panel, took the rare step of publicly noting she disagrees with the extreme path chosen by her Democrat-appointed colleagues on the panel.

“Judge Henderson would stay any further action by this court until the United States Supreme Court has taken final action on the Government’s Petition for Certiorari before Judgment now pending before it in this case,” noted the Court order.