***BREAKING OVERNIGHT*** NEW YORK Attorney General Eric Schneiderman abruptly resigned on Monday night following detailed accusations published hours earlier by The New Yorker of physical assault and threats against four women. The New York Times: Schneiderman, 63, resigns while denying the allegations; Manhattan district attorney opens investigation. The Hill: Schneiderman issues a statement: "While these allegations are unrelated to my professional conduct ... they will effectively prevent me from leading the office's work at this critical time." Takeaway: Schneiderman's exit marks a stunning fall for the former Democratic powerhouse, who had fashioned himself as a Trump critic and ally of the #MeToo movement. CAMPAIGNS: Key Primary Before Election Day — The most interesting and consequential primary contest on Tuesday will take place among Republicans in West Virginia. The national party is doing everything it can to sink former coal CEO Don Blankenship's candidacy. The Hill: GOP nightmare looms in West Virginia. The Hill: Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) says he'll donate to Democrat if Blankenship wins. Why? - Blankenship spent a year in prison for his role in a 2010 explosion that killed 29 miners in West Virginia.
- He has repeatedly and unapologetically referred to Sen. Mitch McConnell's (R-Ky.) father-in-law, who was born outside Shanghai, as a "Chinaperson."
- A centerpiece of his campaign has been an ad attacking "Cocaine Mitch," in which he alleges the Senate majority leader's father-in-law, a shipping magnate, profited off the cocaine trade.
Republicans believe that if Blankenship tops Rep. Evan Jenkins and West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey in the primary, he is certain to lose to incumbent Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), who is otherwise among the most vulnerable Democrats up for reelection in 2018. Trump is doing his part. © Twitter
But Blankenship, who has described himself as "Trumpier than Trump," is swinging back. "We all really like President Trump's policies, but we know he doesn't get things right. He recommended people vote for a guy that was basically accused of pedophilia in Alabama." – Blankenship on WZTS in West Virginia on Monday. Blankenship was referring to former Alabama Supreme Court Justice Roy Moore, who lost the special election for Senate in Alabama. Trump stood by his endorsement of Moore after decades-old allegations of sexual misconduct with teenagers surfaced in the final weeks of the campaign. Democrat Doug Jones now holds the seat. How do the polls look? Alarming, if you're a mainstream Republican or the president. The Weekly Standard: Two West Virginia internal campaign polls show Blankenship narrowly edging GOP rivals. Takeaway: After the Jones mess, Trump needs to show he has some sway, or at the very least, some newly acquired political savvy about contests that aren't his own. The Hill's Lisa Hagen has a rundown of all the other primaries to watch today too. One notable race is taking place among Democrats in Ohio, where former Consumer Financial Protection Bureau chief Richard Cordray will square off against former Rep. Dennis Kucinich in the governor's race primary. Cordray has establishment support — and backing of Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) — while Kucinich has the backing of a group affiliated with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). Election day odds and ends: Reuters: Republicans in key election races turn down the volume on Trump's tax cuts. The Atlantic: Incumbency is toxic in GOP primaries. NPR: GOP fears about holding the Senate start to sink in. The Associated Press: From prison to politics, Chelsea Manning runs for U.S. Senate. The New York Times: California Republicans an endangered species. The Hill: N.C. Rep. Walter Jones (R) faces an opponent today who seeks to frame his independent streak as evidence of disloyalty to Trump. The Hill: How social pressures drive the partisan education gap. INTERNATIONAL: From nuclear agreements to negotiations on trade, the administration is mighty busy today. IRAN — The president has described the Iran nuclear deal as a "disaster" negotiated by the Obama administration. It delivered, in his view, too little risk reduction for the world, in exchange for too much sanctions relief for Tehran. Bolstered by Israel, as well as his new national security adviser, John Bolton, and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Iran hard-liners, Trump is expected this afternoon to describe the next steps for the U.S. and the impact of his policy approach. The New York Times: European diplomats said Trump appeared inclined to scrap the deal and reimpose sanctions on Iran that were suspended in July 2015. BBC: What did the provisions of the 2015 landmark nuclear deal include? A refresher. The Washington Post: All the different ways the president could go on the Iran deal. The Washington Post: The legality of the Obama administration's $1.7 billion cash deal with Iran, explained by the Fact-Checker. CHINA – Bloomberg: U.S. trade talks with China, which produced no breakthroughs last week in Beijing, continue next week in Washington, the White House announced Monday. Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, the top economic adviser to Chinese President Xi Jinping, will meet with top U.S. officials. DIPLOMACY – The Associated Press: State Department says the president's personal attorney, "Rudy" Giuliani, doesn't represent U.S. foreign policy. INVESTIGATIONS: Trump and conservative media appear emboldened by recent developments surrounding special counsel Robert Mueller's probe: - A federal judge rejected the prosecutor's request to delay the first hearing in a criminal case against 13 Russian individuals and three Russian entities accused of interfering in the 2016 presidential election.
Fox News: Cracks in Mueller investigation. - A federal judge scolded Mueller's prosecutors in the fraud trial for Trump's former campaign chairman Paul Manafort, questioning whether Manafort's prosecution is outside the scope of the special counsel.
Alan Dershowitz: Federal judge rightly rebukes Mueller for questionable tactics. Washington Examiner: Time to end the crazy secrecy of the Trump-Russia investigation. - Conservatives say newly unredacted details from a House Intelligence Committee report raise questions about why law enforcement officials approached Trump's former national security adviser Michael Flynn and whether he was wrongly pressured into pleading guilty to lying to the FBI.
The National Review: Outrageous redactions to the Russia report. The Wall Street Journal: The mystery of Michael Flynn's guilty plea. Trump is getting in on the act, too. © Twitter
The Hill's Niall Stanage reports that the sum total of these developments is that the president appears less and less likely to sit for an interview with Mueller. The Associated Press: Trump grows frustrated with "Rudy" Giuliani. The Hill: GOP leaders ponder holding Attorney General Jeff Sessions in contempt. |
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