Saturday, September 23, 2017

Trivia, useless information, and chuckles

With John McCain's announcement yesterday afternoon that he would vote No on  Graham-Cassidy, this very likely dooms the bill -- and any real possibility of repealing Obamacare.   Kim Jung Un and Donald Trump are still trading their schoolboy taunts;  and that is truly scary.   But, with one big worry lifted, I'm in a lighter mood.   
. . .  So, herewith . . . 

1.  (NYT)  "The United States director of the International Knife Throwers Hall of Fame is named Jack Dagger."
    This may even top that:   One of the handful of physicians in my small home town was Dr. Marion Hurt.

2.  (NYT)  "The Yiddish for rhinocerus is the rather literal 'nozhorn.'"

3.  (From a church lawn message board)   "Do not criticize your wife's judgment.   See whom she married."

4. (From late night host Jimmy Kimmel)   "I guarantee [Trump] doesn’t know anything about this Graham-Cassidy bill. He doesn’t know the difference between Medicare and Medicaid; he barely knows the difference between Melania and Ivanka.”
 
5.  (NYT)  "A small asteroid named Bennu periodically crosses Earth's orbit.   There's a one in 2,700 chance that it could hit us between 2175 and 2196."

     But will it matter?   What's the chance Earth will still be inhabitable in 2175?

Anderson Cooper calls out Sean Spicer . . for lying about lying

This wry political humor is reported by CNN's Ed Mazza.
   "CNN's Anderson Cooper on Thursday called out former White House press secretary Sean Spicer for lying to the media -- and even lying about his lies.
   Cooper played a clip from earlier in the day of Spicer being asked if he had ever lied to the American people.
   Spicer:  "I've not knowingly done anything to do that, no,"
   Cooper:  "That answer is so Washington, D.C., it should have its own reflecting pool.  Just a nice, calm place where you can sit down with your word salad and think about what you've done."
   "The CNN host then went through a list of lies,  including claims about illegal voting and lies about the size of the inauguration crowd, along with some of the things Spicer has said to the press since leaving the White House.
   "Sean Spicer doesn't have to lie for a living anymore," Cooper concluded.  "Now he just seems to be doing it recreationally."

Friday, September 22, 2017

BREAKNG NEWS: McCain will vote No

Sen. John McCain has announced that he will vote No on the latest attempt to do away with Obamacare.    With Rand Paul already announcing his No vote, and with Susan Collins almost definitely a No, and Lisa Murkowski probably a No -- this looks like the end.   It only takes three of those four.

TV host is most effective foe of GOP bill

Jimmy Kimmel, host of ABC's late night talk show "Jimmy Kimmel Live," has a personal involvement in opposing the latest GOP iteration of their determined effort to "repeal and replace Obamacare," the Graham-Cassidy Act.

Last May, after his newborn son turned out to have a life-threatening congenital heart defect that required immediate heart surgery, Kimmel spoke eloquently and emotionally of his realization that, while he had insurance that covered the very expensive treatment for his son's "preexisting condition," many others did not.  "No parent should ever have to decide if they can afford to save their child's life.  It just shouldn't happen.  Not here," he declared.

In a face-to-face televised interview, back then, GOP Sen. Bill Cassidy declared to Kimmel that he would only support a healthcare bill that covers just such situations, which he dubbed "the Jimmy Kimmel test."   And in fact, Cassidy did briefly cosponsor a proposed bill that covered preexisting conditions -- but got nowhere.

Now, however, Cassidy is the named cosponsor of the alarming Graham-Cassidy bill that is being rushed to a floor vote next week to meet the Sept. 30th deadline for a "budget resolution" bill.   Among other problems, the bill rather coyly pretends to cover preexisting conditions, but allows states to price them out of the reach of average users.   The difference is in the meaning of "access."   They're right that people with preexisting conditions have access to health care;   but states can jack up the prices as much as they want.   As one tv host said:   "I have access to the Porche showroom, but that doesn't mean I can afford to buy one of the cars."

Graham-Cassidy also removes the requirement for "essential services," like maternity and mental health, as well as allowing for caps on payments.   Not to mention that it also ends the Medicaid expansion and essentially reward states that did not expand Medicaid by allotting them more of the funding than states that did;  and, by the way, ends all federal funding after 10 years, leaving health care completely up to the states.

Tuesday night, in response to this new bill, Kimmel, on air, accused Sen. Cassidy of having "proposed a bill that would allow states to do all the things he said he would not let them do.  He made a total about-face, which means that he either doesn’t understand his own bill or he lied to me. It’s as simple as that.”

Wednesday morning, Sen. Cassidy told CNN, "I'm sorry that he does not understand [the bill]."   In his response Wednesday night, Kimmel did not hold back (as reported by Nick Romano of "Entertainment Weekly."

“Oh, I get it. I don’t understand because I’m a talk-show host, right? Well then, help me out. Which part don’t I understand?  Is it the part where you cut $243 billion from federal health-care assistance? Am I not understanding the part where states would be allowed to let insurance companies price you out of coverage for having preexisting conditions? Maybe I don’t understand the part of your bill in which federal funding disappears completely after 2026; or maybe it was the part where the plans are no longer required to pay for essential health benefits, like maternity care or pediatric visits; or the part where the American Medical Association, The American College of Physicians, The American Academy of Pediatrics, The American Hospital Association, The American Cancer Society, The American Diabetes Association, The American Heart Association, Lung Association, Arthritis Foundation, Cystic Fibrosis, ALS, The National Multiple Sclerosis Society, and The March of Dimes, among many others, all vehemently oppose your bill.

“Which part of that am I not understanding?  Or could it be, Senator Cassidy, that the problem is that I do understand and that you got caught? . . . Is that possible? Because it feels like it is.”

Dylan Scott, writing for Vox.com:  "The underlying truth, the beating heart of Obamacare repeal that refuses to let it die, is:  Republicans just want to pass a bill, any bill, to say they repealed Obamacare.  Whatever standards they've set for their health care plan, whatever promises they made before, don't matter.  The policy is, in a very serious sense, beside the point."

And then there is Dean Obeidallah of CNN, who said:  "It couldn't be clearer that Cassidy and the GOP are more concerned with fulfilling a campaign promise than ensuring Americans have guaranteed coverage for prexisting conditions.  They are playing politics with our health care and the lives of our families by weakening such coverage.  And once again we can thank Kimmel -- not Congressional Democratic leaders -- for making this clear to all."

Actually Congressional Democratic leaders are doing everything they can to oppose this bill politically and to arouse public resistance, as are all the organizations that mobilize the very effective protest movements.

But, let's face it, someone with the television audience at his command, like Jimmy Kimmel, who also has such a personal stake, and who is also passionate that all parents have the advantages that he has for his son -- that is a powerhouse to mobilize citizen action.

If this bill gets defeated, as it should, Jimmy Kimmel will deserve a big slice of the credit.

Ralph

PS:  As usual, I write -- and then more news comes in the evening tv broadcasts.  Chris Hayes interviewed Republican Rep. Tom Reed of New York, a member of the Problem Solvers Caucus, who is rather confident that the bill will not pass in the Senate, which is astonishing given that, as most people believe, the Republicans are only one vote short of the 50 they need. 

The other bit of news from "All In With Chris Hayes" is about the "real" reason Republicans are doing this:   their wealthy donors, who want their Obamacare tax to be repealed.  They have said 'the bank is closed for 2018 if they don't repeal it.   And this means Koch Brothers and Sheldon Adelson.  So Republicans are afraid that, without all those campaign funds, along with their very poor record of accomplishments on campaign promises, they will lose control of Congress.  They see it as a matter of political survival.

Jimmy Kimmel -- again -- nails it:   "Listen, health care is complicated.  It's boring.  I don't want to talk about it.   The details are confusing -- and that's what these guys are relying on.  They're counting on you to be so overwhelmed with all the information [that] you just trust them to take care of it.   Well, they're not taking care of you.  They're taking care of the people who give them money."

So what does Rep. Reed know -- that the rest of us don't know -- that makes him confident it won't pass?   Is this only a charade to show the donors that they tried everything they could to repeal the Obamacare Tax on the wealthy?

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Are senate cosponsors misleading their colleagues about their bill to repeal ACA?

Political writer Jonathan Cohn says they may be.   In an article for HuffPost, Cohn writes:
================
"The co-sponsors of new Senate legislation to repeal the Affordable Care Act are misleading America about the effects of their proposal. They may also be misleading their own colleagues.

"The story Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and Bill Cassidy (R-La.) tell about their legislation during speeches and news conferences is a straightforward, seemingly innocuous one ― that they are simply transferring money and authority away from the federal government.
"To their colleagues in the Senate, Graham and Cassidy make a different, more nuanced pitch. With key Republicans nervous about what the bill would mean for coverage of their constituents, Graham and Cassidy are promising the vast majority of Republican states would end up with more money, not less, if the proposal becomes law.
"The story Graham and Cassidy are telling the public is a vast over-simplification, one that leaves out the bill’s most important elements.  And the story they are peddling to colleagues?  That’s even more misleading.
"The bottom line is that the Graham-Cassidy bill is like every other repeal proposal that’s come before Congress this year. It would mean millions more people struggling to get care or being exposed to financial hardship. And it’d most certainly hit some Republican-leaning states hard. 
"What Graham-Cassidy would actually do
"Graham and Cassidy are telling the truth when they say their proposal turns [over] control of the Affordable Care Act to the states. Specifically, they would transform the program into a “block grant,” giving states enormous leeway over how to spend the money that, in today’s system, goes to finance expanded Medicaid programs and subsidized private insurance.
"But the proposal actually does a great deal more than simply give states more control over how to spend dollars now going to health care. It also gives them less of that money to spend.
"On the whole, the block grant would be smaller than what states would receive if the Affordable Care Act remains in place. That is very much by design, because Graham and Cassidy want to reduce federal spending. But the cut would be substantial ― to the tune of $239 billion over the first 10 years, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, which so far is the only independent organization to conduct this kind of analysis.
"That’s a smaller cut than the Senate’s leadership bill from July envisioned, but almost surely, it’s still enough to affect health insurance for at least a few million people. More important, the block grant would expire after 10 years. That’s right, funding to “replace” Obamacare would drop to zero.  At that point, Congress could always authorize new spending. But given the parliamentary obstacles to such expenditures, it would quite likely appropriate less ― and maybe a lot less.
"Meanwhile, the bill calls for redistributing funds among the states ― in general, taking from those, like California, where officials have tried diligently to expand coverage and giving to those, like Texas, where officials have done nothing or even tried to undermine the [ACA].
"And then, on top of all that, the bill would cut Medicaid by introducing a “per capita cap,” reducing projected spending on the program by roughly $179 billion in the first 10 years, based on Congressional Budget Office assessments of previous legislation. This is a change that would affect the entire Medicaid program, including the parts that existed before the [ACA} came along, which would mean less coverage for groups like poor children and the disabled that Republicans have frequently promised to protect.

"How Cassidy is trying to cover up the bill’s effects


"Judging by how many GOP senators voted for repeal bills in July, most are willing to live with such cuts, at least on a national level, even if they don’t like to advertise them. But many of those senators remain skittish about the precise effects cuts would have on their own constituents ― and that’s a big political problem for the Graham-Cassidy bill, thanks in part to how it redistributes that money among the states.
"In general, the bill would move money from Democratic to Republican states. Graham and Cassidy have generally acknowledged this, when pressed, and sometimes justified it in the name of fairness.  
"But when the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities looked at the effect of Graham-Cassidy on a state-by-state basis, it found that plenty of GOP states would end up losing out in the first decade.'

[Cohn then lists some of the Republican states that the Center says would get less money in this plan.   They include Alaska (Sen. Murkowski), Arizona (Sen. McCain), Maine (Sen. Collins) the three Republicans that voted No on the last bill, resulting in its defeat.   In addition, states losing money would also include Ohio (Sen Rob Portman) and West Virginia (Sen. Shelley Moore Capito) -- two senators who are known to have wavered about voting against the last bill.]

[Cohn further states that Sen. Cassidy has put out a spread sheet, purportedly showing something different, where "states with key Republican senators end up with more money, not less."   Cohn then goes into detail about the erroneous figures that Cassidy is using, which ignores the fact that health care costs are rising faster than inflation.   He also points out that Cassidy's spread sheet ignores the effects of the per-capita caps on Medicaid which the bill imposes and which zero out any funds in 10 years.]

"In short, the cuts are much deeper than Cassidy’s spreadsheet shows, and the bill would hurt many more states than the document acknowledges.
"In a normal legislative debate, such propaganda wouldn’t really matter. Multiple independent experts, including those at the Congressional Budget Office, would have plenty of time to analyze the proposal. Lawmakers, in turn, would have plenty of time to study those results ― and reach their own conclusions about which projections were the most reliable and which raised issues that mattered most to them.
"But with the debate suddenly moving at breakneck speed, and a possible vote next week, that won’t happen. Already the CBO has said it doesn’t have time to provide a full analysis, including effects on coverage and premiums, as it did for previous bills. As a result, Cassidy’s misleading numbers could sway one or two key senators, potentially making the difference in whether millions of Americans lose access to health care."
================

So here we are again.   Republicans trying once again to sneak one over when there is no time for analysis and study of a change in how we manage one-sixth of our nation's economy -- which also happens to affect the lives of millions of their own constituents.

Lindsey Graham is trying to sell this on the virtues of "local control," and someone to complain to who will listen if you have problems with it.   But ten governors, five Democrats and five Republicans, signed a letter urging senators not to pass this bill.   They don't want it.   And Obamacare now has a majority of people in polls who like it.   There is no real movement to get rid of it -- except among Republican politicians -- and their wealthy donors who want to get rid of the tax on them that is part of Obamacare.

Have they no conscience?   Have they no shame?   Is scoring "a win" so important that they will try to pass, by stealth and deception, what the American people do not want them to do and what they have failed to pass dozens of times already?

Ralph

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Trump at the UN -- a mixed result

Did President Trump embarrass us at the U.N.?    Yes.   Not so much with childish tweets (at least not yet;  that may yet come) but with his arrogant, America First bombast.   With his bare-knuckled tone and saber-rattling content, he portrayed a grim world with only hostility and ineffective diplomacy.  It was just short of a call to arms.

Swedish foreign minister Margot Wallstrom  told the BBC that "It was the wrong speech, at the wrong time, to the wrong audience."   U.S. response was mixed.   Mitt Romney tweeted that it "gave a strong and needed challenge" to confront global problems.   But Democratic Senator Ed Markey of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee denounced Trump's speech:   "He engages in escalatory language that only induces further paranoia in Kim."
Trump began his criticism of the U.N. itself on Monday in discussions about reorganizing the bureaucracy, but with a less combative stance, offering to help fix the problems.   He also had numerous private talks with other world leaders.

Then came this major address to the General Assembly on Tuesday.  Denouncing North Korea and Iran, being very critical of China, Venezuela, and Cuba --- and, of course, not a negative word about Russia.  HuffPost headlined its article about the speech:  "Loose Cannon Lectures the World."

His most shocking statement was about North Korea.   "The United States has great strength and patience, but if it is forced to defend itself or its allies, we will have no choice but to totally destroy North Korea."

Loud, startled murmurs filled the hall, as Trump went on to refer to Kim directly:  "Rocket man is on a suicide mission for himself and his regime."  A junior member of the North Korean delegation was seated in the front row.  As of this writing, North Korea has not responded.

Trump was reading carefully from his prepared script, which took no note of U.N. Secretary General Antonio Guterres' appeal, minutes before, for "statesmanship" and not war.

Trump did also call for unity of nations to isolate the Kim government until it ceases its "hostile" behavior.  But that nod toward a non-military solution was lost in the startling language of "totally destroy."

Trump apparently thinks tough talk will intimidate Kim.  I am not the only one who thinks it's exactly the opposite.   Kim's deep-seated obsession with becoming a nuclear power has to do with power and pride, of course;   but even more with survival.   Kim seems to actually believe that the U.S. wants to destroy his regime (not without good reason).   So Trump's bluster only increases Kim's determination,

Trump moved on to Iran, calling it "an economically depleted rogue state" that exports violence.  He took aim at their nuclear ambitions and regional meddling.  He said the 2015 nuclear deal was "an embarrassment" and hinted that he may not recertify the agreement when the next report is due.   He has certainly in the past talked about pulling out of the deal, but he did not make that explicit here.

As reported by Reuters' Steve Holland and Jeff Mason, the speech also sought to define the America First vision for the U.S. foreign policy.   It includes, as summarized by Holland and Mason, "downgrading global bureaucracies, basing alliances on shared interests, and steering Washington away from nation-building exercises abroad."

Trump also told the 193 nation body that "the United States does not seek to impose its will on other nations and will respect other countries' sovereignty. . . .  I will defend America's interests above all else," Trump said. "But in fulfilling our obligations to other nations we also realize it's in everyone's interest to seek a future where all nations can be sovereign, prosperous and secure."

Well, that's a little bit reassuring . . . maybe.   The embarrassing thing is -- it needed to be said.  If only we could hope he meant it.  The United States does not have a good track record for respecting other nations' sovereignty.

Turning to Venezuela, he called the collapsing of democratic institutions and their economy "completely unacceptable" and said "the United States cannot stand by and watch."  He did not specify what actions, if any, he was considering.   Will he respect Venezuela's sovereignty?   Is there a way to help, where the government itself is the problem -- if the government does not request our help?   Think about Turkey, as well.

Venezuela objected to Trump's threats, saying it would resist any U.S. actions, "even military invasion."     Venezuelan Foreign Minister Jorge Arreaza said of Trump:  "He came to the house of peace and promoted war and the destruction of certain countries." 

Besides his shocking tone and language, Trump's statement about his foreign policy and his plans and threats toward other countries do not add up to a coherent vision.   I am horrified at what is happening in Venezuela, in the Middle East, in some African countries, in North Korea, in Myanmar.   And what we did by invading Iraq.

But what is the answer to when it is appropriate to decide to interfere in another country's sovereignty?   How do you balance that against coming to the aid of oppressed people?    I don't have the answers.    Donald Trump showed us that he does not either.

Ralph

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

Will Trump embarrass us at the UN ? . . . . Of course he will.

The United Nations is back in session in New York, and President Trump will follow the usual practice of the U.S. President addressing the General Assembly.   He's already there having many small meetings, group meetings.   His big public moment is today, Tuesday.

No doubt he will read a carefully vetted teleprompter script -- and, hopefully, keep any ad libs to a minimum.   But can they please confiscate his twitter phone?

Ralph

GOP going to try once more to kill ACA

It's never safe to relax about the Republicans trying to repeal Obamacare.   Persistent, aren't they?   What was it . . . 60-some times they voted to do it when Obama was still president and would have vetoed it?

Then they failed by one vote before their August recess, and we thought that was it.   But now they're back with one last hope for a hurrah.   Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) have introduced a bill that would essentially replace most of the Affordable Care Act with block grants to the states, leaving it up to the states to decide how to use it for their citizens.

Because Graham and Cassidy are generally among the more reasonable Republicans in the senate, most people (including me) assumed that their bill would also be more reasonable.    But it is not.  In many ways, it is far more drastic than what the senate already rejected.  For example, a state could decide to eliminate the pre-existing protection.   Any premium subsidies would also be up to the states;  the federal subsidies would end.

There are two problems with this procedurally.   In order to pass it with a simple majority -- the 51 votes they needed, and failed, to get in August -- they have to complete it and get the House's approval by September 30th when the fiscal year ends and the new fiscal budget goes into effect.  That's because, as part of the budget reconciliation, it is not subject to the senate filibuster.  And there's no way they can pass the bill if it takes 60 votes in the Senate, which it would on October 1st.

Then the Congressional Budget Office has just informed them that they will need two to three weeks to complete the scoring of the bill to see how many people will be lose coverage and what the cost will be.   They have just 12 days.

They can, of course, vote to pass it without the CBO scoring.   The House rushed its bill through passage without a CBO score.   But it would also be without having had any committee discussion or public comment.  And then it could be rushed to a floor vote in the senate with less than two (2) minutes debate.   I don't believe Sen. Collins for one would vote for that.

Chris Hayes explained why such limited debate.  It's part of the budget bill, which had a certain amount of time for discussion.  They've already used up all but the last 90 seconds allotted to discuss the budget bill.

So, assuming that everyone votes the same way they did on the last bill, it would fail by one vote.   Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski are thought to be reliable no votes again.   But John McCain's vote is said to be uncertain this time.  Ron Paul voted yes before but has already said he will oppose this one -- because it leaves "too much of Obamacare in place."   I'm not sure what he's referring to.

The lobbying and arm-twisting will be fierce.   All kinds of deals will be offered.   Block grants are generally appealing to the more conservative members, but I think they all voted for the previous bill.   So that may not pick up any votes.  But it's too close for comfort.

And, by the way, the concern about Sen. Menendez won't apply here.  His trial is currently ongoing and expected to last for weeks.   So there's no chance for him to be convicted, resolve the question of whether he gets booted from the senate, and then a replacement sworn in.

Never a dull moment.  Call your senators.   Demand a defeat of this abomination that would throw more people off health care than the other bills, because it has the worst of each previous plan, all rolled up into one.

Ralph

Monday, September 18, 2017

"Building a wall" was just talk, according to Trump's long-term executive VP

Barbara Res is a former Executive Vice President of the Trump Organization.  She worked for Trump for 18 years, including overseeing the construction of Trump Tower.   She was a guest on Ari Melber's "The Beat" on Friday night.

According to Ms. Res, Trump often spun big plans, which he knew would never be realized.   "He likes to tell people what they want to hear," she said.   In answer to Ari's question, she scoffed at the idea that Trump ever seriously meant to build a wall.  "It's ridiculous," she said.  And then added: "Way too expensive, not necessary.   No way."

To be clear, this is her opinionhaving worked closely with Trump as he planned and built, and sometimes promised what he knew would never be built. She has no specific insider knowledge about "the wall" as strategy.  But it seems clear: Barbara Res knows Donald Trump . . . all too well.

Trevor Noah challenges Steve Bannon's claim that America was built by "it's citizens," not immigrants.

Steve Bannon, as he has proclaimed, is "going to war" against the establishment "from the outside," i.e., back at his perch atop Breitbart News in control of a major, alt-right propaganda outlet.

Charlie Rose broadcast an interview with Bannon on his "60 Minutes" show last Sunday night, in which Bannon proclaimed, among other things, that "America was built by its citizens."

Bannon accused Rose of pushing "leftist propaganda" when he pointed out that everyone in the U.S., except perhaps Native Americans, are really immigrants.

Trevor Noah took on the Bannon argument on his "Daily Show," revealing that his producers had hired a professional genealogist to explore Bannon's own ancestral history.   Here's what they found:   "Bannon's great-great-grandfather . . . arrived in the U.S. from Ireland by the 1850s when America's borders were so open that Irishmen could just walk into the country with no passport, no visas, no background check of any kind."

So, Noah pointed out, "Bannon's great grandfather [the immigrant's son] was a Dreamer . . . and his great grandson is a fucking nightmare."

And what about the African-Americans who, as slaves, were the backbone and muscle of the Southern economy and, actually, helped build the White House itself?   Bannon apparently discounts their forced "contribution" to building this country.

I suggest that, the next time someone asks you to explain "white privilege," you might use Steve Bannon's attitude as an example.

Ralph

Sunday, September 17, 2017

Trump had to be talked out of firing Sessions over his recusal back in May

New York Times reporters Michael Schmidt and Maggie Haberman have been doing terrific investigative journalism on Trump and his campaign.  This week they have revealed what sources have told them about an Oval Office meeting in May, in which President Trump "unleashed a string of insults" on his Attorney General Jeff Sessions for recusing himself from overseeing investigation of Russia's interference in our election process and whether there was any collusion from the Trump campaign.

Now, let's take note that Sessions really had no choice and was told so by advisers.  Had he not recused, with his history of having lied about his own meetings with the Russian ambassador, it would have become an ethics case on top of all else.  But, to Trump, it meant only that Sessions was disloyal to him and that, as he put it at one point, that his administration had "lost control of the investigation."  He saw the role of the AG as being to protect him from, apparently, even his own crimes.

The Times article is based on interviews with seven "administration officials and others" with knowledge of interactions between Trump and Sessions since that time.

Present in the meeting were Trump, VP Pence, AG Sessions, U.S. Counsel Don McGahan and others.   During the meeting, McGahan took a phone call from Deputy AG Rod Rosenstein, who was informing him that he had decided to appoint Bob Mueller as special counsel to take over the investigation, following Trump's firing of FBI Director James Comey, who had been conducting it.

We had known, of course, that Trump had fired Comey in order to try to stop this very investigation, among other stated reasons.   So, upon hearing in the May meeting that, rather than stop the investigation, it now was to be led by the man who would be at the top of any list for integrity and expertise -- Trump was furious.   And he aimed that fury straight at Sessions.

According to this account, Trump accused Sessions of "disloyalty," saying that it was Sessions fault "that we're in this situation," that appointing him as AG was one of the worst decisions he had made, and calling Sessions an "idiot."   Further, he said that Sessions should resign.   Emotionally shaken and "ashen," Sessions said he would resign and left the office.   That night he submitted his letter of resignation.

But Trump's advisers Mike Pence, Reince Priebus, and Steve Bannon finally prevailed on Trump not to accept the resignation, arguing that it would only sow more chaos in the administration and turn Republicans in Congress against him, given the relationships Sessions had built up there over his decades as a senator.

Trump ultimately contained his anger and declined to accept Sessions' resignation.  But he has continued to take swipes at Sessions, to thwart him and contradict him in public.   So that's the inside story, apparently, of what we only saw bits and pieces of from the outside.   There was no secret that Trump had been both surprised and unhappy when Sessions had recused himself some time before.  And Trump made that comment about how it was "unfair to the president" and that, had he known Pence was going to recuse, as he did shortly after taking office, he would never have appointed him.

So, let's look at what this means.   What is new in what we now know is primarily the degree of Trump's fury on finding out he was going to face investigation after all.  In essence, he thought he had jumped out of the frying pan by firing Comey, and now he finds out he had jumped directly into the fire.   And it's his own fault.  Regardless of what will be found in the investigation, it was his firing of Comey that led directly to the appointment of Mueller -- who, by the way, is more formidable than Comey by a good bit.

This all smacks of the behavior of a man who knows he's guilty and who is desperate and running out of tricks to derail his own downfall.

Meanwhile, hardly a day goes by without some new assumption becoming clear about where the investigation is going.   Not so much from leaks but from simply observing who is being listed or called upon to supply information or to be interviewed by the investigative team.

What we are learning is that Mueller is already reaching into the White House staff.   Six people have been listed as people he wants to interview:   Reince Preibus, Sean Spicer, Hope Hicks, plus three others who are less publicly known but who were likely in positions know what was going on.

Mueller is obviously looking at the Trump Tower meeting with the Russian lawyer.  One of the Russians in that meeting has already been interviewed.   Don, Jr. has been interviewed by the staff of the Senate Judiciary Committee.  Mueller is also looking at the crafting of the letter about the content of that meeting, which Trump himself reportedly dictated.  He's looking into the Comey firing, the Sessions "resignation" -- and the inside discussions about all of that.

In addition, Mike Flynn's son, who was also his chief of staff in his business during the time Flynn was National Security Adviser, is now listed as a "subject" of the investigation.   He must have known about his father's business dealings with these foreign governments.  As I remember from the transition period, when he misrepresented himself as actually being on the White House transition staff, there was talk about that not being possible because he couldn't get a security clearance.

What a tangled pile of linguini.   If anyone can figure it all out, Bob Mueller is the one.   Donald Trump has reason to be frightened.

Ralph