Thursday, November 30, 2023

Liz Cheney’s new book, Oath and Honor

 

Advance copies of Liz Cheney’s new book, Oath and Honor, as reported on and summarized by The New York Times, CNN and The Guardian, have the GOP denial machine in full gear. In its pages, Cheney recounts precisely how cowardly, unprincipled and cynical the GOP has become, particularly around January 6 and Trump’s illegal quest to remain in office.
Now, before folks say, “Why did she wait for her book to come out to say all this?” let’s assume, because she is principled, that Cheney already told whatever she knew to investigators on the January 6 Committee and to federal prosecutors. The cases have in no way been prejudiced by her withholding this information from the public. And in any event, much of what she conveys has been discussed in other contexts, just not all together in one damning volume.
With that said, here are some highlights which still present as new information:
Cheney tears into former Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), blasting him for kissing Trump’s ring at Mar-a-Lago after January 6 because he was worried the former president was “depressed” and “not eating.”
She takes aim at the current Speaker, Mike Johnson (R-LA), who coerced House GOP members to sign onto a legal brief, warning that Trump would later review whose names were on it.
She rakes Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) for arguing that, despite the lack of any evidence the election was stolen, “The only thing that matters is winning.” And she singles out Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) for abandoning his duty for the sake of personal ambition.
According to early accounts of the book, Cheney collectively and unflinchingly labels the GOP “enablers and collaborators” for “the most dangerous man ever to inhabit the Oval Office.” While mocking him as “Orange Jesus” behind his back, Congressmembers dutifully did his bidding in public.
Cheney may also now become a witness for Jack Smith. She found herself accidentally included in a White House surrogates call where Trump allies detailed plans to overturn the election using Mike Pence to obstruct or delay the vote count. Those on the call are probably wondering what specifically Cheney has told prosecutors.
Let’s take a deeper dive into Cheney’s revelations and why they are so damning.
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**Kevin McCarthy, Tool of the Era
She thought it must have been a fake photo. There was no way that Kevin McCarthy would travel to Mar-a-Lago, she believed, to stand side-by-side with the guy who just tried to overthrow the government. So she confronted McCarthy about it.
“Mar-a-Lago?” she asked, dumbfounded. “What the hell?”
McCarthy’s excuse was so lame it almost defies belief. “Trump’s not eating,” McCarthy said to her, “so they asked me to come see him.”
“You went to Mar-a-Lago because Trump’s not eating?” she asked.
“Yeah, he’s really depressed,” McCarthy answered.
Sanity check. The notion that Trump wasn’t eating is itself a bit hard to believe. The notion that McCarthy went to cheer him up about it is even harder. We all know McCarthy was quite worried about gaining back the House majority, and that this wasn’t going to be possible without Trump’s help, or so he thought.
The book mentions something else that should be of no small interest to prosecutors. Two days after the 2020 election, McCarthy told Cheney that he had spoken to Trump. “He knows it’s over,” he told her. “He needs to go through all the stages of grief.”
Those stages, Cheney noted, apparently included tweeting out in ALL CAPS. And later, denial, but this time of an entire election.
When McCarthy went on Fox that same day and claimed that “President Trump won this election,” Cheney writes, “McCarthy knew that what he was saying was not true.”
**Mister Johnson’s naughty list
Now that Mike Johnson is the head honcho in the House, his role in January 6 is coming under added scrutiny. Cheney’s account adds significant fuel to that.
Johnson had worked to gain support among House GOP members for an amicus brief to be filed with the Supreme Court. He emailed his conference that he’d spoken with Trump who would be “anxiously awaiting the final list to review.”
Cheney read that as a threat, and no doubt others did as well. What would happen to those who didn’t sign on? Would they become targets of his tweets and his angry MAGA base?
Of Johnson, Cheney was unsparing. “He appeared especially susceptible to flattery from Trump and aspired to be anywhere in Trump’s orbit,” she wrote. “When I confronted him with the flaws in his legal argument, Johnson would often concede, or say something to the effect of, ‘We just need to do this one last thing for Trump.’”
He was also highly dishonest. “He was playing bait and switch,” Cheney writes, “assuring members that the brief made no claims about specific allegations of [electoral] fraud when, in fact, it was full of such claims.” Cheney also says Johnson told House colleagues he was a “constitutional law expert,” which was untrue, and that he wrote the brief, which was also untrue. In fact, pro-Trump lawyers actually wrote the document, Cheney notes.
Johnson sent poll numbers to Cheney showing how 68 percent of Republicans believed the election had been stolen. “These numbers are big,” Johnson said, “and something we have to contend with as we thread the needle on messaging.” Cheney observed that the reason so many believed this was because people like Johnson were echoing Trump’s lies.
**Jim Jordan enables an assault, again
Cheney singled out Jim Jordan as one of the worst of the Trump acolytes and loyalists. On top of saying the quiet part out loud by claiming, despite no evidence of election fraud, “The only thing that matters is winning,” Jordan was also “dismissive” of the legal process for challenging the election results and “didn’t seem to think the rules mattered,” according to Cheney.
On the day of the attack at the Capitol, the Sergeant at Arms warned members to be ready to hide under chairs if necessary. “Jim Jordan approached me,” Cheney writes, and said, “We need to get the ladies off the aisle.” He extended a hand to Cheney to help her, but she swatted it away.
“Get away from me. You f—ing did this,” Cheney responded.
**Ted Cruz’s blind ambition
Among the GOP senators, the most dangerously ambitious is Ted Cruz, according to Cheney. Cruz was the primary mover behind a plan to set aside the Electoral College vote count on January 6, arguing for a commission to investigate election results that had already been recounted and recertified. Cruz called publicly for a delay of 10 days—by no small coincidence, the same amount of time others named within the conspiracy to overturn the election had pressed for.
Cruz is a highly educated, highly intelligent lawyer. That makes what he was urging even more cynical because he knew it was wrong and that it at least skirted right up to the very edge of legality.
“It was one of the worst cases of abandonment of duty for personal ambition I’ve ever seen in Washington,” Cheney writes.
**Fear and loathing in the GOP
Cheney recounts several instances where House members appeared to privately express disdain and opposition to Trump but then publicly did the opposite. The hypocrisy and lack of backbone was galling to her, especially as she paid the full political price of standing by her principles by being removed from House leadership.
One colleague told her he stayed publicly loyal to Trump because he was afraid for the safety of his wife and baby if he spoke out, a claim now buttressed after credible death threats went out to opponents of Jim Jordan’s speakership candidacy as well as to their families and staff.
Another Congressman, Mark Green (R-TN), signed on to Johnson’s amicus brief but remarked, aloud and to no one specifically, “The things we do for the Orange Jesus.”
When McCarthy visited Mar-a-Lago, many GOP members expressed private disgust and anger. “Some mocked him, circulating the Trump/McCarthy photo along with the clip from the movie Jerry McGuire” where Tom Cruise claims, “You…complete…me.”
Privately joking and mocking, when it came to voting lockstep with Trump, they readily obeyed while publicly praising and defending him. “So strong is the lure of power that men and women who had once seemed reasonable and responsible were suddenly willing to violate their oath to the Constitution out of political expediency and loyalty to Donald Trump,” Cheney writes.
**An unlikely ally
When former Speaker Nancy Pelosi offered Cheney a position on the January 6 Committee, some of Pelosi’s staff were horrified at the prospect. Some pulled together a list of the 10 worst things Cheney has ever said about Pelosi. But this didn’t sway the former House leader. “Why are you wasting my time with things that don’t matter?” Pelosi asked them.
In her book, Cheney praises Pelosi for always backing her and for her stalwart leadership. “We may have disagreed on pretty much everything else, but Nancy Pelosi and I saw eye to eye on the one thing that mattered more than any other: the defense of our Constitution and the preservation of our republic.”
**A memoir and a warning
The subtitle of Cheney’s book reminds readers that her account is not only a recollection but also a warning to us all. Her words are worth repeating here in full.
“Trump has told us that he thinks the Constitution can and should be suspended when necessary, that what happened on Jan. 6 was justified, that in a second Trump presidency he would seek retribution,” Cheney writes. “The assumption that our institutions will protect themselves is purely wishful thinking by people who prefer to look the other way.”
“We have also now learned that most Republicans currently in Congress will do what Donald Trump asks, no matter what it is.” Cheney adds, “I am very sad to say that America can no longer count on a body of elected Republicans to protect our republic.”
“Every one of us – Republican, Democrat, Independent – must work and vote together to ensure that Donald Trump and those who have appeased, enabled, and collaborated with him are defeated.”
“This is the cause of our time.”
* * *
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POLITICO Nightly: The real nepo-babies of New Jersey

 


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BY MIA MCCARTHY

Presented by the Consumer Credit Card Protection Coalition

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and his wife Tammy Murphy at the White House state dinner for South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on April 26, 2023.

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and his wife Tammy Murphy at the White House state dinner for South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on April 26, 2023. | Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

FAMILY BUSINESS — It was almost a year ago that New York Magazine released a cover photo of “Hollywood’s nepo-baby boom ” — an image illuminating how many celebrities got to where they were from their parents’ own fame.

But if that list tracked political nepo-babies and other close family relatives, New Jersey would fill an issue all by itself.

The Garden State has mastered the art of keeping politics in the family, as evidenced by a roster of politicians from prominent political New Jersey families. Two of the 12 members of Congress had fathers who served in Congress. GOP Rep. Tom Kean Jr.’s father was governor for two terms. Democratic Rep. Donald Norcross is the brother of one of the state’s most influential powerbrokers. And that’s just the House delegation.

The all-in-the-family nature of New Jersey politics — and its reform-resistant, antiquated political ways — are suddenly the talk of the state again, now that yet another family-connected candidate has the inside track for a prominent office.

With Democratic Sen. Bob Menendez seemingly unlikely to win reelection after a bribery indictment — his favorability ratings have cratered — his Senate seat has attracted prominent challengers from across the party, nepo-families included. First Lady Tammy Murphy announced her bid for the seat two weeks ago in the latest example of the Jersey machine in action.

The wife of Gov. Phil Murphy, Tammy Murphy has had a proactive policy agenda since her husband assumed the governor’s office in 2018, but has never held a position in government. 

Her Senate run has already been met with frustration due to her familial connection with the governor. Much of that criticism is related to the peculiar New Jersey ballot design — known as “the line” — that many say greases the way to elect the same political names over and over.

Right now, Murphy is looking like a frontrunner. In the two weeks since Murphy announced her candidacy, endorsements from the state’s Democratic establishment have flooded in. She has already grabbed the support of six out of the nine Democrats in New Jersey’s House delegation — despite the fact that they currently serve with Democratic Rep. Andy Kim, a relative outsider who is also running for Menendez Senate seat. And Murphy’s got support from some of the state’s most influential Democratic county chairs — in another only-in New-Jersey phenomenon, county party chairs are unusually powerful.

One House member who is not supporting Murphy? Democratic Rep. Rob Menendez, the son of the embattled senator, whose pre-indictment influence all but anointed him into the House before voters even knew he was running.

The only New Jersey House Democrat not tied to a campaign already is Rep. Bonnie Watson Coleman, who said it is too early to make an endorsement. She said Kim or Murphy would both make great senators for the state, but called out New Jersey’s penchant for electing government officials who are on the friends and family plan.

“New Jersey has an infrastructure that has worked for New Jersey’s leadership,” Watson Coleman told Nightly. “But sometimes, options get foreclosed before voters can have their voice heard.”

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at mmccarthy@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @Reporter_Mia .

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Biden admin won’t impose conditions on Israel aid, officials say: President Joe Biden suggested that conditioning future military aid to Israel was a “worthwhile thought.” But days later, administration officials are shutting down any talk of that happening. Senior U.S. officials hit the Sunday shows to rule out the proposal, hinting — but not outright saying — there wouldn’t be a shift in the administration’s Israel policy . Now three U.S. officials say Biden won’t restrict support for Israel any time soon.

— Tuberville considers dropping some military holds ‘soon, but not today’: Tommy Tuberville said in an interview today he’s considering dropping his months-long holds on military promotions “soon, but not today.” The Alabama GOP senator said he and other Armed Services Committee members are “getting close” to a resolution and will be holding more meetings on the subject later today with Chair Jack Reed (D-R.I.) and other members of the panel.

— Arizona officials who refused to canvass election results are indicted by grand jury: Officials in a rural Arizona county who delayed canvassing the 2022 general election results have been criminally charged , the state’s top prosecutor said today. A grand jury in Maricopa County Superior Court has indicted Cochise County Supervisors Peggy Judd and Tom Crosby on one count each of conspiracy and interference of an election officer.

 

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NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

SWITCHING TEAMS — A former top aide to GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy is leaving his campaign this week to join Donald Trump’s re-election effort , reports The Messenger.

Brian Swensen, Ramaswamy’s national political director, confirmed that he will take a new job working closely with Trump campaign senior adviser Susie Wiles in the upper echelon of the Trump campaign. Swensen directed further questions to the Trump and Ramaswamy campaigns. The move is a blow to Ramaswamy, who soared to prominence over the summer but has struggled to maintain his momentum in the Republican primary. Ramaswamy is polling at around 5% in support in the average of national Republican polling compiled by 538.

WALL STREET BETS — JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon urged Democrats to support Nikki Haley in the GOP presidential primary , arguing that she offers a strong alternative to former President Donald Trump, reports POLITICO.

“If you’re a very liberal Democrat, I urge you to help Nikki Haley, too. Give them a choice on the Republican side that might be better than Trump,” Dimon, who leads the country’s largest commercial bank, said onstage at the 2023 DealBook Summit today.

Dimon has been talking up Haley in recent weeks as the former South Carolina governor has gained in the polls. While she’s still trailing well behind Trump, she has won endorsements from an influential super PAC backed by the Koch network and has started to fundraise with Wall Street heavyweights.

When pressed if he’d support “anything but Trump,” Dimon pushed back. “I would never say. He might be the president, I have to live with that too,” he said.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

A woman walks past banners at the UNFCCC COP28 Climate Conference in Dubai.

A woman walks past banners at the UNFCCC COP28 Climate Conference today in Dubai. | Sean Gallup/Getty Images

DEAL WITH IT — Countries are poised to seal a hard-fought agreement on Thursday for the creation of an international fund to help communities rebuild from climate-driven calamities , giving the U.N. climate talks a win on their opening day, reports POLITICO.

The hosts of the summit, known as COP28, released a draft agreement today that would accept wholesale the recommendations a handful of countries adopted earlier this month. It includes a provision, demanded by the United States, that says all contributions to the fund are voluntary.

Five diplomats from European and African nations, who were granted anonymity to speak to POLITICO about the negotiations, said it was likely the draft deal would be adopted at the opening of the summit in Dubai.

Still to be decided: How much money the fund should contain and where the cash should come from. At this point, the draft “invites” developed countries to lead in providing financial resources to start up the fund. None have yet provided firm pledges.

A deal on the first day would remove a long-running point of conflict from the conference agenda. That, in turn, would allow delegates to focus talks on the root cause of the carnage: the burning of fossil fuels. It would be a positive sign for a conference facing headwinds from geopolitical upheaval, a bullish fossil fuel industry, and climate activists’ complaints that a major petro-state is hosting the gathering.

But that will take a final agreement between almost 200 countries gathered for the beginning of the two-week conference.

SHOT DOWN — A U.S. Navy warship sailing near the Bab el-Mandeb Strait shot down a drone launched from Yemen , a U.S. official said today, in the latest in a string of threats from Iranian-backed Houthi rebels, reports the Associated Press.

The official said according to initial reports, USS Carney, a Navy destroyer, deemed the drone — an Iranian-made KAS-04 — to be a threat and shot it down over water in the southern Red Sea as the ship was moving toward the strait. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a military operation not yet made public.

The shootdown today comes a day after an Iranian drone flew within 1,500 yards of the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower aircraft carrier as it was conducting flight operations in international waters in the Arabian Gulf.

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

Nearly 90

The number of House Republicans who say they plan or are likely to support voting to expel George Santos from Congress , according to an internal whip count from POLITICO. That means it’s a near-certainty the indicted New York lawmaker will be out this week.

RADAR SWEEP

COLOR WARS — Tyrian purple, also known as shellfish purple, was a dye that was the most expensive product in antiquity. The color shaped multiple empires — Cleopatra used it in the sails of her boat and some Roman emperors said that anyone wearing it other than them would be sentenced immediately to death. Now, at the edge of the Syrian desert, researchers have discovered a sample and are trying to recreate the color . For the BBC, Zaria Gorvett goes deep into the importance of the color, how it was lost in the first place and the efforts to bring Tyrian purple back.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1992: A group of Somalis crowd onto a broken-down truck, while one man checks under the hood, at the Mandera refugee camp in Kenya. The Somali Civil War, which is ongoing, continues to give rise to thousands of refugees.

On this date in 1992: A group of Somalis crowd onto a broken-down truck, while one man checks under the hood, at the Mandera refugee camp in Kenya. The Somali Civil War, which is ongoing, continues to give rise to thousands of refugees. | David Brauchli/AP

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Learn more and tell Congress to say no to defunding data security by rejecting the Durbin-Marshall credit card bill.

 
 

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POLITICO Nightly: How the Kremlin keeps dodging tough sanctions

 

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BY GABRIEL GAVIN

Presented by the Consumer Credit Card Protection Coalition

A Russian cargo ship arrives at the port of Dunkirk in northern France.

A Russian cargo ship arrives at the port of Dunkirk in northern France on March 20, 2023. | Sameer Al-Doumy/AFP via Getty Images

POWER PLAY — Smoke rose over Kyiv on Saturday as the city was hit with the largest drone strike since the start of the full-scale invasion , killing five and forcing Ukrainian civilians to huddle together in bomb shelters for more than six hours.

While Russia rains down death in Eastern Europe, across the other side of the continent, EU nations are still divided over just how much they want to go after the Kremlin’s energy exports.

The bloc’s long-awaited package of new sanctions is the twelfth it will have imposed on Russia in the past year and a half. A draft document seen by POLITICO revealed that key demands from Kyiv — lowering the $60 oil price cap to $30 per barrel, banning fuel refined from Russian oil in third countries , and ending the purchase of Moscow’s nuclear fuel — have struggled to find consensus in Brussels.

That’s creating headaches in Washington, which wants its partners to move faster on cutting off Moscow’s flow of cash, but is loath to be seen to intervene politically on the other side of the Atlantic. Now, the State Department is taking unprecedented steps that could have a profound impact for European firms still doing business in Russia.

Instead of targeting flagship exports like oil and gas, Ukraine’s European allies will focus on restricting trade in diamonds, iron and copper, which are of relatively little value to the Russian state. When it comes to energy, “we’ve reached the capacity of what we can do without shooting [ourselves] in the foot and harming our competitiveness," one EU diplomat claimed.

The biggest omission is liquefied natural gas, the all-important fossil fuel that netted President Vladimir Putin’s regime an estimated $6.6 billion in sales in the EU this year alone. Countries like Spain and Belgium have actually even boosted their LNG imports by a massive 50 percent in 2023, compared to 2022.

Meanwhile, hopes that Europe could agree to shut the door on Russia’s atomic energy sector given its dangerous occupation of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant — the continent’s largest — have failed to materialize. Hungary is expanding one of its own atomic power stations with Moscow’s help and populist Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has vowed to veto any sanctions that would hurt the industrydespite criticism from EU and Ukrainian officials alike. Unanimous support from all 27 member states is needed to impose new restrictions, meaning talks on the subject are now deadlocked.

The standoff creates a challenge for Washington, which is trying to keep Ukraine’s allies united and maintain pressure on Russia’s economy. Earlier this month, the Biden administration took the unprecedented step of slapping sanctions on a major LNG project in Russia’s frozen Arctic region , despite the fact that European companies are actively involved in the project. Now, France’s TotalEnergies could have to decide whether to give up their stake or run the risk of serious consequences from the Treasury Department. It’s a surprise move that may indicate the U.S. is prepared to use its global influence while Europe seemingly drags its feet.

Washington has also stepped well beyond the EU in sanctioning Alexey Miller , the CEO of state energy giant Gazprom, and has imposed restrictions on several senior Russian nuclear officials.

While the Russian budget is facing a multibillion-dollar black hole as a result of the sanctions that have already been imposed, Putin is betting that he can hold the system together long enough for Western support for Ukraine to wane. Whether he is right or not depends on what European and American politicians do next — and, if they fail, they could find themselves worrying about more than the energy bill.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at ggavin@politico.eu or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @GabrielCSGavin .

 

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Some politicians are trying to defund data security by passing the Durbin-Marshall Credit Card bill, serving your private financial data to hackers on a silver platter. But you can stop them. Learn more and tell Congress to stop the Durbin-Marshall credit card bill.

 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— House GOP denies Hunter Biden demand on impeachment inquiry testimony: Hunter Biden’s legal team demanded that he be allowed to testify publicly in response to a House GOP subpoena. Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.) quickly shot it down . A Biden lawyer sent a letter to the House Oversight Chair this morning, saying the president’s son would appear publicly before the committee on Dec. 13. That ran counter to a stipulation of the subpoena, which called for a private deposition with lawmakers and aides. “A public proceeding would prevent selective leaks, manipulated transcripts, doctored exhibits, or one-sided press statements,” Abbe Lowell, Hunter Biden’s attorney, wrote in the letter. He added that they were also amenable to any other date next month the two sides could agree on. Comer denied the request in a statement today, saying it “won’t stand with House Republicans.”

— Jewish groups sue University of California over ‘unchecked’ antisemitism: Jewish groups are suing the University of California system, UC Berkeley and its leaders over what they are calling a “longstanding, unchecked spread of anti-Semitism.” The 36-page lawsuit, filed today by the Brandeis Center and Jewish Americans for Fairness in Education, argues that Berkeley and its law school’s “inaction” on discrimination against Jewish students has led to a spread of antisemitism, and violence and harassment against them. Demonstrations and incidents on campus following the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks on Israel serve as examples of the discrimination, according to the complaint.

— Democrat starts official clock for Santos expulsion vote: A fierce Democratic critic of Rep. George Santos has officially triggered another push to expel him — the most serious threat against the indicted lawmaker to date. The privileged motion introduced by Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) means the House must vote on expulsion within two legislative days. That’s almost exactly two weeks after the release of a damning bipartisan House Ethics Committee report that found “sufficient evidence” of Santos’ criminal wrongdoing.

 

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NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

CAN’T QUIT X — The Biden campaign and White House increasingly see the site formerly known as Twitter as a sewer. They just can’t quite leave the mess alone , writes POLITICO..

They say they no longer see the platform as a place where they can actually build useful voter relations or even engage in level political discourse. But even as they trash the site, they aren’t ready to quit it either. Aides continue to tweet — as does the president. They debated, internally, the merits of leaving the platform, but determined it would be a mistake to leave even the crass political debates unattended.

Instead, they are adapting to the bare-knuckled nature of X by trying to shape it. Largely, they’ve used X to try and drive the conversation and slam their likely general election opponent. But aides to the president have begun more aggressively using the platform to call out reporters and news outlets, mock pundits and try to influence the news cycle.

HOME FIELD DISADVANTAGE — Nikki Haley sees her home state as a launchpad. It could become her campaign’s crash site, writes NBC News. The former South Carolina governor has staked her hopes of wresting the 2024 Republican presidential nomination from former President Donald Trump on the idea that she can survive January contests in Iowa and New Hampshire that will thin the GOP field and then defeat him in a one-on-one battle here in her backyard. So far, she hasn’t made the sale.

That’s at least in part because Haley has yet to give voters a reason to abandon Trump — the dominant political figure in the state for almost a decade — a recurring theme that emerged in interviews with almost two dozen Republican voters, current and former elected officials, county party chairs and Republican strategists. The same can be said for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and the rest of a field that Trump leads by more than 30 percentage points in recent polls of the state’s Feb. 24 primary.

DISQUALIFYING TRUMP — The window is narrowing to try to knock former President Donald Trump off California’s March 5 primary ballot , reports POLITICO. Democrats across the country have launched several long-shot challenges to Trump’s ballot status over his role in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. But the deadline for California Secretary of State Shirley Weber to certify which presidential candidates will appear on the ballot is just a month away.

If Weber or the courts don’t act by Dec. 28, attempting to remove Trump could create major logistical challenges as the state prepares voter guides and other materials.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

A man stands at a border checkpoint between Russia and Finland on Nov. 15, 2023.

A man stands at a border checkpoint between Russia and Finland on Nov. 15, 2023. | Vesa Moilanen/Lehtikuva/AFP via Getty Images

SHUT IT DOWN — Finland will completely close its border with Russia for two weeks after a surge of asylum seekers crossing the frontier, Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo announced today .

“This is Russia’s influence activity, and we do not accept that,” Orpo said at a press conference, according to Finnish news outlet Helsingin Sanomat. The two-week border closure will take effect between Wednesday and Thursday night and will end on December 13, the paper reported.

Helsinki’s move follows a decision by the European border agency Frontex last week to deploy border guards and other staff, along with equipment, to bolster Finland’s border control activities amid accusations by Finland that Moscow is stoking the migrant influx. Tension between the two countries has escalated since Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, prompting Finland to join the NATO military alliance.

On Monday, NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg accused Russia of using migration as a tool to pressure Finland. “NATO stands in solidarity with our ally Finland,” he said.

 

GET A BACKSTAGE PASS TO COP28 WITH GLOBAL PLAYBOOK : Get insider access to the conference that sets the tone of the global climate agenda with POLITICO's Global Playbook newsletter. Authored by Suzanne Lynch, Global Playbook delivers exclusive, daily insights and comprehensive coverage that will keep you informed about the most crucial climate summit of the year. Dive deep into the critical discussions and developments at COP28 from Nov. 30 to Dec. 12. SUBSCRIBE NOW .

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

$35 billion

The amount of money effectively being cut from the Defense Department budget , according to Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks, as the Pentagon operates under a temporary funding measure that freezes spending at the previous year’s levels.

RADAR SWEEP

THE AIRBNB WARS — In New Orleans, Airbnb owners are at war with one another: The city tried to control short-term rentals through a lottery system that allowed one rental per carved up block. But the rule, designed initially to decrease short term rentals in the city, led to more chaos and confusion, especially after a federal judge halted the rule, which is still under review. Neighbors were pitted against each other in hopes to continue their rental side hustles. Now, the listings sit in limbo, with owners unsure whether they can create bookings or not as they await the judge’s final decision. In an article for WIRED, Amanda Hoover looks at how the city rule made a mess for Airbnb hosts around the city that is left frozen in place.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 2011: A veiled Egyptian woman casts her ballot in Maadi, a suburb of Cairo, as voting began in Egypt's first parliamentary elections since longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak was ousted in a popular uprising nine months prior.

On this date in 2011: A veiled Egyptian woman casts her ballot in Maadi, a suburb of Cairo, as voting began in Egypt's first parliamentary elections since longtime authoritarian leader Hosni Mubarak was ousted in a popular uprising nine months prior. | Tara Todras-Whitehill/AP

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Your security is on hackers’ wish list this year and some lawmakers are trying to put defunding data security under the tree by passing the Durbin-Marshall Credit Card bill.

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