Tuesday, December 5, 2023

Federal judge REJECTS Trump's presidential immunity & double jeopardy claims; case set for trial

 



This extended Justice Matters video does a deep dive into the new ruling by Judge Tanya Chutkan rejecting Donald Trump's motion to dismiss his DC case, claiming he has "absolute presidential immunity" against being prosecuted for his crimes and that the double-jeopardy clause of the Constitution prohibits him from being prosecuted.




Deadline: White House [4PM] 12/5/2023 | πŸ…ΌπŸ†‚πŸ…½πŸ…±πŸ…² BREAKING NEWS Today Dec 5, 2023

 

 





Informed Comment daily updates (12/04/2023)

This is a War on Children, and “Safe Zones” are Death Traps: UNICEF

This is a War on Children, and “Safe Zones” are Death Traps: UNICEF

Ann Arbor (Informed Comment) – Gaza was a free-fire zone on Saturday and Sunday, with UN officials saying that no place in the Strip is safe. Hundreds were killed, almost all of them innocent noncombatants, and including a worrisome number of children. Although Israel tried to pull the stunt of issuing a map with supposedly […]

The Israel-India-U.S. Triangle: Its Human Toll Will Be Incalculable

The Israel-India-U.S. Triangle: Its Human Toll Will Be Incalculable

By Priti Gulati Cox and Stan Cox ( Tomdispatch.com) – In 1981, India’s post office issued a stamp showing the flags of India and occupied Palestine flying side by side above the phrase “Solidarity with the Palestinian people.” That now seems like ancient history. Today, Hindu nationalists are flying the flags of India and Israel […]

Protesting the University of Pennsylvania Ban on the Screening of the Documentary, “Israelism”

Protesting the University of Pennsylvania Ban on the Screening of the Documentary, “Israelism”

Committee on Academic Freedom, Middle East Studies Association Liz Magill President, the University of Pennsylvania president@upenn.edu   John Jackson Provost, the University of Pennsylvania provost@upenn.edu . . .

Old posts you may have missed

Palestinian-Israeli Leader Mansour Abbas: Nonviolent Struggle Necessary; Hamas’s Oct. 7 Atrocity Blasphemed against Islamic Values

Pre-COP Report: German Industry Investments in Climate Protection increased 74% over 10 years

Gaza: Why all Civilian lives matter Equally, according to a Military Ethicist

Did Israeli PM Netanyahu start Bombing Gaza Again to Stay out of Jail and Appease Fascists in his Cabinet?

The History of Gaza: On Conquerors, Resurgence and Rebirth

How the Keffiyeh – a practical Garment used for Protection against the desert Sun – became a Symbol of Palestinian Identity

How War Criminal Kissinger paved the Way for a Genocidal Total War on Gaza’s Civilians

 





POLITICO Massachusetts Playbook: Biden's Bay State boost

 

Massachusetts Playbook logo

BY LISA KASHINSKY AND KELLY GARRITY

MONEY AND MANPOWER — Joe Biden is getting a boost from the Bay State in more ways than one today.

As the president hits the fundraising circuit here , a pair of Democratic operatives are attempting to round up potentially thousands of party activists to aid the Biden write-in effort taking shape across state lines.

To recap: Biden didn’t put his name on the primary ballot in New Hampshire amid a spat between state and national Democrats over the party’s 2024 nominating calendar. Biden and the Democratic National Committee wanted South Carolina, a more diverse state that helped propel Biden to the nomination in 2020, to vote first. New Hampshire was supposed to follow on a shared date with Nevada.

But New Hampshire state law dictates that its presidential primary be held a week before any similar contest. And Republicans who control state government there refused to change it, setting the primary date for Jan. 23 — more than a week before South Carolina’s Democratic contest.

Biden’s Granite State allies are now running a write-in campaign on his behalf, and standing up a super PAC to help . Still, even for these seasoned operatives, it’s a tall order to convince potentially tens of thousands of people to come to the polls to write in the president’s name — spelled accurately, with the bubble filled in and all — and avoid a potentially embarrassing early, though unofficial, loss to Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.) or self-help guru Marianne Williamson.

Enter Joe Caiazzo and Nick Clemons , two local operatives who’ve worked on presidential campaigns in the region and on Rep. Joe Kennedy III’s failed 2020 Senate bid. The duo — alums of Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton's presidential campaigns, respectively — are now volunteering to organize Massachusetts Democrats to stand outside New Hampshire polling places on primary day and help with other educational efforts around the Biden write-in.

“Insider party politics aside, the stakes are astronomically high,” the pair wrote in an email blasted out widely to Massachusetts Democratic activists Monday and obtained by Playbook. “Massachusetts Democrats have a long tradition of helping candidates in New Hampshire. We know that a good volunteer base from down here can be a difference maker up there.”

Though Biden may have shunned New Hampshire’s primary , he’s still banking — literally and figuratively — on support from Massachusetts.

The president is slated for three fundraisers today: one hosted by former U.S. Ambassador Alan Solomont; one with Jack Connors, a Democrat who chaired GOP Gov. Charlie Baker’s 2018 reelection campaign; and evening concert with Grammy-winner James Taylor. MassDems Chair Steve Kerrigan said the state party is also “ready to help [Biden] in his reelection in any way we can, in New Hampshire, in Massachusetts or anywhere.”

Gov. Maura Healey is greeting Biden on the tarmac at Logan Airport around 11:30 a.m. But Healey, who is on Biden’s national campaign advisory board, won’t be with him all day — she has her own fundraiser to get to in Worcester in the evening.

President Joe Biden waves before boarding Air Force One, Sunday, Nov. 26, 2023, at Nantucket Memorial Airport in Nantucket, Mass. Biden is returning to Washington after spending the Thanksgiving Day holiday in Nantucket with family. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)

President Joe Biden is returning to Massachusetts for a fundraising swing days after spending the Thanksgiving holiday on Nantucket. | Stephanie Scarbrough/AP

GOOD TUESDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Pro-Palestinian groups are planning to protest Biden outside of the Shubert Theater where he and Taylor are holding their concert.

“Genocide Joe is not welcome in Boston,” reads the flier for the picket and rally to demand an end to U.S. aid for Israel that was posted on social media by the Boston branch of the Party for Socialism and Liberation. The group was among several that protested Vice President Kamala Harris’ visit to Boston last month over the administration’s response to the Israel-Hamas conflict.

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll attends the United Way of Massachusetts Bay’s Real Estate & Building Industry Celebration at 5:30 p.m. at the Omni Boston Seaport. Boston Mayor Michelle Wu holds a press conference on the new BPPA contract at 9:15 a.m. at City Hall and speaks at a Meet Boston event at 4:30 p.m. at Big Night Live.

Tips? Scoops? Email us: lkashinsky@politico.com and kgarrity@politico.com .

DATELINE BEACON HILL

SIGNED, SEALED AND DELIVERED — House Democrats converged on Beacon Hill Monday to put an end to Republicans stalling a roughly $3 billion supplemental budget over concerns with the ruling party’s approach to managing the migrant and shelter crises.

After three days of Republicans blocking the bill by questioning whether there was a quorum in the chamber, House Democrats powered past their objections to pass the spending bill, 105-14. It later cleared the Senate on a 20-3 vote that broke on party lines.

With $250 million in critical funding for the state’s shelter program, $400 million to fund union contracts for state employees and disaster relief on the line, Gov. Maura Healey signed the bill just 18 minutes after it hit her desk .

But the finger-pointing hasn’t stopped. In the House, Republicans continued to castigate Democrats for failing to act earlier on the bill. “If you want to see why this didn’t happen in a timely fashion, grab a mirror and look at it,” Minority Leader Brad Jones said of the majority party.

“Maybe we should,” House Speaker Ron Mariano replied when asked by a reporter about the remark. But he also turned blame back on the Republicans for holding up the supp. “I don’t know what they hoped to accomplish. Obviously, nothing much has changed, except that the checks will go out three days later.”

Across the third floor, Senate President Karen Spilka and Minority Leader Bruce Tarr addressed reporters together in a pointed show of bipartisanship. Both knocked the House for dragging out the process of even getting the supplemental budget to the negotiating stage. Healey filed the bill in September. But it didn’t come up for a vote in the House, which had to act first, until early November.

Spilka later told Playbook that she moved quickly to avoid a procedural squabble with Republicans in her chamber. First, she contacted members to ensure she’d have a quorum. Then she called Tarr “and started talking to him about what were the issues and how can we work together to get this done, because the bill is critically important for so many people?”

Healey’s fast action means tens of thousands of state workers who’ve been waiting for their raises will see bigger paychecks in time for the holidays. But because of what Senate Ways and Means Chair Michael Rodrigues described as delays “down the hall,” they likely won’t see the retroactive pay they’re owed until early January.

— “Tax revenue will likely fall short of forecasts by more than half a billion,” by Matthew Medsger, Boston Herald: “After tax takings for 2023 came in $2 billion under the previous year and with the global economy nowhere closer to stability, policymakers did not seem the least bit surprised to learn Massachusetts will likely experience a further revenue downturn this fiscal year.”

PARTY POLITICS

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is headlining a fundraiser for the MassGOP on Jan. 11 in Boston, the latest in a string of high-profile Republicans helping to pad the cash-strapped party’s coffers — and, in some cases, promote their presidential bids.

Former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson is booked for a fundraiser on Wednesday, The Messenger’s Stephanie Murray first reported. New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu is the headliner for a holiday party at the Lenox Hotel next Tuesday, according to invitations obtained by Playbook. Tickets run up to $1,000 for all three.

Christie and Hutchinson are also cutting the party $10,000 checks to submit their names for the state’s presidential primary. Candidates can pay the MassGOP $20,000 for ballot access, a fee that’s halved if they hold an event with the party. There are other — and cheaper — ways to get on the ballot. But this one engenders goodwill with party activists and donors. DeSantis also chose this route , appearing at a MassGOP event in October.

STEPPING UP — Healey is taking steps to raise her national profile as she prepares to enter her second year in office. She’s going to be next chair of the Democratic Governors Association’s Women Governor’s Fund, leading fundraising efforts to help elect, you probably guessed it, Democratic women governors. It’s familiar work for Healey, who co-chaired the Democratic Association of Attorneys General in 2020 and 2021. More from NBC News .

BALLOT BATTLES

IT’S OFFICIAL — A campaign to get a question on the 2024 ballot that would end the “sub-minimum” wage for tipped workers has completed the signature certification process with the secretary of state’s office, One Fair Wage, the group behind the effort, is announcing this morning. The campaign wants to see service workers earn a “full minimum wage with tips on top.”

ROE FALLOUT

COVERAGE FOR CONTRACEPTION — Healey is one of a handful of governors urging the Biden administration to make sure a newly approved over-the-counter birth control pill is covered by private health insurance.

MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS

— “Saugus migrant population on the decline,” by Charlie McKenna, ItemLive: “The number of migrants living in hotels and motels along Route 1 has dramatically dwindled over the last month, Public Health Director John Fralick told the Board of Health Monday night. Fralick told board members the majority — roughly 250 people, or 'north of' 50 families staying at the Red Roof Inn — of the migrants living in town had been moved to Plymouth by state officials.”

PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES

— “Gov. Healey’s office ordered takedown of MBTA podcast, emails confirm,” by Christian MilNeil, StreetsBlog Mass: “Internal emails obtained through a public records request have confirmed that Governor Healey's office ordered the deletion of audio files and promotional social media posts after the T attempted to launch its new podcast in October."

— “Judge dismisses lawsuit against Holden over defiance of MBTA housing law, ” by Marco Cartolano, Telegram & Gazette.

FROM THE DELEGATION

FROM THE OPINION PAGES — Rep. Seth Moulton is out with a Time op-ed calling on Israeli forces to “tighten their rules of engagement” and take greater care to avoid civilian casualties in Gaza — or risk bolstering support for Hamas among Palestinian civilians.

MARIJUANA IN MASSACHUSETTS

— “O’Brien attorney calls charges against her laughable,” by Bhaamati Borkhetaria, CommonWealth Magazine: “Suspended Cannabis Control Commission Chair Shannon O’Brien urged a judge to postpone a meeting scheduled for Tuesday with Treasurer Deborah Goldberg, saying the person who tapped, hired, and suspended her is now refusing to give her a fair chance of defending herself against charges of making ‘racially, ethnically, and culturally insensitive statements.’”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

— “Newton council passes scaled-back plan to allow more multifamily housing in some areas,” by Andrew Brinker, Boston Globe: “After years of arguing and planning, the Newton City Council passed zoning changes Monday night that will allow for denser multifamily housing in several key corridors of the city, potentially paving the way for thousands more apartments and condominiums in one of Boston’s wealthiest and most prominent suburbs.”

— “Harvard, MIT, UPenn have ‘basically been the center’ of campus antisemitism, key GOP congresswoman claims ahead of hearing,” by Hilary Burns and Mike Damiano, Boston Globe: “Congresswoman Virginia Foxx, a conservative Republican from North Carolina who chairs the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, claimed in an interview that Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of Pennsylvania have ‘basically been the center of the antisemitic violence and protests,’ since the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel, which killed 1,200 people.”

— Related: “Harvard alumni rebuke its Israel response with mere $1 donations,” by Janet Lorin, Bloomberg.

— Not-so related: “Prominent disinformation specialist files whistle-blower complaint against Harvard,” by Travis Andersen and Daniel Kool, Boston Globe.

2024 WATCH

BYE, BYE BURGUM — North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum has dropped out of the presidential race.

DEBATE STAGE SET — Chris Christie made Wednesday’s debate stage after all. He had been on the brink of not qualifying as late as last week.

— “Poll: Young voter enthusiasm plummets from 2019,” by Erin Doherty, Axios: “A poll out Tuesday offers a warning for presidential candidates hoping to tap into the youth vote in 2024. … Just 49 percent of 18-29 year-olds "definitely" plan on voting for president in 2024, down from 57 percent who said the same during the fall of 2019, according to the Institute of Politics at Harvard Kennedy School poll.”

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

SPOTTED — at the Massachusetts Women’s Political Caucus Winners Circle Awards Ceremony Monday: Lt. Gov Kim Driscoll , National Women’s Political Caucus President Deidre Malone, MWPC Board President Gail Jackson-Blount, MAHP President and CEO Lora Pellegrini, YW President and CEO Beth Chandler, Ann Murphy of Seven Letter, DeWit Group’s Jesse Mermell; MWPC Board of Directors members Linnea Walsh, Kate Worrall, Chelsea Aquino, Deloris Pettis, Charlotte Golar-Richie, Big Sisters CEO Annissa Essaibi George and Jacquetta van Zandt; MWPC Director Kat Cline , Winners Circle Honorees Brooke Thomson, Lee Pelton, Juan Fernando Lopera , state Sen. Lydia Edwards and state Rep. Hannah Kane ; and state Reps. Joan Meschino, Christopher Worrell, Kay Khan, Dawne Shand and Michelle Ciccolo.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Merrilee Rogers of Rep. Jake Auchincloss’ office, Ellen Parker, Simon Jerome and Greg Timilty .

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com .

 

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POLITICO Nightly: The future of electric cars could be at stake in 2024

 


POLITICO Nightly logo

BY TANYA SNYDER WITH JOSHUA POSANER

A Polestar electric car prepares to park at an EV charging station.

A Polestar electric car prepares to park at an EV charging station on July 28, 2023, in Corte Madera, Calif. | Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

ELECTRIC ELECTION — The future of electric cars could look a lot different one year from now.

Sales are still growing in the U.S. and abroad , but headwinds are building. And auto executives are sweating upcoming elections in the United States and Europe, which could impact EV-friendly policies that have been put in place to juice sales.

Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares raised eyebrows last week when he told reporters he was prepared to adjust his company’s electric vehicle strategy if the political tides turn against EVs ahead of key ballots in 2024 on both sides of the Atlantic.

“There are two important elections next year — the European Parliament elections in June and the U.S. elections in November. It could be that politics will be different then,” Tavares told Automotive News affiliate Automobilwoche on the sidelines of a press conference at the Mirafiori plant in Turin.

Stellantis — the parent company of Chrysler — may have to change its strategy “if political and public opinion tends toward fewer EVs,” he said.

President Joe Biden’s reelection is among the most important variables . He has made the transition to electric vehicles a personal crusade, directing billions in two of his most significant legislative achievements to build EV chargers and help subsidize the cost of new electric vehicles — policies that could face resistance if a Republican wins the White House in 2024.

In Europe, parliamentary contests across multiple countries stand to shape the debate. A ban on the sale of all but zero-emission cars and vans is already in place from 2035 onwards , with regulatory pressure also piled on automakers to start selling increasing numbers of EVs now as the phase out date approaches.

But even with the law already on the books covering hulking carmaking states such as Germany, France and Italy, a different political constellation in Brussels could review the rules in the next political term.

Closer to home, it would be hard for Republicans to fully unwind the popular Inflation Reduction Act, Biden’s signature climate law, with its $7.5 billion tax incentives for buying an EV. But that tax credit is already hobbled by the law’s strict rules aimed at wresting the EV supply chain away from China. Rules that took effect in March narrowed the field of eligible vehicles down to just 1 in 5, and another tranche of rules that just came out will narrow it further.

The Biden administration did what it could to interpret those rules as liberally as possible in order to keep as many EVs eligible as possible for the tax credit — which brings prices closer to those of a traditional gas-powered vehicle. (Note that new vehicles are painfully expensive across the board, with the average new car setting a consumer back more than $48,000.) A Republican administration could further tighten the interpretation of the law, if not the law itself.

The federal grants for EV chargers are just beginning to trickle out. Ever cognizant of the whims of Congress and the fragility of the appropriations process, lawmakers had the good sense in 2021 to pay a hefty down payment on the infrastructure law in the form of advanced appropriations. But the nascency of the process of building out the nation’s charging network still makes it vulnerable.

Over in Europe, automakers also say the process of getting charging infrastructure installed across the bloc’s roads is patchy at best — with huge discrepancies between rich and poor countries.

For example, while the Netherlands has 64 chargers per 100 kilometers of road, some six countries have fewer than a single charger over the same distance and 17 have fewer than five.

This mismatch between pressure to sell clean cars to meet climate targets and the perceived lack of adequate supporting infrastructure raises the prospect of a serious review of the EU’s 2035 rule when it comes up for review in 2026, after next year’s election cycle.

Though that possibility is rejected by politicians today, it’s made all the more likely by a steep decline in the political fortunes of Europe’s Greens, especially in countries such as Germany where the party governs in a three-way coalition.

Of course, just as the elections could impact EVs, the politics of EVs could impact the elections.

Biden’s use of taxpayer dollars to subsidize expensive cars for the upper-middle classes in service to a “green revolution” conservatives love to mock is a useful GOP talking point — especially in an increasingly populist Republican Party. Then again, EV battery plants creating jobs all over the Sun Belt is bringing even doubters into the EV fray.

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

 

Enter the “room where it happens”, where global power players shape policy and politics, with Power Play. POLITICO’s brand-new podcast will host conversations with the leaders and power players shaping the biggest ideas and driving the global conversations, moderated by award-winning journalist Anne McElvoy. Sign up today to be notified of new episodes – click here .

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Former U.S. ambassador charged with serving as agent for Cuba: Federal prosecutors allege former State Department official Victor Manuel Rocha, a 73-year-old resident of Miami, Fla., “secretly supported” Cuba and its clandestine intel-gathering efforts by serving as a covert agent of the country’s General Directorate of Intelligence. “Rocha provided false and misleading information to the United States to maintain his secret mission; traveled outside the United States to meet with Cuban intelligence operatives; and made false and misleading statements to obtain travel documents,” the DOJ stated. The DOJ said, when confronted by an undercover FBI agent within the last year, Rocha admitted his ties to the country’s government and referred to the U.S. as “the enemy.”

— House Judiciary set to present new spy powers bill with broad warrant requirement: The House Judiciary Committee will unveil its bid to revise a controversial surveillance program that’s set to expire in just a few weeks. The new legislation would require a warrant to search for any American’s information under Section 702, according to draft text obtained by POLITICO, which is meant to target foreigners abroad but in the process sweeps in citizens’ communications. The current program does not require a warrant when that occurs. The Judiciary Committee is expected to vote on that bill Wednesday, which hasn’t been publicly released but is expected to earn bipartisan support.

— Senators race to save faltering border-Ukraine negotiations: Senate negotiators are scrambling to revive bipartisan border talks after the lead Democrat involved warned that talks had reached a major impasse, potentially endangering a cornerstone of President Joe Biden’s foreign policy agenda. After Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) said today that there’s “no path” currently forward to a border deal, other senators tried to keep discussions from deteriorating further. Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-Ariz.) moved to bat down claims that Republicans are insisting on harsh detention policies and Republicans said they expected a new exchange of offers, potentially as soon as this evening.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

DOUG DOWN — North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum dropped his presidential bid today, POLITICO reports. Burgum, who failed to qualify for the November and December debates, was polling in the single digits before suspending his campaign.

In a statement announcing his drop, Burgum criticized the Republican National Committee’s “clubhouse debate requirements.” The two-term governor made the first two RNC debates, but failed to qualify for the most recent two.

Burgum’s campaign was largely self funded due to his past career as a software entrepreneur (his company sold to Microsoft for $1.1 billion). His name also got recognition for being the first candidate to offer $20 gift cards to anyone who donated $1 to his campaign to reach the 40,000 individual donor requirement for the earlier debates.

DESANTIS IOWA SPOT — Ron DeSantis is starting a new Iowa ad campaign featuring former Donald Trump supporters switching to backing the Florida governor in 2024, CBS reports. The new ad flight, which will launch tomorrow, is starting just six weeks before the Iowa caucuses, scheduled to start on Jan. 15.

DeSantis is up against former President Trump for the GOP nomination, who currently trails in double digits over his opponents. Desantis has attempted to present himself as an alternative to Trump and recently finished visiting the final 99th county of Iowa on Saturday.

The 2016 and 2020 Trump voters in the ads praise DeSantis for his border and economic policies and talk about the need to move on toward a “drama free” candidate. The ads also end with a shot of the DeSantis family with Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, who has already endorsed DeSantis.

AROUND THE WORLD

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken shake hands prior to a meeting at the presidential compound in the West Bank city of Ramallah.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken shake hands prior to a meeting at the presidential compound in the West Bank city of Ramallah on November 30, 2023. | Saul Loeb/Pool/AFP via Getty Images

POSTWAR PLANS — Biden administration officials have spent weeks quietly drafting a multiphase postwar plan that envisions a revamped Palestinian Authority ultimately taking over the Gaza Strip , reports POLITICO.

It’s an imperfect solution, but American officials view it as the best of only bad options for a territory where a war between Israel and Hamas militants has shattered infrastructure, killed thousands of Palestinians and displaced more than 1.5 million others. It also could put the U.S. on a collision course with the Israeli government.

Although Secretary of State Antony Blinken and others in the administration have publicly declared that a “revitalized” Palestinian Authority should run the strip, they haven’t unveiled details of how that would work.

But they’ve already run into resistance from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has effectively ruled out a future Gaza role for the Palestinian Authority. Israeli officials for the most part are unwilling to discuss much beyond the current war, which was sparked by a vicious Oct. 7 Hamas attack that killed some 1,200 Israelis.

Still, the U.S. strategists drawing up the plans keep coming back to the Palestinian Authority, which governs parts of the West Bank but has long been beset by allegations of corruption and inefficiency. It’s the most viable option, they say.

“We’re stuck,” the State Department official said. “There’s a strong policy preference for the PA to play a governing role in Gaza, but it has significant legitimacy and capability challenges.”

THE TRUMP CARD — One name could dominate Canada’s next election: Donald Trump.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Liberal lawmakers are shifting into full-on attack mode, trying to use former President Trump’s MAGA brand to bludgeon his popular rival , Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, as a hard-right populist out of sync with Canadian values, reports POLITICO.

In Canada, Trump’s name is like a swear word for the center-left, but also a useful tool. A Trump reelection bid could influence the timing of Canada’s next election or deal a wild card to the race, with the odds currently stacked heavily against Trudeau.

“A second Trump presidency almost certainly creates a situation where the next election won’t be about Pierre Poilievre or Justin Trudeau — it will be about Donald Trump and Canada’s relationship with an America that is led by an angry, vengeful creature,” said Scott Reid, who worked in former Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin’s office.

Poilievre, a career politician, has fashioned himself as an outsider to the country’s political elite. When he won the party leadership in 2022, the Liberals did not bother to try to define him or launch a major ad campaign to slow his momentum — strange to many Canadian political insiders.

These days, Trudeau’s Liberals keep repeating that Poilievre is “not worth the risk.” They say he’s “reckless” and “unhinged” with moves “straight out of the Republican playbook” in efforts to link him to the Trump arm of the party.

 

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

640

The number of acres that the Wyoming Office of State Lands and Investments is considering selling inside the eastern border of Grand Teton National Park. The office thinks they could raise around $80 million, or $125,000 per acre, for public schools in the state. The State Board of Land Commissioners will vote on the recommendation this week.

RADAR SWEEP

ANCESTRAL REMAINS — Indigenous tribes in Maine are on a mission to rebury ancestral remains — but Harvard University has been stepping in the way for almost three decades , according to a ProPublica investigation. The Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, Maliseet and Mi’kmaq tribes, also known as the Wabanaki tribal nations, have attempted for decades to get the remains of ancestors dug up by Harvard-owned museums almost a century ago. And while a 1990s law was supposed to grant indigenous tribes the right to recollect the remains of their ancestors, Harvard has used loopholes and their influence to delay and stop the return of these remains. Mary Hudetz and Ash Ngu investigate Maine tribes’ struggle to retrieve ancestral remains from one of the most influential universities in the country — and the university’s effort to block them.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1969: Chief Warrant Officer Hugh C. Thompson meets with reporters after appearing before an Army hearing at the Pentagon into the massacre at My Lai. Thompson, an Army helicopter pilot, was credited with calling attention to the "unnecessary killing" of civilians in the South Vietnamese village. U.S. troops killed hundreds of civilians in the village; 26 soldiers were charged with criminal offenses but only one was convicted.

On this date in 1969: Chief Warrant Officer Hugh C. Thompson meets with reporters after appearing before an Army hearing at the Pentagon into the massacre at My Lai. Thompson, an Army helicopter pilot, was credited with calling attention to the "unnecessary killing" of civilians in the South Vietnamese village. U.S. troops killed hundreds of civilians in the village; 26 soldiers were charged with criminal offenses but only one was convicted. | AP

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The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...