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2018年5月2日 星期三

The Hill's Morning Report - GOP midterm message muddle on taxes | Pelosi: 'We will win. I will run for Speaker.’ | Mueller wants Trump to talk, with a subpoena, if needed | Ex-coal CEO roils GOP primary debate in W.V. | Flynn sentencing delayed | Rosenstein won’t be `extorted’ | Campaign season heats up | Drug makers on defense | Trump administration sued by states again | Trump `very happy’ with Kelly | Uneasy days for Pruitt | White House doctors’ drama | Facebook wants the world to find love (or a date)

The Hill's Morning Report
GOP midterm message muddle on taxes | Pelosi: 'We will win. I will run for Speaker.' | Mueller wants Trump to talk, with a subpoena, if needed | Ex-coal CEO roils GOP primary debate in W.V. | Flynn sentencing delayed | Rosenstein won't be `extorted' | Campaign season heats up | Drug makers on defense | Trump administration sued by states again | Trump `very happy' with Kelly | Uneasy days for Pruitt | White House doctors' drama | Facebook wants the world to find love (or a date)
 

© Getty Images

 

Welcome to The Hill's Morning Report, and happy Wednesday! This daily email, a successor to The Hill's Tipsheet, is reported by Jonathan Easley and Alexis Simendinger to get you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch.  (CLICK HERE to subscribe!)

 

Republicans face brutal electoral conditions in 2018 and a new foe: Themselves.

 

Over the past 48 hours, key figures in the party have uttered head-scratching statements about the tax cuts bill that will be millstones for those Republicans fighting for their political lives in the midterm elections.

 

President Trump's former Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, forced to resign last year after racking up $400,000 in travel bills, said that repealing ObamaCare's individual mandate – an act the GOP achieved in its December tax bill – "drives up the cost for others in the market."

 

"We couldn't have said it better ourselves." - Matt House, spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.).

 

     "Price just exposed every single GOP Senate candidate." - Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Communications Director Lauren Passalacqua.

 

A day earlier, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said there's "no evidence whatsoever" that the GOP's corporate tax cuts are helping workers, undermining the cornerstone of the party's electoral strategy this cycle.   

 

            "It's disappointing to see Marco Rubio echo some of the false rhetoric of tax reform opponents and we hope he clarifies his remarks."Brent Gardner of Americans for Prosperity, which is spending tens of millions of dollars to sell the tax reform plan and protect the Republicans who supported it.

 

Polls show the public has been slow to warm to the tax cuts bill. The comments from Price and Rubio - and previous remarks from retiring Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) - make the sales campaign more difficult.

 

The landscape was already bad for Republicans. Democrats have the advantage in essentially every metric, from grassroots energy to the generic ballot. Republicans increasingly concede privately that their House majority seems a lost cause.

 

There were plenty of intraparty fissures within the GOP before the messaging fiasco of the last few days but until recently, all Republicans agreed they should stake their electoral hopes on the benefits of tax reform for the economy. Now?

 

"If Republicans can't unify behind tax cuts, what can they unify behind?," said Andy Surabian, a former special assistant to Trump. "Republicans have to laser focus on the benefits of the tax bill every day between now and Election Day, especially the long-term effects of the bill, since most of the positive impact hasn't been felt yet."

 

One celebratory GOP pitch to conservative voters … Senate Republicans are on pace to confirm more of Trump's appeals court nominees than any other recent president in his first two years. (The Hill)

 
LEADING THE DAY

INVESTIGATIONS: The Washington Post reported late Tuesday that special counsel Robert Mueller threatened to subpoena the president to appear before a grand jury if Trump refused to talk to his team voluntarily.

 

That story dropped as Washington was still trying to wrap its collective mind around The New York Times bombshell report detailing the dozens of questions Trump's representatives anticipate he could be asked.

 

Trump's allies are seething.

 

    "Robert Mueller's merry band of Trump-hating Democratic sycophants are completely and totally desperate to find anything, something on President Trump…if any of these [leaked] questions are true, be warned – Mueller is laying a huge perjury trap." - Fox News Channel's Sean Hannity.

 

The Memo: Leak fuels new Mueller intrigue.

 

MORE:

 

CNN: Mueller has asked for a delay in sentencing former White House national security adviser Michael Flynn, who pled guilty to lying to investigators and is cooperating with the government.

The Hill: GOP committee chairmen press Justice Department for information on Comey friend who leaked personal memos.

The Hill: Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who is overseeing the special counsel, says he won't be "extorted" by  lawmakers trying to impeach him.

 

OPINION:

 

Jonathan Turley: The gravest danger to Trump lies in sneaky questions from Mueller.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas): We must get to the bottom of Russian efforts to interfere in the election.

Mark Penn: A few questions for Mueller.

 

POLITICS: A trio of Republicans seeking the GOP nomination for Senate in West Virginia faced off in a wild debate on Tuesday night that was broadcast live in prime time on Fox News Channel.

 

National Republicans are hopeful that either Rep. Evan Jenkins or West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey wins the nomination. But former coal executive Don Blankenship walked away with most of the headlines on Tuesday night, which is not great for the GOP.

 

Ahead of the debate, Blankenship explained a campaign ad called "Cocaine Mitch," in which he alleges that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's (R-Ky.) father-in-law, a shipping magnate, profited from the cocaine trade.

 

During the debate, Blankenship defended referring to McConnell's father-in-law, who was born outside Shanghai, as a "Chinaperson." And he blamed the government for a 2010 explosion that killed 29 miners in West Virginia. Blankenship spent a year in prison for his role in the disaster.

 

For many Republicans, he cannot leave the midterm stage fast enough.

 

More from the Senate:

 

  • One-time GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who has been critical of Trump, is praising the president's first term in office as he seeks to be the next senator from Utah. (The Washington Examiner)
  • Dean Heller (R-Nev.), who is among the most vulnerable Republicans up for reelection in the Senate, is at odds with the Trump administration over a nuclear waste repository in his home state. (The Hill)
  • Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who suddenly finds himself in a tough reelection race, has a decision to make. Cruz's Democratic opponent Rep. Beto O'Rourke (Texas) has challenged him to six debates, including two in Spanish. Cruz has acknowledged that his Spanish is "lousy." (The Texas Tribune)
  • Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), facing a primary challenge, backs legal weed in California. (McClatchy)
  • Indiana mystery man upends bloody GOP primary in Indiana. (Politico)

 

From the House:

 

  • House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.): "We will win. I will run for Speaker." (The Boston Globe)
  • Voters in 12 states will choose nominees in critical primary races across the country this month. (The Hill)
  • Robert Pittenger (R-N.C.) is facing a familiar primary opponent next week: Pastor Mark Harris, who came within 134 votes of knocking off the incumbent when they faced off in 2016. (The Hill)
  • Liberal firebrand Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) is making a comeback, seeking to reclaim the House seat he lost when he ran for Senate in 2016. (The Hill).
  • Jeff Denham (R-Calif.) is fighting for his political life in a district that is 40 percent Hispanic and that Hillary Clinton won by 3 points in 2016. Denham is betting that his efforts to move immigration reform will convince his constituents to send him back to Washington for a fifth term. (The Hill)
  • Former White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci is fundraising for former Rep. Michael Grimm (R-N.Y.), who spent eight months in prison for a federal tax fraud conviction. Grimm is looking to win back his old seat from Rep. Dan Donovan (R-N.Y.). (New York Daily News)
  • A federal judge rules that Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-Colo.) can be on the ballot after the Colorado Supreme Court said he should be kicked off because some of the signatures his campaign gathered are from out of state. (ABC 7 Denver)
 
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES

POLICY: The Hill: Drug makers are on defense about high drug prices as President Trump prepares to take aim at the issue, likely in a speech next week.

The Hill: FDA, Federal Trade Commission crack down on e-cigarette liquid sold in kid-friendly packaging.

The Hill: NASA cancels the lunar rover despite Trump's vow to return astronauts to the moon.

The Hill: Congress is expected to act soon on an administration-backed plan to enlarge the jurisdiction of the interagency Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) to add additional national security analyses to reviews of foreign acquisitions of U.S. businesses or other investments, particularly involving China.

The Hill: Anti-abortion groups urge the Trump administration to jettison Planned Parenthood from federal family planning grants, a shift that could reinstate a regulation put in place by President Reagan.

The Hill: California, 16 states and the District of Columbia join forces to sue the Trump administration over its decision to roll back vehicle fuel efficiency standards.

 

ADMINISTRATION: Trump is "very happy" with chief of staff John Kelly, White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders assured reporters Tuesday, one day after Kelly denied an NBC News report that he referred to his boss as "an idiot" (The Hill).

Why it matters: Some West Wing staffers want the retired Marine general gone, and the question remains whether the president's second chief of staff is around to see his one-year White House anniversary in July. Sanders said locating another Cabinet post for Kelly is not Trump's aim. … Finding the next nominee for the Department of Veterans Affairs is taking time.

 

Scott Pruitt, administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, is still turning slowly on several investigatory spits:

 

  • A longtime friend and lobbyist helped Pruitt arrange a pricey trip last year to Morocco, accompanied the administrator, and later won a lucrative contract with the Moroccan government (The Washington Post). Lawmakers and EPA's inspector general are investigating.

 

  • The Hill: Democrats on the House Science, Space and Technology Committee are probing Pruitt's effort to build a new EPA office in Tulsa, Okla., his hometown, at taxpayer expense.

 

  • Another top Pruitt aide at EPA is exiting: Albert Kelly, whose agency portfolio was toxic waste cleanups, decided to resign from the agency following a spate of negative publicity about his former career in banking, Axios reports. Also gone: senior Pruitt security aide Pasquale Perrotta (The Hill).

 

Dr. Ronny Jackson, who withdrew as Trump's nominee to lead the VA following misconduct allegations he denied, is no longer the president's personal White House physician (The Hill). And he's under investigation by the Pentagon's inspector general, reports The Wall Street Journal.

 

CNN added to the Jackson puzzle with a report that the retired rear admiral clashed last year with Vice President Pence's physician, in part over Karen Pence's medical privacy. The complaints, documented in memos, reportedly went up the ladder to John Kelly. Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.), chairman of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, said CNN's reporting "corroborates" information obtained by his panel.

 

Separately, the White House defended its confiscation of Trump's personal medical records from his former physician, Harold Bornstein, in New York early last year. And to add to the intrigue, Bornstein told CNN that Trump, during the 2016 campaign, dictated the laudatory wording of the doctor's publicly released letter attesting to the candidate's health.

 

A group of Democratic senators is calling on the Office of Special Counsel to investigate Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney following his comments to bankers last week appearing to link government access to campaign donations (The Hill). Mulvaney is a former congressman from South Carolina.

 
OPINION

Trump will leave but his damage will endure, Richard Cohen, The Washington Post. https://bit.ly/2Kp23dv

 

The resistance is cracking, Conrad Black, The National Review. https://bit.ly/2w9srFg

 
WHERE AND WHEN

The House and Senate are out this week.

 

President Trump visits the State Department for the first time and will be part of a swearing-in ceremony for Secretary Mike Pompeo (who was confirmed by the Senate and formally sworn in last week). He's having lunch with the vice president and Health and Human Services secretary Alex Azar. In the afternoon, Trump speaks at a reception for the National Teacher of the Year.

 

Vice President Pence hosts a swearing-in ceremony this afternoon for Carlos Trujillo, U.S. ambassador to the Organization of American States.

 
ELSEWHERE

> China urges all sides to uphold Iran nuclear pact; says IAEA affirms Iran's compliance (Reuters).

 

> Dollar gains ahead of Fed meeting and rate-hike rumors (The Street).

 

> Next step for immigration caravan will take place out of public view (AP).

 

>  Trump trade chief wants to open China, not change its economic system. (Reuters)

 
THE CLOSER

If you're in the Washington, D.C., area today, expect summer-like temperatures (89 degrees) and again tomorrow (90 degrees), but without summer's hot-blanket humidity. Live large: allergy meds + al fresco drinks and dining!

 

© The Washington Post

 

And finally… if Facebook can keep the world in touch with its friends, how about steering the world to new friends and new intimates? Think life partner, soulmate, the love that lasts beyond Friday night…. CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced a Facebook dating service on Tuesday (Recode). (Answers about privacy protections and functionality remain a little foggy).

 

Correction: Yesterday's alert readers noted that mention of Sen. Cory Gardner, chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, should have referenced his home state, Colorado.

 

Suggestions? Tips? Intriguing pix to share from around D.C. and the Capitol? We want to hear from you, and please encourage friends and colleagues to SUBSCRIBE! Jonathan Easley jeasley@thehill.com + Alexis Simendinger asimendinger@thehill.com

 
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DAILY DOSE: Any Moment

Chabad.org
ב"ה

Any Moment

By Tzvi Freeman

In every point of time, all of time is there.

After all, at every moment, as the previous moment and all its history is cancelled into naught, He must regenerates the entire cosmos anew out of the void. And so He must renew along with this moment all of its past and all of time from its beginning to its end.

If so, He has rendered us masters of all of time in a single moment, of the present, of the future, and of the past as well. Wherever we steer this moment now, there rushes all of time.



By Tzvi Freeman


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2018年5月1日 星期二

Hillicon Valley: Facebook to let users clear history | Black lawmakers push diversity during Silicon Valley visit | Rosenstein hits back at Republicans who want to impeach him | Apple plans $100B stock buyback

 
 
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The Hill's Overnight Cybersecurity and Tech teams are joining forces to bring you Hillicon Valley, a new comprehensive newsletter detailing all you need to know about the tech and cyber news from Capitol Hill to Silicon Valley.

 

Welcome! Follow the tech team, Ali Breland (@alibreland) and Harper Neidig (@hneidig), and the cyber team, Morgan Chalfant (@mchalfant16) and Olivia Beavers (@olivia_beavers), on Twitter.

 

FACEBOOK TO LET USERS CLEAR HISTORY: Mark Zuckerberg promised during his congressional testimony that Facebook would improve data privacy on its platform, and the company announced a new tool on Tuesday taking a step toward that goal.

Zuckerberg said on Tuesday that Facebook will create a "clear history" option allowing users to erase data about the apps and websites they've interacted with while logged into Facebook.

Facebook is moving to quell concerns about data privacy following the revelations about Cambridge Analytica, a British research firm hired by the Trump campaign that improperly harvested the data of 87 million Facebook users.

--Zuckerberg on the change: "After going through our systems, this is an example of the kind of control we think you should have. It's something privacy advocates have been asking for -- and we will work with them to make sure we get it right," he wrote in a post.

--Also worth noting: This is Facebook's first major privacy announcement since Erin Egan began focusing on the role of chief privacy officer at Facebook. She was previously in charge of their policy team in Washington as well. But the increasing scrutiny over

the company's data policies led the company to have Egan focusing on privacy issues

--From Egan: "As Chief Privacy Officer for the past six years, it's been rewarding to see the progress we've made. But now it's time to supercharge this work. Clear History is one of our first steps."

 

What to watch for: It remains to be seen how meaningful the changes will be and what "Clear History" will actually look like. Zuckerberg said that users will be able to see what interactions they have on Facebook with ads and websites are tracked, and that they'll be able to delete them.

But the final version of the tool has yet to be fully determined. Egan said that the Facebook will "work with privacy advocates, academics, policymakers and regulators to get their input on our approach," towards a final product.

Zuckerberg said that there are also more announcements in the works down the line.  

 

WHAT'S HILL-HAPPENING: Members of the Congressional Black Caucus are visiting Silicon Valley to push the tech industry to improve diversity.

The visit is part of the group's Tech 2020 initiative, which calls on companies to boost the numbers of African-Americans they employ.

Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), whose Oakland district borders the country's tech hub, expressed frustration with the industry's efforts.

"Silicon Valley's economy is booming but we still don't have the parity and equity in terms of racial inclusion," Lee told The Hill on Monday. "The lack of understanding of why racial equity is important is mind-boggling to me."

--This is their second visit since last fall. So far though lawmakers have had more praise for the industry's efforts on diversity and racial issues than during their last visit.

 

THE MUELLER FILES:

SHOT... HOUSE CONSERVATIVES DRAFT ARTICLES OF IMPEACHMENT AGAINST DEPUTY AG ROSENSTEIN: A group of conservative House lawmakers have begun drafting a resolution that calls for the impeachment of Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, the top Department of Justice (DOJ) official overseeing special counsel Robert Mueller's Russia investigation.

The impeachment document makes a series of charges against Rosenstein, the latest sign of escalating efforts among conservatives to oust the DOJ's No. 2 official, according to a copy of the draft obtained by The Hill.

Conservative members led by Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), chairman of the House Freedom Caucus and a close ally to President Trump, drafted the eight articles of impeachment against Rosenstein.

The articles include allegations that Rosenstein violated federal law by refusing to comply with a congressional subpoena over Congress's efforts to obtain documents about FBI surveillance during the election, intentionally stalling document production for congressional investigations into possible government misconduct and failing to enforce key laws and protocols.

BUT BUT BUT... There has been no indication, however, that Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and other House GOP leaders will act on the measure, having largely remained silent amid calls for his removal by hard-line conservatives.

To read more, click here.

 

CHASER... ROSENSTEIN FIRES BACK: The deputy attorney general on Tuesday appeared to shrug off the news.

"They can't even resist leaking their own drafts," Rosenstein quipped during a moderated discussion at the Newseum to commemorate Law Day.

Rosenstein said the standards the Department of Justice (DOJ) follows for making charges against someone are far different than how the drafters approached making allegations in this document -- leaked and unsigned.

"The way we operate in the Department of Justice, if we are going to accuse someone of wrongdoing, we have to have admissible evidence, and credible witnesses, we need to be prepared to prove our case in court. And we have to fix our signature to the charging document, and that is something that not everybody appreciates," Rosenstein told the audience.

"I just don't have anything to say about documents like that that nobody has the courage to put their name on and they leak in that way," he continued.

Rosenstein also added: "There have been people who have been making threats privately and publicly against me for quite some time, and I think they should understand by now the Department of Justice is not going to be extorted."

To read more, click here.

 

LATEST: A White House spokesman brushed off the extortion remark, saying it had "nothing to do with us."

 

SPEAKING OF SPECIAL COUNSEL MUELLER: He's got dozens of questions for President Trump, reports The New York Times. The White House isn't commenting.

 

TECH'S TROUBLES IN EUROPE: Damian Collins, the British MP who's been hounding Facebook in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica scandal, threatened Mark Zuckerberg with formal summons unless he agrees to testify in front of Parliament's committee on digital media.

"It is worth noting that, while Mr Zuckerberg does not normally come under the jurisdiction of the UK Parliament, he will do so the next time he enters the country," Collins wrote in a letter to the company. "We hope that he will respond positively to our request, but if not the Committee will resolve to issue a formal summons for him to appear when he is next in the UK."

The panel had invited Zuckerberg to testify last month, but he declined. Collins is clearly unhappy that Facebook sent its chief technology officer instead, and sent the social network a list of 39 questions that he says were left unanswered during last week's grilling.

To read more, click here.

 

And at the EU, the top watchdog for data privacy likened internet firms that rely on data collection to "sweatshops" and warned them not to look for ways to work around the new privacy law coming later this month.

"Brilliant lawyers will always be able to fashion ingenious arguments to justify almost any practice," Giovanni Buttarelli wrote in a blog post. "But with personal data processing we need to move to a different model. The old approach is broken and unsustainable - that will be, in my view, the abiding lesson of the Facebook/Cambridge Analytica case."

To read more, click here.

 

LIGHTER (TWITTER) CLICK: The secretary of State is now on Twitter.

 

NEW TROUBLING CYBER RESEARCH: A cybersecurity firm is warning that a malicious Chrome extension is using a series of new techniques to target cryptocurrency platforms.

FacexWorm, which was first uncovered in August 2017, is accessing these digital wallets by spreading through affected web browsers as well as through shared socially engineered links on Facebook Messenger, Trend Micro wrote in a blog post on Monday.

"The links redirect to a fake YouTube page that will ask unwitting users to agree and install a codec extension (FacexWorm) in order to play the video on the page. It will then request privilege to access and change data on the opened website," according to Trend Micro's analysis.

Its capabilities, however, have changed. The malware now is able to steal key data from certain websites of interest, including data like account information and credentials.

But don't freak out quite yet: Despite its savvy methods of entry, the FacexWorm's impact appears to be relatively minor.

To read more, click here.

 

BREACHES GOT YOU STRESSIN': According to a new survey from Kaspersky Lab, a whopping 81 percent of Americans (and 72 percent of Canadians) say they're feeling stressed out by news of data breaches. The main culprit for this heightened worrying? A lack of awareness among consumers about how they can protect themselves, says the company.

 

FCC COMMISSIONER FOUND TO HAVE VIOLATED ETHICS LAW AT CPAC: FCC Commissioner Mike O'Rielly violated an ethics law during an appearance at CPAC earlier this year, a federal watchdog found.

The Office of Special Counsel, which is tasked with policing federal agencies for Hatch Act violations, issued a warning letter to O'Rielly for urging voters to re-elect President Trump.

"Commissioner O'Rielly advocated for the reelection of President Trump in his official capacity as FCC Commissioner," OSC official Erica Hamrick wrote in a letter to a public interest group. "Therefore, he violated the Hatch Act's prohibition against using his official authority or influence to affect an election."

To read more, click here.

 

$100 BILLION IS A LOT OF MONEY: Apple plans to buy back $100 billion in shares, the company announced Tuesday. The move comes as Apple beat quarterly revenue and profit projections from analysts and as the company reaps the benefits of massive tax cuts from the Republican tax law. The new buyback comes on top of an existing plan to repurchase $210 billion worth of shares.

 

LONGREAD OF THE DAY: The Atlantic has a piece today laying out why the 2018 midterms are vulnerable to interference by malicious actors.

Congressional Democrats have said they will not use stolen or hacked data as they campaign to win in November, reports the publication, but Republicans have stayed silent on whether they will do the same. 

Concerns about the potential for future foreign interference have mounted since the U.S. intelligence community revealed that Russia engaged in a hacking and disinformation campaign against the 2016 vote. Officials say that Moscow's intent has not changed.

Check out the full piece from The Atlantic here.

 

ON TAP FOR TOMORROW:

Keep an eye out for some new stories on TheHill.com Wednesday morning about the security of critical infrastructure and "active cyber defenses."

 

FROM TODAY'S HILL OPINION PAGE: NASA just proved it is serious about returning to the moon. (The Hill)

 

NOTABLE LINKS FROM AROUND THE WEB:

Count 'em: Three steps to secure elections. (The Advanced Cyber Security Center)

NIST wants your help to keep big data safe. (National Institute of Standards and Technology)

Federal IT official says focus on the 'dwell time.' (NextGov)

Over 400 UK businesses affected by NIS cybersecurity regulation. (SC Media)

Steve Ballmer sold his stake in Twitter (Bloomberg)

 
 
 
 
 
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