đŠ Programming note: Iâll be publishing editions of WTFJHT on Monday and Tuesday this week. After that, Iâm taking a short break for the holiday and will be back in your inbox on Monday, December 1st (unless, of course, something truly wtf-y demands otherwise). Thanks, as always, for reading and letting me be part of your news routine. Iâm glad youâre here. -MATT
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WTF Just Happened Today? is a sane, once-a-day newsletter helping normal people make sense of the news. Curated daily and delivered to 200,000+ people every afternoon around 3 pm Pacific.
Day 609: Such an outstanding man.
Today in one sentence: Christine Blasey Ford is "prepared to testify next week"; Senate Republicans plan to move forward with Brett Kavanaugh's confirmation despite sexual assault allegations by Ford; Trump insists there is no role for the FBI in investigating Ford's claim; and Trump told Spain's Foreign Minister to "build a wall across the Sahara."
1/ Dr. Christine Blasey Ford is âprepared to testify next weekâ as long as senators offer âterms that are fair and which ensure her safety.â In an email sent to committee staff members, Fordâs attorney reiterated that it is their âstrong preferenceâ that the FBI conduct âa full investigationâ before her testimony. (New York Times)
2/ Senate Republicans plan to move forward with Brett Kavanaughâs confirmation despite sexual assault allegations by Ford. Trump, in defending Kavanaugh, said it was âvery hard for me to imagine anything happenedâ with Ford because Kavanaugh âis such an outstanding man.â Sen. Chuck Grassley said a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing would begin at 10 a.m. Monday, and gave Ford a deadline of 10 a.m. Friday to submit prepared remarks if she plans to testify. While Ford has not officially declined the committeeâs invitation, her attorney has asked for a âfull, nonpartisan investigation.â (Wall Street Journal / Washington Post / New York Times)
3/ Trump insists there is no role for the FBI in investigating Fordâs claim. Trump said that investigating Fordâs accusation that Brett Kavanaugh covered her mouth while trying to strip her bathing suit off during a high school party in the 1980s âis not really their thing.â Former government officials, however, have come forward to contradict Trumpâs claim that the FBI cannot investigate the allegations against Kavanaugh. While Republican leaders in the Senate have echoed Trumpâs claim, several officials involved in nomination and background check processes say itâs actually common. (Politico / NBC News)
4/ Sen. Dean Heller called the sexual assault allegation against Kavanaugh a âlittle hiccupâ and that he hopes âall senatorsâ will address the accusations âin good faithâ so they can âget through thisâ and âoff to the races.â The Nevada Republican went on to call Trump âa great leaderâ despite saying he was â99 percent against Trumpâ in October 2016. Heller is considered the most vulnerable Senate Republican seeking reelection this year. (Washington Post / The Hill / New York Times)
5/ A former classmate of Ford walked back her claims that she knew about Brett Kavanaughâs alleged assault at the time it happened. âThat it happened or not, I have no idea,â said Cristina Miranda King. âI canât say that it did or didnât.â In a now-deleted Facebook post, King previously said: âThe incident DID happen, many of us heard about it in school.â (NPR)
6/ Senator Claire McCaskill will vote against Brett Kavanaughâs confirmation to the Supreme Court, but not because of the allegations against him. McCaskill cited Kavanaughâs âpositions on several key issues, most importantly the avalanche of dark, anonymous money that is crushing our democracy,â as the reason for her ânoâ vote. McCaskill says Kavanaugh ârevealed his bias against limits on campaign donationsâ and that she is âuncomfortable about his view on Presidential power,â as well as his âposition that corporations are people.â The Missouri Democrat is running for re-election this year in a state Trump won in 2016. Republicans hold a 51-49 majority in the Senate and could still confirm Kavanaughâs appointment even if all Democrats oppose his nomination. (NPR / Politico / CNN)
7/ Michael Cohen met with Robert Muellerâs team multiple times over the last month for interview sessions lasting several hours. The special counsel has focused on Trumpâs dealings with Russia, including the investigation into collusion with Russia by the Trump campaign to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election. Muellerâs team is also interested in knowing whether Trump discussed the possibility of a pardon with Cohen, who is voluntarily participating in the meetings without any guarantee of leniency from prosecutors. (ABC News)
poll/ 38% of voters say they oppose Kavanaughâs nomination to serve on the Supreme Court compared to 34% who support his nomination. (NBC News)
Notables.
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Trump told Spainâs Foreign Minister to âbuild a wall across the Saharaâ in order to curb migration from Africa. When Spanish diplomats pointed out that the Sahara stretched for 3,000 miles, Trump responded by saying: âThe Sahara border canât be bigger than our border with Mexico.â The US/Mexico border is roughly 2,000 miles long. (The Guardian / Bloomberg / CNN)
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The Department of Health and Human Services wants to reallocate $266 million in funds to pay for housing for detained immigrant children. Funds would be diverted from National Cancer Institute, the Ryan White HIV/AIDS program, Head Start, the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and other refugee support programs. (Yahoo News)
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Jeff Sessions announced new limits on the ability of immigration judges to dismiss deportation cases, saying judges âhave no inherent authority to terminate removal proceedings even though a particular case may pose sympathetic circumstances.â (Reuters)
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The U.S. says it is ready to resume talks with North Korea after Kim Jong Un pledged on Wednesday to dismantle key missile facilities and suggested that he would close the Yongbyon nuclear complex. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo invited North Koreaâs foreign minister to meet in New York next week to discuss the possibility of North Korea denuclearizing by January 2021. (Reuters)
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Florida gubernatorial candidate Ron DeSantis (R) is dealing with his campaignâs fifth race-related controversy after newly unearthed tweets showed one of his campaign allies using a racial slur to describe Barack Obama. âFUCK THE MUSLIM Nââ,â wrote Steven Alembik, who has donated more than $20,000 to DeSantisâ campaign. A DeSantis campaign spokesperson said that they âadamantly denounce this sort of disgusting rhetoric.â (The Hill / Politico)
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Trump has named retiring Rep. Darrell Issa to head the U.S. Trade and Development Agency. Issa is the former House Oversight Committee chairman, and has been in Congress for nine terms. He built a name for himself by clashing with the Obama administration for years and by accusing top officials at the IRS of targeting conservative groups for political purposes. (Politico)
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A Pennsylvania state representative introduced a bill to ban public school teachers from discussing politics in the classroom. Will Tallman said his bill would stop teachers from discussing âlegislation, regulations, executive orders or court cases involving any level or branch of government.â (Morning Call)
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The Russia story so far: What we know and what it means. (New York Times)
The Trump Russia Investigation. Everything weâve learned so far. (WTF Just Happened Today)
A political newsletter for normal people
WTF Just Happened Today? is a sane, once-a-day newsletter helping normal people make sense of the news. Curated daily and delivered to 200,000+ people every afternoon around 3 pm Pacific.
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