Today's essential guide to the daily shock and awe in national politics. Read in moderation. Curated by @matt_kiser Site updated:
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🚨 Trump taps Brett Kavanaugh to be his Supreme Court nominee
Updated 7/9/2018 6:50 PM PDT
Trump nominated Brett Kavanaugh, a federal appeals court judge in Washington to succeed Anthony Kennedy on the Supreme Court. (NBC News / Politico / New York Times / Washington Post)
President Trump Announces the Nominee for Associate Justice of the Supreme Court https://t.co/rVMTOMpurr
1/ Hope Hicks allegedly told Trump that the emails involving Trump Jr. and the Trump Tower meeting "will never get out" because only a few people have access to them. The White House communications director's comment was in response to Mark Corallo, who served as the spokesman for Trump's legal team, saying the statement they drafted aboard Air Force One would backfire when documents surface that the meeting was setup to get political dirt about Hillary Clinton from the Russians – and not about Russian adoptions. Corallo believed Hicks' comment indicated that she could be contemplating obstructing justice. Corallo will tell Robert Mueller about the previously undisclosed conference call with Trump and Hicks when he meets with the special counsel's team sometime in the next two weeks. Corallo resigned from Trump's legal team in July. (New York Times / CNN)
2/ The White House is worried that FBI Director Christopher Wray will quit if The Memoâ„¢ is released. Wray has "grave concerns" that "material omissions of fact" make the document inaccurate. Trump is expected to approve the release of the memo on Friday, which alleges surveillance abuse by the FBI, without the bureau's requested redactions. (CNN / New York Times / Washington Post)
3/ Trump Jr. tweeted that Andrew McCabe was "fired" because of the contents of The Memoâ„¢. Trump Jr. claimed that the information in the memo was "good enough" for the administration to "fire McCabe." On Monday, the White House specifically denied involvement in McCabe's decision to resign. (The Hill)
It was good enough to fire McCabe, no one argues its factually inaccurate, but now days later they want to protect the names of those involved in a scandal that was big enough to fire a senior official a month before retirement? They don’t deserve a pass on that!
4/ Adam Schiff accused Devin Nunes of giving Trump a "secretly altered" version of The Memoâ„¢ which contained "substantive" changes that had not been approved by the House Intelligence Committee. A spokesperson for Nunes denied Schiff's allegations, referring to them as another "strange attempt to thwart publication of the memo." (The Hill)
5/ Trump is telling friends that The Memoâ„¢ is a way of discrediting the Russia investigation. He believes it would expose bias at the FBI and that the bureau is prejudiced against him. (CNN)
A top Republican senator urged House Republicans to consider the FBI's "grave concerns" before making the memo public. John Thune also said the Senate Intelligence Committee should be allowed to see the document before its release. (New York Times)
6/ Trump falsely claimed that his State of the Union address had "the highest number in history" in terms of viewers. Nielsen reported that 45.6 million people watched Trump's address. In 2002, 51.7 million people watched George W. Bush's address, 48 million watched Obama's first address, and 46.8 million tuned in for Bill Clinton's first SOTU speech. (Associated Press)
Thank you for all of the nice compliments and reviews on the State of the Union speech. 45.6 million people watched, the highest number in history. @FoxNews beat every other Network, for the first time ever, with 11.7 million people tuning in. Delivered from the heart!
7/ The Trump administration took away enforcement power from a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau office that pursued lending discrimination cases that imposed interest rates on minorities higher than those for whites. Mick Mulvaney said staffers will now be focused on "advocacy, coordination and education," rather than enforcement and oversight of companies. (Washington Post)
8/ Three attorneys representing Rick Gates abruptly withdrew as counsel for the former Trump campaign aide. Lawyers Shanlon Wu, Walter Mack, and Annemarie McAvoy said the reasons for quitting is currently under seal, but added that "The document speaks for itself." Gates recently added Tom Green, a prominent white-collar attorney, to his defense team. (Politico / CNN)
poll/ 71% of Americans think Trump should agree to an interview with Robert Mueller if asked. 82% think the interview should be under oath. (Politico)
Notables.
Trump sacked this year's traditional pre-Super Bowl interview, rejecting requests to appear on NBC this Sunday. (CNN)
Mike Pence is launching a nationwide campaign tour to raise money for Republican candidates running in the 2018 midterms. Pence believes Republicans could expand their majority in both chambers. (Politico)
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will cut its epidemic prevention activities by 80% because it's running out of money. (Washington Post)
Robert Mueller's office isn't ready to schedule a sentencing hearing for Michael Flynn, who pleaded guilty in December to lying to the FBI. George Papadopolous' case was also delayed, signaling that Mueller doesn't plan on wrapping up his investigation before the spring. (CNN)
A Republican candidate for U.S. Senate blamed human trafficking on the sexual revolution of the 1960s and '70s. Josh Hawley told a Christian political group in Missouri that "We're living now with the terrible aftereffects of this so-called revolution. […] The sexual revolution has led to exploitation of women on a scale that we would never have imagined." (Washington Post)