Can Democrats Defeat Trump on Emergency? Without Veto Override,
Only in Court
As expected, the House of Representatives voted yesterday to
overturn President Trump’s declaration of emergency because of the crisis at
the southern border with Mexico. But even if open-borders Democrats and their
Republican sympathizers prevail in the Senate too, Trump will veto the final
bill.
The vote was
245-182. That’s nowhere close to the two-thirds majority Democrats need to
override Trump’s certain veto. So the emergency will stand until the court
decides the issue.
Sixteen
Republicans joined the open-borders Democrats, who stridently oppose border
control because they want to keep future voters coming into the country.
Democrats hope that relentless flood-tide of illegals, more than 200,000
so far in fiscal 2019, will permanently alter the country’s
demographics and cement a Democratic majority.
Trump hopes to
stop that invasion with a wall, which Democrats have angrily refused to build.
Thus, the emergency declaration.
Senate Vote Before Recess
Unsurprisingly, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unbosomed another one of her big lies. “We are not going to give any president, Democratic or Republican, a blank check to shred the Constitution of the United States,” the elderly leftist said as she held up a “pocket copy of the Constitution,” as the Washington Post reported. “Is your oath of office to Donald Trump or is your oath of office to the Constitution of the United States?”
Unsurprisingly, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi unbosomed another one of her big lies. “We are not going to give any president, Democratic or Republican, a blank check to shred the Constitution of the United States,” the elderly leftist said as she held up a “pocket copy of the Constitution,” as the Washington Post reported. “Is your oath of office to Donald Trump or is your oath of office to the Constitution of the United States?”
Pelosi had no
such concerns when she shrugged off questions about the constitutionality of
ObamaCare, or when President Obama unilaterally declared an amnesty, and
declared the unpassed DREAM Act federal law.
House Minority
chief Kevin McCarthy of California backed the president. “There is a national
emergency at the southern border that the Democrats will declare today doesn’t
exist,” he said. “The president has the authority to do it, and we will uphold
him.”
Republican
Thomas Massie of Kentucky, one of the most constitutionally minded members of
the House, voted against the president, stating Article I, Section 9, Clause 7
of the Constitution as his reason for doing so: “No Money shall be drawn from
the Treasury, but in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law; and a regular
Statement and Account of the Receipts and Expenditures of all public Money
shall be published from time to time.”
Now the matter
goes to the Senate. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell anticipates a vote on a
resolution, the Post reported,
before the Senate recesses in March.
Liberal Republican Senators such as Thom Tillis of
North Carolina, Susan Collins of Maine, and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska can be
expected to vote against Trump. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas might vote against
the president as well. Cruz worries about a “slippery slope,” he told the Intercept, meaning a Democratic
president might follow Trump’s suit and declare an emergency “to implement
radical policies contrary to law and contrary to the Constitution.” But a
Democratic president can do that anyway.
Senator Rand
Paul of Kentucky is skeptical as well. “I don’t think it’s a good way to run
government — to run government by emergency,” Paul said. “I think the Constitution’s pretty clear
that the power of the purse is with Congress.”
Either way,
Democrats don’t have the votes to override a certain presidential veto.
CRS: Trump Has the Power
Paul is right; the Constitution is clear. But as The New American reported before Trump declared the emergency, the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service has said Trump can use funds to build a wall with or without an emergency declaration.
Paul is right; the Constitution is clear. But as The New American reported before Trump declared the emergency, the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service has said Trump can use funds to build a wall with or without an emergency declaration.
After declaring
an emergency requiring the use of the armed forces, CRS reported, the secretary
of defense may “without regard to any other provision of law ... undertake
military construction projects ... not otherwise authorized by law that are
necessary to support such use of the armed forces.”
This law
enables presidents to build military fortresses in remote parts of the
unconstitutional American Empire.
Federal law
also permits the secretary of defense to “carry out a military construction
project not otherwise authorized by law” if “the project is vital to the
national security or to the protection of health, safety, or the quality of the
environment,” or if not pursuing the project immediately will harm national
security or the environment.
Another statute
says the defense secretary can build barriers to help civilian authorities
fight drugs.
The question, CRS
said, is whether invoking these laws will survive challenges in
court, which the Left mounted almost immediately. A coalition of 16 states, led
by California and its subversive, open-borders Attorney General Xavier Becerra, has
sued the president on multiple grounds.
The Democrats
and the anti-Trump media claim the situation at the border is not a national
emergency because illegal immigration is decreasing, an argument, on looking at
the numbers, that is akin to Captain Smith’s claiming the Titanic isn’t sinking
because only half the ship’s compartments have flooded.
Numbers from
Customs and Border Patrol are
frightening. The number of illegal aliens collared
thus far in fiscal 2019 is 201,497: 99,901 family units, 21,123
unaccompanied minors.
Inadmissible
illegal aliens blocked at ports of entry for the two months totaled 20,344,
including 8,595 family units and 762 unaccompanied minors. Total inadmissibles
this fiscal year are 40,720, including 17,759 families and 1,621 unaccompanied
minors.
The
December-January totals for both figures 118,986. The total for fiscal 2019 is
242,217.
Trump vs. Deep State
In March 2018, New York Times bestselling
author and investigative journalist Jerome Corsi released his most explosive
book yet — Killing the Deep State: The Fight to Save
President Trump.
In searing detail, the book exposed an alleged
conspiracy by the Deep State — the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Central
Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency, and other intelligence and
military agencies, along with the mainstream media and globalist elite — to
topple the presidency of Donald Trump as part of a goal to create a borderless,
one-world government and economic system.
Several months later, Corsi found himself
summoned to an unmarked FBI building in southeast Washington, D.C., where he
was threatened with indictment by Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s
prosecutorial team unless he testified “falsely against [former Trump campaign
advisor] Roger Stone and/or President Donald Trump,” Corsi’s attorney, Larry
Klayman, wrote in a voluminous complaint alleging Mueller and his team are
engaged in a “coup” to “overthrow the duly elected President of the United
States.”
“They ended up treating me like a criminal
from day one,” Corsi, 72, told The New American. “It was this 40-hours. It was
such a grueling experience. I think it is so counter to American justice as I
understand it. It’s more like a Gestapo interrogation — KGB — and I thought I
was going to go off to the gulag next.”
In response, Corsi wrote a new book, Silent No More: How I Became a Political Prisoner of Mueller’s
“Witch Hunt.”
“I wrote it as [the interrogations took
place], so it’s first-person,” he says. “I think you’ll feel my emotions and my
horror at this process as it unfolded for what I feel is a
politically-motivated investigation that was engaging in criminal prosecutorial
misconduct.”
In January, Klayman, a former prosecutor at
the Department of Justice and founder of Judicial Watch, filed a $350 million
lawsuit on Corsi’s behalf against Mueller, the FBI, and intelligence agencies
for alleged “illegal surveillance on him, his family, friends and legal
counsel, without probable cause in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and
related alleged illegalities.”
Corsi alleges he’s being improperly pressured
by Mueller’s team to sign a plea deal, which he says he won’t sign. Mueller’s
team wants him to admit that he acted as a liaison between Stone, WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange, and the Trump campaign regarding the release of hacked
e-mails from the Democratic National Committee, according to Corsi’s complaint.
In November, Corsi rejected a deal offered by Mueller to plead guilty to one count
of perjury.
“They wanted me to establish a connection,”
Corsi says. “They had a predetermined theory of the case. They predetermined
that there was a crime of Russian collusion even though nobody can tell you
whether that is really a crime or not.”
“And then they’ve got a ‘criminal,’ namely the
president, that they want to impeach. And they are looking for factors that fit
their predetermined theory. I don’t consider this to be a fair or honest
investigation at all. I mean they wanted me to establish that I had contact
with Julian Assange so they could connect the dots from Roger Stone to me. Of
all people, I became the linchpin of this whole Russian collusion theory.”
But Corsi, the former Washington bureau chief
of Infowars, who holds a Ph.D. from Harvard University, says he had nothing to
do with the release of the WikiLeaks e-mails that damaged Hillary Clinton’s
White House bid.
“It just didn’t happen,” Corsi says. “I mean,
I don’t know Julian Assange. I’ve never met Julian Assange. I’ve never
communicated with Julian Assange in any way, either directly or indirectly, and
I couldn’t provide them what they wanted, especially during the last 20 of the
40 hours. They got nasty, they got abusive, they were constantly walking out of
the room…. When I couldn’t provide them the link to Assange, they just blew the
whole thing up, threw me out, and said my testimony was worthless.”
Corsi’s experience with the Deep State, eerily similar to
what New York Times best-selling author Dinesh D’Souza
underwent following the release of his explosive film 2016:
Obama’s America, highlights growing concerns that the globalist
elite and Deep State — now that Democrats control the U.S. House of
Representatives — plan to topple the Trump presidency by any means possible,
create some type of planetary government, and usher in what they have long
described as the New World Order.
The Trump Investigation Circus
Corsi’s ordeal in connection with the FBI and
Mueller’s Russia collusion investigation comes amid myriad probes into the
Trump presidency, including new and ongoing ones by House committees controlled
by Democrats. These committees are poised to investigate Trump’s potential
business conflicts of interest, tax returns, and dealings with Russia, among
other matters.
Some members of the House have renewed their
calls to impeach Trump amid a cavalcade of negative news about the president.
Meanwhile, Tom Steyer, the billionaire Democratic donor, has decided not to run
for president in 2020 because he believes that pursuing Trump’s impeachment is
a better use of his fortune.
Riding the wave, the March issue of the The Atlantic magazine features a call for the president’s
impeachment on its cover. It reads “IMPEACH” in large, red letters.
Consequently, pundits are predicting Trump’s
demise, arguing that he’ll be forced to resign the presidency before the
presidential election in November 2020.
Michael Golden, a senior fellow at the liberal Washington, D.C.,
think tank Center for American Progress — founded by John Podesta, chairman of
the 2016 Hillary Clinton presidential campaign — alleged in a New York Daily News article that Trump has been
“implicated in at least one felony.”
“The same crime that his own lawyer pleaded
guilty to and has been sentenced to serve time for in federal prison (along
with other offenses),” Golden wrote. “But [Trump’s former lawyer] Michael Cohen
wasn’t alone. The head of American Media, Inc., David Pecker, has now
implicated Trump. Pecker has also agreed to cooperate with the special counsel.
At the very least, he will attest, under oath, to Trump’s directing hush money
to keep women’s mouths shut about their sexual affairs with him — in a clearly
stated effort to influence the campaign.”
In late November, Cohen pleaded guilty to
making false statements to Congress and was sentenced to three years in prison.
Cohen has agreed to testify before the House Oversight and Reform Committee in
February and give a “full and credible account” of his work with Trump.
Meanwhile, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D-Calif.) said in early January that she wouldn’t rule out the indictment or
impeachment of Trump, describing it as “an open discussion.”
Shortly afterward, U.S. Representative Brad
Sherman (D-Calif.) reintroduced articles of impeachment against Trump. He was
one of three Democrats, including U.S. Representatives Al Green of Texas and
Steve Cohen of Tennessee, who introduced resolutions to impeach Trump in 2017.
In a July 12, 2017 statement, Sherman said that he wanted to
hold hearings on obstruction of justice and Russian interference in the
election. “Recent disclosures by Donald Trump Jr. indicate that Trump’s
campaign was eager to receive assistance from Russia,” Sherman said. “It now seems likely that the President had something to hide when
he tried to curtail the investigation of National Security Advisor Michael
Flynn and the wider Russian probe. I believe his conversations
with, and subsequent firing of, FBI Director James Comey constitute Obstruction
of Justice.”
Trump and the Federal Reserve
In December 1965, Federal Reserve Chairman
William McChesney Martin was summoned to the ranch of President Lyndon Johnson
for a dressing-down. President Johnson, a believer in the fiscal stimulus
programs enacted by his predecessor, John F. Kennedy, wanted to cut taxes
further, and expected the Fed to do its part by keeping interest rates low.
Martin, however, was of the opinion that interest rates should be raised,
arousing the ire of the volatile president.
Ushered into what he expected would be a calm
meeting with the president, Martin was shocked to find himself being physically
shoved around the living room and against the wall by a furious Lyndon Johnson,
who kept screaming at him, “Boys are dying in Vietnam, and Bill Martin doesn’t
care!” President Johnson had apparently never gotten the memo on the supposed
independence of the Federal Reserve from political influences. Cowed by the
president’s belligerence, the Fed chairman maintained interest rates very low
that year and the next, putting the lie to the Fed’s alleged detachment from
tawdry politics.
In our time, we again have, in Donald Trump, a
president openly hostile to the Fed and its policies. Trump, be it noted, has
shown no inclination to physically assault Fed chairmen. But his withering
anti-Fed rhetoric on Twitter has shocked the sensibilities of the East Coast
establishment because, in the years since Johnson’s outburst, criticism of the
Fed simply hasn’t been acceptable to the Powers That Be. Throughout its
history, the Federal Reserve has maintained a public posture of independent
decision making and immunity to criticism. But the reality behind the scenes is
a central bank beholden to special interests both public and private,
determined to maintain the traditional veil of secrecy and special privileges
that have always concealed its true nature from the general public.
Of, by, and for the Rich
In the beginning, the Federal Reserve was created to serve the interests of financial and political elites, both inside and outside the U.S. government, and both in the United States and abroad. It is purely a creation of the internationalist financial and political establishment, and has no accountability whatsoever to the American public. The fact that one of its original sponsors, Rhode Island Senator Nelson Aldrich (shown), was a prominent politician, does nothing to diminish this fact. Aldrich, related by marriage to the Rockefeller dynasty, was wholly beholden to the secretive cabal of international bankers who planned the Federal Reserve at the infamous top-secret meeting at the Rockefellers’ Jekyll Island estate in 1910. Aldrich loaned his personal train car to enable the bankers to ride in secret down to Jekyll Island, on the southern Georgia coast, without being detected by the press or the general public. To this secret meeting Aldrich went in person, along with at least five other notables: Paul Warburg, A. Piatt Andrew, Henry Davison, Arthur Shelton, and Frank Vanderlip.
In the beginning, the Federal Reserve was created to serve the interests of financial and political elites, both inside and outside the U.S. government, and both in the United States and abroad. It is purely a creation of the internationalist financial and political establishment, and has no accountability whatsoever to the American public. The fact that one of its original sponsors, Rhode Island Senator Nelson Aldrich (shown), was a prominent politician, does nothing to diminish this fact. Aldrich, related by marriage to the Rockefeller dynasty, was wholly beholden to the secretive cabal of international bankers who planned the Federal Reserve at the infamous top-secret meeting at the Rockefellers’ Jekyll Island estate in 1910. Aldrich loaned his personal train car to enable the bankers to ride in secret down to Jekyll Island, on the southern Georgia coast, without being detected by the press or the general public. To this secret meeting Aldrich went in person, along with at least five other notables: Paul Warburg, A. Piatt Andrew, Henry Davison, Arthur Shelton, and Frank Vanderlip.
The backgrounds of these men were telling.
Paul Warburg, a partner at Kuhn, Loeb, and Company and a European banking agent
connected with various London and Paris banking interests for whom he had
worked, was the leader of the group, by all accounts. A native of Hamburg,
Warburg in 1910 was not yet a U.S. citizen, although he would become one the
following year. He would go on to be a director of the Council on Foreign
Relations, a key organization within the American political and financial
establishment, from 1921 until his death in 1932. Warburg was determined to
foist on America a central bank modeled after the great European central banks
such as the Bank of England, which had been around since the end of the 17th century.
Abraham Piatt Andrew, a financial wunderkind who was the son of a banker and an
Ivy Leaguer, was director of the U.S. Mint and assistant secretary to the
Treasury Department during the Taft administration. Henry Davison had been a
founder of the Bankers Trust Company and was a partner at J. P. Morgan. Arthur
Shelton was secretary to Nelson Aldrich and to his National Monetary
Commission, an organization created by Congress at the behest of Aldrich in the
wake of the Panic of 1907, whose ostensible purpose was to study the American
financial system and propose remedies that would prevent such panics from
happening again. Frank Vanderlip was president of National City Bank (the
lineal ancestor of Citibank), and had long been an open advocate for an American
central bank. An additional possible seventh member of the Jekyll Island group,
Benjamin Strong, was the energetic vice president of Bankers Trust and would
later become the founding chief executive officer of the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York and the true architect of American central banking. Frank Vanderlip
recalled Strong being present at Jekyll Island in his autobiography, but other
researchers have doubted that he was there. Given his later influence, it would
be surprising if Strong — the first governor of the Federal Reserve’s New York
branch — was not involved.
The small group assembled at Jekyll Island represented all of
the major American banking and financial concerns, elite American political
interests, and (via Warburg in particular) wealthy European banking houses.
Because many of the attendees were public figures, Aldrich concocted the cover
story of a duck hunting trip and insisted that the men address one another only
by their first names during the train trip — lest any of the train workers
recognize them and report their activities to the media. Aldrich also pledged
all of those in attendance to secrecy. The fact of the meeting having
occurred was brought to light in 1916 in an article by B. C. Forbes in a
publication called Leslie’s Weekly, but all of those in attendance
claimed the article was pure fiction. It was not until 20 years after
the meeting that some of those in attendance, including Senator Aldrich,
finally admitted that they had conspired to draw up plans for the Federal
Reserve at the top-secret Jekyll Island meeting. Public admissions of complicity by the likes of Aldrich and
Vanderlip notwithstanding, the most important figure at Jekyll Island, Paul
Warburg, always refused to talk about the event, believing himself “pledged ...
to secrecy.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment