By Jim Geraghty
Thursday, December 10, 2020
The Bad Week for Dianne
Feinstein
For quite a while now, if you paid consistent attention
to Senator Dianne Feinstein (D., Calif.), you would notice that she would make
a statement, and then the next day insist she had never made that statement.
Back in 2018, during the Brett Kavanaugh confirmation hearings, I
laid out cases where the octogenarian Feinstein had publicly doubted the
credibility of Christine Blasey Ford and then later that day issued a
statement that she found her credible, changed her explanation of why she
hadn’t released a Judiciary Committee transcript, claimed to have been
pressured on the decision and then insisted she had never said she was
pressured, gave two contrary and opposing answers about a government shutdown,
and then said she couldn’t remember why she had hesitated to share Ford’s
letter. I noted a Republican senator once told me that it was easier to work
with Feinstein herself than her staff; Feinstein would seem amenable in a
meeting and then her staff would insist she hadn’t agreed to the discussed solution.
Lots of politicians are shameless liars — and that’s bad
enough. But videos of Feinstein’s denials that she had said what she had said a
day earlier raised the possibility of something even worse: She genuinely
didn’t remember what she had said and done not long ago. We can simultaneously
oppose Feinstein’s views, hate seeing her reach this condition, and fairly ask
if Californians or anyone else were well-served by her remaining in office.
But if you discussed Feinstein’s memory problems too openly,
you were accused of agism and sexism and partisan malevolence and God knows
what else. Last night, Jane
Mayer of The New Yorker more or less announced it was no longer socially
and politically required to pretend not to notice Feinstein’s memory problems:
Many others familiar with
Feinstein’s situation describe her as seriously struggling and say it has been
evident for several years. Speaking on background, and with respect for her
accomplished career, they say her short-term memory has grown so poor that she often
forgets she has been briefed on a topic, accusing her staff of failing to do so
just after they have. They describe Feinstein as forgetting what she has said
and getting upset when she can’t keep up. One aide to another senator described
what he called a “Kabuki” meeting in which Feinstein’s staff tried to steer her
through a proposed piece of legislation that she protested was “just words”
which “make no sense.” Feinstein’s staff has said that sometimes she seems
herself, and other times unreachable. “The staff is in such a bad position,” a
former Senate aide who still has business in Congress said. “They have to
defend her and make her seem normal.”
. . . [Senate Minority Leader
Chuck] Schumer had several serious and painful talks with Feinstein, according
to well-informed sources. Overtures were also made to enlist the help of
Feinstein’s husband, Richard Blum. Feinstein, meanwhile, was surprised and
upset by Schumer’s message. He had wanted her to step aside on her own terms,
with her dignity intact, but “she wasn’t really all that aware of the extent to
which she’d been compromised,” one well-informed Senate source told me. “It was
hurtful and distressing to have it pointed out.” Compounding the problem,
Feinstein seemed to forget about the conversations soon after they talked, so
Schumer had to confront her again. “It was like Groundhog Day, but with the
pain fresh each time.” Anyone who has tried to take the car keys away from an
elderly relative knows how hard it can be, he said, adding that, in this case,
“It wasn’t just about a car. It was about the U.S. Senate.”
The U.S. Senate is not supposed to be a nursing home.
The Bad Week for Hunter
Biden
Hunter Biden is a deeply troubled man whose worst habits
and instincts veered into criminal behavior, and who has been largely protected
from the full consequences of his actions by his connection to his famous and
powerful father. The
evidence for this is abundant and longstanding. But if you said that too
loudly before Election Day, you were accused of attacking the vice president’s
family, being callous to the problems of addiction, and making “personal
attacks on a candidate’s child.” (Hunter Biden turned 50 earlier this year.)
When Joe Biden insisted his son was hired at Burisma because he was a “smart
guy,” we were expected to simply accept and nod along to Biden’s psychological
denial.
THE MORNING JOLT
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Now that Joe Biden has been elected president, apparently
we are no longer socially and politically required to pretend that Hunter Biden
is an upstanding, law-abiding citizen who has cleaned up his life and paid the
price for his past bad decisions.
CNN:
After going quiet in the months
before the election, federal authorities are now actively investigating the
business dealings of Hunter Biden, a person with knowledge of the probe said.
His father, President-elect Joe Biden, is not implicated.
Now that the election is over, the
investigation is entering a new phase. Federal prosecutors in Delaware, working
with the IRS Criminal Investigation agency and the FBI, are taking overt steps
such as issuing subpoenas and seeking interviews, the person with knowledge
said. Activity in the investigation had gone covert in recent months due to
Justice Department guidelines prohibiting overt actions that could affect an
election, the person said.
In addition to Delaware, the securities fraud unit in the
Southern District of New York also scrutinized Hunter Biden’s finances,
according to the person with direct knowledge of the investigation. The person
said that, as of early last year, investigators in Delaware and Washington were
also probing potential money laundering and Hunter Biden’s foreign ties. The
person spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to
discuss the matter publicly.
In addition to the probe into Hunter Biden, federal
authorities in the Western District of Pennsylvania are conducting a criminal
investigation of a hospital business in which Joe Biden’s brother James was
involved. Federal officials have asked questions about James Biden’s role in
the business, according to a second person with direct knowledge of that
investigation, who said it remains ongoing.
After the role Jim Comey and the FBI played in the 2016
election, it’s easy to see why law enforcement would want to avoid taking
actions that could influence the outcome of an election. But learning after the
election that a candidate’s family is under serious investigation for criminal
acts does not feel like a significant improvement.
Speaking of FBI investigations . . .
The Bad Week for Eric
Swalwell
Congressman Eric Swalwell is a giant waste of space. He
is a trying-too-hard, gun-confiscation
promoting, nuclear-strike-on-Americans
endorsing, Biden-death
speculating, white-man-who’s-running-to-increase-diversity
congressman who was in the 2020 Democratic presidential primary for about ten minutes.
He consistently polled at zero in surveys. He
broke his promise to not run for Congress again. There are, er, noisy
concerns about his role in uncontrolled methane emissions.
And now Axios is reporting that a Chinese national
named Fang Fang or Christine Fang, a suspected Chinese spy, worked as a
fundraiser for him and interacted with him until she left the country in 2015.
The
best thing you can say about Swalwell is that after the FBI gave him a “defensive
briefing,” he “immediately cut off all ties to Fang.” At this point, we
don’t know if Swalwell had any reason to think Fang was a spy.
Apparently, Fang used sex as tool to get closer to
certain politicians. The Axios article did not say whether Swalwell and
Fang ever did the horizontal mambo, and Swalwell refuses to say. Keep in mind,
people generally do not withhold exculpatory information.
It is not against the law for a congressman to have sex
with a Chinese spy if he doesn’t know she’s a foreign agent. But it sure as
heck makes Swalwell look foolish and vulnerable to blackmail. Senator Marco
Rubio makes the fair point that Swalwell will have to answer a lot of tough
questions if he hopes to remain on the House Intelligence Committee after this.
And “My opponent was literally in bed with Chinese intelligence” will make a
hell of a good attack ad.
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