The Hill’s Morning Report: Can Trump’s VA pick make it through the week?
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A big question in Washington: Will retired Navy Rear Adm. Ronny Jackson, who President Trump tapped to lead the Veterans Affairs Department, make it through the week?
Jackson — the White House doctor for former President Obama and now for Trump — was digging in Tuesday, expressing a desire to rescue his nomination. He met with Trump yesterday and says he’ll seek to persuade deeply skeptical senators that he should be confirmed.
The Hill: White House signals it will battle for Jackson.
The New York Times: Trump concedes Jackson has management experience deficits, but denies knowledge of misconduct; White House defends nominee’s record as “impeccable.”
But that was before Montana Sen. Jon Tester, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, detailed for the first time allegations that have imperiled Jackson’s nomination. Tester advised during a CNN interview Tuesday night that “it would be wise for the admiral to do some self-assessment.” Allegations shared with but not corroborated by the committee include:
- Improper dispensation of prescription drugs, which earned Jackson the nickname “candy man.”
- Being drunk on duty.
- Creating a hostile work environment and being abusive toward staff.
Tester said the allegations came from nearly two dozen “retired military folks.”
“We heard the same story from enough people repeatedly that there’s a lot of smoke there,” Tester said.
CNN: Jackson allegedly banged loudly on woman’s door at night while drunk during a 2015 overseas trip.
AP: 2012 IG report suggested removing Jackson and a rival colleague from White House roles after finding “severe and pervasive lack of trust in the leadership.”
The Hill: Jackson on the ropes.
Tester said he spoke with John Kelly. He said the White House chief of staff denied the allegations against Jackson.
At a dramatic press conference, Trump cleared a path for Jackson to back out of the nomination. The president said his nominee doesn’t deserve to go through the “ugly” confirmation process led by the “vicious people” on Capitol Hill and in the press.
Bottom line:
It looks over for Jackson. He was facing questions about his ability to lead the massive VA bureaucracy — he does not have prior management experience at that level — before the misconduct allegations became public. Republicans are increasingly critical of the White House for failing to interview or vet candidates, and Jackson has become a Democratic symbol of West Wing mismanagement.
Sidenote:
Key Obama administration officials have been silent about the controversy. A spokesperson for the former president did not return our request for comment.
LEADING THE DAY
ARIZONA SPECIAL ELECTION:
Republican Debbie Lesko won Tuesday in the state’s 8th Congressional District against Democrat Hiral Tipirneni, 52.9 percent to 47.1 percent, dashing Democrats’ hopes for an upset in the deep-red district (The Hill).
Still, Trump carried the district by more than 20 points in 2016, so the 6 point margin of victory is another troubling sign for Republicans looking ahead to November. Republicans spent big to protect the seat and Democrats have shown they can be competitive in what were once GOP strongholds.
“The GOP barely hung on to a seat in a region they’ve represented for 35 years. That spells disaster for them in November.” — Bradley Beychok, president of the liberal group American Bridge.
GLOBAL CRUSH:
❝ If Iran threatens us in any way, they will pay a price like few countries have ever paid. ❞
— President Trump, talking midday Tuesday about the U.S. withdrawing from a multinational agreement with Iran he again called “a disaster.”
President Trump is feeling the heat from world leaders as key foreign policy deadlines approach.
The president’s three-day visit with French President Emmanuel Macron this week underscores the high stakes and needle threading, as well as the push-and-pull between the administration and some of the nation’s oldest allies.
- Trump thundered about tearing up the nuclear deal with Iran while also leaving open the possibility that a deal could be reached to amend it before a May 12 deadline.
- The president spoke glowingly of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, while dangling the possibility he’d walk away from the negotiating table as representatives of the North and South gear up for Friday’s historic meeting at Panmunjom.
- Standing next to Macron, Trump blasted the U.S. trade agreement with the European Union. Macron followed by disputing Trump’s claim that a massive trade imbalance exists.
- Trump badly wants U.S. troops out of Syria but has so far refrained publicly from setting a withdrawal timeline while allies push him to keep U.S. forces there.
Trump and Macron have clear chemistry, but it remains to be seen how much influence the French leader will have over the president’s decisionmaking process on any of these fronts.
He’ll get more input here from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who visits Friday, and in phone conversations with British Prime Minister Theresa May.
The president is juggling these dynamics with one hand tied behind his back, as his Cabinet woes simmer beneath the surface and he acclimates to a national security team he overhauled.
Trump has no secretary of State, although Mike Pompeo likely will be confirmed this week. And the GOP-controlled Congress has not scheduled a confirmation vote for Trump’s ambassador nominee to Germany, Richard Grenell, ahead of Merkel’s visit. Grenell was nominated in September.
The Memo: Nationalists gain upper hand in Trump’s White House.
IRAN NUCLEAR DEAL:
French President Macron encouraged his American peer on Tuesday to envision a middle ground between pulling out of the 2015 Iran deal, which Trump calls “a disaster,” and salvaging the agreement with the tougher new restrictions Europe proposes as an appeal to the United States.
“Nobody knows what I’m going to do,” Trump says.
The Hill: GOP anxiety grows over Trump’s Iran decision.
AP: Iran says it would “most likely” abandon the nuclear deal if the U.S. pulls out.
The Washington Post: Why Europe wants to keep the Iran nuclear deal.
Reuters: On steel trade, Macron protested Trump’s tariffs, but the president, as he did recently with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, did not relent.
*** STATE DINNER GUESTS: The Trumps’ guests included Vice President Pence and second lady Karen Pence; Louisiana GOP Sens. Bill Cassidy and John Kennedy, and their wives, and Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards (D) and his wife, Donna.
Also in the State Dining Room: Henry and Nancy Kissinger; House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) and his wife, Janna; House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and his wife, Judy; publisher Rupert Murdoch and his model-celebrity wife, Jerry Hall Murdoch; Apple CEO Tim Cook and his Apple colleague, Lisa Jackson, the former EPA administrator under President Obama.
More VIPs: California Rep. Ed Royce (R) and wife Marie Royce, confirmed to a State Department post last month; philanthropist David Rubenstein and daughter Gabrielle Rubenstein; Chief Justice John Roberts and his wife, Jane; Maine Gov. Paul LePage and Lauren LePage; and U.S. Ambassador to France Jamie McCourt. ***
TRUMP-KIM SUMMIT:
During Tuesday’s White House press conference, Trump set a high bar for success, saying he wants Pyongyang to “get rid of their nukes.” Arrangements for a Trump-Kim meeting in late May or June remain under discussion.
“Maybe good things will happen; it may be we’re all wasting a lot of time,” Trump says.
Flashback: Trump not long ago mocked Kim as “little rocket man” and Kim called the president a “mentally deranged U.S. dotard.” Now they seek to meet before summer.
Just In #1: Reuters — Trump plans to nominate Adm. Harry Harris, the head of the U.S. Pacific Command already nominated to be the next U.S. ambassador to Australia, to instead fill the long-vacant post of ambassador to South Korea.
Just in #2: Wall Street Journal — North Korea suspected of masterminding a global cyberattack dubbed “Operation GhostSecret” involving 17 nations, including the U.S.
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
➔ Immigration:
A federal judge on Tuesday ruled the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, which protects immigrants brought to the U.S. as children from deportation, must resume and accept new applicants.
The New York Times: A district court judge for the District of Columbia ruled the administration’s policy on the DACA program was based on the “virtually unexplained” grounds that the program was “unlawful.”
➔ Investigations:
Taint team or special master? The Hill’s Lydia Wheeler has an important look at a crucial decision facing Kimba Wood, the judge overseeing the federal case against Trump’s personal attorney Michael Cohen (The Hill).
Trump’s response when asked if he’d pardon Cohen: “Stupid question.”
Bloomberg: Attorney General Jeff Sessions won’t recuse himself from Cohen probe.
USA Today (op-ed): Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) calls legislation to protect special counsel Robert Mueller “unconstitutional.”
➔ Beyond Arizona, more politics:
- The House midterm landscape has been rearranged by Trump’s struggles with college-educated voters and minorities, whose fervor has Democrats believing they can compete in districts long thought to be out of reach, The Hill’s Reid Wilson reports (The Hill).
- Trump on Tuesday tweeted an endorsement for Ohio Rep. Jim Renacci‘s (R) bid for the Senate, the latest example of the president wading into key Senate races (The Hill).
- Democrats won special elections to fill two open state Senate seats in New York on Tuesday, giving the party a majority in the legislative chamber for the first time in years (The Hill).
- In Texas, a House seat formerly held by retired Republican Blake Farenthold will be filled after a special election on June 30 (The Hill). Setting aside state law, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton advised Gov. Greg Abbott that he could set the date ASAP (Texas Tribune). That Texas congressional district was among several at the heart of a case argued before the Supreme Court on Tuesday (The Hill).
- In West Virginia, establishment Republicans can take heart. Former coal executive Don Blankenship, viewed by many in Washington as a sure-fire general election loser, is running third in the GOP Senate primary for the right to square-off with Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) (The Hill).
OPINION
Liberal education is in bad shape, by Peter Berkowitz, commentary, The Weekly Standard. https://tws.io/2HXA8jR
Pardoning Cohen could make things worse for Trump, by Jonathan Turley, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2vGmvDp
WHERE AND WHEN
The House and Senate meet jointly today for French President Macron’s speech in the Capitol. Senators will hear from Attorney General Jeff Sessions this afternoon as he testifies before the Appropriations Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, Science, and Related Agencies.
President Trump meets with Tim Cook, CEO of Apple.
Vice President Pence heads to Milwaukee to headline an America First Policies “Tax Cuts to Put America First” event. In the evening, Pence will appear at a fundraiser for Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker (R), who is seeking reelection.
ELSEWHERE
> National Rifle Association breaks a 15-year fundraising record (McClatchy)
> Republican women wonder when they’ll see a female House Speaker (CNN). Meanwhile, House Republican Conference Chairwoman Cathy McMorris Rodgers (Wash.) called a meeting Thursday with a group of younger GOP lawmakers following reports they are dissatisfied with her management of the Republican conference (The Hill).
> Trump team pushing to achieve NAFTA rewrite by early-May deadline (Los Angeles Times)
> Medical providers, insurers and patients are encouraged to change practices to lower U.S. rate of maternal deaths and near-deaths (ProPublica and NPR)
> Armstrong Williams, a close confidant for Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, has purchased three television stations from the Sinclair Broadcast Group, bringing his total to 10 nationwide.
THE CLOSER
From head to toes:
It was a chapeau seen round the world. First lady Melania Trump yesterday wore a large white hat on a cloudy day. And kept it on indoors. Oh là là.
And finally … step it up, creative thinkers and problem-solvers! One of the most influential inventors of the 20th Century (so named by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) wrote this week that “the most important principle is not to invent solutions looking for problems.”
Engineer Shintaro “Sam” Asano mentors young inventors, and is still trying to deliver inventive solutions at age 83. Asano is credited with creating the modern, portable fax machine in 1961, and helping devise those screens on which we scribble our signatures with credit cards. Recognizing the needs of a growing elderly population, he and his team are testing a new shoe-insert system that detects falls and sends out alerts to help vulnerable seniors. A step forward.
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