THREAD: So, I'm still reading the D.C. Circuit's decision in Trump v. Thompson, but think the Court made a mistake....typing as I'm thinking so walk through this with me. At 3-4 of the opinion the Court states: 1/
2/ But here's what H.R. 503 states:
3/ The purpose stated by the Court is not one of the three shown under its purpose; rather, it was the predecessor bill, H.R. 3233 which specificed that purpose.
4/ Now H.R. 503 does include this as a corrective measure:
4/ While Section 4 includes some "mays," it doesn't appear "tasked" as H.R. 3233 did. Now does this matter? Not given opinion's focus on executive privilege, but I found it interesting b/c predecessor bill (that the Senator nixed), made proposing legislation a function.
5/ And one argument made was that there is no "legislative function." While I don't think that is a strong argument, address it, I think purpose put forth in the H.R. 503 needs to be accurately presented and the opinion seems to pull purpose from predecessor bill.
6/ Meadows' complaint forces more forcefully on the lack of a legislative function and in doing so highlighted that 503 dropped the forth purpose.
7/ Of course, bigger issue, from a constitutional perspective, is Executive Privilege, AND in my mind Meadows' point in his complaint (more on this tomorrow @FDRLST that Committee acted without authority in issuing subpoenas, but it just caught my eye in reading Opinion after
8/8 and I mean immediately after, reading this from Meadows' complaint:
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THREAD with some friendly push back for @HansMahncke Baker is going to make a terrible witness, but for Sussmann. Baker clearly has a friendly relationship with Sussmann and an incentive to "not remember," and the hedging, confusion, etc., is going to hurt Sussmann's argument./1
2/ And I doubt Durham's case relies on Baker's testimony, other than to show Baker is at best forgetful. Rather, Durham's case likely rests on contemporaneous notes taken by someone who spoke w/ Baker RIGHT after--maybe multiple someones, since it appears he passed to Strzok,
3/ and Page. Also, remember, this is Sussmann's attorney's doing PR to promote their client's case: They included only a glimpse of the case that seemingly helps Sussmann. Now, might Durham have brought a week case? Sure, but I doubt it.
With more Americans discovering fraud of corrupt media re Russia collusion hoax, I'm pausing for "victory tour," best encapsulated with this article I wrote for @FDRLSTthefederalist.com/2018/08/02/ins… August 2, 2018. To repeat: 2018. I'm very proud of this piece for 2 reasons. 1/
2/ In this article, by delving into original source documents I revealed one of major omissions in FISA warrant applications for @carterwpage MORE THAN A YEAR before IG confirmed that major omission. I did that even with heavily redacted FISA applications to work from.
3/ But equally important in that article, I discarded one theory re players/plots being used to set up Trump, when on surface it looked like the translator for Trump Tower meeting was part of the hoax. It would have been easy to have succumb to confirmation bias.
THEADETEE: So other than @MZHemingway who literally wrote a book on it, I think I'm the only reporter who has done a real deep dive on election intergrity issues in multiple states involving interviews & analysis of original source documents. WI, PA, AZ, and GA. 1/
THREAD: Delaware County, PA lawsuit has many more details beyond the whistleblower videos I posted last night. Posting several excerpts until complaint is live.
2/ Here are the videos from last night, to refresh your recollection.