WATCH: Lisa Page Explains What Her Texts Messages With Peter Strzok REALLY Meant

Former FBI lawyer Lisa Page explained to MSNBC host Rachel Maddow what the text messages between her and former FBI agent Peter Strzok actually meant during her first televised interview on Tuesday.

Maddow asked Page what Strzok, who she was having an affair with, meant by having an “insurance policy” in case then-candidate Donald Trump won the 2016 presidential election.

“First of all it’s not my text so I’m sort of interpreting what I believed he meant back three years ago, but we’re using an analogy,” Page explained. “We’re talking about whether or not we should take certain investigative steps or not based on the likelihood that he’s going to be president or not. You have to keep in mind if President Trump doesn’t become president, the national security risks, if there is somebody in his campaign associated with Russia, plummets.”

(Read more from “WATCH: Lisa Page Explains What Her Texts Messages With Peter Strzok REALLY Meant” HERE)

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How Trump Convinced a Democrat to Switch Parties

President Donald Trump and Republican Party reportedly engaged in a six-week campaign to convince Rep. Jeff Van Drew (D-NJ) to leave the Democratic Party and to become a Republican and also attempted to get a second Democrat to leave the party.

After Van Drew voted against the Democrats’ impeachment inquiry in October, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, a California Republican, approached Van Drew and told him that Trump wanted him to become a Republican.

“But McCarthy also had a threat for Van Drew — Republicans ‘were going to beat you anyway,’ he warned,” Politico reported. “Trump won Van Drew’s South Jersey district by nearly 5 points in 2016, and GOP leaders were already heavily targeting the seat next year.”

The six-week campaign, which was described by Politico as a “stealth effort,” reportedly involved discussions with former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, who is from Van Drew’s district.

“McCarthy kept on reaching out to Van Drew, as did other House Republicans. Van Drew and Trump exchanged several phone calls in the past couple of weeks, brokered in part by McCarthy,” Politico continued. “Trump and McCarthy argued that Van Drew would be better off in the GOP. And they also noted that Van Drew’s old New Jersey state Senate seat, which overlaps with his congressional district, had been carried by Republicans in recent Garden State elections.” (Read more from “How Trump Convinced a Democrat to Switch Parties” HERE)

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FISA Court Releases Statement Blasting Comey’s FBI for ‘Misconduct’, Providing ‘False Information’ to Court

Rosemary Collyer, Presiding Judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), released a rare statement on Tuesday slamming the FBI’s misconduct in surveilling the Trump campaign during the 2016 presidential election which occurred under the leadership of disgraced former FBI Director James Comey.

“This order responds to reports that personnel of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) provided false information to the National Security Division (NSD) of the Department of Justice, and withheld material information from NSD which was detrimental to the FBI’s case, in connection with four applications to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) for authority to conduct electronic surveillance of a U.S. citizen named Carter W. Page,” Collyer wrote. “When FBI personnel mislead NSD in the ways described above, they equally mislead the FISC.”

Collyer explained in detail the process involved in obtaining a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) application against a person suspected of being the agent of a foreign power, saying that it was necessary for people to understand the process in order to “appreciate the seriousness of that misconduct” that happened.

Collyer wrote that the inspector general report showed “troubling instances in which FBI personnel provided information to NSD which was unsupported or contradicted by information in their possession.

“It also describes several instances in which FBI personnel withheld from NSD information in their possession which was detrimental to their case for believing that Mr. Page was acting as an agent of a foreign power,” Collyer continued. “In addition, while the fourth electronic surveillance application for Mr. Page was being prepared, an attorney in the FBI’s Office of General Counsel (OGC) engaged in conduct that apparently was intended to mislead the FBI agent who ultimately swore to the facts in that application about whether Mr. Page had been a source of another government agency.” (Read more from “FISA Court Releases Statement Blasting Comey’s FBI for ‘Misconduct’, Providing ‘False Information’ to Court” HERE)

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Flashback: Democratic Vice Chair Who Rambled Through Impeachment Hearing Was Himself Impeached and Removed From Office

Florida Democratic Rep. Alcee Hastings, the vice chairman of the House Rules Committee, delivered a bizarre, rambling line of questioning during Tuesday’s impeachment hearing.

Oddly enough, Hastings, while serving as a federal judge, was impeached back in 1988 and removed from office in 1989.

Though the impeachment inquiry took place in 1988, the acts themselves – soliciting a $150,000 bribe in exchange for lightening sentences for two mob-connected individuals – took place in 1981. Hastings was acquitted of conspiracy and obstruction of justice charges in relation to the bribe, but new evidence later revealed Hastings had lied during his testimony and falsified evidence.

(Read more from “Flashback: Democratic Vice Chair Who Rambled Through Impeachment Hearing Was Himself Impeached and Removed From Office” HERE)

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Russian Trolls Used Buzzfeed’s Community Site to Spread Misinformation Ahead of UK’s Election

A Russian network of trolls used BuzzFeed’s open community boards to spread misinformation ahead of the United Kingdom’s elections, BBC reported Tuesday.

BBC traced the accounts to posts on BuzzFeed, blogging site Medium, social media site Quora and several other blogs and websites across the internet, the report notes. BBC examined a series of accounts on Reddit, which posted a list of the now-suspended accounts.

Unpaid volunteers are often responsible for posting much of the content on BuzzFeed’s Community section, which is separate from BuzzFeed News. The Community section typically houses silly quizzes and other joke articles that are not professionally edited.

The Community section contains BuzzFeed’s brand logo and colors but bears a disclaimer notifying readers that the news outlet’s editors have not “vetted or endorsed” the content on the site.

One of the Russian-linked Reddit accounts posted false information online and within a few minutes appeared, almost verbatim, on BuzzFeed’s Community Section, BBC reported. One account posted a post on the section that claimed to be an interview with a member of Britain’s MI6 secret service. (Read more from “Russian Trolls Used Buzzfeed’s Community Site to Spread Misinformation Ahead of UK’s Election” HERE)

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If Trump Signs Omnibus Bills, He’ll Lose His Last Legislative Leverage

It’s become an annual ritual before Christmas. Both parties, despite the fake wrestling of soap opera politics, come together to increase spending and add special interest policy riders into a 2,000-page omnibus bill dropped hours before a vote is conducted, while nothing in the bill addresses the core challenges of our time that matter most to the citizenry. This occurs whether Republicans control one, two, or all three branches of the legislative process.

Yesterday afternoon, the bipartisan oligarchy dropped the omnibus bills to fund all of government for the remainder of fiscal year 2020. Unlike past years, lawmakers divided it into two pieces of legislation – a 540-page bill funding Defense, Homeland Security, and the Justice Department, and a separate 1,773-page bill funding the rest of government. They are also expected to add hundreds of pages of special-interest tax carve-outs for various industries, known as “tax extenders.” Rather than pushing for a continuing resolution to keep the status quo through the Christmas break so we can have a national debate over the broader priorities, Trump is being pressured to sign away the remaining leverage of his term. Now is the time for him to discover his veto pen.

In February, Trump mistakenly agreed to an omnibus bill rather than pushing another short-term CR, which would have set up a funding fight after the DHS announced a state of emergency at the border in March. During the initial government shutdown, the border crisis was still too subtle, so Democrats were able to deny the need for more immigration enforcement and a border wall. That would have changed had he just signed a short-term extension. The same principle applies now. No matter what happens in our country that proves the need for more ICE and wall funding, Trump will not have leverage with a funding deadline, because these bills will keep government funded for the remainder of the year.

Is Trump’s payback against the Democrats’ unprecedented vote of impeachment against him to sign their budget bills on the very same day?

Let’s review just a handful of major problems with these bills juxtaposed to Trump’s campaign promises:

The bills increase the deficit by another $390 billion on top of the increases from previous years, placing spending levels well above Trump’s budget proposals in every year. The bills contain record funding for the Institutes of Health, Head Start, Title I education funds for low-income children and Child Care and Development grants, all programs the president promised to slash. EPA funding is massively increased to $9 billion, greater than the budget of ICE, which oversees 3.3 million illegal aliens. Federal workers get a 3.1 percent pay raise, on par with that of the military.

The bills throw record funds at surveillance programs to monitor and limit opioid prescriptions and line the pockets of the drug treatment cartel at the same time they ignore the true source and nature of the polydrug crisis coming from illegal immigration and the border.

While they dramatically increase spending for bureaucracies like the Department of Education, they don’t increase spending for the most needed function – immigration enforcement. ICE badly needs more detention space and agents for deportations.

While these bills contain numerous policy changes across the board, they do nothing to change policy on the civilization issues plaguing our country at present. For example, they contain nothing to refocus the mission of our military to an America-first agenda, they contain nothing about arming soldiers on bases, and they contain nothing to quell the national emergency of states rebelling against immigration law. Nor do they contain a single provision pushing the courts out of a single issue they have illegally grabbed for themselves that are threatening the core of our sovereignty. This is the albatross around Trump’s neck if he hopes to accomplish anything in a second term.

The bills codify for another year the MS-13 trafficking loophole provision that was first inserted in the February bill. They prospectively invite illegal alien relatives to traffic their kids via cartels and then be reunited with them at taxpayer expense, and the reward for doing so is that ICE cannot deport the sponsors. As I reported before, this provision is responsible for the increase in teens coming here and is one of the lynchpins to MS-13 recruitment. This provision alone should be enough to veto the bills.

Section 704 appears to invite illegal aliens to apply for federal jobs. Democrats have been trying to get DACA recipients into the federal workforce for the past few years, and this provision adds a qualification of “or is a person who owes allegiance to the United States.” What does that mean, and who determines it? The bill continues, “Affidavits signed by any such person shall be considered prima facie evidence that the requirements of this section with respect to his or her status are being complied with.” This was another bad provision concocted in the 2018 omnibus that remains.

Section 405 creates a position called “Immigration Detention Ombudsman.” The entire purpose of this position it to monitor and harass ICE agents over the treatment of illegal aliens. Nothing in these bills demands accountability and reporting on illegal alien crime and enforcement of our laws. The entire tenor of this section is premised on illegal aliens being the victims and ICE agents being the criminals.

The bigger omnibus bill (p. 43), which doesn’t even include DHS funding, offers the DHS the opportunity to double the number of H-2B non-agricultural, unskilled seasonal workers who will continue to be a public charge on America. The current acting DHS secretary, Chad Wolf, was a worker visa lobbyist and is sympathetic to these expansions.

The only major policy changes in the bills are all for special interests. They renew the corporate welfare Export-Import Bank, which subsidizes countries like Saudi Arabia to purchase Boeing products. They repeal the Obamacare tax increases, which might sound like a good thing, but it’s the worst of all worlds. The bills contain a host of reauthorizations and expansions of all the subsidy programs under Obamacare and Medicaid expansion. They also bar some of the recent regulatory reforms Trump imposed on Obamacare. That is the heart and soul of Obamacare, and it is codified and expanded. Simply repealing the funding mechanism, aka the tax increases, will just add to the deficit. Moreover, it plays into the hands of the health care cartels by giving them the one thing they want so they can now fully embrace Obamacare without reservation, dashing any hope of marshaling industry press for repeal of meaningful portions of the law. The bills also expand the federal Medicaid matching funds for U.S. territories by roughly 50 percent. This is what I call “low-tax socialism” at its best.

Shockingly, the bills also contain an earth-shattering policy change, raising the age to purchase tobacco products to 21. This was a pet peeve of Mitch McConnell. So, while there was no motivation to fight back against states violating federal immigration law, McConnell grabbed for the federal government one issue that legitimately should be set by states. Moreover, as we continue to send out our 18-year olds to die for nothing in Afghanistan in a war that began before they were born, they won’t even be old enough to smoke. Also, despite the release of the Afghanistan papers showing the perfidy surrounding the Afghani military training, these bills add another $4.2 billion for training the Afghani military.

On March 23, 2018, after Trump reluctantly signed two consecutive budget bills increasing spending and jettisoning his immigration priorities, he promised he would “never again” sign bills like that, especially massive bills with multiple policy changes released just hours before a vote. “But I say to Congress: I will never sign another bill like this again,” warned the president in March 2018. “I’m not going to do it again. Nobody read it. It’s only hours old. Some people don’t even know what is in — $1.3 trillion — it’s the second largest ever.”

Well, he violated that pledge for FY 2019. Now is the time to fulfill his pledge against a $1.4 trillion omnibus that includes a massive amnesty provision for MS-13 recruitment and does nothing to deal with sanctuary cities that are dismantling all of his gains on immigration. (For more from the author of “If Trump Signs Omnibus Bills, He’ll Lose His Last Legislative Leverage” please click HERE)

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Supreme Court Agrees to Constitutional Right to Camp on City Streets

So much for the conservative Supreme Court. The same Supreme Court that has been slow to reverse lower court decisions granting cities and states power to thwart federal immigration law suddenly believes that states are vassals of the federal judiciary when it comes to enforcing their own internal public order issues.

Yesterday, the Supreme Court denied an appeal from the city of Boise, Idaho, to reverse a Ninth Circuit ruling that the city cannot close homeless encampments on the streets because it violates the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. Does it get more radical than that?

The growing trend of public homeless encampment is becoming a major public policy challenge for America’s cities, especially in the western part of the country. As Heather Mac Donald noted on my podcast based on extensive firsthand research of San Francisco’s homeless epidemic, the more a city caters to the culture of vagrancy, the more the public encampment takes root. It has brought with it public disorder, environmental damage, drugs, theft, and violent assaults, threatening the basic peace of city streets. “Tolerating street vagrancy is a choice that cities make; for the public good, in San Francisco and elsewhere, that choice should be unmade,” wrote Mac Donald in her blockbuster report on San Francisco’s homeless crisis.

The core job of a local government, as Madison envisioned, is to deal with “objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State.” Keeping the streets safe, clean, and orderly is a core job of local government. Yet in September 2018, the Ninth Circuit ruled, against an Idaho district court ruling, that Boise and other cities cannot enforce anti-encampment ordinances. “As long as there is no option of sleeping indoors, the government cannot criminalize indigent, homeless people for sleeping outdoors, on public property,” ruled the liberal court in Martin v. City of Boise.

This was part of a recent slew of crazy Eighth Amendment rulings from the Ninth Circuit. For example, earlier this year, the court ruled that Idaho is violating the Eighth Amendment if the state doesn’t fund a castration surgery for a male inmate in state prison. Like that case, it seemed to be a no-brainer that the Supreme Court would not allow a lower court to concoct such a sweeping and consequential new constitutional right and that it would immediately stay the injunction or at the very least take up the case on the merits. Yet, shockingly, the faux conservative court denied the appeal. That denial speaks as loudly as if the court actively ruled on this case, given the novel and insane premise of the court below.

The notion that someone has the right to camp out and defile public streets as if it’s an immutable characteristic of the person is insane. In 2000, the Eleventh Circuit (Joel v. City of Orlando) ruled in a similar lawsuit against an Orlando anti-encampment ordinance that cities can always ban a behavior that negatively affects the jurisdiction so long as they are not banning a state of being. “A distinction exists between applying criminal laws to punish conduct, which is constitutionally permissible, and applying them to punish status, which is not,” concluded a unanimous appeals court in favor of a Florida district judge’s ruling. Boise’s law is the same as the one in the Eleventh Circuit in the sense that it prohibits behavior broadly applicable to anyone without targeting an identity.

Of course, to begin with, the entire scope of the constitutional concept of “cruel and unusual punishment” was a degree of severity of criminal punishment, such as torture, not the scope of criminalization of a behavior through police issuing a citation. A citation, by definition, cannot be cruel and unusual, even if there were other legal problems with it. As Justice Thomas wrote in Graham v. Florida, “The Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause was originally understood as prohibiting torturous methods of punishment—specifically methods akin to those that had been considered cruel and unusual at the time the Bill of Rights” (emphasis added).

Expanding the Eighth Amendment to include the right to public vagrancy is almost as radical as applying it to taxpayer-funded castration. This decision is so radical that even the city of Los Angeles filed an amicus brief in favor of Boise’s anti-encampment law. That places the “conservative majority” on the Supreme Court squarely to the left of L.A. politicians.

One would think this Eleventh Circuit case would be viewed as a circuit split on the issue by the Supreme Court, triggering immediate review. Yet not only can this “conservative” Supreme Court not be trusted to overturn past decades of bogus constitutional rights, it won’t even reverse new radical rights discovered by today’s lower courts.

It’s hard to overstate the significance of this ruling. Cities are being flooded with a culture of vagrancy. It’s inextricably linked to the rise in crime in many cities and states. Courts have already created a right for foreign criminals to immigrate and all sorts of novel rights for domestic criminals to avoid punishment and deterrence. Now they are creating a right to street vagrancy and public defecation. A business owner in Monroe, Washington, recently tried to report drugs and trespassing in front of her business from the vagrant encampments and was assaulted while she was snapping a picture of their behavior. A local police officer told her that they have a right to be there. “He told me that the vagrant had the right to defend himself [from my photography],” said a distraught Jovanna Edge. “And he was defending himself with the rock and with this bottle of liquid.”

Inalienable rights protected by the Constitution, by definition, are things that don’t harm the civil society at large. The growth of street vagrancy and the breakdown of public order are causing enormous fiscal and security threats.

The day the Supreme Court upheld a right for courts to override our self-government at the most local level yesterday happened to be the 246th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party. On December 16, 1773, the colonists living in Boston publicly rebelled against the concept of taxation without representation. What we face today is a greater threat to self-government – that of social transformation without representation. Any random federal court can create the most radical non-right “rights” imaginable and socially transform our communities through them. But only if we let them. (For more from the author of “Supreme Court Agrees to Constitutional Right to Camp on City Streets” please click HERE)

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Congress’ Spending Deal Will Put Millions of Tax Dollars Toward Government Gun Violence Research

Part of the spending deal meant to avert a partial government shutdown at the end of this week includes $25 million in taxpayer funds to be spent on federal research into gun violence.

In a Monday statement, Connecticut House Democrat Rosa DeLauro took credit for securing the funds, saying that the resulting research “will help us better understand the correlation between domestic violence and gun violence, how Americans can more safely store guns, and how we can intervene to reduce suicide by firearms.”

According to The Hill, the agreement would give $12.5 million each to the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health. It marks the first time in over two decades that Congress has directly appropriated money for the purpose of researching gun violence. The $25 million total is half of the $50 million Congressional Democrats asked for earlier in spending negotiations.

In a statement to Blaze Media about the news, Congressional Second Amendment Caucus Chair Thomas Massie, R-Ky., warned that the funds would be used to generate biased, anti-gun research at taxpayers’ expense.

“The inherent bias at NIH and CDC in deciding how this money will be spent will compel left wing researchers to compete with each other to cook up the most anti-gun results possible,” Massie said. “As with the climate change research industry and the privately funded gun-violence research industry, this newly christened government-funded gun-violence research industry will work mainly to justify its own existence, and unbiased voices won’t be funded or even tolerated.”

Gun control advocate and former Democratic Congresswoman Gabby Giffords hailed the funding as a “historic win,” noting it as the first time Congress had appropriated such funds in over 20 years. The reason for this, her statement says, is a long-standing federal spending provision known the Dickey Amendment, which says that federal funds can’t be used for the advocacy or promotion of gun control. Gun control advocates have long said that the rule acted as a de facto prohibition on federal gun violence research and celebrated a 2018 clarification in a spending bill that it said it didn’t ban research.

A 2018 blog post from the National Shooting Sports Foundation, however, pointed out that CDC gun research hadn’t stopped during the time period between the amendment’s inception and the passage of the 2018 language:

The CDC was never barred from any such research. In fact, the CDC has studied guns and suicide, noise and lead exposure at ranges, firearm violence prevention in Wilmington, Del., and issued a report on firearms homicides and suicides in metropolitan areas. That doesn’t include a bevy of FBI, Department of Justice and Congressional studies.

In fact, former President Barack Obama famously ordered the CDC to do a study on gun violence in 2013 in the wake of the December 2012 Sandy Hook massacre. But what the agency found out ended up running contrary to a lot of what gun control advocates might have hoped for.

Among its several published findings, the CDC research pointed out that the use of guns in self-defense is actually pretty common, that gun buyback programs aren’t very effective at lowering crime, and that there are “consistently lower injury rates among gun-using crime victims compared with victims who used other self-protective strategies.” (For more from the author of “Congress’ Spending Deal Will Put Millions of Tax Dollars Toward Government Gun Violence Research” please click HERE)

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Virginia County to Fund Militia, per U.S. Constitution, in Wake of Democrats’ Gun-Control Agenda

Amid dozens of Virginia counties declaring themselves Second Amendment sanctuaries in case the state enacts strict gun-control measures next year, Tazewell County joined in — and took a big extra step.

In addition to passing a resolution declaring the county a Second Amendment sanctuary, the Tazewell County Board of Supervisors on Dec. 3 also passed a resolution underscoring the right to a well-funded and regulated militia as described in the U.S. Constitution and the commonwealth’s constitution, WJHL-TV reported. . .

The Second Amendment Sanctuary resolution indicates the county won’t provide funds for any measure infringing upon its citizens’ Second Amendment rights, the station said.

The militia resolution allocates county funds to maintain a well-regulated militia, board chairman Travis Hackworth told WJHL.

Vice Chairman Charles Stacey added to the station that the militia resolution also would provide immediate intervention if the Virginia General Assembly — which will be Democrat-controlled in 2020 — passes legislation violating citizens’ Second Amendment rights.

(Read more from “Virginia County to Fund Militia, per U.S. Constitution, in Wake of Democrats’ Gun-Control Agenda” HERE)

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Pete Buttigieg Kicks off His Latino Outreach Campaign With a Slogan Popularized by Communists

Struggling with low poll numbers among Latino voters, Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg’s campaign launched a Hispanic outreach effort on Monday that included a series of policy plans, websites, and online videos in English and Spanish.

Buttigieg announced the initiative on his social media accounts by invoking a Spanish-language slogan that is raising eyebrows among Latino leaders. The mayor of South Bend, Indiana, tweeted “El pueblo unido, jamás será vencido” (“the people united, will never be defeated”), a protest chant that is famously connected to Latin American communists. The saying was also featured in several campaign communications, including as a call-to-action on a Latino website.

For decades, Americans have rallied to declare el pueblo unido, jamás será vencido — the people united, will never be defeated. To join us and learn more, text TOGETHER to 25859.

. . .

It is difficult to overstate the degree to which Buttigieg’s Spanish-language campaign slogan is associated with left-wing radicals in Latin America. Last month, at a meeting titled, “An Anti-Imperialist Gathering of Solidarity Against Neo-Liberalism,” the Cuban government’s National Assembly broke out into the chant when the country’s communist president took the stage.

(Read more from “Pete Buttigieg Kicks off His Latino Outreach Campaign With a Slogan Popularized by Communists” HERE)

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