BY MATT BERG & CROOKED MEDIA
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The bigger the screwup, the bigger the promotion.”
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A titanic struggle for the future of the Department of Justice is brewing. Joe Biden’s controversial pardon for his son Hunter, and Trump’s move to install a fire-breathing loyalist at the FBI, both show the battle is heating up.
- President Joe Biden stunned the left and right with a sweeping pardon for his embattled son Hunter on Sunday night, reneging on repeated promises not to do that very thing. Plenty of politicians and commentators from both sides of the aisle criticized Biden for breaking his promise and moving to protect his son. Yet some argued that President-elect Donald Trump’s clear steps toward weaponizing the Department of Justice against his political enemies mean that Biden’s backflip should be judged against that gathering menace. “Hunter was singled out, and because his last name was Biden,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters today. “The president believed enough is enough.”
- The latest sign of looming danger: Trump picked right-wing lunatic Kash Patel — who has minimal DOJ experience, supports shutting down the FBI headquarters, and wrote a children’s book depicting Trump as a king — to be FBI director. The idea of Patel in power is setting off alarm bells. A headline in The Atlantic called it “a constitutional crisis greater than Watergate.” If Patel is confirmed, The Bulwark’s William Kristol writes, Trump is “obviously off to the authoritarian races.”
- There are plenty more reasons to be concerned. Last year, Patel said he’d “come after” journalists, which is one of those moves budding dictatorships love to pull. Patel was an early, vocal backer of the idea that the investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign’s possible ties to Russia was nothing more than a political hit-job. He has all but frothed with excitement when talking about going after his political opponents. Here's a handy list of everyone he wants to prosecute, including Vice President Kamala Harris and the current FBI director. If he scores this job, he’ll bring a dark, punchy, reality-talk-show energy to this normally buttoned-up role, like a walking embodiment of the infamous “cash me ousside” meme.
- So, how does that play into Biden’s surprise move? The scope of Hunter’s pardon shows that the Biden may believe a “[Pam] Bondi-led DOJ and Patel-led FBI could throw the proverbial book at him on additional charges if given the chance,” law professor Kim Wehle wrote in The Bulwark, defending Biden’s pardon and arguing for him to do the same for Special Counsel Jack Smith. In other words, a charitable take would be to say Biden chose to protect his son because of Trump's radical intentions for the Justice Department. At the same time, Biden handed ammunition to critics who will accuse him of giving his son special treatment after he spent years thumping the podium about respecting the decision of the courts.
Patel and the pardon are shaping the latest debate about the DOJ’s future under Trump: Where does this leave the DOJ, for the next four years and the administrations to come? What does it mean for the rule of law in America?
- Politicians on both sides of the aisle criticized Biden’s move as a presidential overreach, with one Democrat even calling for Congress to revisit the Constitution’s pardon power: “What other father in America has the power to pardon his son or daughter if they’re convicted of a crime?” Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) told CNN, also noting Republicans’ constant attacks against Hunter.
- Opponents of Biden’s move worry that future presidents will now feel emboldened to hand out pardons like party favors. Hunter likely wouldn't have been granted a pardon under DOJ criteria — he hasn’t been sentenced for any crimes, or served any time. (Most people who receive full pardons have already served their sentences.) Politico called the pardon “a rich gift to those who want to blow up the justice system as we know it.”
- Of course, Trump made it rain pardons the last time he had the chance — handing out clemency to top supporters like Paul Manafort and Roger Stone, along with Charles Kushner, the father of Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner. Trump was never going to feel restrained, no matter what Biden did. The difference now, perhaps, is that Trump now has a better talking point to publicly justify what he was going to do anyway: Politicize the DOJ.
Such dark skullduggery could set the DOJ on a slippery slope of retribution and rule-bending for years to come.
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Fox News host Pete Hegseth, Donald Trump’s pick for defense secretary, is facing fresh allegations from multiple former colleagues… and his mom.
Hegseth was allegedly forced out of a veterans’ group leadership role for his financial mismanagement, sexist behavior, repeatedly being intoxicated on the job — and chanting “kill all Muslims” at a bar, according to a seven-page report by former employees obtained by The New Yorker. A lawyer for Hegseth said the article was filled with “outlandish claims” by a “jealous disgruntled former associate.”
The report comes days after the New York Times published an email from Hegseth’s own mother accusing him of abusing “many” women and said she has “no respect” for him because of the way he treats women.
She wrote: “I have no respect for any man that belittles, lies, cheats, sleeps around and uses women for his own power and ego. You are that man (and have been for years) and as your mother, it pains me and embarrasses me to say that, but it is the sad, sad truth.” In an interview with the Times, his mom said she apologized for the email soon after.
All I’m sayin’ is it’s bad when your mom pops up in the NYT calling you a terrible person!!
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A current Apple employee alleged that the tech giant spies on its own employees, according to a recently-filed lawsuit. Employees have to give up their right to personal privacy, the lawsuit alleges, claiming that Apple says it’s allowed to “engage in physical, video and electronic surveillance of them” when they’re at home and after they stop working for the company. Apple said that it disagrees with the allegations.
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Introducing WOODWORKING by Emily St. James - the next release with Crooked Media Reads, coming March 4, 2025. This heartwarming novel follows Erica Skyberg, a trans high school teacher from a small town in South Dakota who befriends the only other trans woman she knows: one of her students. As their unlikely friendship evolves, it comes under the increasing scrutiny of their community. And soon, both women—and those closest to them—are forced to ask: Who are we if we choose to hide ourselves? What happens once we disappear into the woodwork? A tonic for the moment, Woodworking is a remarkable debut from an incisive new contemporary voice and celebration of womanhood in all its multifaceted joy.
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Three Uyghurs trapped in China were secretly allowed to leave the country for the United States as part of a prisoner swap last week. One of them, a 73-year-old woman, made it home in time to enjoy Thanksgiving with her two sons who she hadn’t seen in 20 years, and four grandchildren she’d never met.
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