January 23, 2026

Carol Leonnig, et al., of MS NOW: "Federal judges in Minnesota have several times in recent weeks rejected arrest warrants for people protesting a surge of immigration officers in that state, finding that federal agents do not have sufficient evidence that protesters assaulted officers or committed other crimes.... In these sealed court proceedings, magistrate judges in the federal court in Minnesota have been deluged with requests from federal prosecutors to arrest and criminally charge protesters.... But some prosecutors have fared poorly in establishing evidence of crime.... It is exceedingly rare for judges to turn down investigators’ requests for search and arrest warrants or criminal complaints, since the standard of evidence required is so low.... This spate of rejections in Minnesota would normally cause embarrassment for the U.S attorney’s office.... But the Minnesota office has been in turmoil since the Justice Department’s decision not to investigate the officer who killed [Renee] Good, which led to six senior prosecutors resigning, and more departures are expected."

From a New York Times liveblog of stupid stuff Trump has done & said lately: 

Stephen Castle (re: Cadet Bonespurs): “Prime Minister Keir Starmer of Britain and other leading British politicians on Friday condemned claims made by ... [Donald] Trump that NATO troops had stayed 'a little off the front lines' during the war in Afghanistan. Mr. Trump made the comments in an interview in Davos, Switzerland, with Fox Business, in which Mr. Trump questioned whether other members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization would come to the aid of the United States if needed. 'We’ve never needed them,' Mr. Trump said. 'We have never really asked anything of them. You know, they’ll say they sent some troops to Afghanistan or this or that. And they did. They stayed a little back, little off the front lines.' Under NATO’s collective security agreement, known as Article 5, aggression against one member country is considered an attack on all. It has been invoked only once in the history of the alliance — after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.... Britain ... lost 457 soldiers during two decades of subsequent fighting in Afghanistan.... Mr. Starmer — who normally avoids criticizing the president — said the remarks were 'insulting and frankly appalling.'...” Here's a CBS News story. 

Speaking of stupid stuff: ~~~

~~~ KARE Minneapolis: "The day after ICE arrested a 5-year-old boy, his lawyer is sharing new details about how he and his family came to the U.S., directly disputing claims made by the Vice President. Liam Ramos ... was detained on Tuesday afternoon along with his father. The arrest has sparked widespread criticism.... Vice President JD Vance held a press conference in Minneapolis on Thursday, where a reporter asked about Liam. Vance appeared sympathetic at first but then claimed that the boy's father is an 'illegal alien.' 'What are they (ICE) supposed to do? Let a 5-year-old freeze to death?' Vance said.... Attorney Marc Prokosch said the father is not an 'illegal alien' and has been following the law in seeking asylum. According to Prokosch, the family entered the U.S. in 2024 through a port of entry, has been following the legal process, appearing at court hearings, and does not pose a safety risk. He said they 'did everything right when they came in,' and the boy's arrest is 'inhumane and unacceptable.'" ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Mediaite transcribes JayDee's remarks here. He claims he did "a little bit [of] follow-up research" and learned that "when they went to arrest his illegal alien father, the father ran." Every story I've read about the boy's detention says that both the child and his father were detained in the driveway of their home, so it looks as if Dad didn't run very far. According to this Guardian story, the father's car engine was still running when ICE detained him. JayDee's "little bit of research" seems to have been checking in with professional liar Tricia McLaughlin. According to the Guardian, "Tricia McLaughlin, Department of Homeland Security assistant secretary, said in a statement on Wednesday night that ICE was conducting a 'targeted operation' to arrest Liam’s father, who[m] she called an 'illegal alien'. 'ICE did NOT target a child,' she said. McLaughlin also alleged the father 'fled on foot – abandoning his child.'” I don't know for certain what happened, but neither does JayDee.

Once again, we see that Trump's bad decisions are not limited to political and economic matters. : ~~~ 

~~~⭐Apoorva Mandavilli of the New York Times: “Offering a startlingly candid view into the philosophy guiding vaccine recommendations under the Trump administration, the leader of the federal panel that recommends vaccines for Americans said shots against polio and measles — and perhaps all diseases — should be optional, offered only in consultation with a clinician. Dr. Kirk Milhoan, a pediatric cardiologist who is chair of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, said that he did have 'concerns' that some children might die of measles or become paralyzed with polio as a result of a choice not to vaccinate.... In the case of an infectious disease, a personal choice to decline a vaccine may also affect others, including infants who are too young to be vaccinated or people who are immunocompromised. But a person’s right to reject a vaccine supersedes those risks, Dr. Milhoan said.... The polio and measles vaccines are widely acknowledged as staggering successes in public health, credited with preventing disability and millions of deaths worldwide.”

Michael Gold of the New York Times: “Two top House Democrats called on Attorney General Pam Bondi on Thursday to allow them to visit the minimum-security federal prison in Texas where Ghislaine Maxwell is being held and to interview the warden, citing reports they said they had received that she was receiving preferential treatment. In a letter to Ms. Bondi, Representatives Jamie Raskin of Maryland and Robert Garcia of California, the top Democrats on the Judiciary and Oversight Committees, said that more than a dozen people had come forward with whistle-blower complaints about the treatment of Ms. Maxwell, the longtime companion of Jeffrey Epstein.... The lawmakers asserted that whistle-blowers had told them that one person had been fired for reporting Ms. Maxwell’s treatment to Congress, which would be a violation of federal law.”

Indiana. Stephanie Saul of the New York Times: “Police officials in Lafayette, Ind., have arrested five people in connection with the nonfatal shootings of a prominent local judge and his wife five days ago. Officials said in court documents that the attack was part of a plot to murder the judge in order to delay the trial of one of the alleged conspirators in another case. The allegations, described in court documents released on Friday, indicate that the police also believe that the shooting of the judge, Steven P. Meyer of Tippecanoe County Superior Court, and his wife, Kimberly, was a gang-related crime. In the attack on Sunday, the police said, a man went to the door of the couple’s house in Lafayette, claiming to have lost a dog. When the judge and his wife came to the entryway of the house, the man shot them through the door, the police said. Judge Meyer, 66, who was struck in the arm, is hospitalized and recovering. Ms. Meyer was treated for a leg injury and released.”

~~~~~~~~~~ 

Petty Prince of Pity Parties disinvites PM from "peace" party: ~~~

Please let this Letter serve to represent that the Board of Peace is withdrawing its invitation to you regarding Canada’s joining, what will be, the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled, at any time. -- Donald Trump, in a social media post framed as a letter to Mark Carney ~~~ 

~~~ No Need to RSVP, Mark! Chris Cameron & Matina Stevis-Gridneff of the New York Times: Donald “Trump rescinded on Thursday his invitation for Prime Minister Mark Carney of Canada to join his 'Board of Peace,' an organization ... he has ... tried to broaden into an institution to rival the United Nations. In a high-profile speech at the World Economic Forum on Tuesday, Mr. Carney had urged leaders of smaller nations to band together to resist Mr. Trump’s America First doctrine and his efforts to dismantle the post-World War II international order. On Thursday, hours before Mr. Trump’s announcement, Mr. Carney went further, denouncing 'authoritarianism and exclusion' in a speech that appeared to be referencing the president. Though Mr. Trump did not explain why he was rescinding the invitation, Mr. Trump, who often lashes out against leaders who publicly defy him, appeared to be reacting to Mr. Carney’s candid remarks.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'm thinking Carney is not all that upset about being disinvited from the most prestigious board of kings, tin-pot dictators & repressive despots ever assembled: ~~~

~~~ Ian Austen of the New York Times: “... when [Mark] Carney returned this week from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, he was suddenly a global political star. The normally reserved audience at the annual gathering of billionaires, investors, chief executives and politicians rose in an exceptional standing ovation at the end of Mr. Carney’s rousing, 30-minute speech on Tuesday. Mr. Carney was praised for his candid assessment of what he called an irrevocable 'rupture' to the global order caused by ... [Donald] Trump, and for urging other middle powers to join Canada in charting a distinct path away from the world’s superpowers. And in sharp contrast to other world leaders who flatter Mr. Trump or keep their heads down for fear of provoking him, Mr. Carney speaks bluntly. 

“On Thursday..., Mr. Carney set out Canada’s direction in a speech in Quebec City, saying that his country 'must be a beacon — an example to a world at sea.' 'In a time of rising walls and thickening borders, we demonstrate how a country can be both open and secure, welcoming and strong, principled and powerful,' he said, speaking where his cabinet was meeting, in a fortress built by the British more than 200 years ago to fend off American invaders.”

     ~~~ Ishaan Tharoor of the Washington Post: “... for all the oxygen Trump seemed to suck up high in the mountains, he may not have had the biggest impact. That distinction belongs to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, whose speech Tuesday was widely viewed as the defining moment of the week.”

Paul Krugman: Trump may have imagined that the Europeans would cower in the face of his wrath. Instead, they humiliated him. He dropped his latest tariff threats in return for a 'framework' that gave the United States essentially nothing it didn’t already have — and left behind a Europe that is finally united in resistance to his bullying.

President* of the Earth. Marlam Kahn & Kevin Shalvey of ABC News: "... Donald Trump hosted a signing ceremony for his Board of Peace on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday, saying that it was a 'very exciting day' and that the collective would become one of the "most consequential bodies" ever created.... More than two dozen countries have so far accepted Trump's invitation to join the board, but none of the U.S.'s major European allies have yet made a commitment and some have rejected the idea. Trump was flanked on the stage in Davos by more than a dozen leaders whose countries had agreed to be signatories. He described those who were present as 'just the countries that are here.'" MB: For some reason, the photo accompanying the ABC News story looks slightly different from the one below. However, at least two faces are the same in both photos: Trump and crazy Argentine president Javier Milei. (Also linked yesterday.)

Trump signs Board of Peace charter. Thanks to RAS.

Ashleigh Fields of the Hill: “Many of the countries that signed on to join ... [Donald] Trump’s 'Board of Peace' ... are also banned from immigrant visas by the State Department. Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Egypt, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Morocco, Mongolia, Pakistan and Uzbekistan are among the 75 countries the Trump administration has deemed likely to require public assistance while living in the United States.” MB: I should have asserted above that many of “the most prestigious Board of Leaders ever assembled” were the heads of what Trump would call “shithole” countries. 

Constant Méheut of the New York Times: “President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine used a blunt speech before the world’s political and business elites on Thursday to take aim at European countries, denouncing their inability to stop Russia’s aggression and their timid response to ... [Donald] Trump’s threat to seize Greenland. Mr. Zelensky’s speech, delivered at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, was among his most scathing critiques of Europe. It was unexpected, given that the continent has become Ukraine’s most reliable ally as the Trump administration has stepped back from supporting Kyiv’s war effort. The address amounted to a call to action for a continent that Mr. Zelensky portrayed as unprepared for a world growing more dangerous by the day. He warned that Europe must unite and step up or risk being left behind in an increasingly competitive global order.”

When you think President* Whiney-Baby cannot get more absurd: ~~~  

~~~ Lucy Campbell of the Guardian: “Donald Trump has said he is expanding his defamation suit against the New York Times after an unfavorable opinion poll.... [In a post on his social media platform, h]e wrote: 'The Times Siena Poll, which is always tremendously negative to me, especially just before the Election of 2024, where I won in a Landslide, will be added to my lawsuit against The Failing New York Times. Our lawyers have demanded that they keep all Records, and how they “computed” these fake results – Not just the fact that it was heavily skewed toward Democrats. They will be held fully responsible for all of their Radical Left lies and wrongdoing!'... The latest New York Times/Siena University poll showed Trump’s approval rating slipped to 40%, three points lower than in the last survey. Fewer than a third of the people surveyed said the country was better off than it was a year ago, and 51% said Trump’s policies had made life less affordable for them.” ~~~

~~~ Donnie Keeps on Suing. Rachel Lerman & Andrew Ackerman of the Washington Post: “...  Donald Trump filed a lawsuit Thursday against JPMorgan Chase and its chief executive, Jamie Dimon, alleging the bank improperly closed his accounts in 2021 and sought to 'blacklist' him and his family from doing business with other banks. Trump is seeking at least $5 billion in damages.... Dimon initially struck a celebratory tone toward Trump after his reelection in 2024, saying bankers were “dancing in the street” after years of tougher regulation. In recent weeks, however, Dimon has publicly diverged from Trump, suggesting a more strained relationship between the two men. Dimon recently criticized Trump’s immigration policies, in a rare public rebuke by a major U.S. corporate leader, according to CNBC. Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, this week, Dimon said he disagreed with the president’s approach even as he acknowledged efforts to secure the border.” An AP story is here. The MS NOW story is here. It includes a copy of the complaint.

He Takes the Big Aspirin.* Julia Manchester of the HillDonald “Trump on Thursday addressed bruising on his hand seen at an event earlier in the day. saying he 'clipped' it on a table and attributing being easily bruised to the side effects of taking aspirin daily for his heart condition.... 'I clipped it on the table,' he [asserted], saying that he put cream on it. 'I would say take aspirin if you like your heart, but don’t take aspirin if you don’t want to have a little bruising,' the president said. 'I take the big aspirin. And when you take the big aspirin, they tell you, you bruise. The doctors said, “You don’t have to take that, sir. You are very healthy.” I said, “I’m not taking any chances,’” he said. 'That’s one of the side effects of taking aspirin.'” ~~~

     ~~~ * But it's a "Sir" story. 

Luke Broadwater & Zach Montague of the New York Times: “At its first meeting to consider ... [Donald] Trump’s planned new White House ballroom, the Commission of Fine Arts on Thursday reported it had received more than 30 letters from the public about the project. 'The truth is almost all them were in some way critical,' said Thomas Luebke, the commission’s secretary.... The members of the newly remade board — whom Mr. Trump appointed after he fired their predecessors — had their own questions and concerns, including about the size of the 1,000-person ballroom and the security of the facility. But they also made clear they believed it was their role to carry out the president’s agenda, and do so quickly.... The Commission of Fine Arts, which is overseeing the design of the president’s new ballroom plan, is one of two review panels that Mr. Trump has stacked with allies as he has pushed to construct a 90,000-square-foot building in the place of the East Wing....” ~~~

~~~ Huh. Jacob Rosen & Arden Farhi of CBS News: "A federal judge appeared skeptical of the Trump administration's claims that it has the proper authority to continue construction on the East Wing site that was demolished last year. U.S. District Judge Richard Leon heard arguments Thursday on a motion brought by the National Trust for Historic Preservation to block the ongoing construction of the East Wing until the Trump administration goes through the appropriate approval processes, which it alleges the Trump administration has ignored. Friday's [MB: ???] arguments focused primarily on two issues: whether the president can unilaterally renovate the White House and whether he can do it with private funds that were transferred to an office under his authority, rather than with funds appropriated by Congress." 

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Glenn Thrush & Alan Feuer of the New York Times: “Jack Smith, the special prosecutor who twice indicted Donald J. Trump, defended his investigation in a tense and long-awaited appearance before a House committee on Thursday — flatly accusing Mr. Trump of causing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.... His testimony represented the argument he was never allowed to deliver in court: that Mr. Trump 'engaged in criminal activity' that undermined democracy and the rule of law.... 'Our investigation revealed that Donald Trump is the person who caused Jan. 6, that it was foreseeable to him and that he sought to exploit the violence,' Mr. Smith said, sitting alone at the witness table.... The hearing posed significant risks to Mr. Smith, who has said he believes Mr. Trump and his appointees will seize on the smallest misstep to investigate, prosecute and humiliate him.... 

As if to underscore that danger, Mr. Trump took to Truth Social to go after Mr. Smith. Hopefully Attorney General Pam Bondi 'is looking at what he’s done, including some of the crooked and corrupt witnesses that he was attempting to use in his case against me,' he wrote.... Republicans [on the Committee] repeatedly accused Mr. Smith of participating in a Democratic conspiracy to destroy Mr. Trump.... Asked to comment on Mr. Trump’s threat on Truth Social during his testimony, which included a call for his disbarment..., [Mr. Smith said,] 'The statements are meant to intimidate me.... I will not be intimidated. I think these statements are also made as a warning to others what will happen if they stand up.'...

“The expansive report [Mr. Smith] wrote about the documents case remains under seal because of an order issued by Judge Aileen M. Cannon, the Trump appointee who oversaw the proceeding. Her order expires on Feb. 24, but Mr. Trump has been trying to prevent the report from seeing the light of day. On Tuesday, his lawyers asked Judge Cannon to permanently keep it under wraps, arguing that its release would 'improperly endorse' Mr. Smith’s 'unlawful investigation and prosecution' of the case and 'irreparably harm President Trump.'” NPR's report is here. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ American Oversight (December 23, 2025): “On Monday..., Judge Aileen Cannon denied American Oversight’s motion to intervene to lift the court’s January 21, 2025, gag order blocking the release of Volume II of former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on ... [Donald] Trump’s handling of classified documents.... 'After nearly a year of delay, the court acted only when it was forced to and after Donald Trump personally stepped in. Even then, the decision was structured to give him exactly what he wanted: time, leverage, and a clear roadmap for keeping this report buried,' said Chioma Chukwu, Executive Director of American Oversight.'... In November, Judge Cannon was compelled by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit’s to respond to American Oversight’s mandamus petition asking the court to vacate the gag order. The court found that Cannon’s failure to rule on our motion — which had been fully briefed since March — constituted an 'undue delay,' and gave her 60 days to fully resolve the issues....” (Also linked yesterday.)

Emily Bazelon & Rachel Poser in the New York Times Magazine: “Since [Kash] Patel’s confirmation last February, the F.B.I. has undergone a transformation that has upended its nonpartisan rules and norms, deeply rattling many of its 38,000 employees. Patel has fired agents who worked on the Trump investigations and radically changed the bureau’s mission. More than 20 percent of the F.B.I.’s work force has been assigned to immigration enforcement, pulling agents and analysts away from investigating public corruption, cybercrime, white-collar crime, drug trafficking and terrorism. Patel has also been embroiled in controversies over his use of government resources, his temperament and missteps in high-profile investigations. We interviewed 45 employees who work at the F.B.I. or who left during Trump’s second term, as well as many other current and former government officials.... Many current and former employees fear ... that the F.B.I. has become a weapon of the White House, and that the firings and the diversion of resources to immigration enforcement have left the country vulnerable to attack.”

Pooja Salhotra & Jazmine Ulloa of the New York Times: “Hundreds of businesses across Minnesota are expected to close and many people are vowing to pause everyday activities on Friday as part of a general strike against the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. As tensions mount and a sense of fear of detention by immigration agents permeates the state, vendors, labor unions and residents are set to participate in an economic blackout and gather at prayers and protests on what organizers called a 'Day of Truth and Freedom.'”

JayDee “Tries a Different Tack.Natalie Allison & Lauren Gurley of the Washington Post: “Walking out of a roundtable with immigration enforcement officials Thursday in Minneapolis..., the vice president said his goal was to help lower the temperature in a city roiled by chaos in recent weeks. 'The directive that I got from the president of the United States is “Meet these guys halfway,’” Vance said of local leaders whom he and other Trump officials have described as stonewalling Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s efforts.... The vice president’s comments were in tonal contrast with his declaration earlier this month that the officer who fatally shot 37-year-old Renée Good ... was 'protected by absolute immunity.'... He called for city and state leaders to allow police to better cooperate with federal agents to keep enforcement efforts more targeted to violent criminals, and he blamed local officials for making the situation more chaotic.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I don't think JayDee, in calling for cooperation with local officials, addressed the fact that (a) the DOJ has shut out Minnesota officials from participating in an investigation of the killing of Renee Good, or that (b) the DOJ had initiated baseless criminal investigations into prominent Minnesota officials like the governor and the mayor of Minneapolis.  

Heather Cox Richardson pulls together JayDee's attempt "to regain control of the narrative" with a number of other Trumpy developments. Too bad Richardson didn't incorporate the following story, wherein the administration tries to "regain control of the narrative" by proving "a (fake) picture is worth a thousand words." ~~~

~~~ The thing George Orwell got wrong was the year 1984. ~~~ 


~~~ Tiffany Hsu, et al., of the New York Times: “The White House posted a digitally altered image showing a demonstrator involved in interrupting a church service in Minnesota last weekend crying as she was arrested on Thursday. A previous version of the image, also posted by an official government account, showed her looking forward calmly.... The Justice Department said on Thursday morning that it had taken the demonstrator, Nekima Levy Armstrong, a lawyer, into custody, accusing her of helping to interrupt a church service in St. Paul, Minn., on Sunday.... Less than an hour after Attorney General Pam Bondi announced the arrest on X on Thursday, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posted an image of the arrest on the same social media platform. In Ms. Noem’s image, Ms. Levy Armstrong appears composed.... Roughly a half-hour after Ms. Noem sent her message, the White House posted its own version of the arrest image, in which Ms. Levy Armstrong appears to be sobbing. Her skin appears to have been darkened.” Here's the Guardian's story.

Brad Reed of Common Dreams: “US Customs and Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino on Tuesday was caught on video throwing a gas grenade at lawful protesters in Minneapolis on the same day that a court temporarily lifted restrictions on federal immigration agents’ use of force in the Twin Cities. As reported by the Minnesota Star-Tribune, Bovino hurled a gas canister at protesters who had gathered at Mueller Park in the Minneapolis neighborhood of Whittier. After Bovino threw the can, the Star-Tribune wrote, 'plumes of green and gray smoke burst over the crowd,' causing protesters and observers to flee the scene. According to NBC News’ Maggie Vespa, the attack on the protesters began shortly after Bovino and other immigration agents were denied service at a local Speedway gas station. As they exited the station, they were 'swarmed' by demonstrators, and the situation 'devolved' from there.... Immigration agents were also seen deploying chemical spray on protesters and observers. In one case, an agent was caught on video spraying a person directly in their eyes even after they had already been brought to the ground and restrained by fellow officers.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

How Screwed-up Is ICE? Andrew Egger of the Bulwark: When ICE agents detained U.S. citizen ChongLy Thao in Minneapolis this weekend — breaking down his door and escorting him half-naked into the snow -- administration officials claimed they’d been looking for a pair of sex-criminal migrants at the address. DHS plastered images of the two men they were hunting across social media with dire warnings that they remained 'at large.'... But there was one place they apparently hadn’t bothered to look: the Minnesota prison system.... Lue Moua, one of DHS’s purported targets, has been [there] since a 2024 conviction on charges including felony kidnapping.... Moua’s name, face, and criminal record are easy to find in a public database of state criminal records.... Moreover..., Moua is already under an ICE detainer — meaning ICE is already aware he is there and has requested he be placed into their custody upon his release from state prison.... It all amounts to the latest indicator that the Minneapolis ICE crusade is more of a government-run smash-and-grab operation than an orderly, tightly run enforcement process.

Jeremy Roebuck, et al., of the Washington Post: “A [magistrate] judge in Minnesota rejected federal prosecutors’ attempt to criminally charge journalist Don Lemon in relation to his presence this week during a protest at a St. Paul church, an extraordinary rebuke of a Justice Department that has drawn criticism for its forceful response to demonstrations against immigration enforcement efforts.... Lemon, a former CNN anchor now working as an independent journalist, followed the demonstrators into the church as they protested one of its pastors who also works as a local U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement official.... It is exceedingly rare for a court to refuse to sign off on a misdemeanor complaint sought by prosecutors, suggesting the judge did not believe there was probable cause to support a case against Lemon. 'The magistrate’s reported actions confirm the nature of Don’s First Amendment protected work this weekend in Minnesota as a reporter,' his attorney Abbe Lowell said in a statement.” 

Danny Hakim of the New York Times: “ In the wake of an immigration sweep in Chicago last fall that ignited protests all over the city, federal officials accused a local Latino man of offering a bounty on [Border Patrol commander Greg] Bovino’s life.... But on Thursday, a Chicago jury acquitted ... [Juan Espinoza Martinez], the latest setback for the Justice Department, which has faltered in a number of attempts to prosecute cases related to Mr. Trump’s immigration policy.... After the acquittal, Mr. Espinoza Martinez hugged his lawyers but was not released from custody. With a separate immigration case ahead, it was not clear what his fate would be.” The AP's report is here.

Here's a reminder that disregarding the Bill of Rights is an administration-wide project. It's not all on ICE Barbie & her team of swaggering sadists. ~~~  

~~~ Zach Montague of the New York Times: “Secretary of State Marco Rubio personally approved the deportation of five student activists last year after receiving memos largely describing their participation in pro-Palestinian protests and their writings about the war in Gaza, according to internal government documents unsealed by a federal judge on Thursday. The documents reveal new details about how the Trump administration decided to target the activists, who were all foreign students visible in campus protests. They had been in the United States legally but were arrested and threatened with deportation last spring. The several hundred pages were submitted as evidence in a trial held in Massachusetts in July over noncitizen students’ freedom of expression. After hearing testimony and examining the documents, Judge William G. Young, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan, ruled last year that the Trump administration had illegally targeted the students for deportation based on their speech — in particular their opposition to the Israeli government and its military operations in Gaza.... Last week [Judge Young] agreed to a request from The New York Times and other media outlets that [documents in the case] be released as a matter of public interest.”

Sheryl Stolberg of the New York Times: “The United States formally withdrew from the World Health Organization on Thursday, making good on an executive order that ... [Donald] Trump issued on his first day in office pledging to leave the international organization that coordinates global responses to public health threats. While the United States is walking away from the organization, a senior official with the Department of Health and Human Services told reporters on Thursday that the Trump administration was considering some type of narrow, limited engagement with W.H.O. global networks that track infectious diseases, including influenza.... On Thursday, the administration said that all U.S. government funding to the organization had been terminated, and that all assigned federal employees and contractors had been recalled from its Geneva headquarters and its offices worldwide.” The AP story is here.

Marie: Bobby Kennedy, Jr. brought new meaning to the term "Guinea pig" in approving this now-cancelled, horrifying "study": ~~~ 

~~~ Stephanie Nolen & Christine Jewitt of the New York Times: “The West African nation of Guinea-Bissau has suspended a controversial U.S.-funded study of the hepatitis B vaccine in infants there after an outcry from public health researchers over the ethics of the work. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention approved a $1.6 million grant for the study last month, days after the health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., lifted the agency’s longstanding recommendation to give the vaccine to all infants at birth. Although the World Health Organization also recommends giving the shot at birth, Mr. Kennedy said more research was needed about the effects of a birth dose. The study, which was to be carried out by Danish researchers, swiftly became the subject of furor in the public health world, with researchers in Africa and the United States saying that it violated key tenets of ethical science. A Trump administration health official said the study had been paused.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: IMO, this is akin to the infamous "Tuskegee Experiment" on Black men who had syphilis. Bobby Kennedy isn't just a crackpot; he's an evil crackpot. It seems that every day we learn of another atrocity that the Trump administration is carrying out in our names and with our dollars. ~~~

     ~~~ Update: Here's the NPR story, which reports that "Many public health experts call the study unethical and unnecessary, likening it to the infamous Tuskegee Experiment." So I'm in good company. 
The NPR story also reports that HHS "is proceeding as planned and the protocol is being finalized." So it ain't over till it's over. (For a while, I thought I must be getting smarter because I have so often found experts who agree with my knee-jerk reactions to one thing and another. It has since dawned on me that I'm "right" most of the time because Team Trump is so glaringly wrong -- all of the time. I'm not wiser; the government is just consistently dumber.) 

The people who risk their lives in defense of the constitution have earned the right to the press freedoms of the First Amendment. -- Erik Slavin, Stars & Stripes Editor-in-Chief ~~~

~~~ Liam Scott & Scott Nover of the Washington Post: “The Pentagon criticized the military newspaper [Stars & Stripes] as 'woke.' Now its leaders — and some members of Congress — are trying to assert the publication’s independence.... First published during the Civil War and continually published since World War II, Stars and Stripes reports on and for the U.S. military community. With about 60 newsroom staffers spread across eight countries, the paper estimates that it reaches about 1.4 million people a day across its platforms. Even though the newspaper receives some of its funding — about 35 percent to 45 percent — from the Pentagon, Congress has long affirmed the newspaper’s editorial independence.... [Sen. Richard] Blumenthal [D-Conn.] said in a statement Thursday that he’s planning to take action to further codify Stars and Stripes’s editorial independence by introducing legislation ensuring the outlet is 'safeguarded from political influence and interference.'”

Jake Spring of the Washington Post: “National Park Service staff on Thursday took down an exhibit on slavery at Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia, which had been targeted last year by ... Donald Trump in an executive order on 'restoring truth and sanity to American history.' The exhibit was at the President’s House Site, where George Washington lived as president. The informational panels discussed Washington’s ownership of enslaved people, as well as the broader history of slavery, and included details about their lives. The Park Service has been removing information on historic racism, sexism, LGBT rights, slavery and climate change since last year as it carries out Trump’s executive order.” An ABC News-Philadelphia story is here.

Catie Edmondson of the New York Times: “The House on Thursday passed a spending package for a broad swath of the government, narrowly mustering the votes to fund the Department of Homeland Security amid a Democratic revolt over spending for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The package, which also would fund the Pentagon and the health and transportation departments, rejects the deepest spending cuts that ... [Donald] Trump requested, including a 50 percent reduction to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and a 40 percent cut to the National Institutes of Health, which would instead receive a $415 million boost. It also rejects Mr. Trump’s request for a $840 million increase in funding for ICE, leaving funding for the agency roughly flat. It contains the final set of spending bills that must be enacted before next Friday in order to avoid a government shutdown. The legislation still must pass the Senate before it can be sent to Mr. Trump, but it appeared to be on track to clear Congress.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ An NBC News story is here. Politico's story is here.

Robert Jimison of the New York Times: “The House on Thursday just barely defeated a resolution that would have barred ... [Donald] Trump from taking further military action in Venezuela without congressional approval, weeks after he ordered a raid there without consulting or winning approval from lawmakers. The measure failed in an unusual tie vote of 215 to 215, with two Republicans crossing party lines in favor.... The defeat was the latest instance of Congress ceding authority to a president who has aggressively tested the bounds of his military power.” (Also linked yesterday.) The AP story is here.

Catie Edmondson of the New York Times: “The House on Thursday voted unanimously to tuck language into a spending bill that would repeal a law that created a new avenue for senators to sue the government if federal investigators gained access to their phone records without notifying them. The 427-0 vote amounted to a bipartisan rebuke of the Senate after leaders in that chamber in November slipped the legal provision into legislation to reopen the government after the nation’s longest shutdown. It allows each senator to sue for at least $500,000. The last-minute insertion of the measure into a must-pass bill late last year had infuriated Republicans and Democrats in the House — and many in the Senate. They objected in particular to the retroactive nature of the measure, which appeared aimed at ensuring that eight Republican senators whose phone records were subpoenaed by investigators examining efforts by ... [Donald] Trump to obstruct the results of the 2020 presidential election could seek personal payouts.” ~~~

     ~~~ Rachel Maddow pointed out a comical irony of this vote: House members voted to repeal the Senate phone records bonanza during an adjournment of a hearing in which some of these same House members were railing against Jack Smith for subpoenaing the records.   

David McCabe & Emmett Lindner of the New York Times: “TikTok said on Thursday that its Chinese owner, ByteDance, had struck a deal with a group of non-Chinese investors to create a new U.S. TikTok, concluding a six-year legal saga that saw the app banned by Congress and ensnared in politicking between two global superpowers. Investors including the software giant Oracle; MGX, an Emirati investment firm; and Silver Lake, another investment firm, will own more than 80 percent of the new venture. That list also includes the personal investment entity for Michael Dell, the tech billionaire behind Dell Technologies, and other firms, TikTok said. Adam Presser, TikTok’s former head of operations, will be the chief executive for the U.S. TikTok.... 

“Since 2019, universities, several branches of the U.S. military, the vast majority of the House of Representatives and both ... [Donald] Trump and President Joseph R. Biden Jr. had tried to ban or block TikTok, with unanimous support from the Supreme Court.... The driving force behind the deal is a federal law, passed in 2024 and upheld by the Supreme Court, that would have banned the app if it did not separate itself from ByteDance by early 2025.... But Mr. Trump formally delayed the enforcement of the law several times after he took office again last January, as he pushed the company to reach a deal for new ownership.” ~~~

     ~~~ Monica Alba, et al., of NBC News: "The United States and China have signed off on a deal that hands control of TikTok’s U.S. operations to a group of investors backed by ... Donald Trump." 

~~~~~~~~~~ 

Iowa. Frances Vinall of the Washington Post: “A former Iowa schools superintendent on Thursday admitted to a court that he had misrepresented himself as a U.S. citizen on an employment form, in a case that shocked the Des Moines school district after his arrest by Immigration and Customs Enforcement last year. Court filings show Ian Roberts pleaded guilty to falsely claiming to be a U.S. citizen in his employment documentation in June 2023, when he was hired by the Des Moines School Board, and to possessing firearms while he was in the country illegally. A sentencing hearing is set for May 29.”

Minnesota Gubernatorial Race. Lisa Lereret al., of the New York Times: “Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota filed paperwork on Thursday to run for governor of her home state, signaling her likely entrance to a contest that has shifted rapidly since Gov. Tim Walz made the stunning decision to end his campaign for a third term. The state’s race for governor has been upended by ... [Donald] Trump’s anti-immigration raids, the fatal shooting of a woman in Minneapolis by a federal agent and widespread protests against the administration’s crackdown. The Justice Department has also begun investigations into at least five Democratic officials in the state, including Mr. Walz.”

Texas. Neil Vigdor of the New York Times: In 1954, “an all-white jury convicted Tommy Lee Walker of rape and murder, relying on inadmissible evidence and a coerced confession that he immediately recanted, county officials said.... [Walker] was sent to the electric chair in 1956.... On Wednesday, the Dallas County Commissioners Court exonerated Mr. Walker, determining that the prosecutor in the case and the police had steered his conviction ... during the Jim Crow era, and violated his constitutional rights. ”

January 22, 2026

Marlam Kahn & Kevin Shalvey of ABC News: "... Donald Trump hosted a signing ceremony for his Board of Peace on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos on Thursday, saying that it was a 'very exciting day' and that the collective would become one of the "most consequential bodies" ever created.... More than two dozen countries have so far accepted Trump's invitation to join the board, but none of the U.S.'s major European allies have yet made a commitment and some have rejected the idea. Trump was flanked on the stage in Davos by more than a dozen leaders whose countries had agreed to be signatories. He described those who were present as 'just the countries that are here.'" MB: For some reason, the photo accompanying the ABC News story looks slightly different from the one below. However, at least two faces are the same in both photos: Trump and crazy Argentine president Javier Milei.

Trump signs Board of Peace charter. Thanks to RAS.

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Glenn Thrush & Alan Feuer
of the New York Times: “Jack Smith, the special prosecutor who twice indicted Donald J. Trump, defended his investigation in a tense and long-awaited appearance before a House committee on Thursday — flatly accusing Mr. Trump of causing the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.... His testimony represented the argument he was never allowed to deliver in court: that Mr. Trump 'engaged in criminal activity' that undermined democracy and the rule of law.... 'Our investigation revealed that Donald Trump is the person who caused Jan. 6, that it was foreseeable to him and that he sought to exploit the violence,' Mr. Smith said, sitting alone at the witness table.... The hearing posed significant risks to Mr. Smith, who has said he believes Mr. Trump and his appointees will seize on the smallest misstep to investigate, prosecute and humiliate him.... 

As if to underscore that danger, Mr. Trump took to Truth Social to go after Mr. Smith. Hopefully Attorney General Pam Bondi 'is looking at what he’s done, including some of the crooked and corrupt witnesses that he was attempting to use in his case against me,' he wrote.... Republicans [on the Committee] repeatedly accused Mr. Smith of participating in a Democratic conspiracy to destroy Mr. Trump.... Asked to comment on Mr. Trump’s threat on Truth Social during his testimony, which included a call for his disbarment..., [Mr. Smith said,] 'The statements are meant to intimidate me.... I will not be intimidated. I think these statements are also made as a warning to others what will happen if they stand up.'...

“The expansive report [Mr. Smith] wrote about the documents case remains under seal because of an order issued by Judge Aileen M. Cannon, the Trump appointee who oversaw the proceeding. Her order expires on Feb. 24, but Mr. Trump has been trying to prevent the report from seeing the light of day. On Tuesday, his lawyers asked Judge Cannon to permanently keep it under wraps, arguing that its release would 'improperly endorse' Mr. Smith’s 'unlawful investigation and prosecution' of the case and 'irreparably harm President Trump.'” NPR's report is here. ~~~

     ~~~ American Oversight (December 23, 2025): “On Monday..., Judge Aileen Cannon denied American Oversight’s motion to intervene to lift the court’s January 21, 2025, gag order blocking the release of Volume II of former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on ... [Donald] Trump’s handling of classified documents.... 'After nearly a year of delay, the court acted only when it was forced to and after Donald Trump personally stepped in. Even then, the decision was structured to give him exactly what he wanted: time, leverage, and a clear roadmap for keeping this report buried,' said Chioma Chukwu, Executive Director of American Oversight.'... In November, Judge Cannon was compelled by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit’s to respond to American Oversight’s mandamus petition asking the court to vacate the gag order. The court found that Cannon’s failure to rule on our motion — which had been fully briefed since March — constituted an 'undue delay,' and gave her 60 days to fully resolve the issues....”

Brad Reed of Common Dreams: “US Customs and Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino on Tuesday was caught on video throwing a gas grenade at lawful protesters in Minneapolis on the same day that a court temporarily lifted restrictions on federal immigration agents’ use of force in the Twin Cities. As reported by the Minnesota Star-Tribune, Bovino hurled a gas canister at protesters who had gathered at Mueller Park in the Minneapolis neighborhood of Whittier. After Bovino threw the can, the Star-Tribune wrote, 'plumes of green and gray smoke burst over the crowd,' causing protesters and observers to flee the scene. According to NBC News’ Maggie Vespa, the attack on the protesters began shortly after Bovino and other immigration agents were denied service at a local Speedway gas station. As they exited the station, they were 'swarmed' by demonstrators, and the situation 'devolved' from there.... Immigration agents were also seen deploying chemical spray on protesters and observers. In one case, an agent was caught on video spraying a person directly in their eyes even after they had already been brought to the ground and restrained by fellow officers.” ~~~

Catie Edmondson of the New York Times: “The House on Thursday passed a spending package for a broad swath of the government, narrowly mustering the votes to fund the Department of Homeland Security amid a Democratic revolt over spending for Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The package, which also would fund the Pentagon and the health and transportation departments, rejects the deepest spending cuts that President Trump requested, including a 50 percent reduction to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and a 40 percent cut to the National Institutes of Health, which would instead receive a $415 million boost. It also rejects Mr. Trump’s request for a $840 million increase in funding for ICE, leaving funding for the agency roughly flat. It contains the final set of spending bills that must be enacted before next Friday in order to avoid a government shutdown. The legislation still must pass the Senate before it can be sent to Mr. Trump, but it appeared to be on track to clear Congress.”

Robert Jimison of the New York Times: “The House on Thursday just barely defeated a resolution that would have barred ... [Donald] Trump from taking further military action in Venezuela without congressional approval, weeks after he ordered a raid there without consulting or winning approval from lawmakers. The measure failed in an unusual tie vote of 215 to 215, with two Republicans crossing party lines in favor.... The defeat was the latest instance of Congress ceding authority to a president who has aggressively tested the bounds of his military power.”

~~~~~~~~~~ 

Here's a New York Times liveblog of stuff that's happening today, including at Davos and at the House committee hearing featuring Jack Smith.  

Jeremy Roebuck of the Washington Post: “Former special counsel Jack Smith is expected to return to Capitol Hill on Thursday to offer his first public testimony defending his efforts to prosecute Donald Trump. The scheduled hearing, before the House Judiciary Committee, is unlikely to deliver many new insights into Smith’s now-shuttered investigations into how the then-former president handled classified documents or his alleged efforts to subvert the results of the 2020 election. Smith fielded lawmakers’ questions about those probes during a closed-door deposition last month, and House Republicans have since released a full transcript of that eight-hour grilling. But Thursday’s proceeding will offer Smith the opportunity to defend his work on his largest public stage to date amid Republican efforts to reframe it as a witch hunt tainted by partisan politics.” The AP report is here. ~~~ 

     ~~~ Marie: I'll probably be away for much of the big show. It will be televised on C-SPAN2 at 10 am ET. I expect some of the major newspapers will carry it live, and you probably can find the hearing live on YouTube, too. I have to go out for a while now (at 7:20 am ET), and I'm not sure when I'll be back.

~~~~~~~~~~ 

Today's New York Times liveblog of what-all is going on in Davos is here

By Lalo Alcatraz.

Wednesday was TACO Grande Day.

Zolan Kanno-Youngs of the New York Times: “As ... [Donald] Trump threatened to upend some of the central pillars of the Western order on Wednesday, during a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, some in the crowd of elites sat speechless. Others groaned. A few gasped.... The group had weathered insult after insult from Mr. Trump about their approach to trade, the environment and immigration.... European leaders sat stunned as Mr. Trump insulted their governments and questioned their reliability as allies. Others grimaced as Mr. Trump claimed the European nations and Canada owed the United States a debt.... Mr. Trump suggested the European allies owed him Greenland. He said that without the United States’ efforts in World War II, 'you’d all be speaking German and a little Japanese perhaps,' prompting moans from the crowd.  Alexander Stubb, the Finnish president and a key power broker in Europe, stood up ashen-faced at the end of the speech that took aim at people like him: the leaders of the Western political and economic elite.... Mr. Trump transformed the forum into the setting of a dramatic rupture between the West’s leading player and its increasingly distant allies.” ~~~

     (~~~ Marie: Apparently Trump didn't realize he was in Switzerland, where about 65% of the population does speak German. Or maybe he knew where he was and thought folks spoke Swiss.) ~~~

     ~~~ Matthew Choi & Dan Merica of the Washington Post: “Trump accused Denmark of ingratitude for rejecting his demands for Greenland after the United States helped defend it during World War II. He said that without the U.S., the forum’s host nation of Switzerland 'wouldn’t have a country” and that the U.S. was picking up Europe’s slack in defending Ukraine. He warned Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney not to antagonize him because he said 'Canada lives because of the United States. Remember that, Mark, the next time you make your statements.' Trump openly cast doubt that NATO would ever come to the defense of the U.S., even though the U.S. became the only NATO member to invoke its collective defense agreement after 9/11, leading thousands of NATO troops to fight in Afghanistan.... Trump issued a veiled warning to Denmark if it continued to refuse ceding Greenland: 'You can say yes, and we will be very appreciative. Or you can say no, and we will remember.'”

     ~~~ Emmanuel Felton & Cleve Wootson of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump took his crusade against Somali migrants to the world stage on Wednesday, questioning the intelligence of a community that has become a frequent target of his tirades. Speaking before foreign dignitaries and corporate executives at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, the president alluded to an ongoing fraud scandal in Minnesota involving dozens of Somali residents, continuing a pattern of attacks against African migrants that has spanned both of his administrations. 'Can you believe that? Somalia — they turned out to be higher-IQ than we thought,' Trump said. 'I always say these are low-IQ people. How do they go into Minnesota and steal all that money?'” MB: I heard on the teevee yesterday that Trump also knocked Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), a Somali immigrant, during his talk. Most of the people in the room probably never heard of her and couldn't imagine why Trump would raise one of his domestic political squabbles at an international fatcats forum.

Heather Cox RichardsonMore than anything..., the speech demonstrated his mental unfitness for his position. Tom Nichols of The Atlantic wrote: 'No one can be watching this Davos speech and reach any conclusion but that the President of the United States is mentally disturbed and that something is deeply wrong with him. This is both embarrassing and extremely dangerous.'” 

Eli Stokols & Diana Nerozzi of Politico: “After two weeks of escalating threats toward Europe..., Donald Trump blinked on Wednesday, backing away from the unthinkable brink of a potential war against a NATO ally during a speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Trump’s vow not to use military force to seize Greenland from Denmark eased European fears about a worst-case scenario and prompted a rebound on Wall Street. And his declaration hours later after meeting with NATO’s leader that he may back off of his tariff threat having secured the 'framework' of an agreement over Greenland continued a day of backpedaling.... But his continued heckling of allies as 'ungrateful' for not simply giving the U.S. 'ownership and title' of what he said was just 'a piece of ice' did little to reverse a deepening sentiment among NATO leaders and other longtime allies that they can no longer consider the United States — for 80 years the linchpin of the transatlantic alliance — a reliable ally....” ~~~

     ~~~ This Politico story covers Trump's statement that he won't use force to acquire Greenland. Marie: However, in clips I heard, Trump repeatedly confused Greenland with Iceland, so who knows? (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Oh, wait, RAS has clarified everything. (It's all about Fat Elvis!): ~~~

     ~~~ Wait, Wait. The Gaslight Queen Says We're All Mistaken. Isaac Schorr of Mediaite: “White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt lashed out at NewsNation’s Libbey Dean on Wednesday while brazenly denying that ... Donald Trump referred to Greenland as Iceland during his speech in Davos, Switzerland that morning. As Mediaite previously reported, Trump erroneously identified the landmass that he wants the United States to acquire as Iceland several times during his address[.]... 'No he didn’t, Libby [sic]. His written remarks referred to Greenland as a “piece of ice” because that’s what it is,' fired back the press secretary on X. 'You’re the only one mixing anything up here.'” Thanks to RAS for the lead. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~ 

     ~~~ Marie: MS NOW counted 4 times Trump said "Iceland" when the context of his remark had everything to do with Greenland and nothing to do with Iceland.

Aamer Madhani, et al., of the AP: “Investors appeared to have gotten through to ... Donald Trump about the risk posed by his designs for Greenland with a message he wasn’t hearing from European leaders: Threatening allies with tariffs and land seizure isn’t exactly the type of policy that generates confidence in the global economy. Trump on Wednesday backed off his threat to slap punishing tariffs on eight European allies for opposing his insistence on acquiring Greenland from longtime ally Denmark after the plan spooked Wall Street by sparking serious talk within NATO about a fundamental rupture to the transatlantic military alliance that’s been a linchpin of post-World War II security.”

He Has a Concept of a Framework of a Deal. Emily Davies, et al., of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump said Wednesday that he had reached the 'framework' of a deal on Greenland, backing away from his earlier demands to acquire the Danish territory after days of escalating threats and once-unthinkable worries about the most powerful member of NATO turning its weapons against one of its oldest allies. Declaring that he would scrap planned tariffs on Europe, Trump said talks were underway with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte about bolstering security in the Arctic. The announcement, made on Trump’s social media account, was the latest head-spinning twist in his effort to seize Greenland from Denmark despite Danish and Greenlandic objections that the island is not for sale. And it marked a retreat from a push to claim another nation’s territory as his own, which had unsettled markets as the European Union readied economic retaliation. The president offered few details, but the deal was likely to fall far short of the full sovereign possession that he previously demanded. Denmark’s top diplomat said that the United States would not 'own' the island, and Rutte is not empowered to negotiate the transfer of territory from one NATO member to another.” ~~~

     ~~~ Steven Erlanger & Jeanna Smialek of the New York Times: “But neither [Mr. Trump] nor NATO provided any details of what that framework might look like, and there is no guarantee that such a deal will be finished. A member of the Danish parliament from Greenland called the deal into question in a social media post, saying it had created /total confusion.' But one thing was clear. Mr. Trump’s comments throughout the day underscored just how little the United States and Europe — long the closest of allies — now have in common.... European leaders, many of them shocked by Mr. Trump’s threats to take over the sovereign territory of an E.U. member and NATO ally, must still come together on what they might or should do if Mr. Trump changes his position again — and about the trans-Atlantic relationship more broadly. On Thursday evening, leaders from across the 27-nation European Union will gather in Brussels to discuss the perilous state of Europe’s relationship with the United States.” 

Sarah Fortinsky of the Hill: “NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said early Thursday that the military alliance will need to increase its security in the Arctic under ... [Donald] Trump’s plan for Greenland. 'When it comes to the protection of the Arctic, with a priority on Greenland, we have to spend more energy, more time, more focus on this because we know the sea lanes are opening up,' he said in an interview with Reuters on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Rutte added that Denmark is 'completely open' to an increased U.S. footprint, though he said that prospect was not discussed.” 

AND the Winner Is ... China! Peter Goodman of the New York Times: “In a long, rambling address that was by turns bombastic, aggrieved and self-congratulatory..., [Donald] Trump pronounced last rites on American leadership of the liberal democratic order forged by the United States and its allies after World War II. Mr. Trump used a keynote speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday — a pilgrimage site for adherents of globalization — to assert that the United States was done offering its markets and its military protection to European allies he derided as freeloaders. And he vowed to advance his trade war. He characterized tariffs as the price of admission to a land of 300 million consumers. 'The United States is keeping the whole world afloat,' Mr. Trump said. 'Everybody took advantage of the United States.' By evening, Mr. Trump had flip-flopped on Greenland. He said in a social media post that he would no longer use tariffs to try to wrest control of the Danish territory, at least while discussions between his top aides and Europeans carried forth. The announcement spared the sovereignty of the island, but there was no taking back the significance of Mr. Trump’s attack on the global economic order just hours earlier.... 

“In the near decade since [Xi Jinping spoke at Davos in 2016], the sense has only been enhanced that China is — at least rhetorically — invested in economic values that Mr. Trump has renounced: engagement in multilateral institutions to advance its causes, faith in the wealth-enhancing powers of global trade and recognition that no country is large enough or powerful enough to go it alone.” MB: Do read to the end. Trump's misogynistic rant yesterday against the leader of the host country, which I hadn't seen reported elsewhere, is the icing on the cake.”

Hugh Leask of CNBC: "European lawmakers on Wednesday suspended the approval of the trade deal that the European Union and U.S. agreed in July. In a statement Wednesday, European Parliament member Bernd Lange, and INTA chair on EU-US trade relations, said the recent plans by ... Donald Trump to impose tariffs of between 10% and 25% on European nations go against the terms of the trade pact. Referring to Trump’s address at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, Lange said: 'I guess he didn’t revise his position. He wants to have Greenland as part of the United States as quick as possible.' In his speech, the president called for 'immediate negotiations' on the acquisition of the Arctic territory." MB: Hours later, the TACO King did back off his threat to impose additional tariffs on countries opposed to his seizure of Greenland, BUT he also threatened a new 200% tariff of French wine for France's refusal to join his Board of Peas. He's a lunatic.

Paul Krugman: "On Tuesday Mark Carney, Canada’s Prime Minister, gave a remarkable speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos. In effect he announced, calmly and lucidly, that Canada is filing for divorce from the Pax Americana[.]... And he urged other nations — implicitly, although he didn’t say it in so many words, the nations of Europe in particular — to join Canada in a new alliance of democracies no longer willing to take orders from an abusive hegemon[.]... It was a brave stand to take.... But democracies can no longer maintain close ties with the U.S. The day after Carney spoke, Donald Trump showed why."

Board of Peas.
Mikhail Klimentov, et al., of the Washington Post: “... Donald Trump’s invitations for world leaders to join his so-called Board of Peace have prompted a range of responses, from immediate displays of willingness to hedging, wait-and-see statements from bewildered officials seeking more time to deliberate over the particulars. In Hungary, Belarus and Uzbekistan, leaders rushed to accept the president’s invitation. Countries as disparate as Canada, Russia and China were among the many that equivocated, citing a need to study the proposal. France, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Slovenia declined to participate in the board as it is currently formulated — eliciting a furious reaction from Trump, who threatened to impose punitive 200 percent tariffs against French wine.... More than 50 countries are known to have been contacted by the White House, either through statements made by Trump or officials representing recipient countries. A full tally of countries solicited for a seat on the board was not made public.”

Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times: “In days and weeks before he resigned as president, Richard Nixon came unglued.... [Donald] Trump has reached those depths with three years left on the clock.... [Trump's Greenland gambit]  is nothing less than madness. On Sunday night, we learned that it stemmed from delusion as well. In a message to Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store of Norway, the president explained that he wanted Greenland because Norway would not give him the Nobel Peace Prize.... The letter is an astonishing glimpse into the mind of a man who rejects the core duty of his office, faithful representation of the American people. The only thing he cares about — the only thing that motivates him — is the immediate satisfaction of his every impulse.... His letter to the prime minister ... shows that [Trump] is essentially unable to serve as president of the United States, that he is as temperamentally and psychologically unable to engage with the practical as he is the symbolic, and that he has totally collapsed the distinction between his interests and those of the country, if he even recognized them in the first place.”

Marie: Not content to threaten to conquer a territory of Denmark, our Treasury Secretary -- who is often held up as "the adult in the room" -- thought it would be prudent to flat-out insult Denmark. The arrogance of these people is jaw-dropping. ~~~ 

     ~~~ Tasmin Lockwood of CNBC: “'Denmark’s investment in U.S. Treasury bonds, like Denmark itself, is irrelevant,' U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told reporters Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. The 'sell America' trade was in full swing Tuesday after ... Donald Trump and European leaders escalated tensions over Greenland. U.S. stocks and bond prices tumbled, sending yields spiking. It comes as Trump’s threats to impose 10% tariffs on eight European countries as part of his push to take over Greenland spooked markets. The levies would come into force on Feb. 1, Trump said, and later rise to 25%.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Brianna Tucker & Maeve Reston of the Washington Post: “California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) was denied entry to a U.S.-designated venue at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday following pressure from the White House, his office said. Newsom had been invited more than a week ago to participate in a fireside chat at the USA House, the official U.S. pavilion, which also hosted ... Donald Trump for a speech earlier Wednesday.... A USA House official contacted the governor’s office Wednesday afternoon, shortly before the event was set to begin, and said they were canceling [the] event[, sponsored by Fortune], Newsom’s office said, backing up its account with screenshots of its communication with the event organizers. Newsom’s office said it was told his presence would not 'align with their afternoon programming.' The governor’s office said USA House offered him the option to attend a 'nightcap reception' instead, which he declined.... USA House['s] ...  webpage says the venue 'does not represent the U.S. government and does not organize official government programming.'...”

Hamed Aleaziz of the New York Times: “The Trump administration this week started arresting immigrants in Maine as part of a new federal operation targeting the state, the Department of Homeland Security said on Wednesday. Two U.S. officials said the operation was intended to target immigrants from Somalia, along with other immigrants. People from countries including Sudan, Guatemala and Ethiopia were swept up on the first day of the operations, according to a department statement.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Max Rego of the Hill: “The Trump administration has surged federal immigration enforcement to Maine, with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) saying that 50 people have been arrested so far by immigration officers.” (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Here's something disgusting. ICE is calling their Maine ops "Operation Catch of the Day," to further dehumanize the people of color they are targeting. They're just fish and ICE is going to have them for lunch. 

Andrew Jeong of the Washington Post: “Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Minnesota have detained at least four children from the same school district this month, including a 5-year-old boy, school officials in a Minneapolis suburb said Wednesday. The events have inflamed tensions between residents and ICE officers.... The Trump administration has sought to justify the presence of ICE agents by saying that the officers are detaining immigrants convicted of violent crimes. 'Why detain a 5-year-old? Zena Stenvik, the superintendent of the Columbia Heights Public Schools district, located just north of Minneapolis, said at a news conference. 'You cannot tell me that this child is going to be classified as a violent criminal.'... The family’s lawyer [said the 5-year-old and his father, both of whom were detained and removed to San Antonio, Texas,] are not U.S. citizens but 'have been following the legal process perfectly, from presenting themselves at the border to applying for asylum and waiting for the process to go through.'...” ~~~

     ~~~ A Minnesota Public Radio story is here. The story includes a few pictures of the 5-year-old: definitely a scary, hardened criminal. In two of the photos, he is disguised as a killer rabbit -- super-menacing! 

U.S. Appeals Court Rules Against Constitution. Maya Yang of the Guardian: “An appeals court has temporarily lifted restrictions from a federal judge in Minnesota that blocked ICE agents from pepper-spraying and arresting peaceful protesters. In a victory for the Trump administration, the eighth US circuit court of appeals on Wednesday granted the justice department’s request for an administrative stay of a preliminary injunction issued last Friday by Judge Katherine Menendez. Menendez’s preliminary injunction would have prohibited ICE agents from retaliating against peaceful protesters, arresting or detaining people who are participating in peaceful protests, using pepper spray or similar non-lethal munitions and crowd dispersal tools, as well as stopping or detaining drivers without reasonable cause. When Menendez imposed the restrictions, she ruled that federal immigration agents’ actions had a 'chilling effect' on protesters’ first amendment rights.”

Marie: One by one, ICE is shredding the Bill of Rights. We already know they make a mockery of the First Amendment rights to free speech, freedom of assembly and freedom to petition the government. They routinely scrap the Sixth Amendment, which guarantees assistance of counsel. And now we are learning that ICE agents have been given instructions from on high to ignore the Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. Now that Donald & Drunk Pete are making plans to deploy the military to U.S. cities, are we going to have to start quartering soldiers, too? ~~~

~~~ Frances Vinall of the Washington Post: “A memo allegedly signed by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement acting director [Todd M. Lyons] in May instructs agents and officers that they can enter a person’s home to arrest them without a judicial warrant. The memo was included in a disclosure to senators by Whistleblower Aid, a nonprofit legal organization, based on information provided by two of their clients, government employees who are not named in the document. It requests that lawmakers investigate its claims....

“The memo ... tells personnel that they only require a Form I-205 to force entry into a private residence. A Form I-205 is signed by an immigration enforcement official and authorizes an arrest following a final order of removal, which is typically issued by an immigration judge.... Immigration judges are Department of Justice employees who fall under the executive, not judicial, branch. They have the power to authorize deportations but cannot issue search warrants or similar judicial orders.... The memo instructs ICE officers and agents to 'use only a necessary and reasonable amount of force' to enter the home of someone subject to a removal order if they are not allowed in.... David Kligerman ... of Whistleblower Aid, said the instructions in the memo appeared to violate the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures.” The AP story, which broke the news, is here.

Pooja Salhotra of the New York Times: “A Cuban immigrant’s death in an El Paso detention center this month was ruled a homicide, according to an autopsy report released Wednesday by the county medical examiner’s office. The detainee, Geraldo Lunas Campos, 55, became unresponsive while he was physically restrained by law enforcement on Jan. 3 at the Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility called Camp East Montana, the report said. Emergency medical workers tried to resuscitate him, but he was pronounced dead at the scene. The autopsy listed the cause of death as 'asphyxia due to neck and torso compression.' The report also described injuries Mr. Lunas Campos had sustained to his head and neck, including burst blood vessels in the front and side of the neck, as well as on his eyelids.... Mr. Lunas Campos’s ... family has asserted that he was killed by the facility’s guards, citing a witness who said he saw guards choking Mr. Lunas Campos to death. The family is preparing a wrongful-death lawsuit, according to their lawyer....”An AP report is here.

Jim Rutenberg of the New York Times: “The Trump administration is opening a new front against late-night comedy, announcing plans to enforce long-dormant rules on appearances by political candidates on network talk shows. Under new guidance released on Wednesday, the Federal Communications Commission warned that entertainment-oriented talk shows carried on local television stations were required to offer candidates vying for the same office equal airtime. The guidance was clearly aimed at the late-night hosts who frequently anger ... [Donald] Trump — Jimmy Kimmel of ABC, Stephen Colbert of CBS and Seth Meyers of NBC — and have in turn drawn scrutiny from the F.C.C. chairman, Brendan Carr. But it would also cover daytime talk shows including another Trump target, 'The View.'... It is in keeping with Mr. Carr’s yearlong campaign to use old and largely unenforced media regulations, known as the 'public interest standard,' to crack down on the major networks for perceived bias.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: As Trump says, we'll see what happens. The late-nite stars have two things going for them that Carr doesn't: a fan base and a sense of humor. But I suppose it would be fun to listen to Colbert tearing JayDee or Little Marco to shreds. Just last night, Kimmel started his monologue with couch jokes about JayDee. ("... The only birth control JayDee Vance uses is a pull-out couch.")

Adam Liptak & Colby Smith of the New York Times: “After two hours of lively arguments on Wednesday, the Supreme Court seemed likely to rule narrowly and provisionally in favor of Lisa D. Cook, the Federal Reserve governor whom ... [Donald] Trump has sought to fire based on an accusation of mortgage fraud. Some justices voiced reluctance to imperil the independence of the Federal Reserve Board. Others said the alleged fraud, which Ms. Cook has denied, did not appear grave enough to satisfy the law governing the Fed, which allows the president to remove officials only 'for cause.' Ms. Cook has not been charged with a crime. The court is likely to return the case to the lower courts for further proceedings, including a fuller exploration of the facts. A separate question for the justices is whether Ms. Cook should keep her job in the meantime. On that, the majority seems to be leaning toward leaving her in place while the case proceeds. Here are four key takeaways from the arguments.” (Also linked yesterday.) 

Perry Stein of the Washington Post: “Government officials may not examine electronic devices seized from a Washington Post reporter until litigation stemming from the search of her home is settled, a federal judge in Virginia ruled Wednesday. The ruling from U.S. Magistrate Judge William B. Porter was issued hours after The Post demanded in a court filing that federal law enforcement officials return the electronic devices the government seized from staff reporter Hannah Natanson’s home last week. The extraordinary search 'flouts the First Amendment and ignores federal statutory safeguards for journalists,' The Post told the court.” Politico's report is here. MB: Aw, c'mon. You know the feds copied everything to their own drives within hours of taking possession of Natanson's devices a week ago. So technically, they won't be violating the judge's order by poring over documents that are now on their own devices.

Finally, somebody is taking Lindsey Halligan's side, and it's not Pam Blondie who is just pretending to be in Lindsey's corner because that's what Donald Dementia wants: ~~~

~~~ Evan Hurst of Wonkette: “Lindsey Halligan has 'quit' her non-job as non-US attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia IN A HUFF, and Pam Bondi is IN A HUFF about it, and Halligan will now have to go cosplay at another job she’s wildly unqualified for, like maybe junior spaceman or rocket scientist cowboy.” Thanks, Evan!

Benjamin Weiser of the New York Times: “A federal judge on Wednesday denied a request by two members of Congress that would allow them to seek an independent monitor to ensure that the Justice Department follows a law requiring it to release its files on Jeffrey Epstein. The judge, Paul A. Engelmayer of Federal District Court in Manhattan, ruled that he did not have the authority to supervise the Justice Department’s compliance with the law, and therefore could not grant the request by the two representatives — Thomas Massie, Republican of Kentucky, and Ro Khanna, Democrat of California.... In turning down the request by Mr. Massie and Mr. Khanna, the judge said the questions raised by the representatives and the victims were 'undeniably important and timely.... They raise legitimate concerns about whether D.O.J. is faithfully complying with federal law,' the judge wrote. Judge Engelmayer noted that the representatives could initiate a separate lawsuit that would request the appointment of a monitor, and they could use 'the tools available to Congress' to seek oversight of the Justice Department’s compliance.” (Also linked yesterday.)

Riley Beggin & Marianna Sotomayor of the Washington Post: “House Democrats plan to vote against a negotiated funding bill for the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday to protest Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s aggressive actions against U.S. citizens in Minneapolis and other cities.... House Democrats were initially poised to support the DHS funding bill because congressional appropriators worked in a bipartisan manner to cobble together the dozen individual pieces of spending legislation necessary to pass before the Jan. 30 deadline to fund the government and prevent another shutdown. But [Renee] Good’s death incensed many Democrats and became a red line for the caucus, forcing Republican leaders to delay the measure’s consideration and put the bill on the floor for a stand-alone vote.”

Emily Brooks & Sarah Davis of the Hill: “The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Wednesday advanced resolutions to hold former President Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in contempt of Congress over their refusal to appear for depositions after being subpoenaed in the panel’s investigation into the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The panel voted 34-8 to advance the resolution holding Bill Clinton in contempt and 28-15 on the measure holding Hillary Clinton in contempt.... Ranking member Robert Garcia (D-Calif.) and other Democrats, meanwhile, sought to turn attention back to the Department of Justice (DOJ) for its delay in releasing information related to the Epstein investigation as required by law.” (Also linked yesterday.) The New York Times story is here.

Glorifying the Brady Bunch. Jessica Grose of the New York Times: “In the very first paragraph of the Heritage Foundation’s lengthy new policy paper, 'Saving America by Saving the Family,' the authors go all the way back to 1776 for inspiration.... The Heritage Foundation — the think tank behind Project 2025, which has had an outsize influence on executive branch policy in the second Trump administration — seems to want to take a time machine back to when women were financially dependent on men and gay marriage was not legal, but the authors can’t decide exactly how far back they want to go.... The bulk of the paper is about ways to whittle down government support for anybody who isn’t part of a traditional married family, ideally with a male breadwinner.”

~~~~~~~~~~ 

New York. Patrick Marley of the Washington Post: “A New York judge ordered state officials Wednesday to redraw the congressional district held by Republican Rep. Nicole Malliotakis, handing Democrats a likely victory amid a nationwide political brawl over congressional lines. State Judge Jeffrey H. Pearlman in an 18-page decision concluded Malliotakis’s Staten Island-based district violates a provision of the state constitution that bars the abridgment of voting rights for racial minorities. He ordered the state’s redistricting commission to draw new lines by Feb. 6. An appeal is expected, and Malliotakis said she is confident the existing lines will ultimately be upheld.... A group of New York voters sued in October over Malliotakis’s district to argue it violates a 2024 amendment to the state constitution. Pearlman on Wednesday agreed with them....”

Texas. Edgar Sandoval of the New York Times: “More than three years after a gunman massacred 21 people at Uvalde’s Robb Elementary in one of the worst school shootings in U.S. history, a former school police officer was found not guilty of abandoning or endangering children. Adrian Gonzales, the first officer to arrive at the school, was facing 29 counts.... The verdict delivered a devastating blow to families of the victims and survivors who have clamored for accountability for the delayed police response on May 24, 2022. During the three-week trial, prosecutors argued that Mr. Gonzales, 52, failed to stop the gunman despite a witness alerting him to his whereabouts moments before the assailant stormed two connected classrooms. Defense lawyers persuaded the jury that Mr. Gonzales had done the best he could with the information he had and that at least three other officers had arrived seconds later and also failed to stop the gunman. They also presented evidence that Mr. Gonzales had rushed into the building minutes after arriving, but retreated with the other officers after shooting began.”