Monday PM ~ TheFrontPageCover

TheFrontPageCover
~ Featuring ~
Bill Bradley, Call Your Bookie 
by Judge Andrew Napolitano  
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Jeff Sessions Is Caught In An FBI 
Cover Up That Will Leave You Speechless 
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{ americanpatriotdaily.com } “GOP Reps. Mark Meadows of North Carolina, Jim Jordan of Ohio and Ron DeSantis of Florida sent a letter to the president Wednesday... asking for him to use his authority to “instruct Attorney General Jeff Sessions to immediately produce all documents” related to House Republicans’ investigation into “prosecutorial and investigatorial decisions” made the DOJ and FBI made in 2016 and 2017. “As a separate and equal branch of government, we have a constitutional right to these documents,” the lawmakers wrote. “The Department of Justice has obstructed Congressional oversight by refusing to supply necessary and relevant documents.” The congressmen note that Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein told Congress in May 2017 that special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation should not impede ongoing congressional investigations...   http://www.americanpatriotdaily.com/uncategorized/jeff-sessions-is-caught-in-an-fbi-cover-up-that-will-leave-you-speechless/ 
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A new letter from Grassley to Roseinstein 
seems to have several bombshells in it
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by Allen West
{ allenwestrepublic.com } ~ A new letter from Grassley to Roseinstein seems to have a number of bombshells in it. For starters... did Rosenstein secretly and improperly grant to Mueller wide-ranging spy powers that belong only to the Attorney General? ~ Sean Davis, The Federalist. The authority, independence, and accountability of independent counsels is a longstanding concern for jurists, lawmakers, and administrators of all political stripes. These investigations draw significant resources and operate to varying degrees independently from standard Department of Justice supervision. It is thus more likely that a special counsel investigation will evolve beyond its original parameters to capture additional, tangentially related matters. For example, a chief complaint against Kenneth Starr centered on the expanding scope of his investigation from one targeting real estate fraud to perjury about an affair. KEEP READING THE FULL LETTER HERE...   https://www.judiciary.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/2018-05-17%20CEG%20to%20DOJ%20(Special%20Counsel%20Investigation%20&%20Regulations).pdf.
A Month of Islam and Multiculturalism in France: April 2018
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by Soeren Kern
{ gatestoneinstitute.org } ~ April 1. Interior Minister Gérard Collomb, in an interview with the newspaper Ouest-France... said that French authorities had foiled 20 jihadi attacks in 2017 and two in 2018. He also revealed that of the 26,000 known jihadis in France with S-files (fiche "S," those considered highly dangerous), only 20 were deported during 2017. April 4. French prosecutors called for Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, an MP for Essone (Île-de-France), to be given a suspended fine of €5,000 ($6,000) for "provocation to hatred or discrimination" for using the words "migratory invasion." While running as a candidate for president in the 2017 elections, he tweeted: "In 2016, the Socialists compensated for the declining birth rate with the migratory invasion." Dupont-Aignan said that his remarks were aimed at the Socialist Party rather than immigration and that, in any event, as an MP he is immune from prosecution. The public prosecutor disagreed: "We have a leading politician, a declared candidate in the presidential election, who publicly promotes, on his personal account, a conspiracy and racist theory born in the depths of the French far right...the thesis of 'the great replacement' by French writer Renaud Camus. A failure to condemn him would open the floodgates of uninhibited racist speech...against all those who do not belong to the national community, including migrants and immigrants." The court will decide the matter on June 6...   https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12328/france-islam-multiculturalism-april 
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Are Liberals Finally Driving Their States Off The Fiscal Cliff?
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by Warner Todd Huston
{ lidblog.com } ~ Conservatives have been warning for decades that rapacious government spending and never-ending tax hikes will drive governments... whether local, state, or federal — into bankruptcy. That hasn’t happened yet despite the decades of predictions. But some now say that years of policies pushed through by liberals along President Donald Trump’s fantastic tax cuts are about to push blue states off the fiscal cliff. The conservative claim only makes sense. If you put it on a personal level, without budgetary responsibility no one can continue spending money they don’t have. Eventually, the credit will run out, the bills will come due, and financial disaster will result. For us reg’lar folks, the form of that disaster can even mean jail time. Liberals, of course, say that this idea is stupid. The government can’t go bankrupt because everything works by compulsion. All government has to say is jump and everyone must ask how high? Government is forever, you see?...   https://lidblog.com/liberals-fiscal-cliff/ 
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Wife of Stormy Daniels’ Lawyer 
Is Furious with Him – ‘I Need to Be Divorced’ 
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by CILLIAN ZEAL 
{ westernjournal.com } ~ Poor Michael Avenatti. And I don’t just mean that figuratively, but literally... if court filings are correct, he was only worth $400,000 total before he took the Stormy Daniels case. And that was before you count the $8 million he owed various creditors, including the rather aggressive folks at the Internal Revenue Service. While Avenatti is obviously going to be worth a great deal more after the Daniels case is over if it ever is, given Avenatti’s penchant for dragging every minor detail of it out, a lot of of it is going to go to places he probably doesn’t want it to:  the IRS, former business partners, alimony. Alimony, you say? That’s right, Avenatti’s wife wants a divorce — provided, that is, that her estranged husband can even find the time to work one out while he participates in Daniels’ magical misery tour...
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Bill Bradley, Call Your Bookie 
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by Judge Andrew Napolitano 
{ townhall.com } ~ In 1992, Congress passed a statute authored by then-Sen. Bill Bradley of New Jersey, who was a former Princeton University and New York Knicks basketball superstar, prohibiting the states from authorizing sports betting. At that time, gambling in Atlantic City was flourishing, and notwithstanding one of its own senators' efforts to keep gambling away from competitive sports, the state of New Jersey wanted to duplicate Las Vegas' success with sports betting.

When Bradley's legislation grandfathered the state of Nevada, legislators in New Jersey came up with an idea to get around the federal legislation that would permit Atlantic City casinos to compete with those in Las Vegas by repealing all laws about sports betting, thereby escaping the federal prohibition on "authorizing" sports betting. It would be up to the casinos to set up their own betting parlors for college and professional sports, and in so doing, they could increase their own bottom lines and thus the state's tax revenues.

When major professional sports leagues and the NCAA challenged this, a federal district court in Newark read the 'thou shalt not authorize' language to mean 'thou shalt not permit under any circumstances.' That ruling was upheld by a federal appeals court in Philadelphia, and New Jersey appealed its case to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled in its favor earlier this week.

Get ready to call your bookie.

The Supreme Court decision reinforces the anti-commandeering jurisprudence of the 10th Amendment, which was dormant from the New Deal era to the mid-1990s. Recall that the states formed the federal government, not the other way around. When they did so, they delegated certain areas of governmental authority to the feds, and as new states were added to the Union, they did the same.

The 10th Amendment is the constitutional recognition of the truism that the legislative powers that the states did not delegate to Congress they retained for themselves.

The anti-commandeering jurisprudence prohibits Congress from telling the states how to govern or legislate or spend their tax dollars in any governmental areas not delegated to the Congress. This congressional practice was condemned in a case called Printz v. United States, in which Congress had ordered state law enforcement officials to establish certain gun registration protocols consistent with congressional standards and made state legislatures pay for the enforcement of the protocols.

The Supreme Court, through the late Justice Antonin Scalia, characterized this federal legislation as "commandeering" -- taking the discretion away from -- state officials and legislatures. The Supreme Court's sports gambling decision this week followed the rationale of the Printz case and characterized the federal legislation that prohibited the states from permitting sports gambling as commandeering their legislative processes.

The reason that federal commandeering of state legislative processes is unconstitutional -- Justice Samuel Alito's sports betting opinion likened commandeering to having a federal agent on the floor of each state legislature give a thumbs-up or -down to proposed legislation -- is that it flies in the face of the Guarantee Clause of the Constitution.

That clause guarantees a representative form of government in each state. A representative form of government requires that the representatives in the government be free to vote their consciences and not be prohibited or restrained from doing so because of a federal command.

Did Bill Bradley make a mistake?

I am a longtime fan and friend of Sen. Bradley's, notwithstanding our general ideological differences over the constitutional role of government in our lives. Bradley is smart, fair and open-minded, and I miss him in the public forum. Yet he ought to have known that the legislation he authored was unconstitutional, and he ought to have known that Congress could have outlawed sports betting had it chosen to do so.

Had Congress made sports betting criminal -- which it has not yet done -- the sports gambling case this week would have been moot. Congress undoubtedly has the power under the Commerce Clause to prohibit any item from interstate commerce that it wishes, and it could have done so to communications that further sports betting. But of course, federal laws cost the feds money to enforce, and Congress did not want to foot that bill -- hence Bradley's scheme of transferring the cost of preventing sports betting to the states.

If Congress had outlawed sports betting, such a law would not have implicated the anti-commandeering jurisprudence because it would have been a restraint on individual personal behavior and not a restraint on the discretion of state law enforcement or elected state representatives.

What are the unintended consequences of this ruling?

All of this bodes well for the independence of the states in the areas where they are free to govern. There, they can be laboratories of democracy, dependent upon the public sentiment of their voters and the freely exercised consciences of their state representatives.

In an odd couplet, however, it also helps the sanctuary city movement, insofar as that movement purports to require that state and local law enforcement agencies not actively enforce federal immigration laws or policies because compelling them to do so would violate anti-commandeering jurisprudence. The commandeering would consist of removing the discretion of state and local law enforcement as to the disposition of law enforcement resources and the discretion of state legislatures as to how state tax revenue is spent.

And all of this underscores the wisdom of the Framers, who created a federal union that, even after the Civil War, is still subject to the sovereignty of the states. The beauty of the Union is that no two states are alike and we can all get ourselves to states where the laws are more to our liking. Ronald Reagan once whimsically captured these constitutional values when he argued that only in America can you vote with your feet.

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