News·5 min read

Daily Skimm: President Trump, Twitter, and SZA

The House select committee investigating the attack on the US Capitol holds their final meeting to vote on criminal referrals against former President Donald Trump
December 20, 2022

Historic

The Story

For the first time ever, a congressional committee is recommending that a former US president be prosecuted. 

This is about Jan 6, right?

It is. Yesterday, the Democratic-led House select committee investigating the Jan 6 insurrection held its final hearing. After 18 months of gathering and presenting their findings, the panel of seven Democrats and two Republicans voted unanimously to issue four criminal referrals against former President Trump for trying to overturn the 2020 election. Now, the Justice Dept has to decide whether it’ll move forward with any of the following:

1) Conspiracy to defraud the US…The committee is accusing Trump of a multi-pronged plan to steal now-President Biden’s win, including by falsely claiming widespread election fraud. The panel maintains Trump also worked with his lawyer John Eastman to pressure then-VP Mike Pence to delay the election’s certification.

2) Conspiracy to make a false statement…The former president and his allies allegedly submitted a number of fake electors to Congress. And did it in an effort to turn-key swing states from Biden to Trump. 

3) Insurrection…The committee believes Trump called on his supporters to descend on the US Capitol (see: his “be there, will be wild” message). And added that the former president refused to stop the violence even though he knew lives were at risk.

4) Obstruction of an official proceeding…The panel argues the former president was “directly and personally involved” in preventing the certification of the election process on Jan 6. And that he acted with “corrupt” purpose including by trying to pressure Pence.

So...will he be charged?

That’s up to the DOJ, whose AG has already set up a special counsel to also investigate Jan 6 and whether Trump removed gov docs when he left the White House. In the meantime, Eastman could also face criminal charges for his role in the above. And the committee also referred four House Republicans, including House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, to the House Ethics Committee for not cooperating in the investigation. They wouldn’t face criminal charges. But the ethics committee — which is evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans — could impose fines and recommend disciplinary action by the full House (think: expulsion, censure). But keep in mind: Republicans are taking over the lower chamber next year.

How are people responding?

Trump dismissed the committee as a “kangaroo court.” Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) said he didn’t have any “immediate observations.” But that the nation “knows who is responsible for that day.” (And has called out Trump in the past.) Outgoing Rep. Liz Cheney (R-WY) called Trump “unfit for any office.” Meanwhile, polls show Americans are concerned about political violence. But more than three-quarters of Republicans say it’s time to move on from Jan 6 — while 90% of Dems say that shouldn’t happen. Next up: the full report will be released tomorrow.

theSkimm

The Jan 6 committee — largely boycotted by the GOP — is wrapping up its investigation. Now, it’s up to the American public and DOJ to digest the findings. What happens next could impact everything from trust in US institutions to the safety and security of those institutions themselves.

And Also...This

What the mantra might be at Twitter right now...

Everything Musk go. Over the past 48 hours, millions voted for Elon Musk to step down as head of the company slash whatever it is he’s doing. If he didn’t like it, he shouldn’t have put it to a poll. On Sunday, the billionaire said he’d “abide by” the results. But so far, the only thing he’s said is that he’d restrict policy-related voting to Twitter Blue users from now on. It’s also not clear who his successor would be. The poll — which saw 57.5% of respondents saying ‘off you go’ — comes after a wave of chaotic changes from Musk, including firing almost half the staff, reinstating far-right accounts, suspending then un-suspending journalists, and a verified mess of a Twitter Blue rollout. The goblin mode management style hasn’t only rocked feeds, but has left his other business…

  • Feeling drained: Tesla has been sidelined and it shows. The EV company’s shares are down around 30% ever since Musk took on Twitter. Tesla has also lost nearly half of its value — a potential problem for Musk since it’s still his main source of wealth, despite dumping billions of dollars’ worth of stock last week.

What’s making a deal…

COP15. Yesterday, the UN’s biodiversity conference reached a deal to protect the world’s lands and oceans. As of right now, about 17% of land and at least 8% of oceans are considered protected, with restrictions on things like fishing and mining. The goal: to protect everything from marine life to insect diversity. Now, this deal pledges to boost those numbers up to 30% by 2030. It also calls on countries to set aside $200 billion a year to invest in biodiversity work. But it’s still not clear whether countries will follow through on their promises — especially since targets set over a decade ago still haven't been met.

What’s putting out a warning…

The FBI and Justice Dept. Yesterday, officials issued a public safety alert after an uptick in cases of “financial sextortion.” In the past year, there were more than 7,000 reports of the cybercrime with over 3,000 kids — mainly boys — being extorted for money after being coerced into sending explicit images. The offenders often target boys — some as young as 10 years old — on social media platforms like Instagram and Facebook and gaming websites. The FBI says it can be hard to prosecute suspects whose identities are difficult to verify. Now, they’re issuing a warning for families as kids go on winter break and could be “spending a lot of time online.”

While Amber Heard has settled the defamation lawsuit...

Harvey Weinstein’s on track to spend more time in prison.

Who gave his first interview in a decade…

Jamie Spears.

While RBD is making us feel like teen rebels again…

SZA is seeing some good days.

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