Thursday PM ~ thefrontpagecover

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~ Featuring ~    
Trump Wins Big in Emoluments Lawsuits: 
2 Down and 1 to Go
Hans von Spakovsky and
 GianCarlo Canaparo  

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Esper: U.S. Will Provide Intel to Allies to Keep
 Middle East Merchant Ships Safe, 
Not Warship Escorts
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By Sam LaGrone
news.usni.org } ~ American forces are willing to provide allies with intelligence on potential maritime threats in the Middle East, but countries will need to bring their own escorts... defense officials told USNI News on Wednesday. Operation Sentinel is the emerging U.S. Central Command plan to keep merchant traffic in the Middle East moving and safe amidst the ongoing disputes between Washington and Europe and Iran, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper told reporters on Wednesday. “The key issues are two-fold: one is maintaining freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. The second is deterring provocative action from Iran,” he said Wednesday morning after being sworn in as SECDEF on Tuesday evening. CENTCOM is working through a planning process with unspecified partners and allies to outline a construct for Operation Sentinel – not to be confused with the ongoing NATO mission in Afghanistan, Operation Freedom’s Sentinel – by the end of the month. While plans are still being developed, the idea that CENTCOM will collect and distribute information related to the Middle East threat picture from the Bab el-Mandeb entrance into the Gulf of Aden, through the Arabian Sea, up into the Gulf of Oman and through the Strait of Hormuz into the Persian Gulf. While the U.S. will share the information with members of the group, American Navy ships will not be escorting international maritime shipping, two defense officials told USNI News on Wednesday. “Most countries who transit the strait have an interest in this and should want to provide forces to ensure navigation of the strait, freedom of the seas and deter provocative behavior. It’s all complementary, it all works,” Esper said. “The Brits are trying to escort their ships. We’re escorting our ships to the degree that the risk demands it. I assume that other countries will escort their ships.”...
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Evaluating the Senate Finance Committee 
proposal to restructure Medicare Part D
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by Scott Gottlieb and Benedic N. Ippolito
aei.org } ~ Senior citizens are facing increasing and often significant burdens from rising out-of-pocket costs on drugs... that they need to improve their health while many observers worry about the long run stability of the Part D program. As part of the Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act (PDPRA), the Senate Finance Committee is considering two significant reforms to the Medicare Part D program aimed at reducing overall program outlays and beneficiary out-of-pocket spending. Most notably, the proposal would substantially redesign the structure of the Part D benefit to encourage more efficient management of drug spending and reduce incentives that encourage rapid growth of list prices. In addition, it would establish mandatory rebates in Medicare Part D if list prices on drugs grow faster than the rate of inflation as measured by CPI-U to reduce enrollee out-of-pocket spending. This proposal is a well-intentioned effort to improve the incentive structure of the Part D program and protect seniors from rising out-of-pocket burdens. However, these proposals introduce a number of important tradeoffs, that in some cases may challenge the stated policy goal. In this piece, we outline the interaction between Part D benefit design, list price growth, and out-of-pocket spending. In addition, we discuss some of the potential effects of the policies under consideration, and offer alternatives proposals that Congress could consider. These policy alternatives could help achieve the desired policy goals of reducing financial burdens on seniors and bringing more fiscal discipline to Part D drug spending, while creating potentially more desirable tradeoffs. The PDPRA includes an ambitious plan to redesign Part D benefits in order to improve incentives that affect government and beneficiary out-of-pocket spending. Under current law, insurers must offer standard Part D coverage which consists of four phases whose descriptions we take directly from the Chairman’s Mark of the PDPRA...
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China Vows to Protect Religious 
Freedom Four Days after Bible Ban
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by 1776christian.com ~ On April 4, 2018, the Chinese government issued an official policy paper vowing “protection” for religious freedom – but words and action have proved to be very different... During a press conference, the State Council Information Office introduced the white paper labeled “China’s Policies and Practices on Protecting Freedom of Religious Belief.” Ironically, the move comes a mere four days after the country banned the online sale of the Bible. In September of 2017, the State Council passed legislation banning religious organizations from receiving any foreign funding. Additional regulations concerning religion were implemented in the communist country in February of 2018. Some religious leaders have voiced concerns that the new rules violate religious freedom. Eric Lai, a Catholic commentator, remarked in March of 2018 that the ruling Communist Party in China desires “to use religion as a tool for stability” in the same manner as other authoritarian governments, such as Russia, utilize it. The recent white paper labelled China as a “multi-religious country since ancient times.” However, the missive also stated, “active guidance” was required in order for religions to “adapt to socialist society.” Referencing a perceived defect in the policy paper in a piece written for AsiaNews, Bernardo Cervellera said, “it is not an attempt to draw up a map of religions, but to convince the world that the only religions that exist in China are the official ones, allowed by the CCP. For it, religion is a concession from the top of political power, not an innate dimension of man, Chinese or foreign.” The white paper acknowledged five recognized religions in China. The policy paper purported that 200 million people in the country practice one of these religions. Of the 200 million worshipers, six million are reportedly Catholics, while another 30 million are Protestants. Providing proof concerning his comments about an alleged flaw in the policy paper statistics, Cervellera said, “it bases its calculations only on official communities, although every religion in China has an unofficial dimension. For Catholics, there are estimated at least 6 million underground faithful; for the Protestants about 60 million.” In October of 2017, World Watch Monitor documented that some people believe the Christian population in China might reach an astounding 247 million before 2030. If this occurs, China will be the world’s largest Christian congregation...
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Jeffrey Epstein Found Semi-Conscious 
In Cell, Markings On Neck
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by SHELBY TALCOTT
dailycaller.com } ~ Accused child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein was found injured and laying on the ground in a New York City jail... according to sources close to the investigation.  Epstein was arrested July 6 for allegedly sex trafficking minors in New York after previously pleading guilty in 2008 to two counts of prostitution, one with a minor, in Florida. He was denied bail and jailed after U.S. District Judge Richard Berman said that he was a flight risk. The Manhattan financier was found laying semi-conscious in a fetal position with marks on his neck Wednesday in his Metropolitan Correctional Center cell, two sources told NBC New York. He may have tried to hang himself, they added.  Another person said that the injures were not serious and alleged that Epstein may be trying to get a transfer out of the situation, according to NBC NY. He has been complaining about the conditions inside the jail.  Yet another source said that an assault has not yet been ruled out as a reason for the injuries. Investigators have questioned Nicholas Tartaglione, a former police officer in Westchester County who was arrested in 2016 for allegedly killing four men and burying their bodies, NBC NY reported. Tartaglione said that he did not know what happened to Epstein and was not responsible, according to the sources.The former police officer’s attorney said Tartaglione did not attack Epstein, according to NBC NY. Epstein, who pleaded not guilty to the sex trafficking charges, is now on suicide watch, two sources said. Who really cares.
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Trump Administration Not Turning a Blind Eye 
to Chinese Violations of Iran Oil Sanctions
by David Adesnik
fdd.org } ~ The U.S. imposed sanctions on a Chinese oil trading firm and its chief executive on Monday “for knowingly purchasing or acquiring oil from Iran... contrary to U.S. sanctions,” according to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. The move indicates the Trump administration will not look the other way as China continues to import millions of barrels of Iranian crude. The target of U.S. sanctions,  Zhuhai Zhenrong, is one of two state-owned enterprises that serve as China’s principal importers of Iranian oil, the other being Sinopec. “We said we would fully enforce our sanctions, and we are backing this up with real action,” Pompeo added. The scumbag/liar-nObama administration sanctioned Zhuhai Zhenrong in 2012 for exporting gasoline to Iran, then suspended those sanctions as part of the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran. While the sanctions were in place, the Chinese firm remained a leading importer of Iranian oil, bringing in about 240,000 barrels per day. The U.S. aimed a lethal blow at Tehran’s finances in late April by ending the waivers that allowed China and several others importers to continue purchasing Iranian oil despite the re-instatement of sanctions in 2018. In May, Iranian exports plunged to an all-time low following the decisions of Japan, South Korea, India, and Turkey to comply with U.S. restrictions. Whereas Iran exported about 2.4 million barrels per day before the Trump administration withdrew from the nuclear deal, its exports fell to 500,000 barrels per day or less after the U.S. waivers expired. Precise figures for Iranian exports are now unavailable because, in violation of maritime law, Iranian tankers conceal their activity by turning off the transponders that broadcast their location. However, Tanker Trackers’ analysis of commercial satellite imagery has shown that the Iranian-flagged tanker Salina delivered about one million barrels of crude to China in late June – the first delivery since the expiration of U.S. waivers – while the Iranian-flagged Horse and Humanity made deliveries in July. Meanwhile, Bloomberg listed deliveries from the Iranian-flagged Amber and Panamanian-flagged C. Infinity, while reporting that other tankers were en route or anchored off Chinese shores...
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Trump Wins Big in Emoluments Lawsuits:
2 Down and 1 to Go

Hans von Spakovsky and
 GianCarlo Canaparo
 

President Donald Trump has won the second of three lawsuits alleging he violated the Constitution because foreigners and state officials patronize his businesses, such as the Trump Hotel in Washington, D.C.

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the claim by Maryland and the District of Columbia that Trump was violating the Constitution’s domestic and foreign emoluments clauses.

The foreign emoluments clause reads:

No Title of Nobility shall be granted by the United States: And no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them, shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.

The domestic emoluments clause reads:

The President shall, at stated Times, receive for his Services, a Compensation which shall neither be increased nor diminished during the Period for which he shall have been elected, and he shall not receive within that Period any other Emolument from the United States, or any of them.

In throwing out this latest suit, the 4th Circuit chastised the plaintiffs for wasting the court’s time with a plainly meritless case.

The court also scolded federal Judge Peter Messitte, a Clinton appointee, for not throwing out the case sooner and for refusing to let the president appeal his erroneous rulings.

Messitte’s faulty reasoning “blinks reality,” the court said, and his actions “amounted to a clear abuse of discretion.”

Messitte’s rulings were so erroneous that the 4th Circuit didn’t even wait for an appeal. It accepted the president’s request for writ of mandamus — a rarely granted procedural tool that allows early review of an otherwise nonappealable issue — to take the case away from Messitte, reverse his rulings, and force him to throw the case out for good, without the possibility of further appeal.

The lawsuit alleged that, because government employees and foreign officials pay for services they receive from Trump’s businesses, payment produces a constitutionally forbidden “present” to the president.

The court held that Maryland and the District’s interest in the case was “abstract” and “simply too attenuated” for the case to proceed.

Maryland and the District argued that they are harmed by the alleged constitutional violation because the Trump Hotel “competes” with conference centers and hotels they own. Which, of course, brings up a question not dealt with in the lawsuit: Why are Maryland and D.C. involved in the conference and hospitality industry to begin with and competing with private industry?

Their claims rested on the speculation (accepted at face value by Messitte) that government officials patronize the Trump Hotel because it distributes profits to the president and not for any other reason.

But there are, of course, two equally plausible competing speculations: that some government officials avoid the Trump Hotel because of its association with the president, and that some government officials stay at the Trump Hotel because it’s a nice place to stay.

Regardless, courts don’t decide cases based on speculations.

What’s more, Maryland and the District couldn’t explain how prohibiting the president from earning money from the hotel would stop government officials from going there. In other words, even if they had a viable legal claim, there is no possible remedy.

Assuming that foreign officials were trying to curry the president’s favor by staying at his hotel, the hotel is associated with him and would financially benefit his family even if it didn’t benefit him — and the emoluments clauses have no application to the family members of a federal official.

The 4th Circuit found this a fatal flaw in the plaintiffs’ argument and noted that the lawyer for Maryland and the District was “repeatedly unable to articulate the terms of the injunction” that was being sought to remedy the supposed violation of the Constitution.

As the court expostulated, “when plaintiffs before a court are unable to specify the relief they seek, one must wonder why they came to the court for relief in the first place.”

The only other interest that Maryland or the District had in the case was “a general interest in having the law followed.” And a plaintiff “raising only a generally available grievance about government” has no right to do so in court.

So ended the second of three emoluments clauses cases. The president won the first case in 2017 when a federal court in New York tossed out an almost identical lawsuit filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a liberal advocacy organization.

One emoluments case remains, this one before federal Judge Emmet Sullivan in the District of Columbia. In that case, Democratic members of Congress, including Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., personally sued the president for allegedly violating the foreign emoluments clause.

In an order reminiscent of Messitte’s “clearly erroneous” orders, Sullivan simply accepted the speculation — with no supporting evidence — that foreign officials are staying at the Trump Hotel only because it pays the president part of its profits.

Sullivan then went on to say that congressional Democrats have a personal interest in the case because — and now hang on, because this is wild ride — the president, by accepting the alleged foreign payments, has denied Congress, as an institution, the right to vote on these payments.

You might wonder how Sullivan made the logical leap from the Democrats’ personal interest to Congress’ institutional interest. Sullivan answers that question by calling that distinction “relevant … but not dispositive.”

That case is ongoing, and Sullivan is letting the congressional Democrats subpoena the president’s financial information. Additionally, Sullivan recently denied the president’s request to delay the case while he appeals.

Political fights belong in the political arena. As the 4th Circuit said here, the claims made by Maryland and the District were “so attenuated and abstract that the prosecution of this case readily provokes the question of whether this action against the President is an appropriate use of the courts.”

It isn’t. And in light of the 4th Circuit’s opinion, perhaps the president should seek another writ of mandamus in the D.C. Circuit to overrule what is clearly an erroneous decision by Sullivan.  ~The Patriot Post

https://patriotpost.us/opinion/64410?mailing_id=4434&utm_medium=email&utm_source=pp.email.4434&utm_campaign=snapshot&utm_content=body  

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