Tag: trump 2020
The $259 Million Incentive For Trump To Bomb Iran

The $259 Million Incentive For Trump To Bomb Iran

Reprinted with permission from LobeLog.

On Thursday, the United States came perilously close to a military confrontation with Iran after it downed a U.S. drone that may or may not have entered the country’s air space. President Donald Trump reportedly ordered a retaliatory military strike on Iran but called it off, according to Trump’s own tweets on Friday morning, because a general told him that “150 people” might die in the strike.

Much analysis of Trump’s slide toward war with Iran has focused on his hawkish national security adviser, John Bolton, who, reportedly requested options from the Pentagon to deploy as many as 120,000 troops to the Middle East and hit Iran with 500 missiles per day. Bolton is the loudest voice inside the White House pushing for a military escalation to the administration’s “maximum pressure” strategy.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, for his part, is staking out the position that the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force allows the administration to take military action against Iran without congressional approval, an unusual and broadly criticized interpretation of congressional oversight.

Yet, there’s another omnipresent influence on Trump: $259 million given by some of the GOP’s top supporters to boost his campaign in 2016 and support Republican congressional and senate campaigns in 2016 and 2018.

Those funds  came from Sheldon and Miriam Adelson, Paul Singer and Bernard Marcus, donors who have made no secret, both through public statements and funding think tanks that support military action against Iran, of their desire for the United States to destroy the Islamic Republic.

Adelson, who alongside his wife Miriam are the biggest donors to Trump and the GOP, contributed $205 million to Republicans in the past two political cycles and reportedly sent $35 million to the Future 45 Super PAC that supported Trump’s presidential bid. His role as the biggest funder of Republican House and Senate campaigns makes him a vital ally for Trump—who relied on Adelson’s campaign donations to maintain a Republican majority in the Senate and curb Republican losses in the House in the 2018 midterm election—and any Republican seeking national office.

Adelson publicly suggested using nuclear weapons against Iran and pushed for Trump to replace then-national security adviser H.R. McMaster with Bolton, partly due to the former’s perceived unwillingness to take a harder line on Iran. In 2017, the Zionist Organization of America, which receives much of its funding from the Adelsons, led a public campaign against McMaster, accusing him of being “opposed to President Trump’s basic policy positions on Israel, Iran, and Islamist terror.”

In 2015, Trump mocked his primary opponent, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), for seeking Adelson’s financial support, warning that Adelson expects a degree of control over candidates in exchange for campaign contributions. Trump tweeted:

Sheldon Adelson is looking to give big dollars to Rubio because he feels he can mold him into his perfect little puppet. I agree!

And Adelson isn’t alone.

Billionaire Home Depot co-founder Bernard Marcus is the second largest contributor to Trump’s campaign, providing $7 million. He also champions John Bolton, contributing $530,000 to John Bolton’s super PAC over its lifetime. And he’s a major contributor to GOP campaigns, contributing over $13 million to Trump’s presidential campaign and GOP congressional campaigns in 2016 and nearly $8 million to GOP midterm efforts in 2018.

Marcus, like Adelson, makes no qualms about his views on Iran, which he characterized as “the devil” in a 2015 Fox Business interview.

Unlike Adelson and Marcus, hedge fund billionaire Paul Singer was a “never Trump” conservative until Trump won the election. Then he donated $1 million to Trump’s inauguration. Singer is far more careful with his words than Marcus and Singer, but his money supports some of the most hawkish think tank experts and politicians in Washington.

Singer, alongside Marcus and Adelson, has contributed generously to the hawkish Foundation for Defense of Democracies, whose experts have spent the past decade regularly promoting policies to pressure Iran economically and militarily, including most recently Trump’s “maximum pressure” approach.

According to donor rolls of FDD’s biggest supporters by the end of 2011, a year that saw a sharp rise in tensions and rumors of war by Israel against Iran, Adelson contributed $1.5 million, Paul Singer contributed $3.6 million, and Bernard Marcus, who sits on FDD’s board, contributed $10.7 million.

(FDD says that Adelson is no longer a contributor, but Marcus continues to give generously, contributing $3.63 million in 2017, over a quarter of FDD’s contributions that year.)

Employees of Singer’s firm, Elliott Management, were the second largest source of funds for the 2014 candidacy of the Senate’s most outspoken Iran hawk, Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR), who urged Trump to conduct a “retaliatory strike” against Iran for purportedly attacking two commercial tankers last week.

Singer donated $26 million to Republicans in the 2016 election and $6.4 million to the GOP’s midterm campaigns.

The billionaire Iran hawks—the Adelsons, Singer, and Marcus—made combined donations of over $259 million to GOP politicians in the past two cycles, making them some of the Republican Party’s most important donors. That quarter-billion-dollars doesn’t include contributions to dark money 501c4 groups and donations to 501c3 nonprofits, such as think tanks like FDD.

News coverage of Trump’s slide toward war frames the discussion as a competition between his better instincts and a national security advisor and secretary of state who, to varying degrees, favor military action.

But the $259 million that helped elect Trump and Trump-friendly Republicans must loom large over the president.

As Trump evaluates his options with Iran and turns his attention to the 2020 election, he knows he’ll need to rely on the Adelsons, Singer, and Marcus to boost his campaign, maintain a narrow majority in the Senate, and attempt a take-back of the House.

These donors have made their policy preferences on Iran plainly known. They surely expect a return on their investment in Trump’s GOP.

Eli Clifton reports on money in politics and US foreign policy. He previously reported for the American Independent News Network, ThinkProgress, and Inter Press Service.

#EndorseThis: Kimmel Shows How The Trump Campaign ‘Monetizes Stupid’

#EndorseThis: Kimmel Shows How The Trump Campaign ‘Monetizes Stupid’

“You know you have a hothead president when you have to defuse tensions with Canada,” quips Jimmy Kimmel as he reviews Trump’s week, which included a visit from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Among many eventful moments was the kickoff of Trump 2020 in Orlando where — according to the president — his rally attracted a crowd of at least 121,000 supporters and a huge overflow. Indeed, Trump claimed that his campaign urged people not to attend to avoid dangerous overcrowding.

Well, Kimmel fact-checked all of that nonsense and offers a few extremely amusing corrections. How else can you have fun with a president who habitually lies?

The late-night host also reveals Trump’s campaign fundraising strategy — how his minions “monetize stupid,” as Kimmel puts it. The best merch? A fabulous Trump T-shirt that no sane person would ever wear.

Click and laugh.

Trump Holds Election Rally — Four Years Early

Trump Holds Election Rally — Four Years Early

Reprinted with permission from AlterNet.

Donald Trump has been in office almost one month and every single day of it feels like a dress rehearsal for the apocalypse. (Spoiler: He definitely goes to hell.) Instead of focusing on the many problems of his administration, including leaks, scandals, firings. and legislative failures, Trump is trying to relive the glory days of his campaign. As The New York Timesreported in November, Trump “likes the instant gratification and adulation that the cheering crowds provide.” That means White House staffer job descriptions include creating useless distraction events where Trump can be adored by his base. That’s what’s happening this weekend at a rally being staged by team Trump in Melbourne, Florida.

According to White House flak Sean Spicer, Saturday’s happening is a “campaign event,” presumably meaning it’s part of the Trump 2020 reelection effort. Trump filed papers to run for a second term on inauguration day, which no president has done in four decades. At the end of December, Politico reported the Trump campaign had raised $11 million for that presidential bid. Considering Trump reportedly hates his new job, it’s possible that this reelection scheme is as much about excuses for pointless campaign rallies as for reinstalling Trump for a second round.

The rally location is roughly two hours from the Mar-A-Lago resort, which Trump has dubbed the “Winter White House” because to call it what it is—a vacation mansion, or “holiday palace,” if you prefer—would be to admit how little time he spends working. On weekdays, Trump is reportedly in his bathrobe by 6:30pm, watching TV, or tweeting while President Steve Bannon and Vice Vampire Stephen Miller take turns throwing darts at the Constitution. Then, when the weekend comes, Trump jets down to his vacation mansion to play golf, imperil national security and waste taxpayer money. He’s doing it for a third consecutive week, again at an estimated $3 million cost to taxpayers.

ABC News notes that as Obama campaigned in 2011—one year before the election, like a normal person—Trump tweeted an attack that read, “Does @BarackObama ever work? He is constantly campaigning and fundraising—on both the taxpayer’s dime and time—not fair!”

It’s unclear if the bill for Saturday’s rally is being paid for by the Trump 2020 campaign, American taxpayers, or Mexico.

Trump, who lied massively when he repeatedly stated during the campaign he would never leave the White House or take vacations, also tweeted numerous criticisms about Obama’s vacation habits. The 44th president spent far less time on vacation than his predecessor, George W. Bush, and Trump is on track to beat his eight-year holiday total in the next few months.

The New Civil Rights Movement rounded up a number of Trump’s critical, and hypocritical, messages.

Kali Holloway is a senior writer and the associate editor of media and culture at AlterNet.

IMAGE: Republican U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses the Rolling Thunder motorcycle rally to highlight POW-MIA issues on Memorial Day weekend in Washington, U.S. May 29, 2016. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst