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Possible Trump indictment pushed back as New York grand jury to break for a month – live


Trump indictment may not come till late April – report

Martin Pengelly

Martin Pengelly

Donald Trump’s expected indictment over his hush money payment to the adult film maker and actor Stormy Daniels may be delayed for a month, Politico reports, because of a scheduled hiatus for the grand jury in the case in Manhattan.

The site’s report is based on an anonymous source “familiar with the proceedings”.

Politico said “the break would push any indictment of the former president to late April at the earliest”, but added that the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, could change the grand jury schedule and ask it to convene during planned breaks.

Bragg’s office did not comment.

Trump first denied then admitted reimbursing his former fixer, Michael Cohen, for $130,000 paid to Daniels in 2016 to be quiet about the affair she claims and which Trump denies.

The former president claims to be the victim of prosecutorial political and racial bias. Bragg is Black.

Trump and Republican supporters have accused Bragg of doing the bidding of George Soros, the progressive philanthropist – an attack line with established antisemitic overtones.

Trump has also predicted his own arrest and appeared to threaten violence against Bragg. Running for president in 2024, he also faces legal jeopardy over his election subversion at the state and federal levels, his business affairs, his retention of classified records and an allegation of rape in New York.

He denies all wrongdoing.

Peter Stone has more:

Key events

Martin Pengelly

Martin Pengelly

Chuck Schumer, the Democratic Senate majority leader, has some news for us…

BREAKING NEWS: The Senate has voted to the repeal the Iraq Authorizations for the Use of Military Force.

— Chuck Schumer (@SenSchumer) March 29, 2023

The issue is not done yet, as the House has to follow suit and it’s not clear Republicans will do so.

Here’s some background, to be updated with today’s vote of course:

Trump indictment may not come till late April – report

Martin Pengelly

Martin Pengelly

Donald Trump’s expected indictment over his hush money payment to the adult film maker and actor Stormy Daniels may be delayed for a month, Politico reports, because of a scheduled hiatus for the grand jury in the case in Manhattan.

The site’s report is based on an anonymous source “familiar with the proceedings”.

Politico said “the break would push any indictment of the former president to late April at the earliest”, but added that the Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, could change the grand jury schedule and ask it to convene during planned breaks.

Bragg’s office did not comment.

Trump first denied then admitted reimbursing his former fixer, Michael Cohen, for $130,000 paid to Daniels in 2016 to be quiet about the affair she claims and which Trump denies.

The former president claims to be the victim of prosecutorial political and racial bias. Bragg is Black.

Trump and Republican supporters have accused Bragg of doing the bidding of George Soros, the progressive philanthropist – an attack line with established antisemitic overtones.

Trump has also predicted his own arrest and appeared to threaten violence against Bragg. Running for president in 2024, he also faces legal jeopardy over his election subversion at the state and federal levels, his business affairs, his retention of classified records and an allegation of rape in New York.

He denies all wrongdoing.

Peter Stone has more:

Democrat: Hawley ‘a fraud and a coward’ over Nashville

Martin Pengelly

Martin Pengelly

A Democratic opponent of Josh Hawley labelled the far-right Missouri senator “a fraud and a coward”, after the Republican demanded the killing of three nine-year-old children and three adults at a Christian school in Nashville, Tennessee, be investigated as a federal hate crime.

Josh Hawley.
Josh Hawley. Photograph: Leah Millis/Reuters

Less than two years ago, Hawley was the only senator to vote against a bill to crack down on hate crimes against Asian Americans during the Covid pandemic.

That bill, he said, would “turn the federal government into the speech police [and] give government sweeping authority to decide what counts as offensive speech and then monitor it”.

Federal and state authorities have said the motive in the Nashville attack had not been established.

On Tuesday, Lucas Kunce, a Missouri Democrat running to oppose Hawley in 2024, said: “One out of 100 senators voted against the anti-hate crime bill in 2021. His name is Josh Hawley. He’s a fraud and a coward. Some days it’s more obvious than others.”

Full story:

House Democrats hold press conference calling for gun control

House Democrats including Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries and Democratic whip Katherine Clark are holding a press conference on Capitol Hill to call for an end to gun violence.

The press conferences comes amid the aftermath of a mass shooting in Nashville, Tennessee that saw six people gunned down including three children.

At the press conference, Democratic Minnesota representative Ilhan Omar criticized Republicans for their lack of effort on preventing gun violence.

“I am outraged as a legislator, I am ashamed at the lack of political will to keep our kids safe from our Republican colleagues… Why is it that our Republican colleagues continue to lie and pretend we can’t do anything about it,” she said.

“I say to my Republican colleagues, stop listening to your corrupt campaign donors… Give us a vote on common sense gun reform and show American parents where we are,” she added.

Republican representative Tim Burchett of Tennessee said that nothing could be done about school shootings in the wake of Monday’s tragedy in Nashville in which 6 people were gunned down, including three children.

“Three precious little kids lost their lives, and I believe three adults, I believe, and the shooter of course, lost their life too… So, it’s a horrible, horrible situation. And, we’re not gonna fix it,” Burchett told reporters.

“Criminals are gonna be criminals. And my daddy fought in the Second World War, fought in the Pacific, fought the Japanese, and he told me, he said, ‘Buddy,’ he said, ‘if somebody wants to take you out, and doesn’t mind losing their life, there’s not a whole heck of a lot you can do about it,’” he added.

When asked about any responsibility Congress may have had in the shooting, Burchett replied,

“I don’t see any real role that we could do other than mess things up, honestly, because of the situation… Like I said, I don’t think a criminal is going to stop from guns, you know, you can print them out on the computer now, 3-D printing, and, there’s really, I don’t think you’re going to stop the gun violence.”

Martin Pengelly

Martin Pengelly

Republicans in North Carolina today repealed a requirement for permits when buying pistols, overriding a veto from the Democratic governor, Roy Cooper.

The move came two days after a shooter in neighbouring Tennessee carried a pistol and two automatic weapons into a Christian school in Nashville and killed three children and three adults before being killed by police.

According to the Associated Press, the North Carolina House “voted 71-46 to enact over Cooper’s objections [and] to eliminate the state’s long-standing pistol handgun purchase system, which requires in part for sheriffs to perform character evaluations of gun applicants. The Senate voted to override the veto on Tuesday.

“Cooper and Democrats warned the repeal would allow more dangerous people to obtain weapons through private sales, which do not require a background check, and limit law enforcement’s ability to prevent them from committing violent crimes.

“The enacted bill also would allow guns on some school properties where religious services are held.”

The AP also reports that three House Democrats failed to vote on the veto override, thereby enabling Republicans to meet the constitutional requirement.

Here’s Ed Pilkington, meanwhile, on what the Nashville shooting has revealed about America’s love for military grade weapons:

Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz will face Bernie Sanders today in a union-busting hearing.

The hearing committee is chaired by Democratic Vermont senator Bernie Sanders who has been one of Schultz’s harshest critics.

The committee has accused Schultz of running “the most significant union-busting campaign in modern history.”

A report by the committee’s majority staff found that Starbucks violated labor practice laws 130 times in six states and is facing another 70 cases.

According to the report, Starbucks has fired workers in retaliation for union organizing, shut down stores and withheld pay and benefits.

“There is mounting evidence that the $113bn company’s anti-union efforts include a pattern of flagrant violations of federal labor law,” the report said.

“Starbucks has engaged in the most significant union-busting campaign in modern history. It has been led by Howard Schultz,” it added.

Longtime Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz arrives at a crowded Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing room where he expects to face sharp questioning about the company's actions during an ongoing unionizing campaign, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, March 29, 2023.
Longtime Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz arrives at a crowded Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing room where he expects to face sharp questioning about the company’s actions during an ongoing unionizing campaign, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, March 29, 2023. Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP

Republican senator Mike Rounds of South Dakota said that enough has been done about gun control, following the mass shooting at an elementary school in Nashville, Tennessee earlier this month.

In an interview with CNN, Rounds said, “I think the things that have already been done have gone about as far as we’re going to with gun control.”

Rounds went on to propose reallocating $500 million for solar panels in schools to increased security instead so the schools could be “more difficult to get into.”

Sen. Mike Rounds (R-SD), post-Nashville: “I think the things that have already been done have gone about as far as we’re going to with gun control.”

Rounds then suggests taking $500M away from schools allocated for solar panels in order to use that money for increased security. pic.twitter.com/FMZkCeZ5QI

— The Recount (@therecount) March 29, 2023

Chris Christie promises to never support Donald Trump again

The former governor of New Jersey has vowed to never pledge his allegiance again to Donald Trump, even if the former president wins the GOP nomination again.

In a statement to Axios published on Wednesday, Christie, who previously supported Trump in the 2016 election, said, “I can’t help him. No way.”

Christie went to condemn Trump for showing a video at his rally of the January 6 choir by those who were arrested at the deadly riots.

“When you have the Jan. 6 choir at a rally and you show video of it — I just don’t think that person is appropriate for the presidency,” he said.

Although Christie has not yet revealed whether he will run for president, he has issued stern criticisms not only towards Trump but also to president Joe Biden.

“I can’t imagine myself voting for Joe Biden, either. I don’t know if I can vote for either of these guys. They’re both too old. They’re both out of touch with what’s going on in the world right now,” he said.

Potential GOP presidential candidate Chris Christie vows to never support Donald Trump again

Good morning, US politics readers. Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie has vowed to never throw his support behind presidential candidate Donald Trump again, even if he wins the GOP nomination.

On Wednesday, Axios reported Christie, who pledged his allegiance to Trump during the 2016 presidential election, saying: “I can’t help him. No way.”

“Look, I just can’t … When you have the Jan. 6 choir at a rally and you show video of it – I just don’t think that person is appropriate for the presidency,” he added.

Earlier this week, Christie spoke at a town hall meeting in New Hampshire and said that Trump’s “end will not be a calm and quiet conclusion”.

So far, only a few prominent Republicans have joined in on the race to challenge Trump, including former US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley and tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy. Others potential candidates include Florida governor Ron DeSantis and Trump’s former vice president Mike Pence.

As we bring you the latest on today’s US politics, here are other key developments and events to expect today:

  • The FBI and US Marshals are each offering $10,000 for any information that can lead to the capture of Roy McGrath, ex-chief of staff to former Maryland governor Larry Hogan who is on the run from wire fraud and embezzlement charges.

  • Joe Biden will host the virtual Summit for Democracy later this morning with world leaders, as well as representatives from the private and public sectors.

  • The Biden administration will hold an oil and gas drilling rights auction of a large area in the US Gulf of Mexico today that spans the size of Italy.





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