Donald Trump has suffered a double blow after the DC Circuit Court of Appeals ruled his accountants, Mazars USA, must turn over eight years of his financial records to the House impeachment inquiry and his ambassador to the EU, Gordon Sondland, confirmed he will now testify before Congress, defying a White House pledge to stonewall the Ukraine investigation.
At a campaign rally in Minneapolis, Minnesota, last night, the president attacked “America-hating socialist” and local Democratic congresswoman Ilhan Omar, and also laid into Joe Biden, his son Hunter and House speaker Nancy Pelosi over the ongoing probe.
The House has meanwhile subpoenaed energy secretary Rick Perry and the two business associates of Rudy Giuliani arrested in Florida on Thursday, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, as the ex-US ambassador to Ukraine, Marie Yovanovitch, appears on Capitol Hill today to tell her side of the story.
Mr Trump on Friday said that he is not sure if Mr Giuliani is still his attorney — a statement he made on the White House lawn, sparking a flurry of reporters to contact Mr Giuliani to ask if he had a better idea of the circumstances (he said he is still representing him).
Mr Trump's Minneapolis rally ended up garnering more attention than just for his attacks on those prominent Democrats, too, with clips of him seeming to imitate a love affair between former FBI agent Peter Strzok and Lisa Page.
The president is choosing to spend yet another evening away from Washington on Friday, too, and will hold yet another rally in Louisiana to prop up two GOP candidates for governor there.
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They may not evade requests from Congress for documents and information necessary to conduct our inquiry. They are required by law to comply with the enclosed subpoenas. They are not exempted from this requirement merely because they happen to work with Mr Giuliani, and they may not defy congressional subpoenas merely because President Trump has chosen the path of denial, defiance, and obstruction.
The two had donated $325,000 (£259,000) to a pro-Trump political action committee called America First Action in May 2018 and the money was falsely reported as coming from a purported natural gas company set up to conceal its true source, according to the indictment.
Marie Yovanovitch, a career diplomat who was abruptly recalled from Ukraine in May, is set to give a deposition to congressional investigators but at present it remains unclear whether or not she will be given the chance to go through with it after Gordon Sondland, the US ambassador to the EU, was abruptly blocked from testifying behind closed doors on Tuesday.
Congressional lawmakers are waiting to see if she shows up after White House lawyer Pat Cipollone lashed out at its "kangaroo court" proceedings in an eight-page letter to the investigating chairmen earlier this week.
The testimony from Yovanovitch - should it take place - is the first of several depositions of key figures planned by the House committees spearheading the probe.
The ex-ambassador, described by colleagues as a consummate professional, became the target in March of allegations - vehemently denied by the State Department - that she gave a Ukrainian prosecutor a list of people not to prosecute.
Trump allies called for her removal, accusing her of criticising the president to foreign officials, something current and former colleagues found inconceivable. Giuliani alleged she blocked efforts to persuade Ukraine to investigate the Bidens.
According to a White House summary, Trump described her as "bad news" to Zelensky in the July call in which he sought Zelensky's help to investigate Biden and his son. "She's going to go through some things," Trump added.
One of the foreign-born businessman arrested on Thursday, Lev Parnas, sought the help of a US congressman - identified by a person familiar with the matter as Republican Pete Sessions - to get Trump to remove Yovanovitch, according to the indictment.
Giuliani told Reuters last week he had provided information to both Trump and the State Department about Yovanovitch, who he suggested was biased against Trump.
Sessions lost his House seat from Texas last year to a Democrat. In a statement quoted by Politico, he said his motivation in urging the removal of Yovanovitch was his belief that "political appointees should not be disparaging the president, especially while serving overseas."
Trump has asked the court to block Deutsche Bank from releasing banking records related to himself and his family, which the House Financial Services Committee and Intelligence Committee subpoenaed in April. The subpoena is part of Democrats' broader efforts to gather information about the president's personal finances.
Long a principal lender for Trump's real estate business, a 2017 disclosure form showed that Trump had at least $130m (£104m) in liabilities to Deutsche Bank.
In a letter to the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in August, the bank acknowledged that records related to Trump and three of his children subpoenaed by the committees included tax returns. But while the previously redacted letter said Deutsche Bank held tax returns for two individuals named in the subpoenas, their identities were withheld. Media organisations had asked the court to unseal the letter and reveal whose tax returns Deutsche Bank had on file from the Trump family. The court denied the motion on Thursday.
However, in its ruling, the court said Deutsche Bank's letter revealed the tax returns it has for individuals or entities named in the subpoenas were not those of the president.
Deutsche Bank declined to comment on the court's ruling but a former executive did tell David Enrich of The New York Times it was normal procedure to retain client's tax returns and reacted by text with the words: "Holy f***".
While campaigning for the presidency in 2016, Trump broke with a decades-old convention of candidates releasing their tax returns publicly.
A decision on whether Deutsche Bank needs to hand over the banking records of Trump, his children and businesses is still pending, the court confirmed.
The two congressional panels issued a joint 12-page subpoena in April seeking the records. Lawmakers requested documents that identify "any financial relationship, transactions, or ties" between Trump, his family members and his companies and "any foreign individual, entity, or government", according to the subpoena.
In a separate ruling on Monday, a federal judge said eight years of Trump's tax returns must be provided to Manhattan prosecutors, forcefully rejecting the president's argument that he was immune from criminal investigations.
Expectations were low that the negotiations would do much to resolve a 15-month trade battle that is weighing on the global economy.
But as the first of an expected two days of talks wrapped up Thursday, Trump told reporters at the White House, "We're doing very well... We're going to see them tomorrow, right here, and it's going very well."
Chinese vice premier Liu He is leading the delegation in the 13th round of negotiations with US trade representative Robert Lighthizer and Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin.
The world's two biggest economies are deadlocked over US allegations that China steals technology and pressures foreign companies to hand over trade secrets as part of a sharp-elbowed drive to become a world leader in advanced industries such as robotics and self-driving cars.
Under Trump, the United States has slapped tariffs on more than $360bn (£286bn) worth of Chinese imports and is planning to hit another $160bn (£127bn) on 15 December. That would extend import taxes to virtually everything China ships to the United States. China has hit back by targeting about $120bn (£95.4bn) in US goods, focusing on farm products.
The high cost of the tariffs and uncertainty over when and how the trade war will end have taken an economic toll, especially on manufacturing companies. A private survey last week found that US factory output had dropped to its lowest level since 2009, when the economy was in the grips of a deep recession.
Liu met with leaders of the US Chamber of Commerce and the US-China Business Council on Thursday. He told them the Chinese negotiators "come with great sincerity" and were ready to discuss the trade balance, market access and investor protection, Xinhua News Agency reported.
The report made no mention of willingness to discuss Chinese industrial and technology policy, a major irritant that sparked the tariff war.
It wasn't clear whether that was intended to signal Beijing was digging in on resisting pressure to roll back plans for government-led development of global competitors in robotics, electric cars and other technology. Washington, Europe and other trading partners complain those violate China's market-opening commitments and are based on stealing or pressuring companies to hand over business secrets.
"Both sides have been losing, and so has the global economy," said Myron Brilliant, head of international affairs at the US Chamber of Commerce.
Brilliant, who spoke with both delegations, sounded optimistic about the chances of progress, noting that Beijing has stepped up purchases of U.S. soybeans in a goodwill gesture. He said he hoped a productive meeting would persuade the Trump administration to call off or postpone plans next Tuesday to raise tariffs on $250bn (£199bn) of Chinese imports from 25 per cent to 30 per cent.
"We all know we can't afford a further escalation of the trade war," Brilliant said.
Still, Beijing has been reluctant to make the kind of substantive policy reforms that would satisfy Washington. Doing so likely would require scaling back the Chinese leaders' aspirations to technological competitiveness they see as crucial to their country's future prosperity.
No one will say what was discussed but it surely had something to do with his outlets' coverage of the impeachment inquiry.
The president's message to voters in Lake Charles will be less precise than traditional get-out-the-vote events. He'll seek to unite a squabbling Republican Party against the Deep South's only Democratic governor, trying to keep Edwards from a primary win, while not telling voters which GOP contender to back in Saturday's election.
"Republicans must get out and vote for either of our two incredible candidates," Trump said in one of several tweets about the Louisiana governor's race.
Republican loyalties are split among two major candidates: Ralph Abraham, a third-term congressman and physician from rural northeast Louisiana, and Eddie Rispone, a businessman and longtime political donor from Baton Rouge who is making his first bid for office. Abraham and Rispone each will attend the rally. Both claim long-term support from Trump, even as they quarrel over who backs the president more.
"The president deeply cares about Louisiana. Louisiana loves President Trump. It is a match that is literally made in heaven," Abraham said.
In Louisiana, all candidates run against each other, regardless of party, on the same primary ballot. With polls showing Edwards well in the lead, national Republicans have bombarded the state with millions in advertising and visits from Trump, vice president Mike Pence and Don Jr to urge anti-Edwards votes and force a 16 November runoff.
"Trump is going to energise the base, the people, the conservatives, make them recognise that we need to do something different," Rispone said.
Pollster John Couvillon thinks such visits will have marginal impact, animating voters who already planned to show up at the polls. He thinks Edwards' bigger problem is the US House Democrats' impeachment inquiry, stirring up interest from voters in a red state who'll want to cast their ballots in opposition to anyone aligned with Democrats. "To some extent, you can't entirely escape what has become the stigma of the national Democratic Party here in Louisiana," Couvillon said.
Edwards isn't the type of liberal, anti-Trump Democrat with whom the president usually clashes. Louisiana's governor is an anti-abortion, pro-gun West Point graduate who avoids criticising Trump, talks about his strong rapport with the White House and calls the impeachment inquiry a distraction for Washington. He doesn't focus on party affiliation and tries to avoid national political feuds in a state Trump won by 20 points.
While Edwards' efforts to keep the president at bay in the governor's race have been unsuccessful, the Democratic incumbent isn't complaining about the rallies. Instead, he has downplayed them, calling it unsurprising that Trump backs members of his own party in the "hyperpartisan" environment of Washington. He said he would continue to "work well" with the president and focus on his own, bipartisan approach to governing.
"That's the way we have moved our state forward, gotten out of the ditch. I work well with Republicans, with Democrats and with independents, anybody who wants to show up and work in good faith with me," Edwards said. He'll need that crossover vote to win a second term.
Republicans nationally have targeted Edwards for ouster since his longshot election victory four years ago. But work to unify around one major contender failed, with the state's top-tier, well-known GOP officials passing on the race.
Neither Abraham nor Rispone has been able to break away as the top competitor, even as Rispone poured $11m (£8.7m) of his own personal wealth into the campaign.
Party leaders' efforts to keep the men from fighting each other have failed, raising concerns the backbiting could wound both GOP contenders and help Edwards. Republicans blame attacks among their own candidates for helping to elect Edwards four years ago.
Clemence Michallon has more.
Robert O'Brien said that during the Obama administration the number of staffers swelled to more than 100.
He told employees at a National Security Council (NSC) town hall that he wants to bring the staff level back to where it was when Condoleezza Rice was national security adviser to George W Bush.
"That was about 100 staffers to give policy advice to the president and to help implement his decisions," O'Brien said on Fox Business's Lou Dobbs Tonight. "And that was with two wars going on" in Iraq and Afghanistan. It just ballooned into a massive, you know, bureaucracy... under the last administration," he continued.
The size of the NSC has fluctuated over the years. O'Brien did not it say how he planned to cut the staff. Many staffers are detailed to the NSC from other government agencies so the reductions could be made by not replacing them when their tours are over and they return to other agencies.









