Archive for the ‘Mike Pence’ Category

OPINION EXCHANGE | If Trump and Pence both get very sick, it’s unclear who would be president – Minneapolis Star Tribune

It remains unlikely, but hardly unthinkable, that President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence could simultaneously come down with serious cases of COVID-19 especially after two prominent White House aides recently tested positive for the coronavirus. We have already seen one head of government, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, incapacitated by COVID-19 and sent to an intensive care unit.

Both men are in high-risk groups: Trump is 73 and overweight; Pence is 60. (Johnson, in contrast, is a comparatively youthful 55.) If they were ordinary people, the protocol would be for the two men to place themselves in self-quarantine for two weeks, yet they have not done so.

When Johnson was hospitalized, he deputized his foreign minister to act as prime minister in his absence. Should only the president become ill, then the vice president can take over, following the protocol laid out in the 25th Amendment. But if the vice president becomes incapacitated as well, then we could face a constitutional crisis. It would be triggered by the inadequacies of the Presidential Succession Act passed in 1947 (when there was no vice president, because Harry Truman had succeeded Franklin D. Roosevelt).

Article II of the Constitution grants Congress the right to provide for the Case of Removal, Death, Resignation or Inability, both of the President and Vice President, declaring what Officer shall then act as President and the 1947 act is the current result. Under its rules, the speaker of the House and the president pro tempore of the Senate would be next in the line of succession, followed by the members of the Cabinet, beginning with the secretary of state.

Until 1947, succession had passed through the Cabinet. Congress added the speaker and president pro tem on the grounds that the president should desirably be an elected official, even if not part of the executive branch. This might make sense in theory, but it could be truly terrible in practice. Should both Pence and Trump be unable to serve, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D.-Calif., would become president under the act handing the White House to a different party without an election. Should she be unable or unwilling to serve, then the office would go to Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa.

Any effort to transfer power from Trump and Pence to Pelosi would surely inspire legal and political challenges, adding to chaos at precisely the moment the nation desperately needed stability.

To be sure, COVID-19 in the White House could precipitate a crisis well before the Succession Act came into play. It is not difficult to imagine that Trump would deny and denounce as fake news any suggestion that he lacks the ability, in the words of Article I, Section 2, of the Constitution, to discharge the Powers and Duties of the presidency. The vice president and Cabinet can, in theory, overrule him and pronounce him unable to serve, invoking the 25th Amendment. But would they? Even if Pence and the Cabinet displayed independence, would Trump simply fire those who betrayed him? He couldnt fire the vice president, but the vice president cannot displace a president on his own; he needs the support of the majority of Cabinet officials and then Congress.

But even if the headstrong president bowed to reality, perhaps as he was about to go on a ventilator, the system would be stretched to the breaking point if Pence faced his own health crisis. If Pence, too, acknowledged his constitutional inability, then the Succession Act would apply and its flaws would become apparent.

The act, first of all, bespeaks a simplistic theory of democratic legitimacy that ignores the prominent role that political parties which have grown far more polarized since 1947 play in the American system. And it raises vexing legal and practical questions. Most lawyers believe that the speaker would have to resign from the House to serve as president, as a result of the Constitutions obscure incompatibility clause, which says that no Person holding any Office under the United States, shall be a Member of either House during his Continuance in Office. Perhaps, then, Pelosi would waive her right of succession (since, after all, her term would probably last only several weeks at most). So then the 86-year-old Grassley could take on the awesome role of president should he be willing to resign from the Senate.

There is also a serious argument, first laid out by Yale Law School professor Akhil Reed Amar and his brother, Vikram Amar, now dean of the University of Illinois College of Law, in a 1995 essay in the Stanford Law Review, that the Succession Act is unconstitutional. Article II specifically says that Congress in setting rules of succession must select an officer as a replacement for the president and vice president. Members of Congress, the argument goes, are not officers, because they are elected officials and not presidential appointees. (Another legal argument holds that the incompatibility clause does not apply if a member of Congress were to serve as president or vice president, because officers refers to people appointed by the president, not to the chief executive position itself. Under that interpretation, Pelosi could retain her legislative office, if the act were upheld as constitutional.)

To put it mildly, it is hard to imagine these questions being litigated in real time should Republicans try to prevent Pelosi from taking office, or should she try to serve as president and speaker simultaneously. This month, Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh evoked the possibility of chaos in a Supreme Court argument about unfaithful electors members of the electoral college who opt for candidates besides the ones they pledged to support. The problem of unfaithful electors is trivial compared with the true chaos possible under the Succession Act.

Constitutionality aside, the Succession Act makes little sense as policy: No one seriously believes that the worthies who serve as speaker of the House and president pro tem of the Senate do so because of a belief by the House or Senate that they have the skill set needed to serve as president. Indeed, Grassley occupies his office exclusively because he is the senior member of the majority.

Just as the United States turns out to have been woefully unprepared to confront the coronavirus, so are we unprepared to confront simultaneous presidential and vice-presidential disability. Returning to the pre-1947 rules, under which the secretary of state would follow the vice president in the line of succession, would make far more sense. The Constitution authorizes is it too much to suggest that it even places a duty on? Congress to address the possibility that the president and vice president could both become incapacitated. It should face up to its responsibility, before the grim scenario becomes reality.

Sanford V. Levinson is a professor of law and government at the University of Texas at Austin. He wrote this article for the Washington Post.

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OPINION EXCHANGE | If Trump and Pence both get very sick, it's unclear who would be president - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Here’s what VP Mike Pence is doing today – The Pavlovic Today

VP Mike Pence is on his way to Marietta, GA, for lunch with the governor and a roundtable with restaurant owners.

Good morning from a wet Andrews. The VP is headed to Marietta, GA, for lunch with the governor and a roundtable with restaurant owners.

Travelling with the VP are Secretary Eugene Scalia, Senator Kelly Loeffler and Marc Short.

VP arrived in motorcadeat 09:29. He saluted ground crew, waved to pool and climbed steps without further ado. Wheels up imminently.

Tail reg of AF2 today is 80002.

Schedule below.

9:25AM THE VICEPRESIDENT departs Washington, D.C. en route Marietta, GA on Air Force Two

Joint Base AndrewsPool Press

11:05AM THE VICE PRESIDENT arrives in Marietta, GAon Air Force Two

Dobbins Air Reserve BasePre-Credentialed Press11:40 AM THE VICEPRESIDENT has lunch with Governor Kemp to discuss Georgias phased economic re-opening

Star CafPool Press

1:35PM THE VICEPRESIDENT participates in a roundtable discussion with restaurant owners and executivesWaffle House Corporate HeadquartersPre-CredentialedPress

4:45PM THE VICEPRESIDENT departs Marietta, GAen route Washington, D.C.on Air Force Two

Dobbins Air Reserve BasePool Press

6:10PM THE VICE PRESIDENT arrives in Washington, D.C. on Air Force Two

Joint Base Andrews

Pool Press

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Here's what VP Mike Pence is doing today - The Pavlovic Today

Michigan Man Accused of White House Bomb Threat to Kill Donald Trump and Mike Pence – Newsweek

A Michigan man has been arrested for allegedly sending a number of emails threatening to commit a mass shooting and kill President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence in a bomb attack.

Jeffrey David Cox, of Grand Blanc, has been charged with use of interstate communications to make a bomb threat, making threats against the president and vice president of the United States and use of interstate communications to make threats to injure another person after allegedly sending a total of 18 emails from his personal address.

According to an affidavit, seen by MLive, Cox sent the emails on May 16 to the Mott Community College's admissions office, the Monroe Community College's president's office in New York and the Navy's Recruit Training Command in Great Lakes, Illinois.

In one email, Cox allegedly wrote: "There is a bomb in the White House set to detonate Monday, May 18, 2020 at 12:00 P.M. I either placed it near the main White House gates or in the White House itself. I plan to assassinate the President and the Vice President. Nobody can stop me."

In another email, Cox threatened to plant bombs and carry out a mass shooting at Mott Community College.

"I won't tell you when I will do it because I don't want the police to catch me or stop me, but rest assured I will do it and this time it is for real," the email said.

"I am doing this because I think it is extremely funny and I just love the thrill of killing people and destroying buildings and stirring up trouble. There is nothing you or the police can do to stop me! Ha Ha Ha!"

Cox also said he planned on stealing an aircraft and crashing it into the U.S. Naval Reservation in San Diego, California.

Cox's laptop and cellphone were then seized after a search warrant was carried out at his home. The emails were allegedly found in the sent email folder on his phone.

The suspect admitted to sending the threatening emails from the device, according to the affidavit filed by Jeffery Brook, a special agent with the United States Secret Service.

Cox said he sent the emails to help "calm himself down" and had no intention to carry out the threats, reported WXYZ.

"Cox claimed that he had no negative feelings toward the protectees nor the White House," the affidavit said.

Cox has been booked into the Genesee County Jail on state charges of false report of terrorism and using a computer to commit a crime.

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Michigan Man Accused of White House Bomb Threat to Kill Donald Trump and Mike Pence - Newsweek

Trump heads to Capitol Hill to meet with Senate GOP on virus – The Detroit News

Lisa Mascaro, Associated Press Published 11:15 a.m. ET May 19, 2020

Washington President Donald Trump is heading to Capitol Hill for lunch Tuesday with Senate Republicans as Washington considers next steps in the coronavirus response.

Thats according to a person unauthorized to discuss the presidents schedule and granted anonymity.

The administration is launching a full day of appearances on Capitol Hill as the White House and Congress consider another pandemic aid package.

Vice President Mike Pence and Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin huddled earlier with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy.

Vice President Mike Pence wears a face mask to protect against the spread of the new coronavirus as he arrives on Capitol Hill in Washington for a meeting with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, Tuesday, May 19, 2020.(Photo: Patrick Semansky, AP)

Very helpful, said Mnuchin as he exited the meeting on his way to testify before the Senate Banking Committee. Good update.

The Capitol remains partly closed with the House away due to health risks but the smaller Senate convening under new social distancing restrictions. Among the new rules, senators are limited to three to a table at the weekly GOP luncheons. One senator and dozens of Capitol Hill workers and staff have tested positive for the virus.

While House Democrats passed a new virus aid package last week, Senate Republicans say theyre not interested in providing more funds until they assess how the $2 trillion in already approved money to fight the virus and improve the economy is being spent.

McConnell has said theres no urgency to act on the latest $3 trillion bill from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. He has declared the package a seasonal catalogue of liberal programs.

Pelosis package includes $900 billion to states and cities to shore up their budgets during the crisis and prevent mass layoffs of state and local government workers. Regional tax revenues have plummeted during the shutdown. Theres also money for more virus testing, a fresh round of $1,200 rebate checks for cash-strapped Americans and other aid.

Republicans prefer to wait to see if efforts to open up the economy can provide a kick-start and lessen the need for more aid.

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Trump heads to Capitol Hill to meet with Senate GOP on virus - The Detroit News

DeSantis bragged about deal with firm at crux of COVID-19 testing scandal – Florida Bulldog

Gov. Ron DeSantis with Vice President Mike Pence at a May 20 press conference in Orlando talking about Floridas response to COVID-19

By Daniel Ducassi, FloridaBulldog.org

Gov. Ron DeSantis touted an $11-million COVID-19 testing deal with a Texas-based lab now embroiled in controversy and facing questions about the reliability of its tests.

DeSantis, under pressure to ramp up testing while pushing to reopen Florida, boasted at an April 22 press conference that, we have two contracts in place with two new labs that will increase our lab capacity by 18,000 samples per day.

One of those firms was Southwest Regional PCR, of Lubbock, TX, which does business as MicroGenDX, headquartered in Orlando. The Executive Office of the Governor had signed an $11-million contract the day before with the firm for COVID-19 Diagnostic Testing ($99 per test 8000 tests per day for 14 days).

Less than a month later, however, the governors office quietly canceled the contract amid questions about MicroGenDXs dependability.

The firm made headlines after Altamonte Springs-based Advent Health raised concerns on May 16 about the reliability of tens of thousands of lab tests and canceled its contract with the firm. On Thursday, Florida Today reported that MicroGenDX is now under investigation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. MicroGenDX has disputed Advents claims and adamantly defended the reliability of its testing.

DeSantis spokesman Cody McCloud wrote in an email to Florida Bulldog on May 7 that MicroGenDX was one of the two companies the governor was referring to at the press conference. Florida Bulldog requested a copy of the contract that day, but the governors office has yet to provide it.

Division of Emergency Management spokesman Jason Mahon said the state canceled its contract with the firm on May 15, and that no samples had been sent to MicroGenDX for processing.

As with any lab, we do our due diligence to ensure the company will be able to provide reliable services before sending any samples, Mahon stated in an email. Upon further interaction with this vendor, the Division determined that the state could not be 100% confident in the results that would come from this vendor, or with the processing speed, which is critical for COVID-19 testing.

Mahon did not immediately answer a question about whether the state has secured another lab firm to replace the testing MicroGenDX was supposed to provide.

MicroGenDX CEO Rick Martin told Florida Bulldog in a phone interview that his firm never started any work under the state contract, which he said did not specify any requirement to refrigerate samples. He said the state asked him to first validate the use of a transport medium the state wanted to use for testing. But Martin said his lab was so slammed with samples that it didnt have time to do the validation and figured the state officials would simply go with another provider if they insisted.

They were very slow to act on it, he said of the states efforts to follow up on the contract.

The contract was issued under authority of the governors emergency executive order addressing the COVID-19 crisis. Its one of dozens of emergency agreements the state has made in recent weeks without any formal bidding process, although medical services are generally exempt from competitive solicitation requirements under state law.

A reporter asked DeSantis at a press conference on May 18 about the problems AdventHealth was having with the lab firm. DeSantis said the samples need to be refrigerated and that the firm just let the samples be spoiled a characterization MicroGenDxs Martin disputed.

Despite the FDAs guidance to refrigerate COVID-19 test samples, he insists the samples are valid up to thirty days without refrigeration, even in Florida heat. He also shot back at Advent, saying his firm experienced problems due to flaws with how the hospital system was integrating patient data with the tests, resulting in thousands of tests that could be processed but had no patient information attached.

But Martin said the biggest struggle he has had has been securing additional equipment and supplies he had previously ordered to conduct testing. He said the firm had stockpiled much of what they needed, but complained that the federal Defense Production Act has resulted in major suppliers canceling contracts with MicroGenDX at the federal governments direction.

The Defense Production Act has really hurt us, he said.

Martin explained that the state wanted certain things in place, such as the transport medium validation, before it started sending test samples to MicroGenDX, but they were taking so long, by the time they were getting ready, I had problems with supplies.

He said the state canceled its contract with MicroGenDX soon after Advent canceled its contract but also that the lab was so hammered with huge volumes of samples and short on supplies that if the state had actually tried to implement the contract, he would have told them he couldnt do it. However, he stood by the reliability and accuracy of his firms testing and said he looks forward to a day of vindication after federal inspectors conduct any inquiries.

Florida Today reported that Martin was indicted in 2017 for conspiracy and mail fraud related to an alleged healthcare kickback scheme involving another company, but that he was acquitted last year.

The state has been under immense pressure for more testing as DeSantis has pushed to forward his reopening effort. At the time, the two testing contracts DeSantis referred to on April 22 represented his administrations largest effort to boost testing, intended to double the states capacity.

At the same time, Florida signed a major testing deal with Indur Services. Last week, Florida Bulldog reported that Indur CEO and founder Brandt Beal pleaded guilty in Texas last year to two financial felonies.

Indur was to be a passthrough for a Washington-based lab. The state cut Indur out of the testing portion of its contract, worth $10.2 million, but still bought $2.2 million worth of testing supplies from the firm.

The states database shows as part of the description of the Indur contract, completed sample refrigeration not required.

Its not clear what the governors office is doing to vet the companies it has given multi-million dollar, no-bid contracts, if anything at all. Mahon said state officials are handing out emergency contracts so fast they dont have time to really check them out.

Time is of the essence when securing these critical testing supplies for Floridians, and that limited time does not allow for the Division to vet every companys executive leadership or board of directors, Mahon said.

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DeSantis bragged about deal with firm at crux of COVID-19 testing scandal - Florida Bulldog