Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “Harry Hopkins”

Eisen: The Architect Of Lawfare

Former White House counsel Norm Eisen assails the Trump administration’s attempts to dismantle some programs and agencies. Appearing on “CUOMO,” he says neither the president nor his emissaries have that kind of unilateral power.

Eisen, who originally worked as deputy counsel for Barack Obama, more recently served as an appointed consultant for the House Judiciary Committee spearheading the first House impeachment charges against President Donald Trump. He is behind the “lawfare” tactics that Democrats have used to subvert the will of the majority of Americans.

Their goal is to try to prevent the exposure of gross corruption, fraud and waste, as well as to stall the release of more damaging details about Jeffrey Epstein’s vile Caribbean resort as well as the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

In short, if you hear his name, you should be sure to spit on the ground. Do not believe a single word this political hack says. Do not follow his advice. Let the Democrats keep listening to him because it will surely lead them down a path from which they will never recover. Here’s more from the Chris Cuomo show “Cuomo” on News Nation.

This past Saturday, at 1AM, in the DEAD OF NIGHT, a Federal Judge by the name of Paul Engelmayer, a judge from the U.S. District Court of southern New York,  issued a temporary restraining order preventing anyone from auditing the Treasury Department database—including the Treasury Secretary himself!

We are all too familiar with the Progressive Left making political use of friendly Federal judges to hand out nationwide injunctions when they lack the legislative power to assert their will. It seems there’s always a helpful Hawai’ian judge when the Progressive Left needs one.

The question is, what to do about these unelected judges with supposedly lifetime appointments who seem determined to act as though they possess greater Executive Branch authority than does the elected President. Impeachment is always an option, but it’s a heavy burden—requiring a full two-thirds of the Senate.

That super-majority is a stretch under the most egregious of circumstances, and highly unlikely today. There is, however, an easier way to remove an overreaching judge from the bench. Here’s more from Andrew Branca on The Law of Self-Defense.

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