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Jeff Cumberbatch - Columnist, Barbados Advocate
Jeff Cumberbatch – Columnist, Barbados Advocate

โ€œA successful president need not have a degree in constitutional law. But he should understand the Constitutionโ€™s grant of executive power.โ€ โ€œHe should share Hamiltonโ€™s vision of an energetic president leading the executive branch in a unified direction, rather than viewing the government as the enemy. He should realize that the Constitution channels the president toward protecting the nation from foreign threats, while cooperating with Congress on matters at home.โ€ –James Yoo, University of California (Berkeley)

I feel almost a sense of compulsion to apologize to readers of the Barbados Advocate for returning for a second week to a commentary on the any matter associated with the neโ€™er-do-well Trump presidency in the US. This is even more keenly felt when locally there is much fodder for a columnist; last weekโ€™s launching of what claims hopefully to be a third political way; an unseemly public disagreement between Board and Governor at the Central Bank; and an overdue determination from the Prime Minister as to the viability of the controversial Bridgetown Hyatt project However, todayโ€™s effort is concerned only tangentially with what is swiftly morphing into a U S kakistocracy and pertains rather to the ongoing battle between the Trump administration and the courts for the constitutional governance of the republic.

A few columns back, I had tentatively advanced the thesis that President Trump, having been abandoned by some of the leading lights of the Republican party under whose banner he ostensibly campaigned, might have adopted an attitude of โ€œI-canโ€“and-will-do-it-myselfโ€ and thereby assume the role of a latter-day monarch. While I am not prepared to argue whether or not this has become an actuality, his attitude towards judicial rulings that have been adverse to him leads one to conclude that he is behaving less than merely a disgruntled litigant and more like one who regards the prudential application of the law as an officious gadfly to his overweening ambitions.

To bring the point closer home, if this were a game of cricket in the road and the bat and ball were his, he would have long ago taken both up and gone home in a huff after disagreeing vehemently with the umpireโ€™s verdict that he was clearly out.

Readers will be reminded that both the โ€œso-called judgeโ€, as Robart J. was so irreverently termed, and the three judge federal appeals panel have rejected President Trumpโ€™s attempt to prohibit entry into the US of nationals from seven largely Muslim nations. These rulings have driven a ZR through a major plank of the presidentโ€™s efforts to โ€œmake America great againโ€, the appeals court ruling stating that the Trump administration had shown no evidence that anyone from the embargoed nations had committed or were likely to commit terrorist acts in the US. Mr Trumpโ€™s bold openly voiced discriminatory threat to ban Muslims as a whole could scarcely have helped his cause since such a sentiment clearly betrays an intention to discriminate on grounds of religious affiliation, a patently unconstitutional act, and relegates to an afterthought the consideration of national security.

The matter now moves to the Supreme Court for consideration. However, an initial hurdle for the governing administration is whether the case will be taken at all by that body. In a brilliant and well researched article, โ€œControlling Inherent Presidential Power: Providing a Framework for Judicial Reviewโ€, published in the Southern California Law Review, Professor Edward Chemerinsky of the De Paul University College of Law argues that โ€œmost suits to have a Presidentโ€™s act declared unconstitutional never reach the Supreme Courtโ€ฆโ€ He references in support a number of instances among dozens where this has occurred, including disputes as to the authority of the President to impose wage price guidelines on government contractors and as to his authority to impose a 10% surcharge on most articles imported into the United States.

Even if the Supreme Court should decide to try the matter, however, the current jurisprudence is woefully unsettled. The author notes no fewer than four approaches to the question of whether the opening words of Article II of the Constitution to the effect that โ€œthe Executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of Americaโ€™ are to be construed as vesting the President with powers not enumerated in the Article.

There are those, doubtless including Mr Trump himself, who hold fast to the interpretation that the Presidentโ€™s powers are untrammelled and that he is permitted to exercise authority not specifically granted by the Constitution, while others are, contrastingly, of the considered opinion that such plenary authority would be inconsistent with a Constitutional ethos of a government with restricted authority.

According to Professor Chemerinskyโ€™s analysis, the approaches used by the lower Courts range from a clear denial of any inherent judicial power at all and that he must act pursuant to constitutional or statutory authority only, to the existence of a broad and substantial inherent authority, especially, interestingly enough in the current context, in the field of foreign affairs.

In accordance with the first perception, there is no room in US governance for a โ€œpresidential prerogativeโ€ equivalent to the โ€œroyal prerogativeโ€ claimed by British monarchs of yore and still claimed by some to extend to the local Governor General, itself an office created by Constitutional provision and thus inherently of limited authority. On this approach, if there is no condign constitutional provision authorizing the presidentโ€™s action, then it is unconstitutional.

As for the broad authority in international relations approach that the lawyers for the President will doubtless be hewing towards in their arguments, this limits the narrow approach to internal matters only. In one 1936 decision, the judge wrote:

โ€œ The two classes of powers (domestic and foreign are different, both in respect of their origin and their nature. The broad statement that the federal government can exercise no powers except those specifically enumerated in the Constitutionโ€ฆis categorically true only in respect of our internal affairsโ€ฆโ€

This approach reminds us โ€œwe are here dealing not with an authority vested in the President by an exertion of legislative power, but with such an authority plus the very delicate plenary and exclusive power of the President as the sole organ of the federal government in the field of international relationsโ€ฆโ€

Nonetheless, as if presaging the current dispute, after these dicta acknowledge that this power does not require as a basis for its exercise an act of Congress, it concludes ominously for the Trump administration:

โ€œโ€ฆbut which, of course, like every other government power, must be exercised in subordination to the applicable provisions of the Constitutionโ€ฆ.โ€

The right to due process before any abrogation of an existing right is one such entrenched therein.

To be continuedโ€ฆ.


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368 responses to “The Jeff Cumberbatch Column – The Rule of Law and Presidential Authority”


  1. @Bush Tea

    Let us see how it plays out ๐Ÿ™‚

  2. Anonymouse - TheGazer Avatar
    Anonymouse – TheGazer

    @DpD
    I am a purist.
    I believe that if you are catholic, then you should believe in the Pope and virgin Mary. If you are a surgeon then you must perform operations and not be stopped by the sight of blood; and if you are a journalist, then you need to tell the truth and call names.

    If as a journalist, your goal is to secure a loaf of bread, then find another profession. Square pegs in round holes is what is killing the island. Thousands going through the motions and not delivering as promised.

    Barbados does not have the history of Haiti or many African countries, but our fears are even more pronounced; our fears paralyze us and render us weak.

    Our politicians know that we are a docile and fearful people. They do not talk with us, because they know we will in fall line and accept their actions.

    We are not a people of action, but are men/women of words. We are more comfortable browsing our thesauruses than taking to the battlefield. We can justify our inaction with our fancy vocabularies, but deep in our hearts we know that a single and simple word describe usโ€ฆ.. cowards.


  3. Best dressed chicken in town
    Warning


  4. Dompey,
    Britain has just revoked the naturalised citizenship of a number of Pakistani rapists and has promised to do the same for other offences. Naturalisation is not a right, and, in my opinion, is birth.
    I know a woman who was in Barbados illegally, had a son, who became a Barbadian citizen. Both mother and son should have been deported, in my view. Instead, the mother got citizenship.
    Yes, citizenship can be removed.

  5. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    The illiterate is suffering teething pains in everything but wants to challenge the judicial government, but can be scary as hell when they stubbornly dig in their heels and get bare knuckles with the law…it will be an epic battle.

    http://ow.ly/awnz308WIhi

    “Trump backing off big promises in early weeks of administration
    BY CAMERON JOSEPH
    NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Sunday, February 12, 2017, 11:30 PM

    In three weeks, President Trump has gone from “build the wall” to hitting a wall.

    After multiple guarantees that he’d rapidly remake American government Trump has gotten quickly bogged down in the mire of Washington.

    His quick-strike executive orders have done little or gotten stymied court. Some of his international proclamations have had to be walked back. Congress plods along at its usual creeping pace on big-ticket legislation – and confirming his own cabinet.

    The president of bold statements and big promises refused to admit on Friday that he’s been stymied by the pace of Washington, while admitting that he’s been frustrated by the city’s pace.

    GUILLERMO ARIAS/AFP/GETTY IMAGES)
    “We are going to do whatever is necessary to keep our country safe. We have had decision which we think will be very successful with, it shouldn’t have taken this much time because safety is a primary reason,” he said.

    The Trump administration has ratcheted up deportations of undocumented immigrants in a big way, according to reports. But on most other fronts, he’s faced obstacles.

    Here are some big things the president guaranteed to do immediately – and where the Trump administration stands three weeks after his inauguration.”

  6. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://ow.ly/IpeL308Wd1X

    This is a perfect example of the crap presidents can do if not kept in check…General Lee was born in Virginia, the president who stripped him of citizenship was an illiterate just like trump, a Scottish/Irish named Andrew Johnson, he only lasted 4 years in the white house and impeachment dogged his steps every day until he was gone….Johnson never understood the judicial arm of government, just like trump….and that made it very dangerous, even for born citizens.

    That is why parallels were so quickly drawn between the illiterate trump and the illiterate johnson this week.

    “President Ford Restores Robert E. Lee’s Citizenship After 100 Years

    August 5th, 2011 by Siggurdsson
    Share10

    President Ford Restores Robert E. Lee’s Citizenship After 100 Years
    Today in Military History: August 5, 1975

    On April 9, 1865, Union Commanding General Ulysses S. Grant accepted the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia near Appomattox Court House from its longtime commander, Gen. Robert E. Lee. The next day Grant signed a parole paper, allowing Lee and his staff officers to return to their homes without legal repercussions.

    On May 29, 1865 President Andrew Johnson โ€“ who succeeded the assassinated Abraham Lincoln โ€“ issued a Proclamation of Amnesty and Pardon to those former Confederates who participated in the “late Rebellion.” This document was a general pardon, but did contain fourteen classes of persons who were barred from the general pardon. These persons, including Lee, were required to make a special application directly to the President.

    Lee wrote to President Johnson on June 13, saying in part:

    “Being excluded from the provisions of amnesty & pardon contained in the proclamation of the 29th Ulto; I hereby apply for the benefits, & full restoration of all rights & privileges extended to those included in its terms. I graduated at the Mil. Academy at West Point in June 1829. Resigned from the U.S. Army April ’61. Was a General in the Confederate Army, & included in the surrender of the Army of N. Va. 9 April ’65.”

    Consequently, Lee was provided with an Amnesty Oath form, which he filled out, dated October 2, 1865 โ€“ the same day he was sworn in as president of Washington College in Lexington, VA โ€“ and sent the signed document to the nation’s capital [see below].

    Unfortunately, Lee was not fully pardoned, nor was his U.S. citizenship restored. He died 5 years later, still in a kind of limbo. He was buried in the chapel that bears his name at what is today Washington and Lee University.

    In 1970, a worker in the National Archives was going through some State Department files from the post-Civil War era. In those files he discovered Lee’s Amnesty Oath. Apparently, then-Secretary of State William Seward, having no intention of approving Lee’s request for restoring his citizenship, gave Lee’s original application to a friend. The agency then pigeonholed Lee’s Amnesty Oath, and so matters rested for 100 years.

    Five years later, U.S. Senator Harry F. Byrd, Jr. (VA) introduced Senate Joint Resolution 23, a bill to restore Lee’s U.S. citizenship. Passed by both chambers, the measure was signed by President Gerald Ford on August 5, in a ceremony at Arlington House โ€“ formerly the Custis-Lee Mansion โ€“ on the grounds of Arlington National Cemetery. In addition to a number of congressional members, about a dozen of Lee’s descendants attended the ceremony, including Robert E. Lee V, the general’s great-great grandson.

    President Ford’s remarks at the ceremony included these words:”

  7. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://ow.ly/wuY7308WLxn

    Legacy of the worst president in the 1800s, the illiterate johnson.

    Andrew Johnson: Impact and Legacy

    [Facts at a Glance

    Term: 17th President of the United States (1865 โ€“ 1869)
    Born: December 29, 1808, Raleigh, North Carolina
    Political Party: Democrat; Unionist
    Died: July 31, 1875

    Death of Andrew Johnson (The Library of Congress) November 30, 1874
    On his deathbed, Andrew Johnson was surrounded by family members and friends. Shortly after being elected to the U.S. Senate as the representative from Tennessee, Johnson suffered a stroke in July 1875 and died shortly thereafter. He was buried in Greenville, Tennessee, in what is now the Andrew Johnson National Cemetery.

    About the Administration
    For the most part, historians view Andrew Johnson as the worst possible person to have served as President at the end of the American Civil War. Because of his gross incompetence in federal office and his incredible miscalculation of the extent of public support for his policies, Johnson is judged as a great failure in making a satisfying and just peace. He is viewed to have been a rigid, dictatorial racist who was unable to compromise or to accept a political reality at odds with his own ideas.

    Instead of forging a compromise between Radical Republicans and moderates, his actions united the opposition against him. His bullheaded opposition to the Freedmen’s Bureau Bill, the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the Fourteenth Amendment eliminated all hope of using presidential authority to affect further compromises favorable to his position. In the end, Johnson did more to extend the period of national strife than he did to heal the wounds of war.

    Most importantly, Johnson’s strong commitment to obstructing political and civil rights for blacks is principally responsible for the failure of Reconstruction to solve the race problem in the South and perhaps in America as well. Johnson’s decision to support the return of the prewar social and economic systemโ€”except for slaveryโ€”cut short any hope of a redistribution of land to the freed people or a more far-reaching reform program in the South.”

    http://ow.ly/GQ2T308WM5h

    The movement to impeach johnson.

    Impeachment of Andrew Johnson

    The United States government is separated into three branches: the Congress, the Presidency and the Judiciary headed by the Supreme Court. The writers of the Constitution adopted this “separation of powers” principle to prevent one person or one part of the government from becoming too strong and possibly dictatorial.

    In the election of 1864, Abraham Lincoln, a Republican, chose Senator Andrew Johnson, a Tennessee Democrat, as his vice-presidential running mate. Lincoln believed that Johnson, the only senator from a rebel state to remain loyal to the Union, would help persuade Democrats to vote Republican.

    After Lincoln was assassinated, Andrew Johnson took the oath of office on April 15, 1865. Two profound questions faced the nation. First, under what conditions should the Southern rebel states be readmitted into the Union? Second, what rights should the freedmen, or ex-slaves, have?

    A little over a month after becoming president, Johnson began executing his plan for reconstructing the South. Johnson pardoned all rebels except Confederate leaders. He also restored all rebel property except for slaves. Finally, he authorized each rebel state to call a convention of white delegates to draw up a new constitution. Once completed, a new state government could then be formed, and the state could apply for readmission to the Union.

    During the summer of 1865, the rebel states held their constitutional conventions, followed by elections to choose state and federal government representatives. None of the new state constitutions allowed the black freedmen to vote. President Johnson himself opposed the idea of ex-slaves voting. “It would breed a war of races,” Johnson said.

    When Congress finally met in early December, the Republicans, in control of both the House and Senate, expressed outrage. They saw the same men who had led the rebellion returning to power throughout the South. Worse still, the new Southern governments were passing “black codes,” which made it difficult for freedmen to work in certain jobs, own land, or even quit a white employer. Most troubling to Republicans in Congress was that President Johnson had, on his own authority, established a reconstruction plan for the South. Many Republicans believed this was the job of Congress and Congress alone.

    In early February 1866, the Republican Congress passed the Freedmen’s Bureau Bill. It called for the distribution of land to the freedmen, provided schools for their children, and set up military courts in Southern states to protect freedmen’s rights. But to the dismay of Republicans and the joy of most white Southerners, President Johnson vetoed the bill. He called it unconstitutional and too expensive. When Republicans failed to muster enough votes to override his veto, Johnson believed that he had won the battle over Reconstruction.

    On Washington’s birthday, a few days after he had vetoed the Freedmen’s Bureau Bill, Johnson spoke to a crowd outside the White House. During the speech, he claimed that “new rebels” in the North were plotting to take over the government. He charged that some members of Congress were as traitorous as Jefferson Davis, the Confederate leader. “Give us the names!” a voice in the crowd shouted. Johnson named three Republican leaders of Congress. Republicans in Congress reacted angrily. The opposition started to solidify against “King Andy,” as some began to call the president.

    In March 1866, Congress passed the Civil Rights Bill. It declared ex-slaves to be U.S. citizens and gave them the right to make contracts, sue, be witnesses in court, and own land. Again Johnson used his veto. He stated in his veto message that blacks were not qualified for citizenship and the proposed bill would “operate in favor of the colored and against the white race.” The Republicans, abandoning all hope of working with the Democratic president, overrode his veto by a two-thirds majority in both the House and Senate. For the first time in American history, Congress overturned a presidential veto.

    The Radicals

    The Republicans had large majorities in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. But they did not agree on any single reconstruction plan for the South. Some Republicans supported Johnson’s program. Others wanted to proceed slowly on both the readmission of rebel states and freedmen’s rights. Still another group wanted to treat the former Confederate states as “conquered provinces” and pass laws providing equal rights for the black man. The members of this group were called the Radical Republicans or just Radicals. The man who symbolized the Radical viewpoint was a 73-year-old member of the House of Representatives from Pennsylvania, Thaddeus “Old Thad” Stevens.

    During the summer of 1865 when Johnson was implementing his reconstruction plan, Thaddeus Stevens formulated his own ideas. He believed that the rebel states had taken themselves out of the Union when they seceded; now they should be dealt with as U.S. territories. Furthermore, Stevens argued, since the large Southern landowners had brought on the Civil War, the U.S. government should confiscate their property and give it to the freedmen (40 acres for each adult male). According to Stevens, this would break the back of the old slave-holding class and prevent it from regaining political power in the South.

    At first, Stevens and his Radical friends made up only a minority of the Republicans in Congress. Unable to get his reconstruction plans passed into law, Stevens worked to build a coalition of House members and senators to deal with all reconstruction matters.

    On December 13, 1865, Congress created the Joint Committee on Reconstruction. It consisted of nine representatives and six senators, most of them Radicals hand-picked by Stevens. As the most influential member of his committee, “Old Thad” would have a powerful voice in determining Congressional action on reconstruction. President Johnson called the Joint Committee the “French Directory,” a reference to the dictatorship by committee that emerged during the French Revolution.

    The Radicals Take Over

    Congress grew increasingly Radical after Johnson’s veto of the Freedmen’s Bureau and Civil Rights bills. In June 1866, it passed a constitutional amendment, which when ratified by three-fourths of the states would be the 14th amendment. This amendment declared that all persons born in the United States were automatically citizens. This, of course, included ex-slaves. In addition, the 14th Amendment prohibited states from depriving citizens of “equal protection of the laws.” Although it did not include the right to vote, it went a long way toward establishing equal rights for freedmen.

    President Johnson, who had no role to play in amending the Constitution, sent a message to Congress condemning this amendment. For good measure, he also vetoed a second Freedmen’s Bureau Bill. This time, however, Congress overrode him on the same day as his veto.

    During the summer of 1866, it became clear that the freedmen needed the federal government’s protection. On July 30, a group of whites and blacks attempted to hold a Radical political convention in New Orleans. A mob of ex-Confederate soldiers attacked the convention members. The New Orleans police not only failed to protect them, but actually joined in the attack. Nearly 40 convention members, mostly black men, were killed. News reports of the “New Orleans massacre” shocked Northerners and proved to many that President Johnson’s reconstruction program was too lenient.

    After these events, Northern states supported the 14th Amendment, but no Southern state ratified it. It failed to receive the required three-fourths approval. This enraged Radicals in Congress, and most Northerners seemed ready for harsher action against the former Confederate states. “King Andy” found himself increasingly under attack by a hostile Congress and public.

    Under Stevens’ leadership, Congress passed a reconstruction law, described at the time as “written with a steel pen made out of a bayonet.” The law abolished all Southern state governments set up under Johnson’s program. In their place, Congress created five military districts, each commanded by an army officer. The army commanders were authorized to rule by martial law, using federal troops and military courts to maintain order. President Johnson vetoed the law, saying that it would create an “absolute despotism” over the South. But Congress voted to override his veto.”………

  8. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    For the BU cowards who take a stand on nothing but always come out to challenge on everything as though experts, you know who you are…do your own research…all the information is available for the world to access.

    Impeachment and Trial

    Early in 1868, the government crisis came to a climax. President Johnson attempted to fire his Secretary of War, Edwin Stanton, without Senate approval. Stanton had been working with the Radicals to undermine Johnson’s reconstruction policies. Firing Stanton violated the Tenure of Office Act. The Radicals blocked Johnson’s attempt to test the constitutionality of this law in the Supreme Court.

    On February 24, 1868, the House of Representatives voted to impeach President Johnson. Congress wanted Johnson impeached because he refused to cooperate or compromise over black rights and the reconstruction of Southern state governments. But under the Constitution, Congress had to charge him with “high crimes or misdemeanors.” Most of the charges related to his violating the Tenure of Office Act by firing Stanton. The constitutionality of this law was questionable and had never been tested in the courts. It was a weak reason to remove a president.

    Johnson’s trial began in the Senate on March 30. Seven House members, including Thaddeus Stevens, served as the prosecutors of Johnson. Five able lawyers defended Johnson. The president himself never appeared in the Senate during his trial.

    After the trial, which lasted over a month, the Senate failed by one vote to convict Johnson and remove him from the presidency. The doctrine of separation of powers prevailed. Congress had not taken over the government (President Pro Tem of the Senate Benjamin Wade, a Radical, would have become president if Johnson had been removed). On the other hand, military reconstruction still remained in the South. Moreover, Johnson had only about nine months left in his term, his hopes for being elected president in November all but gone. It was a victory for the presidency, but not for President Johnson.”

  9. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    “The constitutionality of this law was questionable and had never been tested in the courts.”

    Many laws are available, but if not tested in the supreme court and a precedent set and made available as reference in future cases, the laws remain weak.

    Hence the killing of chickens and goats religious precedent was available to slap trump in place..lol


  10. Well Well

    You may not know this, but the caseload at the Supreme Court is so enormous, so a lot of these cases are sent to the Appellate Court where they’re settled. So do your research because the Supreme Court can’t obviously review all the cases that are sent to the court, so the court chooses to review the most important cases, and send the majority to the Appellate Court.

  11. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Dompey.., why wont I know this and what does that have to do with anything, look at the speed at which the trump immigration ban was dealt with at the federal district court levels…it took one week.


  12. Well Well

    Yes… American civil liberties Union filed that suit, but you know as well or better than I do that where a law is being undermine, or a action related to a contract isn’t being adhere to, you petition a judge for an injunction against such action until it is properly reviewed.


  13. Well Well

    It is a case of national importance so that is why it was heard at the federal level so quickly my dear. I thought I did mentioned that the Supreme Court review the most important cases?

  14. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    So specifically which cases are you talking about that you know are not important that have to be sent to the appellate court to be settled….Dompey.

    Bear in mind the US is populated with 300 million people, every court opin the land will have overwhelming case loads…including the immigration courts, particularly immigration courts, they have to process millions of immigrants, their hearings and years of processes are tedious and ongoing, that’s why it takes 31 years to deport some immigrants.

    It takes a lot less time to strip citizenship though….ya need to also bear that in mind.

    In contrast Barbados is a tiny island with one little supreme court and ya cant even get a court date in less than one year or a judge’s decision in 10-15 years or never….so what’s your point.

  15. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://ow.ly/HiUO308WYLI

    Looks like trump is prepping to throw Flynn under the bus and Russia is in a tizzy defending and lying for him..lol

    Russia denies embroiled Michael Flynn discussed lifting sanctions
    BY NICOLE HENSLEY
    NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Monday, February 13, 2017, 6:07 AM

    National Security Adviser Michael Flynn’s role at the White House appears uncertain amid speculation he lied about discussing sanctions with a Russian diplomat. (CAROLYN KASTER/AP)

    Russia is standing by National Security Council adviser Michael Flynn โ€” even if the White House is not amid an ethical quagmire.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied that Flynn discussed lifting former President Obama’s sanctions against Russia during a scrutinized phone call with the country’s ambassador before Trump took office, he told reporters on Monday.

    Flynn’s precarious job security took a turn over the weekend as members of Trumpโ€™s White House grew suspicious of his repeated denials and intelligence investigators appeared poised to probe his communications with Russian diplomat Sergey Kislyak.

    Itโ€™s also believed that Flynn may have misled several members of the Trump administration, including Vice President Mike Pence.

    Trump backing off big promises in early weeks of administration
    โ€œThe knives are out,โ€ a White House official told CNN, speaking of a growing animosity against the Trump adviser. โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of unhappiness about this.โ€

    Politico reports Trump is frustrated with Flynn’s alleged lies and that he spent part of his Mar-a-Lago weekend with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe dealing with the sanction scandal.

    On Sunday, White House policy adviser Stephen Miller refused to defend Flynn on “Meet the Press.”


  16. Is Trump leading the US on a warpath with Iran?
    Is Trump leading the US on a warpath with Iran?
    Washington and Tehran dial up war of words as risk of another military action in the Middle East rises.
    aljazeera.com
    http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2017/02/trump-leading-warpath-iran-170203105946707.html


  17. Relax … the universe is unfolding as it should!!


  18. I see they are now teaching students “how to avoid fake news”.

    http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/the-new-civics-course-in-schools-how-to-avoid-fake-news/ar-AAmRSaT?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartandhp

    The News Media is in turmoil and struggling to become relevant.

    It has watched its ratings plummet as more and more Americans believe it les and less!!

    Trump is a trail blazer!!


  19. @ Domps

    Do not use the “double negative” for, in addition to being confusing, it parlays into the positive.

    You said “…but that doesnโ€™t not go without saying that the right to vote, the right to bear Arms, the right to server on a jury etc, does not apply to alients…”

    Double negative becomes positive then “not” conveys negative.

    You are incorrect about the restrictions per the MoS that is permissible for non US born citizens and the clearances accorded them.

    It is waived in certain circumstances albeit under strenuous reviews BUT IT IS WAIVED.

    might I suggest that, BEFORE YOU MAKE STUPID UNINFORMED STATEMENTS, please google the statements that you write

    “…WASHINGTON, Jan 5: A new intelligence law, and now a court ruling, have further strengthened the US government’s power to strip a person of his citizenship even if he committed the crime after naturalization.

    A federal appeals court on Tuesday allowed the government to strip a Haitian-American restaurant owner of his citizenship even though he was indicted, arrested and convicted after naturalization.

    Also on Tuesday, federal agents in Atlanta arrested a prominent Ethiopian human rights abuse suspect and put him in deportation proceedings, for the first time using legal powers granted under a newly-signed intelligence reform law…”

    Anyone can be “denaturalized” depending on the crime involved, it is provided for by law.

    I am sorry that you did not say “if someone can find a situation where a naturalized citizen was stripped of that nationality, i would promise not to come back to BU…”

    Hope springs eternal….

  20. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/93510/central-bank-governor-injunction-stay-office

    Piece….how come this is not yet a hot topic…Worrell filed an injunction against government. ..70 years old, only 2 years left on his contract, he was thrown under the bus…lol

    Ah bet nakeddepature.online will have a huge display on that later.

  21. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Lol….the day Dompey and Pedant can actually stand up as men for something on BU, I will take them seriously…lol…even if they are like Chadster the fraudster…

    …..at least stand fpr something, instead of waiting for others to do all the heavy lifting and then run in to challenge.


  22. Will Winston Moore succeed Dr Worrell, or Dr Clyde Mascoll?


  23. Well Well

    What do you mean when you articulated: ” that I should stand for something rather than running to challenge?” I’ve spent the majority of life trying to instruct the younger as well as older Barbadian through medium of social-media, why it is wrong to physically, sexually, emotionally, psychologically and financially abuse women. And I stand firm in this conviction, having been reared by a single mother whom I love and respect dearly.


  24. Piece
    I have to reinforced the point again: it is virually impossible to strip a naturalized citizen of his or her citizenship, unless he or she has been convicted of treason of falsification of the citizenship application. And I would bet you anything that the both of these men were denaturalized for falsification of they citizenship application. In other words, the both of them weren’t truthful about they criminal background, a condition which disqualifies you from flie for your citizenship in the first place Piece.


  25. And Piece, the two cases you referenced occured during the Bush Administration regarding the Ethiopian and Haitian, and it had to do with George W. Bush new Immigation law. So you ain’t fooling anybody old man!

  26. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ Hal AustinFebruary 13, 2017 at 10:55 AM

    So you are going back on your word and recommending these Neanderthal economists to take control of a monetary spaceship flying in a brave new world of finance?

    Maybe the politicians should follow in the footsteps of the โ€˜Motherโ€™ country and engage the services of ‘foreigner’.

    Why not look to Jamaica? There is a cadre of trained economists with loads of experience in dealing with a ‘Devalued’ economy under heavy social manners and in executing the instructions of the IMF.

    BTW, Dr. Mascoll has already been chosen as the next Guv under the incoming BLP regime.


  27. Dompey

    How come the terrorist Europeans and Americans and their allies who supported ISIS, Daesh in Syria for the last six years are not terrorists?

    How come 500 years of western imperialism is not terrorism?

    To us they are!


  28. In retrospect,Afro-centric Slavery,the Crusades,Capitalism,Communism,Nationalism,Zionism,Radical Islamism and Bhuddism,Ethnic Supremacy in all its forms are today institutionalised acts of terrorism.


  29. @TheGazer February 12, 2017 at 11:22 PM …I suggest that you need to reset your analysis of what is ‘pure’. I would agree that “if you are catholic, then you should believe in the Pope and virgin Mary” but maybe you should first determine the purity of the papacy.

    When one can read about Calvi and the Vatican Bank and about hangings under the Black Friars Bridge and of course the wondrous workings of the Papacy in bygone years then the question must be ‘what is purity’. (I am NOT questioning anyone’s faith or strongly held religions symbols with those comments.)

    As I said in the other blog we need to be realistic and practical in the condemnation of journalists. They are not some mythical group who must march to impossible standards which we do NOT impose on other members of society.

    And if I may…Barbados is surely not like Haiti or for that matter Jamaica, Guyana or T&T but we are not paralyzed in fear nor are we weak. I do prefer “browsing our thesauruses” than dueling Berettas or Sigs for political discourse in Jam or battling kidnappings and killings in T&T.

    All of US in Bdos seem to like it so. Why are journalists the brunt of OUR lassiez-faire attitude or cowardice as you call it!

    @WW&C February 13, 2017 at 10:36 AM….Not me and you madam.

    Anyone who can make a claim about text being in the US Constitution which was absolutely an ‘alternative fact’ untruth and then double down to disabuse those who ask you to clarify your nonsense is way to Trumpian for me to handle.

    Enjoy your blogging and I will mine.

  30. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Pedant….since when do I owe you and the other dummy Dompey, 2 lazy bloggers any explanation for how I word my comments…if any blogger makes a certain comment…I go and research it myself and learn something new in the process, ya dont challenge if ya backward and ignorant to phrases like you and Dompey and if ya really don’t understand, ya ask for clarification, but ya dont accuse and challenge when ya dont know shit.

    I stand by my comment…the constitution. ..from the 1700s until present makes provisions for huddled masses by the millions, immigrants have just as much right to enter the US and be processed like anyone else so give me your huddled masses is quite appropriate and is embedded in the constitution and used appropriately by people with intelligence…

    …dont blame anyone but yaself if you can type but cannot understand standard English Pedant. .

    Vous essayez de sauver la face, mais toujours ressembler ร  la personne inconnue que vous รชtes

    It can never be me and you cause I dont like backward men.

  31. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/baftas-ken-loach-i-daniel-blake-tim-loughton-mp-predictable-drivel-said-what-were-all-thinking-a7577581.html

    Lawson…look at my Justin…lol. be grateful for him amd the corporate courts

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/nasa-scientists-detained-border-phone-unlock-trump-immigration-a7577906.html

    “Despite this, MEPs are wrestling over how to vote. Because in our brave new world, a trade deal with Justin Trudeauโ€™s Canada, which shares so many of our values, seems an urgent necessity. Wouldnโ€™t it be a reaffirmation of the very liberal international order threatened by Trump? Wouldnโ€™t it help us bring together a non-Trump economic bloc?”

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/nasa-scientists-detained-border-phone-unlock-trump-immigration-a7577906.html

    Ah guess even the NASA scientists with high level clearance get scrutinized even if they look European….but carries a southern indian name, those of us who can remember will not that India is not on the list…..dizzy Dompey…how ya like this,

    “A US-born NASA scientist said he was detained by customs officials and not permitted to enter the country unless he unlocked his PIN-protected work phone.

    Sidd Bikkannavar, who works in NASAโ€™s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), was detained by US Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) on January 30, upon returning to the United States from Santiago, Chile.

    Mr Bikkannavar is a natural-born US citizen enrolled in CBP’s Global Entry programme, which allows participants who have undergone a background check to speed up their entry into the US. He had not visited any of the countries mentioned in Donald Trumpโ€™s Muslim travel ban, but Mr Bikkannavar told The Verge that agents may be become suspicious about his family name, which is southern Indian.”


  32. Miller,

    Going back on my word. I am speculating on who may succeed Dr Worrell, not who I will like to see in the position. It is not my pick.

  33. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Under the illiterate….,. born US citizens, naturalized citizens and immigrants will see their rights chipped away and eroded bit by bit, they had absolutely no right detaining that NASA scientist a born American, he does not even look indian but carries Euro features and they refused to release him if they did not get access to that phone…a clear violation of his rights…….

    ……….imagine what they will do to citizens and immigrants coming out of the Caribbean and other places upon their return to the US.


  34. WW all I can say is fuckem , if he is on holiday what is he doing carrying sensitive material on his phone out of the country. How do you know he is not selling info. They have a poor sailor in jail for taking a bunch of innocent photos on his sub. People are going to have to realize like Singapore collectively we may be inconvenienced a bit for the common good. i thought you loved being frisked

  35. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hal AustinFebruary 13, 2017 at 2:51 PM

    If you were really a man of vision -as I had you ‘cut out’ to be, given your previous proposals for a revitalized Bridgetown and your imaginatively creative suggestions to ‘upscale’ the leisure facilities on offer to tourists to save the industry from incestuous implosion- you would have been far more foresighted and call for the disbandment of the Central Bank (CB) which is becoming more and more anachronistic and a distorting and growing financial burden in countries like Barbados.

    The local CB has virtually given up its regulatory role of whatโ€™s left of the traditional banking with the retail banks allowed to dictate the forces of the loans and savings market.

    In addition there is every indication Barbados would soon be adopting the US $ as the โ€˜interchangeablyโ€™ preferred currency of the realm and duty free shopping with foreign money the choice of consumers.

    Further, the inexorable impact of ICT in the areas of banking and finance provides more evidence for recommending a death sentence for the 1970โ€™s version of central banking and all its outmoded โ€˜controllingโ€™ features of โ€˜financialโ€™ capitalism and old-fashioned economics, as you so often rile against.

    So why not use the opportunity to not only get rid of that professional misfit for a guv but also to โ€˜instituteโ€™ the massive restructuring of that โ€˜old-hatโ€™ balding institution and either send it to its inevitable 21st Century grave or recondition it to reflect its existence fit for purpose in the brand new financial world of IT.

  36. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/donald-trump-uk-visit-theresa-may-john-bercow-parliament-president-state-a7577126.html

    Lol..

    “Donald Trump’s trip to the UK will be delayed to avoid embarrassing him, according to reports.

    The visit will be postponed until sometime between late August and the end of September, according to a report from The Guardian. That will mean that it can be held while Parliament is in recess โ€“ and MPs are not around to embarrass the President by objecting to him.

    Mr Trump will head to the UK on a short visit between a Sunday and a Thursday, according to the report. It’s unlikely that he’ll spend much time in London because of the huge protests that are expected to greet him.”


  37. Mir

    You want me to make your points you. But the record, I believe – and have written about – the failure of Caricom in light of the financial crisis, and particularly the mess over the collapse of Clico.
    In simple terms I would like to see a federation; a currency union; a democratically elected Caricom parliament; cross-border regulators; a Caricom Navy (not the RSS); police and air force; integrated educational system; a Caricom central bank. The list goes on.
    I also called for the introduction of technology right across government, not on in terms of modernisation, but because of the productivity gains.


  38. WW&C
    I think I read that Her Brittanic Majesty and Philip the Greek will be at Balmoral,Scotland and it was mooted that he can visit the Royal couple there,as well as his mother’s birth place on the Isle of Lewis and his golf courses.It is also mooted that Scotland would mean less headaches for the security forces.Nicola,the First woman of Scotland and a supporter of Remain, would hardly want to have him address her parliamentary colleagues,what with him being a Brexit an’ all.


  39. Miller
    To further your idea and given that revitalizing Bridgetown,(I almost wrote The City as I am of that era)is now the mantra of the new DLP led by Todd the Walker,the Tom Adams building housing the Central Bank can be redesigned to become a hotel and the Plantations building at Lower Broad Street can also become another hotel,so that we won’t need to build any Hyatt at Lr Bay.


  40. There is the lure of building on the waterfront and the contracts to be distributed to all and sundry.

  41. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Gabriel…the Scits are not too foubd of trump either, he scammed them…lol…he just suits being with those 2 stains on the earth philip and liz…far, far away from humans.

    Lawson….my Justin got backbone, just look at the way he stood up to the illiterate letting him know who is what……and who controls Canada.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/justin-trudeau-donald-trump-nafta-trade-muslim-ban-travel-immigration-refugees-womens-rights-work-a7578676.html

    “Justin Trudeau was all smiles, handshakes and encouraging words at the White House during his first meeting with Donald Trump, despite a slightly frosty start for the US-Canada relationship.

    The leaders posed for a photo in the Oval Office in reported near silence as the cameras clicked.

    โ€œI think they want a handshake,โ€ Mr Trump said.

    Later in the Cabinet Room, Mr Trudeau pulled out a chair for the Presidentโ€™s eldest daughter, Ivanka Trump, and thanked her for organising the roundtable of women executives to discuss how to โ€œcreate pathsโ€ for entrepreneurial success.

    The photo that shows how Justin Trudeau feels about Donald Trump

    The Canadian leaderโ€™s one day visit to Washington, including a lunch and meetings with House Speaker Paul Ryan and Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, will be viewed as critical for strengthening relations and maintaining daily, cross-border trade of around $2 billion.

    Behind the smiles and formalities, the liberal Canadian leader and the conservative American populist were set to discuss two polarising issues: refugees and workplace gender equality.

    Mr Trudeau warned Canada would “not agree on everything”, referring to Mr Trumpโ€™s executive order to ban people from seven Muslim-majority countries.

    The ban, which was signed on 27 January, confused Canadians and caught up dual citizens, as well as visa and green card holders.”

  42. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/donald-trump-justin-trudeau-photo-white-house-visit-first-meeting-awkward-handshake-a7578656.html

    It was plain to see in the photos trump gives off a very bad and disturbing aura, quite noticeable to the media, it unsettled Trudeau, quite understandable.


  43. trudeau was sat at the kiddy table with the girls, surprised he didnt play barbie dolls with them. Lied to the canadian people trump got his dig in ….”I am just doing what I promised” LoL

  44. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Lol…that is why the illiterate will ban Canadians from crossing the border. ..the only thing standing in his way right now is Justin….ya see he already started detaining born US citizens, you try crossing that border upstate talking about the Amish Mafia and ya will see Lawson.


  45. Yes you should see the wild cop car / amish buggy chases in ny york state after they blow through a red light or are running moonshine , Amish buggy wheel men are some of the best


  46. The dumping of chemtrails on the population never factored in photonic light and the capitalization of such by MSN and the Climate Change agenda proved futile. Their ratings are plummeting as their days are numbered.


  47. The Mike Flynn saga has echoes of Watergate, it is only a matter of time before it explodes all over the new President. The cognoscenti in Washington are whispering that Flynn who is an old hand in the Intelligence field wouldnโ€™t have called the Russian Ambassador unless he was asked to do so by some higher up and the only higher up was the President elect.

    The question now being asked sotto voce is โ€œWhat did the President know and when did he know it?โ€ Is Flynn the kind of person who would fall on his sword to protect someone? He may not have to if the conversation captured on the tape is incriminating to others.

    Vamos a ver.


  48. Just in
    Flynn resigns, doubt thatโ€™s the end of the intrigue.

    Stay tuned

    http://www.cnn.com/2017/02/13/politics/michael-flynn-justice-department-warning/index.html


  49. They have to find the moles, and they will

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