The administration gets tough.
| | Russia continues to face international backlash following the assassination of a former spy and his daughter in the United Kingdom earlier this month. Sarah Huckabee Sanders said Tuesday that more than 25 countries have now expelled Russian intelligence agents "hiding under diplomatic cover" since Monday, when the United States and the United Kingdom announced they would take that step against the Kremlin.
"As we have said before, the United States is open to building a better relationship with Russia, but the Russian government must understand that there are serious consequences for its destabilizing actions," Sander told reporters. "This large and growing global response makes it clearer than ever that an improved relationship will only be possible if the Russian government changes its behavior."
Asked whether the White House was considering using the same "maximum pressure" diplomatic strategy it has employed against North Korea, Sanders declined to use that phrase. "We're certainly applying pressure on Russia; we're certainly encouraging and working with our allies and partners also to do so," she said. "And I think you've seen an unprecedented number of countries step up and join the United States in that effort." |
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Bolton Watch—Incoming national security adviser John Bolton was at the White House Tuesday, joining the man he will replace, H.R. McMaster, for a working lunch. The two dined at the ward room in the White House mess and discussed their transition, including upcoming scheduled events that will happen soon after Bolton takes the job on April 9. A source described the meeting as cordial and professional.
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The White House announced Tuesday it had reached a trade agreement with South Korea. According to senior administration officials, the one-on-one agreement will exempt South Korea from the recently announced steel tariffs levied by the United States—although Seoul has agreed to limit its steel exports to around 70 percent of what it currently sells over here.
Other provisions of the agreement include extending the 25-percent tariff on South Korean-made trucks and doubling the cap on American-made vehicles allowed into the South Korean market.
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| Must-Read of the Day—My colleague Andrew Egger reports from Missouri on Josh Hawley, the leading Republican candidate to challenge Democratic senator Claire McCaskill. Here's an excerpt: It would be an understatement to say that 2018 has been a discouraging year for Missouri Republicans. Governor Eric Greitens, an ex-Navy SEAL who swaggered into office in 2016 promising to clean up corruption, is embroiled in a nasty scandal over an extramarital affair. He's accused of snapping a surreptitious nude picture of his lover as an incentive for her to keep quiet about the affair, an act for which he now faces a felony invasion-of-privacy prosecution. The state party's response has been to suggest that the criminal charge against Greitens is a "political hit job" that can be traced back to money from Democratic megadonor George Soros. This helps to explain why the locals who pack into the barn today radiate such a strong sense of cheer, even relief. Hawley, 38, is the kind of guy they can get enthusiastic about. Start with his résumé: Smart, good-looking, and charismatic, Hawley pairs small-town roots with impressive policy chops. He grew up in Lexington, population 4,500, and was a standout student at Stanford en route to a law degree from Yale. He clerked for Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts and served as senior counsel to the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, where he worked on such high-profile Supreme Court cases as Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. and Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. In 2011, he returned home to teach at the University of Missouri School of Law. In his first foray into politics, the 2016 attorney-general race, Hawley trounced Democrat Teresa Hensley with 61 percent of the vote. (He even outperformed Donald Trump, who collected 56 percent of the vote in Missouri.)
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On the President's Schedule—President Trump has no public events on Wednesday, marking the third day in a row he has not appeared publicly.
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| Mueller Watch—The legal team for former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort has filed another motion to dismiss charges brought by the special counsel's office. This motion, similar to Manafort's March 14 filing in D.C. district court, requests that the Eastern District court of Virginia dismiss the charges brought last month against Manafort on counts of money laundering, tax fraud, and bank fraud.
"Mr. Manafort was threatened with additional charges in additional jurisdictions," said Jason Maloni, a spokesman for Manafort's legal team. "He is now playing a game of criminal-procedure whack a mole against a special counsel whose massive resources he cannot possibly hope to match." Maloni did not clarify which additional charges in which jurisdictions Robert Mueller's team have threatened Manafort with.
Special counsel spokesman Peter Carr suggested Maloni's mention of threats refers to a standard prosecutorial action. Carr provided an explanation from the federal government in a previous filing: "Far from threatening defendant, the government advised defense counsel of the nature of proposed charges as part of an offer to entertain any arguments from defense counsel, whether factual, legal, or discretionary, about why charges should not be brought—a standard practice the government followed both before bringing the instant indictment and in connection with bank fraud evidence discussed above." | |
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