Tom with the BTRTN
November 2019 Month in Review, and what’s coming next.
THE LEAD
·
The House Intelligence Committee presented a meticulously conceived and
efficiently produced set of testimony from a cadre of Trump Administration officials
in the public testimony phase of the impeachment inquiry.
·
The testimony proved conclusively that
President Trump personally directed and participated in a scheme to withhold from
Ukraine military aid and a greatly desired White House meeting in return for
political favors to advance Trump’s reelection prospects (as opposed to U.S. security
interests).
·
The GOP scrambled as new revelations emerged
that undercut each successive defense the GOP offered – but by the end of the
hearings, it was clear that not a single GOP representative or senator was
likely to vote against the President when considering either the Articles of
Impeachment in the House or a conviction based on those articles in a Senate
trial.
· GOP Trump supporters are now left with only two strategies: in the
near term, to sputter about the impeachment “process” despite the fact that it has been conducted according to form, or, longer term, to explain the vote they cast on the conclusion that while the President’s
offences were real and regrettable, but they were not impeachable.
·
But that ultimate defense begs the question
raised by House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff at the outset of the public
testimony: “If this is not impeachable
conduct, what is?”
·
And if the GOP admits openly there was wrongdoing,
might some of them sign on to a bi-partisan censure motion in either or both
chambers?
THE MONTH
November, 2019 was completely dominated by nine days of
public testimony of 12 previously unknown, though all senior, public officials. Many were State Department diplomats, and
others worked in the White House or the Pentagon, but all were insiders with deep
knowledge of U.S. policy objectives in Ukraine.
And they all had front row seats to the hijacking of those laudable aims
to ones that sought instead to further Donald J. Trump’s reelection
prospects.
The stories they told were both riveting and credible, and
despite the release of their private depositions before House committees prior
to the public testimony, contained surprises and power. Their power derived from their
professionalism, their commitment to the best of American intentions, and their
personal stories.
The officials each contributed pieces to the puzzle of a
storyline they all deduced over time – that Rudy Giuliani, under direct orders
from Trump, was re-focusing Ukrainian policy with the goal of gaining a public
announcement from Ukraine President Zelensky that investigations would be opened
on Burisma (the energy company on whose board Hunter Biden served) and the 2016
U.S. elections (involving the infamous server that contained Hillary Clinton’s
emails). Both topics were based on long
debunked conspiracy theories that had been embraced by Trump.
The testimony not only laid out this storyline in detail,
but also systematically erased every GOP defense point as quickly as it was
touted.
·
De facto Ukraine Ambassador Bill Taylor
revealed a bombshell, evidence of a telephone conversation between Trump and EU
Ambassador Gordon Sondland the day after the July 25 Trump/Zelensky phone
call. This second call directly linked
Trump to the demand for Biden/Burisma/2016 election investigations. The call was overheard by Taylor aide David Holmes
as he sat with Sondland in a Kyev restaurant, and Holmes himself later
testified about the call.
·
Sondland – the only witness without deep
government experience (he was a wealthy hotelier who donated mightily to the
Trump inaugural, leading to his appointment) -- turned on Trump in his testimony
with a set of All-the-President’s-Men-worthy quotes that revealed the truth and
debunked a slew of GOP defense points:
o
“We
followed the President’s orders.” This established that it was Trump, not Giuliani,
who was calling the shots. So much for
the “hearsay” defense which held that no one had actually heard Trump order the
quid pro quo (apart from the July 25 call, of course). (Sondland also confirmed the substance of the
call Holmes overheard.)
o
“Was
there a quid pro quo? Yes.” So much for the “there was no
quid pro quo” defense. Trump wanted the
investigation in return for a White House meeting with Zelensky – and ultimately
for the aid as well.
o
“Everyone was in the loop.” The quid pro quo strategy was known to every
top Administration official: Trump, Mike
Pence, Mike Pompeo and Mick Mulvaney.
(And John Bolton knew about it, though he was violently opposed.) So
much for the defense theory of the rouge freelancing by the “three amigos” (Sondland,
Kurt Volker and Rick Perry).
o
“He
didn’t actually have to do them, as I understand it.” This statement, referring to
Zelensky, shattered the notion that Trump was interested in actually rooting out corruption at all. Trump did not even care if Zelensky actually undertook any investigations of Biden
and the 2016 election, which were the only alleged “corruption” cases he ever even mentioned. All he cared about, even for them, was an announcement of coming investigations.
·
Laura Cooper, a Pentagon official overseeing
Ukraine policy testified – complete with corroborating emails – that the Ukrainians
officials knew about the hold on military aid as early as July 25 itself (the
day of the call), eliminating the GOP defense that if the Ukrainian’s did not
know the aid had been held up, they could not have understood the “favor” as a
quid pro quo for releasing it.
Apart from this defense-shattering testimony, the hearings
offered other riveting moments:
·
Trump tweeting real-time to denigrate deposed Ukraine
Ambassador Marie Yovanovich while she was testifying on how she was the object
of an ultimately successful schmeer campaign designed to drive her from
office. This was a clear case of witness
intimidation that had horrified GOP representatives trying to save face for the
party during the testimony by bending over backwards to show respect for the
widely-admired State Department veteran.
·
Alexander Vindman’s riveting story of his
family’s emigration from Ukraine when he was a child, and his damaging assessment
– from the standpoint of a White House NSC staffer – of the infamous July 25
phone call.
·
Fiona Hill, the NSC’s top expert on Russia,
completely demolished the conspiracy theory that Ukraine, more than Russia,
conspired to help Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election, stating that such
theories were promulgated by the Russians.
She memorably called on House Republicans to “not promote politically
driven falsehoods that so clearly advance Russian interests.”
·
The other witnesses – Jennifer Williams (an
aide to Mike Pence), Kurt Volker (former special envoy to Ukraine), Tim
Morrison (White House aide to the NSC), David Hale (undersecretary of state for
political affairs) and George Kent (deputy assistant secretary of state for
European and Eurasian affairs) – all added color and corroboration to the
story, with Kent laying out clearly for the American people why Ukraine is so
critically important to U.S. security interests.
By the time the testimony was over, it was also plain that
Trump knew of the whistleblower’s report at the time he released the aid to
Ukraine, giving him a strong motive for doing so. This, too, undercut a key GOP defense point,
which was that since the aid was ultimately released, there was no harm, no
foul.
The testimony so dominated the month that few other
headlines emerged. Trump completely
ignored the successful Bill Clinton playbook of carrying on with the business
of the nation while he was impeached; instead Trump incessantly defended his “perfect”
phone call, and attacked the process (and the witnesses) at every opportunity.
But Trump did take the time to engage on two other topics. The first was the effort to ban flavored
e-cigarettes, to curb the rapid growth of teenage vaping in the face of
unquestionable evidence linking it thousands of lung injuries and even 40 deaths. Trump at first seemed to embrace the ban, then
backed off when made aware of potential backlash among Trump supporters.
In the realm of “madness,” Trump also waded into the case
of Navy SEAL Edward Gallagher, completely overriding the recommendation of his
own military commanders who wanted to see the matter handled in court, and who
saw Gallagher’s maniacal behavior as something to curb, not celebrate. Why a man who ducked the draft by claiming
bone spurs, never spent a day of his life in the military, nor understood the
facts of the case, wanted to take this stand is beyond reason. But Navy Secretary Richard Spencer lost his
job in the kerfuffle, and Trump lost support from yet another institution he
has taken on, adding the military to the diplomatic corps and the intelligence
community.
And it was a bad month in court for Trump. Don McGahn was ordered to testify by a
Federal judge, and Trump’s taxes and financial records were ruled fair game by
District Court in both New York (where the Manhattan D.A. was pursuing them)
and in Congress. Each of this rulings
will be appealed but they served to remind us all that the waiting game may not
extend beyond the 2020 election as Trump as hoped.
NEXT UP
The spotlight turns now to the House Judiciary committee
which will draft, debate and vote on Articles of Impeachment. Many view the outcome of this entire process
to be pre-ordained. Just a month ago, we
at BTRTN predicted that after the House voted to impeach, GOP Senators would
cut and run, taking the position that what Trump did was wrong but not
impeachable or, in their case, worthy of a conviction vote.
But there are many important nuances. First, how many articles will there be? Abuse of power in the Ukraine affair is a
given. And there will almost surely be
an Obstruction of Congress article for the failure of the White House to permit
testimony in the impeachment inquiry.
But will the Democrats go further, with Articles, say, on Obstruction of
Justice for the RussiaGate, drawing on the Mueller report? Or even further, perhaps another article on
emoluments?
The dilemma is, of course, the more articles, the longer
the Senate trial, the more deflection of attention from the Democratic race,
and the more disadvantageous it will be for the five sitting Democratic
Senators who must stay in Washington as jurors in the case: Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders, Amy
Klobuchar, Kamala Harris and Cory Booker.
Those are five of the top seven contenders (in national polls) at this
point and we are talking about THE crucial juncture of the primary season, the
four early states (Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina) and 14 more
on Super Tuesday, all of which have primaries or caucuses in the month from
February 3 to March 3. And to extend the
proceedings for a “done deal” is perhaps unwise.
And the same logic goes for waiting for potentially damaging
witness John Bolton, who could at some point be compelled to testify. But the wait is not likely to be worth the
trade-off; plus Bolton is an unpredictable witness and hardly trustworthy to
tell a story completely favorable to the Democrats’ case. Strictly from a political standpoint it might
be smarter to wait for his tell-all book.
Trump has decided to skip the House Judiciary proceedings,
to which he (and counsel) had been invited.
He will simply continue to damn the entire process and wait until the Senate
trial to mount a defense (although perhaps he might skip that, too).
We think the Dems will go for three articles: abuse of power, obstruction of Congress and,
yes, obstruction of justice, and will push to get them passed before the
holidays. They will bank on McConnell
deciding on a crisp process (though a professional one). Senate Republicans will, as stated, not vote
to convict. Close attention will be paid
to Mitt Romney, Lisa Murkowsky and Susan Collins to see if they cast a
conviction vote, but that seems unlikely.
Perhaps the real drama gets back to Schiff’s question: is it really defensible to say that using
foreign policy to extort political favors is not impeachable? Assuming the Democrats continue to make the
case and the public tunes in, how will that fly? Especially if Trump himself, who hates that
strategy since it is an explicit critique of his “perfect” performance, is
railing about it during the entire trial?
If impeachment is too much – how about censure? Would GOP representatives and senators who
espouse the “not enough for impeachment” argument try to apply that to censure
as well? A bi-partisan censure would
surely be a blow for Trump. But in our
divided country, is there really any bridge that is too far?
TRUMP APPROVAL RATING
Through the tumultuous month, Trump’s approval rating
remained fixed at 43%, locked in the 40-45% range for the 23rd consecutive
month. Impeachment hearing? Everyone’s mind is made up.
TRUMP MONTHLY APPROVAL RATING
|
|||||||||||||||
2017
|
2018
|
2019
|
|||||||||||||
Jan
|
Jun
|
Jan
|
Jun
|
Ja
|
Fe
|
Ma
|
Ap
|
Ma
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Au
|
Se
|
Oc
|
No
|
|
Approve
|
45
|
40
|
41
|
42
|
42
|
41
|
42
|
42
|
43
|
43
|
43
|
43
|
44
|
43
|
43
|
Disappr.
|
44
|
55
|
55
|
53
|
54
|
55
|
54
|
54
|
54
|
54
|
54
|
53
|
53
|
55
|
55
|
Net
|
1
|
-15
|
-13
|
-10
|
-12
|
-14
|
-11
|
-12
|
-11
|
-12
|
-11
|
-10
|
-9
|
-13
|
-12
|
It is worth noting the intensity disparity in Trump’s
approval and disapproval levels. When
you break it down (as per Ipsos/Reuters) further, one can see that the
intensity of the “disapproval” far outweighs the intensity of approval. Simply stated, almost twice as many American
“strongly disapprove” of Trump as “strongly approve.”
But while Trump’s overall
approval rating has remained unchanged over, essentially, the duration of his
presidency, the intensity of that
rating has changed markedly. When you
break it down into “strongly” and “somewhat” segments, you can see the nature
of the shift since Trump’s inaugural. At
that top, 43% of all Americans approved of him (the top two boxes), and that
has dropped modestly since then (using this pollsters, Ipsos/Reuters, among all
Americans). But look at the disapproval
line, and specifically the dramatic increase in “strongly disapprove” from 29%
to 42%.
APPROVAL RATING INTENSITY
|
|||
Approval Rating Intensity
|
Jan 25, 2017
|
Nov 27, 2019
|
Change
|
Strongly
Approval
|
22%
|
21%
|
-1%
|
Somewhat/lean
approve
|
21%
|
19%
|
-2%
|
Somewhat/lean
disapprove
|
16%
|
13%
|
-3%
|
Strongly
disapprove
|
29%
|
42%
|
13%
|
Not
sure
|
12%
|
5%
|
-7%
|
Source: Ipsos/Reuters among all
adult Americans
|
Quite simply, this shift does not bode well for Trump’s
reelection – many more people dislike him intensely than when he was new to the
Presidency. That sharp spike among
detractors is not matched by a like upward climb in approval intensity among
his supporters – and, if it persists, that gap can mean a great deal when it
comes to voter turnout on Election Day 2020.
ON IMPEACHMENT
Polling indicates that just about half of the country
favors impeachment, with supporters outpacing detractors by a 49/44 margin,
having inched upward since the inquiry began.
Democrats have risen about +15 percentage points since the hearings
began, while Republicans have only inched up a few points. Independents are up about +10 points, and are
now solidly in the mid-40% range.
VIEWS ON IMPEACHMENT (FROM FIVETHIRTYEIGHT)
|
|||||||||
2019
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep*
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Support
|
45
|
37
|
39
|
39
|
38
|
39
|
47
|
48
|
49
|
Don't
Support
|
45
|
54
|
50
|
52
|
51
|
53
|
46
|
44
|
44
|
Support among
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep*
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Democrats
|
66
|
63
|
70
|
69
|
67
|
70
|
79
|
84
|
84
|
Independents
|
33
|
31
|
33
|
35
|
33
|
34
|
43
|
46
|
45
|
Republicans
|
10
|
8
|
10
|
9
|
8
|
9
|
12
|
11
|
12
|
* Support starts
moving up on 9/24 when Pelosi announces impeachment inquiry
|
GENERIC BALLOT
The generic ballot continues to favor the Democrats by a
wide margin. If this +7 differential was
the margin on Election Day, our BTRTN model indicates the Dems could pick up
15-20 additional seats and hold an even more dominant position in the House.
GENERIC BALLOT
|
||||||
2019
|
||||||
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
|
Democrats
|
45
|
46
|
47
|
47
|
47
|
46
|
Republicans
|
39
|
38
|
38
|
39
|
39
|
39
|
Net
Margin
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
8
|
7
|
7
|
TRUMPOMETER
The Trumpometer improves somewhat from October to November,
from +10 to +13. The +13 Trumpometer
reading means that, on average, our five economic measures are +13% higher than
they were at the time of Trump’s Inauguration, per the chart below (and with
more explanation of methodology below).
The increase in the Trumpometer was driven by a 1,000-point
rise in the Dow, and a modest adjustment of the Q3 GDP from a growth rate of
+1.9% to +2.1%. The other measured were
either unchanged or not materially changed.
The “Trumpometer” was designed to provide an objective
answer to the legendary economically-driven question at the heart of the 1980
Reagan campaign: “Are you better off
than you were four years ago?” The
Trumpometer now stands at +13, which means that Donald Trump can definitively
claim that the answer to that question is “yes.” (Whether he deserves credit for that score is
another matter.)
Clinton
|
Bush
|
Obama
|
Trump
|
|||
TRUMPOMETER
|
End
Clinton 1/20/2001
|
End
Bush 1/20/2009
|
End
Obama 1/20/2017 (Base = 0)
|
Trump 10/31/2019
|
Trump 11/30/2019
|
% Chg. Vs. Inaug. (+ = Better)
|
Trumpometer
|
25
|
-53
|
0
|
10
|
13
|
13%
|
Unemployment Rate
|
4.2
|
7.8
|
4.7
|
3.6
|
3.6
|
23%
|
Consumer Confidence
|
129
|
38
|
114
|
126
|
126
|
11%
|
Price of Gas
|
1.27
|
1.84
|
2.44
|
2.69
|
2.67
|
-10%
|
Dow Jones
|
10,588
|
8,281
|
19,732
|
27,046
|
28,051
|
42%
|
GDP
|
4.5
|
-6.2
|
2.1
|
1.9
|
2.1
|
0%
|
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Notes
on methodology:
BTRTN calculates our
monthly approval ratings using an average of the four pollsters who conduct
daily or weekly approval rating polls: Gallup Rasmussen, Reuters/Ipsos and You
Gov/Economist. This provides consistent and accurate trending information and
does not muddy the waters by including infrequent pollsters. The outcome tends to mirror the RCP average
but, we believe, our method gives more precise trending.
For
the generic ballot (which is not polled in this post-election time period), we
take an average of the only two pollsters who conduct weekly generic ballot polls,
Reuters/Ipsos
and You Gov/Economist, again for trending consistency.
The Trumpometer aggregates a set of
economic indicators and compares the resulting index to that same set of
aggregated indicators at the time of the Trump Inaugural on January 20, 2017,
on an average percentage change basis... The basic idea is to demonstrate
whether the country is better off economically now versus when Trump took
office. The indicators are the unemployment rate, the Dow-Jones
Industrial Average, the Consumer Confidence Index, the price of gasoline, and
the GDP.
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