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9:35 PM ET, October 30, 2017

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Washington Post:
Upstairs at home, with the TV on, Trump fumes over Russia indictments  —  President Trump woke before dawn on Monday and burrowed in at the White House residence to wait for the Russia bombshell he knew was coming.  —  Separated from most of his West Wing staff — who fretted …
RELATED:
Matt Apuzzo / New York Times:
Paul Manafort, Who Once Ran Trump Campaign, Told to Surrender  —  WASHINGTON — Paul Manafort and his former business associate Rick Gates were told to surrender to federal authorities Monday morning, the first charges in a special counsel investigation, according to a person involved in the case.
Anna Palmer / Politico:
Tony Podesta stepping down from lobbying giant amid Mueller probe  —  Democratic power lobbyist Tony Podesta, founder of the Podesta Group, is stepping down from the firm that bears his name after coming under investigation by special counsel Robert Mueller.
Andrew C. McCarthy / National Review:
The Manafort Indictment: Not Much There, and a Boon for Trump  —  Do not be fooled by the “Conspiracy against the United States” heading.  —  The Paul Manafort indictment is much ado about nothing . . . except as a vehicle to squeeze Manafort, which is special counsel Robert Mueller's objective …
Lawfare:
Robert Mueller's Show of Strength: A Quick and Dirty Analysis  —  The first big takeaway from Monday morning's flurry of charging and plea documents with respect to Paul Manafort Jr., Richard Gates III and George Papadopoulos is this: The president of the United States had as his campaign chairman …
Marcy Wheeler / The Intercept:
Monday's Indictment is Very, Very Bad News For Attorney General Jeff Sessions  —  The biggest news of Mueller Monday — the roll out of a money laundering indictment against Trump's former campaign adviser, Paul Manafort and campaign aide Rick Gates, and the unsealing of a false statements plea deal …
Jonathan Swan / Axios:
Inside the White House as the first Russia indictments came out  —  Just minutes before the senior-most White House staff walked into Roosevelt Room for their morning meeting with Chief of Staff John Kelly, their phones lit up with news alerts of the first indictments in the Mueller probe.
Josh Gerstein / Politico:
Mueller team won battle to force testimony from lawyer for Manafort and Gates  —  Judge concluded there was substantial evidence attorney was duped into relaying falsehoods to Justice Department.  —  Prosecutors convinced a federal judge to require a lawyer for Trump campaign officials Paul Manafort …
Discussion: Business Insider and Axios
Paul Waldman / Washington Post:
How bad will Mueller probe get for Trump?  The Papadopoulos plea may be a big tell.  —  While the biggest news of the day is the indictments Robert S. Mueller III has handed down against former Trump aides Paul Manafort and Rick Gates, today he also released a plea bargain with a heretofore minor figure …
Associated Press:   Trump fumes as Mueller probe enters new phase with charges
Katelyn Polantz / CNN:
Special counsel's office: Papadopoulos ‘small part’ of ‘large scale investigation’
Discussion: Raw Story and Axios
CNN:
Manafort to turn himself in to Mueller, source says
Ken Meyer / Mediaite:
Pat Robertson Says Trump Should Issue ‘Blanket Pardon’ for Indictments: 'He's Got to Shut This Down'
Discussion: RedState and Raw Story
The Daily Beast:
Mueller Probe Appears to Hit Democratic Powerhouses, Too
Derek Robertson / Politico:
Manafort's clothing tab: $1.3 million
Discussion: Axios and ABC News
Matt Apuzzo / New York Times:
Trump Campaign Adviser Met With Russian to Discuss ‘Dirt’ on Clinton  —  WASHINGTON — A professor with close ties to the Russian government told an adviser to Donald Trump's presidential campaign in April 2016 that Moscow had “dirt” on Hillary Clinton in the form of “thousands of emails,” according to court documents unsealed Monday.
RELATED:
Kelly Weill / The Daily Beast:
'Putin's Niece' Catfished Trump Aide, Offered Kremlin Meeting
Discussion: Balloon Juice
emptywheel:   A Month and a Half before the June 9 Meeting, Trump Campaign Learned about Hacked Emails
Dylan Byers / CNNMoney:
Facebook estimates 126 million people were served content from Russia-linked pages  —  Facebook will inform lawmakers this week that roughly 126 million Americans may have been exposed to content generated on its platform by the Russian government-linked troll farm known as the Internet …
RELATED:
Natasha Bertrand / Business Insider:   Twitter will tell Congress that Russia's election meddling was worse than we first thought
Washington Post:
Russian content on Facebook may have reached 126 million users — far more than first disclosed, company testimony says
Discussion: New York Times and Mother Jones
David Ingram / Reuters:
Facebook says 126 million Americans may have seen Russia-linked political posts
Discussion: IJR, more at Techmeme »
RELATED:
Hot Air:
Did George Papadopoulos Wear A Wire For Mueller?  —  I noted in the Papadopoulos post this morning that his plea deal says he's cooperating with Mueller's investigation.  Brad Heath of USA Today made a nifty catch, though, about the possible extent of that cooperation.
New York Times:
Trump Is Expected to Name Jerome Powell as Next Fed Chairman  —  WASHINGTON — President Trump is expected to name Jerome H. Powell as the next chairman of the Federal Reserve, replacing Janet L. Yellen, the current chairwoman whose term expires early next year, according to two people familiar with the plans.
RELATED:
Victoria Guida / Politico:
Trump expected to announce Powell as next Fed chair on Thursday
Discussion: IJR
New York Times:
New Accusers Expand Harvey Weinstein Sexual Assault Claims to Four Decades  —  Hope Exiner d'Amore said Harvey Weinstein raped her in a hotel room in the 1970s, when he was a young concert promoter in Buffalo.  Cynthia Burr said that during this time, he assaulted her in an encounter that began …
Sahil Kapur / Bloomberg:
Key GOP Senator Susan Collins Lays Out Her Demands for Tax Bill  —  Republican Senator Susan Collins of Maine said Monday she's opposed to two tax breaks for the wealthy that her party leaders are pushing for, indicating that her vote won't be easy to win on President Donald Trump's top legislative priority.
RELATED:
Seung Min Kim / Politico:
ABA deems another Trump judicial nominee ‘not qualified’  —  Another one of President Donald Trump's judicial nominees — this time, to the powerful appellate courts — has been deemed “not qualified” by the American Bar Association.  —  Leonard Steven Grasz was nominated in August to fill …
 
 
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 More Items: 
Kurt Schlichter / Townhall.com:
It's Not Too Much To Ask That Our GOP Hacks Show Some Loyalty To Their Voters
James Andrew Miller / Hollywood Reporter:
Why ESPN Could Abandon NFL Football (Guest Column)
Discussion: IJR and The Daily Caller
Page Six:
Matt Lauer throws Megyn Kelly under the bus
Discussion: The Daily Caller and AOL
David Catanese / US News:
Flake Considers Independent Senate Run
 Earlier Items: 
Andrew Scurria / Wall Street Journal:
FBI Is Probing Puerto Rico Power Contract
Oliver Darcy / CNNMoney:
NBC News, MSNBC cut ties with Mark Halperin
Wall Street Journal:
Begging Your Pardon, Mr. President
 

 
From Techmeme:

Kent Walker / The Keyword:
Google says the DOJ's “wildly overbroad proposal goes miles beyond the Court's decision”, would hurt US consumers, and jeopardize the US' global tech leadership

Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch:
Cybersecurity startup Wiz acquires Dazz, a specialist in security remediation and risk management; sources say the cash-and-stock deal is valued at $450M

Paige Smith / Bloomberg:
The CFPB will supervise tech companies with digital wallets, like Apple Pay, Google Pay, and Venmo, with 50M+ annual transactions, treating them more like banks

 
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