Archives par mot-clé : video

George HW Bush Acknowledges Groping Multiple Women

Former President George H.W. Bush arrives for the coin toss for the 2017 Super Bowl in Houston. Two women say he touched them inappropriately.

Patrick Smith/Getty Images


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Former President George H.W. Bush arrives for the coin toss for the 2017 Super Bowl in Houston. Two women say he touched them inappropriately.

Patrick Smith/Getty Images

Former President George H.W. Bush has acknowledged touching multiple women inappropriately in what his spokesman called « patt[ing] women’s rears in what he intended to be a good-natured manner. »

Two women have reportedly accused the former president of groping them while posing for photographs with Bush in recent years.

Actress Heather Lind wrote a post on Instagram, which has since been deleted, about an incident from early 2014.

« [W]hen I got the chance to meet George H. W. Bush four years ago to promote a historical television show I was working on, he sexually assaulted me while I was posing for a similar photo, » Lind wrote in a post Tuesday, according to CNN. « He didn’t shake my hand. He touched me from behind from his wheelchair with his wife Barbara Bush by his side. He told me a dirty joke. And then, all the while being photographed, touched me again. »

In The Wake Of Harvey Weinstein Scandal, Women Say #MeToo

Shortly after, New York actress Jordana Grolnick told Deadspin that the former president groped her during a photo op in August 2016 backstage at a Maine theater.

« We all circled around him and Barbara for a photo, and I was right next to him, » Grolnick told the website. « He reached his right hand around to my behind, and as we smiled for the photo he asked the group, ‘Do you want to know who my favorite magician is?’ As I felt his hand dig into my flesh, he said, ‘David Cop-a-Feel!’ « 

Bush’s spokesman Jim McGrath responded to the allegations with a statement — a « non-apology apology » — to multiple news organizations:

« At age 93, President Bush has been confined to a wheelchair for roughly five years, so his arm falls on the lower waist of people with whom he takes pictures. To try to put people at ease, the president routinely tells the same joke — and on occasion, he has patted women’s rears in what he intended to be a good-natured manner. Some have seen it as innocent; others clearly view it as inappropriate. To anyone he has offended, President Bush apologizes most sincerely. »

A flurry of sexual assault and harassment allegations against powerful men have emerged after The New York Times first reported on film mogul Harvey Weinstein paying off sexual harassment accusers. Since then multiple women have come forward and police in Los Angeles, New York and London are investigating allegations that Weinstein sexually assaulted women in those cities.

At least 38 women have accused Hollywood writer and director James Toback of sexual harassment, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Other prominent men in entertainment, media and politics have been accused of harassment as well; the accusations renew attention to the Access Hollywood recording of President Trump bragging about groping women, which was released just over one year ago.

The reports have sparked a resurgence of women posting stories on social media about sexual assault and harassment using the « #metoo » hashtag.

Leyard and Planar Expand Presence in the United States

PORTLAND, Ore.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Leyard
and Planar,
global leaders in visualization products, announced they have expanded
their presence in the United States by adding the assembly,
configuration and testing of LED video wall products to their
manufacturing facility in Hillsboro, Ore.

Through Leyard’s acquisition of Planar in late 2015, the combined
company is unique in its ability to leverage core LED technology and
supply chain as the worldwide leader in fine pitch LED while designing,
engineering, manufacturing, servicing and marketing LED products in
North America to meet the needs of western markets. Leyard and Planar
are also bringing products to partners and customers across the United
States with five new
showrooms
and their second annual product roadshow, Video
Wallapalooza 2017
.

To support the assembly, configuration and testing of LED video walls at
the Hillsboro facility, the company has added new employees to their
manufacturing organization, representing a 50 percent growth over the
past 18 months. Leyard and Planar are also able to better serve
customers by adding 35 percent more headcount to their U.S. customer
service organization in the last year. Additionally, Leyard and Planar
will be expanding their manufacturing facilities in Hillsboro in 2018.

The hiring expansion comes on the heels of the Global LED Display Market
Report by Futuresource Consulting that for
the second consecutive year ranked Leyard as the global market leader in
narrow pixel pitch LED displays. The expanded teams demonstrate the
company’s commitment to maintaining their global market leader position
by providing the most innovative LED display technology.

“As the global market share leader in LED video displays, we are
continuing to expand to ensure our solutions meet the strictest
requirements for our U.S. customers,” said Adam Schmidt, executive vice
president of sales and marketing for North America at Leyard and Planar.
“By shipping Leyard LED video walls from within the U.S., we’re
shortening delivery times, lowering freight expenses and meeting the
demands of American customers—reflecting our commitment to American job
creation and products that are locally sourced.”

Product Showrooms Across the U.S.

As Leyard and Planar expand their U.S. operations, they are bringing
products to reseller partners and customers across America with the
opening of five new showrooms
in major U.S. cities. In Spring 2017, showrooms opened in New York City
and Washington, D.C. and this fall, three more showrooms opened in
Miami, Chicago and Portland, Ore.

The showrooms include demonstration areas that enable visitors to see
Leyard and Planar’s groundbreaking LED video walls, award-winning LCD
display solutions and other advanced display technology. Participants
can also attend scheduled training events, including a wide range of
Certified Technology Specialist (CTS) courses and continuing education
classes certified by the American Institute of Architects (AIA).

Second Annual Roadshow Slated for 10 American Cities

In addition to their permanent showrooms, Leyard and Planar are bringing
products and training events to 10 American cities through Video
Wallapalooza 2017
, a two-month roadshow. The second annual Video
Wallapalooza kicked off in Cincinnati on Aug. 30 and will end in Atlanta
on Nov. 9 with two-day events also scheduled in Toronto, Boston,
Philadelphia, Nashville, Seattle, San Francisco, Houston and St. Louis.

Leyard and Planar sales, marketing and product teams will be on site at
Video Wallapalooza 2017 to offer product demonstrations. Participants
also have the opportunity to take product installation courses, as well
as attend one-hour technology and product courses. For a complete list
of Video Wallapalooza 2017 events and training courses, visit www.leyard.com/Wallapalooza2017
or www.planar.com/Wallapalooza2017.

To learn more about Leyard and Planar product development in the U.S.,
please watch our USA
Proud video
or visit www.leyard.com/usaproud
or www.planar.com/usaproud.

About Leyard and Planar, A Leyard Company

Leyard is a global leader in the design, production, distribution and
service of digital displays, video walls and visualization products
worldwide. The Leyard Group of companies and brands, which includes Planar
Systems
acquired in 2015, is comprised of displays, entertainment
and lighting system solutions. Leyard is the number one market share
leader in the LED display market and fine pitch LED and offers indoor,
outdoor, fixed and creative displays (Futuresource
2017). Used in applications such as broadcast, sports arenas, stadiums,
advertisement networks, retail digital signage, control rooms,
exhibitions, large scale events and digital cultural experiences, Leyard
enjoys marquee installations globally and has over 300 patents in
display technology. Founded in 1995, the group is headquartered in
Beijing, China, and is traded on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (stock
code: 300296). Forbes magazine (2013) named Leyard among “China’s
Top 100 Most Potential Listed Companies.” For more information, visit www.leyard.com.

How YouTube Entrepreneurs In Their 20s Are Disrupting Traditional Record Labels

MIAMI, FL – MARCH 23: Alan Walker performs at the SiriusXM Music Lounge at 1 Hotel South Beach on March 23, 2017 in Miami, Florida. Walker’s breakout single, « Fade, » was released for free in 2014 on the YouTube channel NoCopyrightSounds (NCS). (Photo by Gustavo Caballero/Getty Images for SiriusXM)

One of the most interesting label MA deals from the past few months was Warner Music Group’s acquisition of indie dance label Spinnin’ Records, for a reported price tag of more than $100 million. Major labels buy up indie labels left and right, but this particular acquisition pointed to a key disruptor that much of the music industry is still struggling to understand and accept: YouTube.

The biggest bargaining chip for Spinnin’ Records is arguably its YouTube community. Having amassed nearly 19 million subscribers over the past ten years, the label currently owns one of the 30 most-subscribed channels in the world. In a statement, Stu Bergen, Warner Music Group’s CEO of International and Global Commercial Services, explained that Spinnin’ Records’ YouTube savvy would prove invaluable for the Warner roster in an era when “the line between a local and a global hit, as well as the distinction between marketing and commerce, is blurring.”

It’s precisely because the music business still wants to separate marketing from commerce that it hasn’t exactly been comfortable partners with YouTube and other video streaming platforms. After all, the numbers paint a clear picture that YouTube not only is the most popular resource for listening to free music, but also yields a stubborn gap between consumption and revenue. The IFPI’s latest Music Consumer Insight Report claims that 1.3 billion YouTube users—or 85% of its user base—accessed free, non-monetized music over the span of a month. Public indie label data from January 2017 revealed that YouTube accounted for 21.7% of the label’s streams, but only for 3.8% of its streaming revenue.

Artists and trade bodies point to such numbers as evidence that YouTube encourages piracy while failing to return fair value back to content owners. Yet, it’s on this same platform where some of the most innovative models for artist development and distribution are taking shape, and where young, new entrants to the music industry are turning the traditional label structure on its head.

Perhaps the most standout example is Trap Nation, a channel run by 20-year-old Andre Benz that boasts over 16 million subscribers. Since its founding in 2012, Benz’s company has expanded to include other channels under the Nations network (Chill Nation, Rap Nation, House Nation, Bass Nation and RB Nation), encompassing more than 24.2 million subscribers in total, and has produced live shows at SXSW, Amsterdam Dance Event and EDC Las Vegas.

What’s more, the Nations network has become profitable despite owning nearly none of the music it posts to YouTube. Instead, an artist signs a license that issues the Nations network the right to monetize their single and retain all the ad revenue from the corresponding video, but the license is non-exclusive—meaning the artist can still promote and monetize that single on any other platform or YouTube channel of their choice.

In another case, Alan Walker, the 20-year-old Norwegian DJ on the bill for the Nobel Peace Prize Concert this December, released his first breakout track for free on NoCopyrightSounds (NCS), a YouTube-first label that allows indie creators to use and even monetize its music freely as long as they give due credit back to the content owners. Unlike the Nations network, NCS, which has over 13.1 million subscribers as of press time, is a more comprehensive label and publisher in its own right, in the sense that it only uploads YouTube releases signed directly to its roster.

Other successful YouTube music channels include Monstercat (6.5 million subscribers), MrSuicideSheep (7.4 million), Majestic Casual (3.5 million) and UKF (1.5 million), all of which go against the traditional label grain by embracing a distribution- rather than licensing-first business model.

According to industry estimates, annual revenue for a given music curation channel can reach as much as $1.5 million for every 10 million subscribers. Coupled with relatively little overhead—most channels employ only around two to five people full-time, while the Nations network is a larger outlier with 12 employees—this consistent revenue flow makes for a surprisingly sustainable business that is « digital-native » in every sense of the phrase.

Despite this opportunity, persuading artists and traditional labels about the seriousness of a YouTube-first business can sometimes be difficult. Majestic Casual’s weeklong shutdown in late 2015 due to alleged copyright violations only exacerbated the industry’s pervasive skepticism.

“Our biggest challenge is justifying our existence as a label, in an age when any artist can self-release a record really easily,” Daniel Lee, Label Manager at NCS, told me. “We try to solve that challenge by providing an amazing service to artists and proving to them that they’re not just another sausage in the industry factory, but becoming part of a much larger, more loyal community.”

Indeed, the secret to any YouTube channel’s success is similar whether its business is in music curation, unboxing videos, reaction videos or four-hour ASMR recordings: providing consistent content to a community that isn’t otherwise being fed.

Interestingly, many YouTube music channels found their community origins in gaming. Benz began curating music by uploading remix playlists to share with his fellow gamer friends; NCS founder Billy Woodfordsaw a gap in the market for free, copyright-safe music when he encountered licensing restrictions when trying to upload gaming videos of himself.

Over the long term, YouTube has proven to be a more effective space than Spotify for catering to these passionate communities, whether in gaming or beyond. Visual iconography plays a crucial role in visibility and stickiness on YouTube, adding a powerful marketing layer atop traditional methods. Video comment sections are ripe territory for engaging with fans and viewers in a two-way conversation that Spotify and Apple Music haven’t yet mastered.

The pace of music discovery is also quite different: while a Spotify-programmed playlist can add as many as 50 new tracks every week, most YouTube channels upload only one song a day, or up to five songs a week. “Our YouTube audience doesn’t necessarily follow up on Spotify,” said Lee. “We see YouTube, Spotify and SoundCloud as serving three really distinct audience segments.”

Another key reason why some curators are more loyal to YouTube is data accessibility. Spotify’s value proposition to the music industry centers around its ability to break artists through its complex system of playlists. In order to maintain that position of power, the service only gives sparse data to third-party curators.

“In a sense, we’re like Spotify’s direct competitors, because they don’t want user-grown playlists to be bigger than their own,” Benz told me. “I’ve tried to work with Spotify to help them grow their playlists via my YouTube channel, but they’re not really about that, either. I respect their approach, because it’s what any smart businessperson would do.”

In contrast, at the moment, YouTube has no ambition to become a music curator in its own right, so can afford to offer superior analytics to independent channels. “Because I get so much data from YouTube like skip rate and demographic info, I use that to my advantage when navigating Spotify and other platforms, especially when it comes to advertising,” said Benz. As a result, Spotify has become more of a secondary port of call for YouTube music curators, offering the opportunity to monetize a wider audience after building a robust community through video.

“If you’re an artist looking to make it big on Spotify, the only people who can really give you that guaranteed big break work at Spotify, » added Luke Hood, Founder and Director of UKF. « In contrast, if you’re looking make waves on YouTube, the only curators who can help you are third-party ones like us. »

In fact, Warner’s acquisition of Spinnin’ Records points to a growing trend of major labels seeking collaborations with YouTube curators, particularly around remixing songs by established artists. Typically, a major label arranges for five to six remixes of a hit single across various genres, including but not limited to Latin, dubstep and drum bass, with the intention of covering as many audiences and media outlets as possible.

In such arrangements, YouTube channels become valuable marketing tools for traditional labels, allowing them to test tracks and measure feedback and engagement in a more responsive environment. “There are also times when an NCS artist breaks on our channel and then get signed to a major, but still keep their music on NCS for the sake of staying in touch with our community,” said Lee.

Occasionally, however, major labels will misunderstand the business models behind YouTube channels, especially for those like NCS that are proper labels and publishers in their own right. “A few big labels have asked us how to get their latest signees on our channel, and our only legitimate answer is to hand over all their masters and publishing rights to us,” said Lee. “But we can look at more of a partnership where one of our artists reworks an existing track that we think has a lot of potential.”

In this vein, the biggest mistake the music industry can make—and one that the industry continues to make often—is putting all of these YouTube music channels into a single box. Digging deeper, one realizes that each channel has a distinct business model, target audience and long-term vision, refuting the claim that YouTube is “just” a lean-back streaming service or “just” a free promotional platform.

In an effort to prove the Nations’ viability as a label alternative for artists, Benz has also been busy growing his indie label imprint Lowly Palace, which is separate from the Nations business but still leverages the latter’s promotional reach. Lowly Palace encompasses a wider range of genres, including pop, RB and alternative in addition to dance, and signs exclusive single-level deals spanning 10 to 15 years, with a 50/50 split on the masters rights.

“A lot of execs will look at our model and wonder why we’re not signing away a higher percentage of the masters, given our huge promotional channels,” said Benz. “I strongly believe you don’t have to take as much of the masters away as possible in order to do something good for the artist.”

Even though a 10- to 15-year deal seems rather extensive, Benz argues that he still provides a much more flexible offering than that of traditional label contracts—especially with the single-by-single rather than artist-by-artist model that mimics a typical YouTube promotional license. “We give artists a choice: if that single ends up working well, let’s just work together again,” he said. “There are some artists who have signed more than 10 singles in a row with us already, and haven’t gone to another label yet.”

Aside from recorded music, YouTube music channels are also using live events to gain leverage over industry incumbents. Historically, the connection between streaming and live data and revenue has been spotty at best. In fact, Spotify’s recent “fake artist” controversy revealed a new class of artists nurtured by the growth of streaming, namely those who could rack up millions of streams without the ability (or desire) to sell tickets to a single show.

The most serious channels are determined not to fall into this trap, and are slowly but surely proving their ability to rally their online communities to live shows. Trap Nation just hosted its first ticketed show, Enter The Vortex, at Amsterdam Dance Event last weekend; UKF hosts one to two concerts every month in the UK under its events arm UKF Live; NCS is just starting to venture into the live space, hosting a lounge at TwitchCon showcasing NCS artists.

As with any music company, the next crucial task for these curators is mastering an increasingly wide range of viable international markets, especially given YouTube’s global reach. In general, only around 15% of YouTube music listeners are in the U.S., with India, Brazil, Mexico and Indonesia among the next top countries.

Each territory has its own musical preferences and subsequent product dynamics, which presents both a challenge and an opportunity to curators with strong roots in Western markets. “We can see from our YouTube stats that we have significant audiences in the Middle East and North Africa, but we haven’t been able to engage them properly yet due to language barriers,” said Lee.

Likewise, only 14% of Trap Nation’s audience is based in the U.S., with Germany tapped as its second-biggest market. The channel is also actively pursuing partnerships in China and Thailand, having just launched on China’s Weibo, WeChat and Youku this past February.

Amidst this global expansion and maturation into full-fledged media companies, these YouTube brands are reframing the conversation about the potential value the site brings to the music industry not as a standalone streaming service, but as a data-rich community-building tool that can generate profits if utilized smartly.

“To what extent have you actually tried speaking and engaging with your fans on YouTube, aside from just posting your content? A lot of people haven’t taken that next step,” said Hood. “You get out of the platform as much as you give.”

Honda Targets Millennials With Gold Wing Motorcycle Relaunch

  • by Tanya Gazdik
    ,

    4 hours ago

Honda Powersports is relaunching its
iconic Gold Wing motorcycle with marketing that attempts to shed its image as a “couch on wheels” in order to appeal to a new generation of riders. 

It is the
motorcycle’s first major redesign in 17 years. The global launch campaign by agency of record Dailey goes beyond features and tries to capture the emotions that come from riding. “What
Lies Beyond” is a departure from the typically product-first mindset of Honda motorcycle ads, instead leaning into the touring lifestyle’s spirit of adventure, says Lee Edmunds, manager of
Honda Powersports marketing.

“The big challenge for us was to create a bike and a campaign that appealed to our existing customer base while also attracting a customer new to
touring,” Edmunds says in a release, adding that the campaign’s videos should appeal to both customer bases.

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The Gold Wing has always had a loyal audience and the new Gold Wing,
has technological advances like Apple CarPlay, an industry first. In another first, the new Gold Wing boasts an available 7-speed automatic Dual Clutch transmission with handlebar-mounted paddle
shifters. It’s lighter by nearly 90 pounds, with more power. 

The microsite hosts five videos including a teaser video,
What Lies Beyond,” an ode to the touring lifestyle that celebrates the appeal of the open road and highlights the types
of unexpected places and people we come across. “Beyond the Standard” is a video and interactive timeline. It celebrates
the Gold Wing’s legacy and evolution from 1975 to modern day, bringing the iconic bike’s history to life. 

In “Beyond the Screen,” weary of connecting with friends only on Facebook, a couple decides to break free from their phone screens and
reconnect with far-flung friends in person, using the high-performing, comfortable Gold Wing to find the kinds of experiences you can only get in real life.  “Beyond the Gold Wing,” a product-centered piece, bridges the history and the modern day, and highlights the latest performance and
technology innovations through the new model.  A fifth and final video will launch next month.

Top video marketing tips: Forget programmatic – think holistic

David Muhle, VP Sales and Channel for EMEA, Ooyala looks at the rise of holistic advertising for more effective video advertising decisions.

The video advertising market has undergone tremendous change looking for the next big thing which solves the issue of managing and maximising sales across direct and programmatic channels simultaneously.

While most advertising purchases are made using automated systems called ‘programmatic trading’ the direct market, often used by publications and on television, is still effective in a challenging market. For advertisers to fully optimise their campaigns, they need a platform that effectively uses both automated and manual purchase.

For publishers, the mechanics of this complex market makes knowing where to sell the advertising to, and how to do so at maximum price, difficult. Using the holistic platform, publishers have a better overall understanding of their channels, allowing them to streamline advertising sales and increase their ROI. A holistic platform creates the conditions necessary to effectively combine direct and programmatic ads, something that had previously been difficult and costly.

How holistic advertising works

In traditional advertising, a buyer is bound to a seller. This means that if the demand for their supply increases over time, the seller can earn more while still holding onto the same space, then sell it on later using programmatic trading. In a programmatic market, where a valuation of an ad impression can be made at any given moment, the seller becomes at risk if they do not sell their full range or their demand decreases.

A platform with a holistic approach to advertising pools together all the benefits of the traditional and programmatic markets, to find the best combination of the two. The result is a higher ROI, more satisfied advertisers, and a better level of overall understanding. Direct and programmatic ads are simply added together in the holistic model, and then strengthened by each other’s characteristics.

The benefits of a holistic platform that combine direct and programmatic adverts are numerous. The ability to optimise sales and see a higher average value (increased CPM) across all video adverts, both programmatic and directly sold ads, allows for more effective forecasting for future campaigns. The platform also increases the control over demand based on advertising rules that publishers enforce across all channels. This results in smarter advertising that reaches the right audiences.
Other benefits include a unified view of stock status and sales channels for publishers which improves data analysis and allows publishers to make objective advertising decisions based on that data. This, in turn, equates to cost savings because you only need to manage one advertising platform.

Are the market players ready?

Several market players are already starting to use the holistic model. In a study for SpotX, Researcher IHS forecast that $2.25 billion, which is over half of all video advertising revenue, will be generated programmatically by 2020, with the UK remaining Europe’s top programmatic market. Here, programmatic digital video currently makes up 32% of digital video net ad revenues which gives operators an enormous opportunity for sales. This opportunity can be acted upon most quickly and effectively via the holistic ad platform.

The same study found that non-traditional media companies offering video ads are also moving their businesses over to the programmatic market. Many of these companies see it as an opportunity to differentiate themselves from traditional TV companies and quickly achieve economies of scale. Using the holistic platform, they can close the gap between traditional, direct and automated marketing to become an even more attractive market player.

Holistic advertising also helps publishers compete with Facebook and other social media platforms, since the holistic ad model gives them more ways to utilize their entire stock by making more money on live videos, more effectively, and creating economies of scale.

The benefits of holistic advertising also apply to mobile marketing, where consumers in the U.S. and U.K. spend the most daily hours watching non-linear, VOD viewing. According to eMarketer in 2016, 69% of U.S. digital video ad spending is forecast to be programmatic this year. Holistic advertising will be a key factor in continued growth for publishers because the demands of the market are so fragmented.

A business’ aim is to create smarter ads based on consumer behavior and viewing patterns on different platforms, and only a holistic platform can do this effectively. A holistic ad platform will lead us into a new and dynamic era for advertising, in which video is the focus.

By David Muhle
VP Sales and Channel for EMEA
Ooyala

George HW Bush Apologizes After Actress Heather Lind Accuses Him of Sexual Assault

Former President George H.W. Bush has apologized for an “attempt at humor” after being accused of sexual assault by actress Heather Lind.

Lind, in a now-deleted Instagram post Tuesday, accused Bush, 93, of touching her from behind during a photo-op while in his wheelchair.

She said Bush’s wife, Barbara, was standing beside him during the 2014 photo-op for American Revolutionary War drama Turn: Washington’s Spies.

GettyImages-483235703 Actress Heather Lind poses during a photocall for the series ‘Turn’ during the MIPTV, on April 7, 2014 in Cannes, on the French Riviera. In an Instagram post she accused former president George H.W. Bush of sexual assault. VALERY HACHE/AFP/Getty Images

“I was disturbed today by a photo I saw of President Barack Obama shaking hands with George H. W. Bush in a gathering of ex-presidents organising aid to states and territories damaged by recent hurricanes, » said Lind, referring to Saturday’s benefit gig where all five living former U.S. presidents appeared on stage.

“I found it disturbing because I recognize the respect ex-presidents are given for having served. And I feel pride and reverence toward many of the men in the photo.

GettyImages-633944178 President George H.W. Bush arrives for the coin toss prior to Super Bowl 51 between the Atlanta Falcons and the New England Patriots at NRG Stadium on February 5, 2017 in Houston, Texas. The former president issued an apology after being accused of sexual assault by actress Heather Lind. Patrick Smith/Getty Images

“But when I got the chance to meet George H. W. Bush four years ago to promote a historical television show I was working on, he sexually assaulted me while I was posing for a similar photo.

« He didn’t shake my hand. He touched me from behind from his wheelchair with his wife Barbara Bush by his side. He told me a dirty joke.

“And then, all the while being photographed, touched me again. Barbara rolled her eyes as if to say ‘not again’. »

Lind said that after the event, security staff working for Bush told her she should not have stood next to the former president.

In a statement Jim McGrath, a spokesman for the former president, said: “President Bush would never—under any circumstance—intentionally cause anyone distress, and he most sincerely apologizes if his attempt at humor offended Ms. Lind.”

In the lengthy post, Lind said:  « We were instructed to call him Mr. President. It seems to me a President’s power is in his or her capacity to enact positive change, actually help people, and serve as a symbol of our democracy,’ the lengthy post went on.

« He relinquished that power when he used it against me and, judging from the comments of those around him, countless other women before me. »

She said that she told other members of the cast and crew on the AMC series about the alleged assault.

« My fellow cast-mates and producers helped me that day and continue to support me. I am grateful for the bravery of other women who have spoken up and written about their experiences, » she said.

« And I thank President Barack Obama for the gesture of respect he made toward George H. W. Bush for the sake of our country, but I do not respect him. #metoo.’  

Lind posted the accusation under the trending #meetoo hashtag, under which women have shared experiences of sexual assault after rape allegations were leveled at Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein.

Bush has vascular parkinsonism, a rare syndrome that mimics Parkinson’s disease, and has used a motorized scooter or wheelchair in recent years.

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The Daily 202: Flake and Corker feel liberated to speak their minds. That should terrify Trump.

With Breanne Deppisch and Joanie Greve

THE BIG IDEA: Now Jeff Flake can listen to his conscience, not his consultants.

The Trumpists feel triumphant and emboldened after the Arizona Republican senator announced that he will not seek reelection. Former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon quickly claimed Flake’s scalp as his own. “Many more to come,” he texted a Washington Post reporter last night.

But a much better outcome for President Trump would have been if Flake ran and lost in the primary. Public and private polls showed that he was deeply vulnerable to a challenge from anyone aligned with the administration.

Flake was building up a serious campaign apparatus, and his advisers were telling him that he had to be cautious. If he had decided to take his chances, the senator’s critiques of Trump would have been very measured. If he subsequently lost in a primary, it would be much easier for the president’s allies to dismiss future attacks as sour grapes from a senator scorned.

— Flake’s decision to retire means that he gets to leave the Senate on his own terms and apparently that entails going full “Bulworth.

In an op-ed for The Post, Flake explains that he decided not to seek reelection in order “to remove all considerations of what is normally considered to be safe politically.”

“For the next 14 months, relieved of the strictures of politics, I will be guided only by the dictates of conscience,” he promises. “It’s time we all say: Enough.”

While some might sulk from the scene, Flake is flooding the zone. He was omnipresent and ubiquitous across media platforms last night and this morning, from CNN to NPR, warning in dire terms about the GOP’s retreat from Reagan-style conservatism.

“Here’s the bottom line: The path that I would have to travel to get the Republican nomination is a path I’m not willing to take, and that I can’t in good conscience take,” Flake acknowledged in an interview with the Arizona Republic. “It would require me to believe in positions I don’t hold on such issues as trade and immigration, and it would require me to condone behavior that I cannot condone.”

— As one of the most authentically conservative members of Congress, Flake has a level of moral authority rivaled by few others. He is the rightful ideological heir to Barry Goldwater, whose namesake institute Flake led before being elected to the House in 2000.

There is a very clear contrast between the president and the senator: Trump was a registered Democrat as recently as 2009. While he was defending partial-birth abortion, supporting an assault-weapons ban and filling Nancy Pelosi’s campaign coffers, Flake was proving his conservative bona fides by leading the charge to kill earmarks, voting against Medicare Part D despite arm-twisting from George W. Bush himself and speaking out against deficit spending by his own party. House GOP leaders even removed Flake from a choice slot on the House Judiciary Committee in 2007 as retaliation for his criticism.

This part of his background makes it hard for anyone to credibly argue that Flake speaking out against Trump is anything but principled.

— Flake’s announcement packed an extra punch because it came just a few hours after Bob Corker — another senator who has decided not to seek reelection — eviscerated Trump on three network morning shows. “I don’t know why he lowers himself to such a low, low standard and debases our country in the way that he does, but he does,” the Tennessean said.

When Trump fired off a barrage of tweets, Corker replied with a zinger:

A CNN reporter then tracked down the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in the bowels of the Capitol. He happily teed off for three minutes. He called the president “the L-word” (as in untruthful), declared that he would not support him again, and expressed hope that the White House staff can “figure out ways of controlling him.”

Both these guys will have as big a megaphone as they want for as long as they want it. They will be the most sought-after guests on the Sunday shows and in prime time cable for the next year.

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who is battling brain cancer, belongs in the same category. He’s become more willing to explicitly decry Trump. In Philadelphia last week, the war hero condemned “people who would rather find scapegoats than solve problems.” He added that “half-baked, spurious nationalism” should be considered “as unpatriotic as an attachment to any other tired dogma of the past that Americans consigned to the ash heap of history.” In an interview, he alluded to Trump getting deferments to avoid serving in Vietnam.

— The conventional wisdom is that Corker and Flake will both be replaced by intellectually pliable apparatchiks who will reliably support Trump. This is more likely than not.

But the changeover won’t happen for 14 months. Flake and Corker will be in office until January 2019. That’s an eternity in politics. It’s more than enough time to derail some of the more unconservative elements of the Trump agenda. Remember, Republicans only have a two-seat majority in the Senate.

Moreover, in this environment, it’s totally plausible that Democrats could pick up the open seats in both Arizona and Tennessee. If you add Nevada, and assume that Democratic incumbents up for reelection in states Trump carried find a way to survive (a big if), the GOP would lose the majority. If Republicans lose the Senate in 2018 — which was inconceivable just a few months ago — they will probably also lose the House. If Trump feels put upon now, he has no clue how miserable the second half of his term would be.

Purges like this are always bloody. If they knew American political history better, Nick Ayers, Sean Hannity and Bannon might be a little more careful about what they wish for.

— Some in the Washington chattering class are under the mistaken impression that — because they will never face voters again — Flake, Corker and McCain are not being that courageous by going public with their fears about Trump.

Here’s a quick thought experiment for these pundits: Can you imagine Chris Dodd, Evan Bayh and Byron Dorgan saying in 2009 that Barack Obama was debasing the country? Or Fred Thompson, Phil Gramm and Jesse Helms saying in 2001 that George W. Bush needed adult day care? Or George Mitchell, Sam Nunn and David Boren going on CNN in 1993 to call Bill Clinton a congenital liar?

Of course not. In fact, it’s inconceivable. As Flake said yesterday, this is not normal. None of it: not Trump’s behavior, nor the reaction to it.

That’s why the mainstream media cannot cover the back-and-forth like a remake of “Mean Girls.” It’s so much more than just another Trump Twitter feud. Objectively, this is an extraordinary moment in our nation’s history.

— In a year of remarkable days, yesterday was one of the most remarkable. Whether it will be a pivot point remains unclear. Flake’s 18-minute speech on the Senate floor announcing his resignation will be talked about for a generation. (It’s worth your time to read the transcript.)

— The million-dollar question now: Will Flake embolden more senators to speak out or will his experience scare them into silence? There are several GOP senators who feel the same way he does, but they won’t put their views on the record.

— For now, Republican leaders on the Hill are downplaying the defections and reiterating that they believe cutting taxes is more important than the president’s fitness for office.

“There’s a lot of noise out there,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said at a news conference after Trump spoke at the Senate GOP lunch. “If there’s anything that unites Republicans, it’s tax reform. We’re going to concentrate on what our agenda is and not any of these other distractions [reporters] may be interested in.”

“All this stuff you see on a daily basis — Twitter this and Twitter that? Forget about it,” Speaker Paul Ryan said at his own news conference. “At the end of the day, I know Bob well. Bob is going to vote for … tax reform. … So put this Twitter dispute aside.”

HOW IT’S PLAYING—

Washington Post team coverage:

From the opinion page:

The mainstream media narrative:

  • The Hill’s Reid Wilson: “The original Tea Partier exits, stage right.
  • The Associated Press’s Julie Pace: “Can the GOP survive the Trump presidency?
  • The New York Times’s Carl Hulse: “Another Republican Call to Arms, but Who Will Answer?
  • Politico’s Alex Isenstadt: “Trump purges enemies and reshapes party in his image. The president wins short-term victories with the retirements of Jeff Flake and Bob Corker, but the cost to the GOP agenda could be steep.”
  • BBC: “Flake (is) a fallen soldier in war for soul of Republicanism.
  • Los Angeles Times: “In stunning rebuke of Trump, two GOP senators accuse him of undermining American values.
  • Bloomberg: “Flake’s Blistering Attack on Trump Is the Latest Crack in GOP Unity.”
  • BuzzFeed: “Two Republicans Just Shattered Trump’s Show Of Party Unity.
  • Smart Politics: “Flake Becomes 1st Arizona US Senator Not to Seek 2nd Term.
  • San Diego Union-Tribune: “Flake isn’t alone. Here are 14 Republicans to say they won’t seek re-election this cycle.”

Jeff Flake talks to the media in the Russell Senate Office Building last night. (Matt McClain/The Washington Post)

On the right:

Bannon’s Breitbart News:

  • The Federalist’s Ben Domenech: “Flake Authenticates The Party Of Trump.”
  • Arizona Republic columnist Robert Robb in USA Today: “I know Jeff Flake. Trump has shaken him to his core.
  • NYT columnist Ross Douthat: “Flake’s Defiant Surrender.
  • National Review Editor Rich Lowry: “Trump fixed Flake in his sights and basically chased him from the Senate. … I admire his candor, but I would think if you are a working politician like Flake, being a little more prudent and doing everything possible to stay in the Senate would be the better option.
  • Washington Examiner: “Trump’s takeover of the Republican Party meets continued resistance.
  • Fox News’s Greg Gutfeld: “Flake Invoking ‘Children Grandchildren’ in Speech Sounded Like Leftist Strategy.
  • Newsmax: “Brett Bozell: Good Riddance to ‘Fake Conservative’ Jeff Flake.
  • Drudge Report: “Schumer Praises: He Will Be Missed…”
  • Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol: “It’s too-clever-by-half to say Flake’s exit may be for the best. It’s bad: Flake took on Trump. Trump Bannon took on Flake. Flake’s gone.”
  • Laura Ingraham: “There is no constituency for open borders, endless wars, and lopsided trade deals. [Flake should] spare us the next 14 [months].”
  • Mike Huckabee (Sarah’s dad): “Note to Flake and Corker: Don’t let the door hit you where the good Lord split you!
  • Ann Coulter: “Sen. Jeff Flake becomes the 5th GOP senator whose career was ended by his vote for Marco Rubio’s amnesty bill. Nine to go.”

On the left:

  • Salon: “Flake’s exit is a win for Steve Bannon. GOP civil war has just claimed another victim.”
  • The Intercept: “After day of feuding, Jeff Flake and Bob Corker join Trump to upend a major consumer protection.
  • Vice: “Flake’s Wild Anti-Trump Tirade Was Also a Total Surrender.
  • Vox: “Flake can’t save America from the sidelines. By leaving the Senate to protest Trump’s agenda, Flake is making it easier for Trump to pass it.”
  • The Daily Beast: “Great Speech, Jeff Flake: Now Do Something About Trump. If his seat is filled by a Bannon acolyte while the president stomps all over the republic, all the words in the world won’t mean a thing.”
  • Vanity Fair: “Republicans ‘furious’ with Bob Corker … for endangering tax cuts. They privately agree Trump is nuts, but they’re willing to keep quiet to get a tax bill passed.”
  • Houston Chronicle Editorial Board: “Trump poses a threat to our national ideals. Even fellow Republicans now warn about the president’s reckless behavior.”

— The late-night comedians joked about Flake’s departure in their opening monologues:

Seth Meyers: “All right! Jeff Flake! Way to eventually go! It took kinda-sorta guts to stand up only 11 months after the election and tell America not to elect Donald Trump. You said, ‘Hey, I don’t care if this hurts my 18 percent approval rating. … I’m going stand up and do what was right a year ago. I’m going to fight for the American people — by quitting my job of fighting for the American people.’”

Stephen Colbert: “First McCain, then Corker, now Flake. Why is it that Republicans only speak up against Donald Trump when they know they’re not running for reelection? They finally grow a set, and then they say, ‘I’m taking my balls and going home.’”

Jimmy Fallon: “[Flake] said that the GOP was headed in the wrong direction. Or, as Trump calls it, ‘Flake News.’

WHILE YOU WERE SLEEPING:

—  SCOOP: The Clinton campaign and the DNC helped fund research that resulted in the infamous dossier alleging ties between the Trump campaign and Russia. Adam Entous, Devlin Barrett and Rosalind S. Helderman report: “Marc E. Elias, a lawyer representing the Clinton campaign and the DNC, retained [Fusion GPS] to conduct the research, [who then hired dossier author] Christopher Steele, a former British intelligence officer[.] . . . Elias and his law firm, Perkins Coie, retained the firm in April 2016 on behalf of the Clinton campaign and the DNC. The Clinton campaign and the DNC through the law firm continued to fund Fusion GPS’s research through the end of October 2016, days before Election Day.” Before that agreement, the firm’s research was funded by a still unknown Republican client during the GOP primary. When the Republican donor stopped funding the research, Elias agreed to pay for the work to continue.

“[It] is unclear how or how much of that information was shared with the campaign and DNC, and who in those organizations was aware of the roles of Fusion GPS and Steele. One person close to the matter said the campaign and the DNC weren’t informed of Fusion GPS’s role by the law firm.” People familiar with the matter told our colleagues it is “standard practice” for political campaigns to use law firms to hire outside researchers, and said that “at no point” did Clinton’s campaign or the DNC direct Steele’s activities.

The Clinton campaign’s national press secretary reacted to the news:

Trump responded to the new this morning:

— U.S. Ambassador to New Zealand Scott Brown acknowledged that he had been investigated for inappropriate comments he allegedly made during his first trip to Samoa. The Guardian’s Eleanor Ainge Roy reports: “Brown told New Zealand media on Wednesday he wanted to address ‘innuendo and rumour’ about his visit to Samoa in July to celebrate 50 years of the peace corps in the country. Brown — speaking with his wife, Gail Huff, by his side — confirmed he was the subject of an official administration inquiry by the US state department, which sent investigators to Wellington to look into what took place on the trip. Brown said the official complaints related to comments he had made at a party in the Samoan capital, Apia, where he told attendees they looked ‘beautiful’ and could make hundreds of dollars working in the hospitality industry in the US. Brown and Huff said they had ‘no idea’ the comments would be regarded as offensive.”

— Wall Street celebrated after Vice President Pence cast the tiebreaking vote in the Senate to block regulations allowing consumers to sue their banks. Renae Merle reports: “The rules would have cost the industry billions of dollars, according to some estimates. … At issue is the fine print in many of the agreements that consumers sign when they apply for credit cards or bank accounts. These agreements typically require them to settle any disputes they have with the company through arbitration, in which a third party rules on the matter, rather than going to court or joining a class-action lawsuit. The [Consumer Financial Protection Bureau] rule would block mandatory arbitration clauses in some cases, potentially allowing millions of Americans to file or join a lawsuit to press their complaints. After more than four hours of debate, the Senate voted 51 to 50 to block its implementation.”

— Chinese President Xi Jinping was granted five more years in power and there is no obvious successor in his senior leadership team. Simon Denyer reports: “Xi introduced the six other all-male members of the Politburo Standing Committee to the media, breaking with recent convention by not including a potential heir in the lineup. That appears to raise the chances that Xi could stay on in power beyond 2022.” The news follows the announcement that Xi’s name would be enshrined in the Chinese Communist Party’s constitution: “That means that Xi is likely to wield ultimate authority in the party as long as he is alive, experts say, and makes any challenge to that authority tantamount to an attack on the party itself.”

Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers reacts during the seventh inning against the Astros in Game 1 of the 2017 World Series. (Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images)

— The Dodgers beat the Astros 3-1 in the hottest World Series game in history, with temperatures exceeding 100 degrees. Dave Sheinin reports: “With [Clayton] Kershaw pitching brilliantly over seven overpowering innings and third baseman Justin Turner delivering the go-ahead runs with a two-run homer in the sixth, the Dodgers beat the Astros, 3-1[.] … Game 2 is Wednesday, with Dodgers left-hander Rich Hill facing Astros ace Justin Verlander, and with temperatures expected once again to approach or climb into triple digits.”

GET SMART FAST:​​

  1. A federal appeals court in Washington ruled that a detained immigrant teen is entitled to receive an abortion “without delay,” reversing a decision last week from a three-judge panel that would have postponed the 17-year-old’s procedure. “Today’s decision rights a grave constitutional wrong by the government,” the judge wrote on Tuesday. It is unclear whether the Trump administration will appeal the decision. (Ann E. Marimow and Maria Sacchetti)
  2. Two top aides to Rep. Robert Brady (D-Pa.) were indicted in connection to the investigation of $90,000 the congressman paid a primary challenger to drop out of the contest in 2012. (Philadelphia Inquirer)
  3. A federal judge upheld 22 of the 24 corruption charges against former congressman Aaron Schock (R-Ill.). But Schock’s defense team praised the judge’s decision to throw out two of the charges based on “separation of powers” concerns. (Politico)
  4. The judge deciding the fate of former Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl is slated to hear today from troops who say they were seriously injured by Bergdahl’s disappearance. Bergdahl faces up to life in prison on charges of desertion and misbehavior in front of the enemy. (Alex Horton)
  5. The SEC for years ignored warnings that it needed to increase security before a massive data breach in 2016 — with the GAO saying as early as 2008 that the agency’s failure to encrypt information made it easier for hackers to access sensitive information. (Renae Merle
  6. Oakland Athletics catcher Bruce Maxwell was denied service at a restaurant for kneeling during the national anthem. Maxwell was home in Alabama when a waiter recognized him and refused to serve him. (Jacob Bogage)

  7. Former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick has reportedly landed a $1 million book deal with Random House. He inspired a wave of NFL protests during the national anthem. (Des Bieler)
  8. A new poll found that more than half of white Americans believe that discrimination against white people exists. But a much smaller percentage reported actually having experienced that discrimination. (NPR)
  9. A Maryland retirement community is under fire for selling houses only to Muslims. The development has sparked complaints from a spate of elected officials and nearby residents, who have accused the community of violating fair-housing laws. (Justin Wm. Moyer)
  10. Italian soccer’s governing body ruled that a passage from “The Diary of Anne Frank” be read aloud before each game this week. The decision follows an anti-Semitic incident in which a small group of one team’s fans used Frank’s image to troll an opposing team. (Matt Bonesteel and Marissa Payne)

  11. Reince Priebus is rejoining his former law firm in Wisconsin. He has also signed with the Washington Speakers Bureau. (Politico)

  12. Albert Einstein’s “theory of happiness” was auctioned off in Jerusalem for a whopping $1.3 million. The handwritten note with the scientist’s thoughts — which was scribbled to a bellboy in Tokyo after Einstein did not have cash to give him a proper tip — reads, “A calm and modest life brings more happiness than the pursuit of success combined with constant restlessness.” (AP)

THE GOP AGENDA:

Trump went to Capitol Hill for a rare lunch with Senate Republicans in the aftermath of the spat with Corker yesterday morning. The lunch was supposed to focus on advancing the GOP’s tax and health-care agenda — but according to participants Trump focused on touting his accomplishments. “’It wasn’t a whole lot about taxes,’” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Tex.), the second-ranking Republican. “’It was about the record in the last nine months and the successes in terms of the regulatory environment, consumer confidence, the stock market, and also the need to get the work done.’” (Sean Sullivan and Elise Viebeck)

— So it may not be surprising that the White House and GOP leaders were scrambling to prevent  defections on a key piece of their tax plan. Damian Paletta and Mike DeBonis report: “The clash centers around an expected provision in the GOP’s tax-cut plan that would prohibit people from deducting the state and local taxes they pay from their federal taxable income. Taxpayers are currently allowed to deduct these taxes in a way that lowers their taxable income, but GOP leaders want to prohibit the practice going forward[.] … This would have a disproportionately negative impact on taxpayers in states like New York, New Jersey, Illinois and other states where taxes are high and taxpayers can save large amounts of money from the deduction. The Republican margin-for-error on the budget resolution is razor thin[.] . . . An initial version of the budget resolution passed earlier this month by a vote of 219 to 207, as 218 votes are needed to ensure passage.”

— The elimination of the state and local tax deduction could prove costly to some of the constituents of Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), Bloomberg’s John McCormick and Joe Light report: “[E]nclaves of upper-middle income homeowners like [Wisconsin’s] Geneva Lake are the Achilles heel of the GOP tax plan, said Moody’s Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi. While low-income and high-income households are likely to get a tax break from the GOP plan, upper-middle-income professionals could come out as losers, he said. For Ryan, who carried surrounding Walworth County in 2016 with 69 percent of the vote and has represented the district since 1998, the push to eliminate the deduction is already testing longstanding friendships.”

— Their long-standing crusade against deficits notwithstanding, House conservatives are largely expected to support adding $1.5 trillion to the debt through the budget agreement setting up the tax rewrite. Mike DeBonis reports: “GOP hard-liners have frequently been willing to oppose must-pass legislation to achieve conservative policy goals, threatening government shutdowns and federal default as leverage. But numerous House conservatives said in interviews this week that this time is different: Republicans are under enormous pressure to pass a tax bill, given the party’s failure to take legislative action on health care, and they do not want to be seen as standing in the way.” The House is expecting to vote on the budget tomorrow. 

— At lunch, Trump instructed Senate Republicans to focus on taxes, delaying a push for bipartisan health-care legislation. Politico’s Jennifer Haberkorn and Adam Cancryn report: Trump “gave no direction on what he wants to see in a health care bill. He praised Sen. Lamar Alexander’s (R-Tenn.) work on a bipartisan deal meant to stabilize the Obamacare markets, but his emphasis on taxes led senators in the room to believe Trump doesn’t want a stand-alone Obamacare vote anytime soon. … The lack of clarity left Senate Republicans with enough wiggle room to interpret Trump’s Obamacare comments as they see politically fit.”

— Ryan told a group of House conservatives that a DACA replacement would be in the year-end spending bill. HuffPost’s Matt Fuller and Elise Foley report: “Asked if he envisioned a December omnibus spending bill including Cost Sharing Reductions for Obamacare or some sort of solution for the [DACA] program, Ryan told leaders of the Republican Study Committee that he didn’t believe CSR payments would be part of the deal with Democrats, but that DACA would. … There is some risk in taking Ryan’s comments too seriously. What he means by DACA could differ greatly from what Democrats want or believe is an acceptable solution. Ryan could also find significant opposition from his conference ― or from the White House ― and be forced to revise his negotiating strategy.”

Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.). (Zach Gibson/Bloomberg News)

— Under the radar: The Senate Intelligence Committee unanimously approved an amendment requiring court approval before federal officials can use information about Americans collected under Section 702 of FISA, a powerful tool that is slated to expire at the end of the year. Karoun Demirjian and Ellen Nakashima report: The amendment proposed by Sen. Mark Warrner (D-Va.) “specifies that if an FBI query turns up information on U.S. persons that it wants to use, it has one business day to submit a request to the [FISA court], which then has two business days to rule on the legality of the request. If the secret court rules against the request, investigators must toss out the information and are barred from using any other evidence they collected on the basis of that query.”

— Congress approved $36.5 billion in emergency funds for ongoing hurricane and wildfire relief efforts. Ed O’Keefe reports: “The spending deal includes $18.7 billion for [FEMA’s] response to natural disasters stretching from the storm-scarred beaches of Puerto Rico to the scorched vineyards of Northern California. There’s also a $16 billion increase in the National Flood Insurance Program’s borrowing limit; $576.5 million to address wildfires in the West; and $1.2 billion for nutrition assistance programs that will provide low-income Puerto Rican residents relief[.]”

— Trump asked Senate Republicans on Tuesday for a “show of hands” in support of potential Fed nominees. Tory Newmyer: “The show-of-hands survey, which Trump asked for during a closed-door lunch meeting Tuesday at the Capitol, pitted Federal Reserve governor Jerome Powell against Stanford University economist John Taylor, participants said. The president also asked about Janet L. Yellen, the current Fed chair, whose four-year term ends in February.”

Michael Cohen leaves Capitol Hill. (Susan Walsh/AP)

THERE’S A BEAR IN THE WOODS:

— Former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort is facing a new probe into possible money laundering. The Wall Street Journal’s Erica Orden and Nicole Hong report: “The investigation by the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York is being conducted in collaboration with a probe by [Robert Mueller] into Mr. Manafort and possible money laundering[.] … The continuing Manhattan U.S. attorney’s probe … is unfolding at the same time the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office pursues an inquiry involving Kushner Cos., owned by the family of [Jared Kushner]. Mr. Trump has interviewed and is poised to nominate candidates to lead the prosecutorial offices in both Manhattan and Brooklyn. The probes could complicate the confirmation process, especially because Mr. Trump is considering individuals with ties to his personal lawyer and to a political ally.”

— House Republicans announced two new investigations into Barack Obama’s Justice Department: one into a uranium deal reached with Russia and another into its investigation of Hillary Clinton’s private email server. Karoun Demirjian reports: “The parallel investigations — both of which involve the House Oversight Committee working in cooperation with another panel — formally revive issues that the Trump campaign used to try to discredit his Democratic rival during the 2016 presidential race and later the conduct of then-FBI Director James B. Comey. Democrats were quick to charge that the GOP-led probes were ‘designed to distract attention’ from the various investigations into Russian meddling in the 2016 election[.]

— Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen met with members of the House Intelligence Committee for nearly six hours Tuesday as part of their ongoing Russia probe. The closed-door session was described by a Democrat on the panel as “contentious” and came just hours before Cohen was scheduled to meet with members of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Karoun Demirjian reports: “The [House] committee also met for several hours with Trump’s former campaign digital director, Brad Parscale, who said … earlier this month that Trump won the election through use of Facebook advertising. That meeting comes just one week before House and Senate investigators are expected to speak with Facebook, Twitter and Google executives, in back-to-back public hearings on Nov. 1 to investigate how Russia used social media to try to influence the election.”

One member of the panel, Rep. Thomas J. Rooney (R-Fla.), said “there will be some overlap” between the subjects in Tuesday’s interview with Parscale and next week’s open hearing but did not detail what that would be.

— Twitter announced Tuesday that it will now label its political ads — including who bought them and how much they are spending — as part of a bid to ramp up transparency. CNBC’s Michelle Castillo reports: “Twitter said in a blog post on Tuesday it would clearly label political electioneering ads, which the [FEC] defines as an ad used to promote a specific candidate for elected office or affiliated party posted within 30 days of a primary election or 60 days of a general election. … The ads will have some sort of visual marker, likely a purple dot next to the user handle, and a purple box with the text ‘Promoted by’ and the name of the sponsor. In addition, the company will limit which criteria can be used to target people, and will introduce a ‘stronger’ penalty on those who do not abide by the new rules. The company did not say what the tougher standards or penalties will be.”

— The U.S. lifted travel restrictions on British businessman and outspoken Kremlin critic Bill Browder, who was temporarily blocked from entering the country after Russia placed him on an Interpol list. Carol Morello writes: “The Kremlin apparently was retaliating for Browder’s long-running international campaign against Russia and Putin over the killing of Browder’s Moscow tax attorney [Sergei Magnitsky] . . . This marks the fifth time since Browder has started tangling with Putin that Russia has asked Interpol to pick him up for ‘illegal activity.’ Browder said in a phone interview that on Monday evening, he was able to buy a plane ticket and get a boarding pass for a flight from London to the United States without being turned away, as he was last week.”

— The ability of Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Calif.) to use congressional funds for foreign trips has been curtailed by GOP leadership over fears that he is too close to Russia. The Daily Beast’s Nico Hines and Sam Stein report: “Rohrabacher has drawn scrutiny for his long-standing links with Moscow, his closeness to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, and his recent willingness to allow his subcommittee to be used for Kremlin propaganda purposes. In response, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs has placed heightened restrictions on the trips abroad that he can take with committee money as well as the hearings he can hold through the subcommittee on Europe that he chairs.”

— Russia vetoed a U.N. resolution to continue investigating Syria’s chemical weapon attacks. Louisa Loveluck reports: “Moscow’s veto decision was condemned by the United States, Britain and others as an attempt to shield the perpetrators from answering for the most controversial human rights abuses of Syria’s six-year-old war. Western intelligence officials and U.N. investigators have blamed the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for the attacks. It was the ninth time Russia has used its veto to hinder international action on Syria.”

— Capitol Police arrested a protester who threw small Russian flags at Trump during his visit to the Hill. Peter Hermann reports: “Ryan T. Clayton, 36, of Sterling, Va., was charged with unlawful conduct. … A video shows several flags flying through the air as Trump walked down a hallway with [Mitch McConnell.] The flags fluttered in front of Trump but did not appear to hit him. … The man identified by police as Clayton, dressed in a suit and tie, is heard repeatedly shouting ‘Trump is treason.’ As police officers detained him, he shouted his name and affiliation with a group called Americans Take Action, which bills itself as a populist organization.” The incident remains under investigation.

Religious leaders and activists hold up a door, closed to refugees, during a protest. (Andrew Caballero/Getty Images)

THE NEW WORLD ORDER:

— Trump signed an executive order Tuesday to restart the refugee resettlement program under a new, stricter screening process. But officials said applicants from 11 unidentified countries will be subject to yet another 90-day review. The New York Times’s Peter Baker and Adam Liptak report: “Administration officials were vague about the additional 90-day review of the 11 countries, refusing even to name them . . . They said refugees from those countries could still be admitted on a case-by-case basis during the 90 days if their entry is deemed in the national interest, and they do not pose a threat to the security or welfare of the United States.”

— The American soldiers who died in Niger were reportedly collecting intelligence on a terrorist leader in the region before being ambushed. CNN’s Jim Sciutto, Ryan Browne and Zachary Cohen report: “The 12-member team was conducting a routine patrol alongside 30 Nigerien soldiers when they were asked to check on a site where a high-value target was believed to have been previously, one official said. The official emphasized that the terrorist leader was known to no longer be at the location, something the US military continues to believe, and the team was tasked only with collecting possible intelligence. … On their way back to their operating base, they stopped in a separate village in order to enable the Nigerien troops to replenish supplies. … The official said that it is ‘quite probable’ that someone in the village tipped off the ISIS-affiliated terrorists that US forces were in the village, setting up the ambush.”

— The administration doesn’t plan to change the U.S. military footprint in Niger following the troops’ deaths. Karen DeYoung reports: “At the same time, officials this week expressed consternation over claims, sparked by the deaths, that Congress has been kept in the dark over how many American troops are in West Africa and what they are doing there. … The U.S. mission, [one] official noted, began years ago under President Barack Obama, has continued under President Trump, and has been repeatedly expanded and briefed on to Congress by both administrations.”

— Diplomats and lawmakers fear that communications between the United States and North Korea have broken down over Trump’s harsh rhetoric. NBC News’s Leigh Ann Caldwell and Vivian Salama report: “Joseph Yun, a top American diplomat to North Korea, has been warning of the breakdown in meetings on Capitol Hill and seeking help to persuade the administration to prioritize diplomacy over the heated rhetoric that appears to be pushing the two nuclear powers closer toward conflict[.] … Officials throughout government worry that a lack of diplomacy increases the risks of military action in the region.« 

— Trump is planning to miss a key Asia summit in the Philippines next month so he can return home earlier from his trip to the region. Josh Rogin reports: “[Trump] will be in Manila Nov. 12 and 13[.] … But Trump will not travel the additional 52 miles to the Philippine city of Angeles on Nov. 14 for the East Asia Summit, an annual conference of Asian and world leaders that focuses on the strategic future of the region. … Multiple administration officials told me there was a lengthy debate inside the Trump administration about the summit, but officials close to Trump were concerned the president did not want to stay in the region for so long and worried he could get cranky, leading to unpredictable or undiplomatic behavior.

Harvey Weinstein attends the De Grisogono Party on the sidelines of the 70th Cannes Film Festival in Antibes, France. (Yann Coatsaliou/AFP/Getty Images)

MORE MEN BEHAVING BADLY:

— Harvey Weinstein has been accused of sexual assault by two more women, and his former company now faces a civil lawsuit over his alleged abuse. LA Times’s Ryan Faughnder and Stephen Battaglio report: “Mimi Haleyi, a production assistant on a Weinstein Co. TV show, said Tuesday she was sexually assaulted by Harvey Weinstein in 2006 in New York. On the same day, actress Dominique Huett said Weinstein sexually abused her in 2010 in Beverly Hills and she sued his company for negligence, marking the first civil suit over the former co-chairman’s alleged abuses since the scandal came to light. … The latest allegations against Weinstein come as the disgraced producer’s company is fighting for its life.”

— Bill O’Reilly’s longtime talent agency has dropped him after news surfaced that he paid $32 million to settle a sexual harassment lawsuit. The Hollywood Reporter’s Marisa Guthrie and Jeremy Barr write: “The agency on Monday evening informed the former Fox News host that it would no longer be representing him when his agreement with the company expires at the end of the year. … ‘Bill has already lined up new representation,’ O’Reilly’s representative, Mark Fabiani, said[.] … But UTA’s move was not unexpected . . . UTA came under pressure from many of its liberal Hollywood clients to dump O’Reilly last spring when it was revealed that he had settled harassment claims after the sex harassment scandal engulfing former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes.”

— Leon Wieseltier, a former editor at the New Republic, lost backing for a new project after he acknowledged “offenses against some of my colleagues in the past.” The New York Times’s Jennifer Schuessler reports: “[S]everal women accused him of sexual harassment and inappropriate advances. As those allegations came to light, Laurene Powell Jobs [who was] backing Mr. Wieseltier’s [new magazine], decided to pull the plug on it. … Over the past week, a group of women who once worked at The New Republic had been exchanging emails about their own accounts of Mr. Wieseltier’s behavior in and out of the magazine’s office in Washington[.] … Several women on the chain said they were humiliated when Mr. Wieseltier sloppily kissed them on the mouth, sometimes in front of other staff members.”

— A USA Today investigation found that military investigators have discovered 500 cases of serious misconduct among generals, admirals and senior civilians: “Many cases involve sex scandals, including a promiscuous Army general who led a swinging lifestyle, another who lived rent-free in the home of a defense contractor after his affair fell apart and another who is under investigation for sending steamy Facebook messages to the wife of an enlisted soldier on his post. Yet despite the widespread abuses, the Pentagon does no trend analysis to determine whether the problem is worsening, nor does it regularly announce punishments for generals and admirals — all public figures[.]”

— Allegations of sexual harassment are piling up at statehouses across the country. AP’s Sophia Tareen reports: “Illinois became the latest to join the chorus, as signatures piled up Tuesday on an open letter describing harassment and intimidation for women trying to negotiate legislation and work on campaigns. … Lawmakers in Oregon and Rhode Island have spoken up to accuse male colleagues of inappropriate touching or suggesting that sexual favors be a condition for advancing bills. … Most states have formal written policies for legislative employees on sexual harassment[.] … But the rules are less clear for others who work at state capitols, including lobbyists and consultants.”

— Fashion photographer Terry Richardson was barred from working with media group Condé Nast International due to sexual harassment claims. The Daily Telegraph’s Ben Riley-Smith and Nick Allen report: “Staff were told that any work already commissioned from Mr Richardson but not yet published should be ‘killed or substituted with other material’. … Mr Richardson, whose photographs often grace the covers of fashion magazines and are known in the industry for being sexually explicit, has been dogged for years by allegations of sexual exploitation of models, something he has always denied.”

Democratic candidate for Virginia governor, Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam, left, gestures during a debate with Republican challenger Ed Gillespie. (Steve Helber/AP)

ELECTION DAY 2017 COMING:

— Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez (R) will campaign for Ed Gillespie (R) in Virginia’s gubernatorial race over the next week. Fenit Nirappil reports: “Two of the Republican Party’s highest-profile Latinos are stumping for [Gillespie] at a time when the Republican is fending off criticism from Latino and immigrant groups, who blast his ads about MS-13 gang violence as fearmongering and racist. … On Tuesday, Latino groups announced they would air Spanish language radio ads in Virginia urging voters to support the Democratic ticket.”

— Gillespie and Ralph Northam (D) have focused on Virginia’s economy in their campaign pitches, even as the state boasts one of the lowest unemployment rates in the country. Gregory S. Schneider reports: “The truth is that the top-line numbers for Virginia don’t paint the full picture. A state that had seemed immune to typical cycles of boom and bust has been vulnerable since the financial crisis of nearly a decade ago. Government work, long the prop for Virginia’s economy, is no longer reliable in an era of shaky congressional budget deals, sequestration and slimmer defense spending. Even worse, the demise of legacy industries — coal mining, tobacco, textiles, furniture-making — has left regions of the state facing a generations-long challenge to rebuild.”

Greg has a profile of Northam on today’s front page: “An Army veteran from an old family on Virginia’s Eastern Shore, [Northam] built a successful medical practice in Norfolk and was a prominent community volunteer before entering politics a decade ago. Local Democrats realized Northam had just the right qualities to challenge a vulnerable Republican state senator in 2007, launching him on an unlikely new career. He rose rapidly from state Senate to lieutenant governor and now the top of the ticket, aided by good timing, powerful mentors and a glittering résumé. But he is playing on a different level now, in a world of career politicians and a time of vicious partisanship. It’s unclear how his quiet bedside manner, his warbly waterman’s accent or his reputation for bipartisanship will translate in the era of President Trump. His supporters hope an exhausted electorate will welcome that more soothing tone.”

SOCIAL MEDIA SPEED READ:

Trump fired back at Flake and Corker on Twitter:

Jeff Flake admired the Capitol in the wake of his announcement:

From Flake’s communications director:

Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) began the standing ovation after Flake’s speech on the Senate floor:

Lawfare’s managing editor responded to the disappointment of Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) that Flake was leaving:

The Federalist’s publisher saw an upside to Flake’s departure:

This meme of Rep. Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), who is running for Flake’s seat, made the rounds on Twitter:

As most outlets focused on Flake’s retirment, Fox News went in another direction:

MSNBC’s Chris Hayes added this:

Former George W. Bush speechwriter David Frum responded to Hayes’s observation:

Hillary Clinton’s former spokesperson commented on the new House investigation into Clinton:

The RNC engaged in some selective editing of the story that the Clinton campaign was involved with the production of the Trump dossier:

A Daily Beast reporter clarified Trump’s assertion that Bob Corker “couldn’t get elected dogcatcher in Tennessee »:

But Corker didn’t seem to mind the dogcatcher reference:

The Post’s Eugene Scott pointed out the irony of Trump’s Corker broadside:

The Post’s Aaron Blake was skeptical of Paul Ryan’s take on the Trump-Corker feud:

Trump’s presence on Capitol Hill created a bit of a scene:

Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) was ready for the show/lunch:

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) ignored a question about the lunch:

Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) paid homage to a late senator from his home state:

The U.S. ambassador to the U.N. visited with South Sudanese refugees:

A former congressman noted how much can change in a year:

And Reuters captured this shot:

 Laura Ingraham is getting her first prime time news show on FOX. (Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post)

GOOD READS:

— Krissah Thompson profiled Laura Ingraham as the conservative pundit prepares to jump from her radio program to her own Fox News prime-time show: “Even as she’s climbed the ranks in Washington, Ingraham has maintained her connection with loyal listeners, who, like her, want to stick it to the establishment. She is a member of the East Coast media elite but says she wants to speak for the ‘heartland.’ In that way, she’s similar to President Trump — a billionaire born into wealth who has positioned himself as champion of the working man. Like Trump, who lived in a gilded Manhattan tower before the White House, Ingraham sees no irony in enjoying the trappings of D.C. success while flouting the conventions of ‘political correctness.’”

— The Wall Street Journal, “In the Ash of the California Wildfires, Hopefuls Sift for Memories,” by Parker Eshelman and Taylor Umlauf: “The fires that swept through this and other Northern California neighborhoods are gone, leaving behind a trail of ashes, charred structures and memories. Here are the stories of what some residents found amid the destruction.”

— CNN, “This is the new ‘giant sucking sound’ you hear. It’s changing the economy and disrupting politics,” by Ronald Brownstein: “[N]ew data show that per capita incomes, education levels and the young adult share of the population are rising rapidly in downtown urban centers that were left for dead 30 and 40 years ago. Simultaneously … incomes, education levels and the age structure is failing to keep pace, or even deteriorating, in the small town and exurban communities at the metropolitan area’s periphery. This widening geographic separation between town and country … helps explain President Donald Trump’s overwhelming support in the smaller, mostly white communities that largely feel excluded from the economic recovery since 2009.”

— The Daily Beast, “Cindy Sheehan: ‘Bush Was No Better’ Than Donald Trump,” by Matt Lewis: “In 2004, Sheehan’s son, Casey Sheehan, was killed by enemy action during the Iraq War. And the following year, the grieving mother camped out near President George W. Bush’s Texas ranch in order to try to force a meeting with the president. Sheehan spent over a month there, drawing the attention of the national press corps, and becoming arguably the most important anti-war activist of that era. … More than a few outlets have favorably contrasted [Bush’s response to Sheehan] with Trump’s own interactions with Gold Star families, including his most recent. But in an email interview with The Daily Beast, Sheehan insists that ‘Bush was no better.’”

 

DAYBOOK:

Trump is in Dallas today — where he will receive a briefing on the state’s hurricane recovery, meet with RNC supporters and deliver remarks at a campaign “victory reception.”

Pence will travel to Oakton, Va., to campaign for Ed Gillespie and later give a speech at a dinner for the nonprofit In Defense of Christians.

 

NEWS YOU CAN USE IF YOU LIVE IN D.C.:

— D.C. will see cooler temperatures today. The Capital Weather Gang forecasts: “We’re off to a cool start as morning readings rise into and through the 50s. By afternoon we’re on our way toward highs right around or just below average, in the low-to-mid-60s with partly sunny skies and light winds.”

— Virginia Republicans are accusing their Democratic counterparts of racial insensitivity after a campaign mailer listed a Latina House candidate as one of Halloween’s “scariest threats.” Fenit Nirappil reports: “The mailer, funded by the Democratic Party of Virginia, features a black-and-white photo of Republican Lolita Mancheno-Smoak next to a werewolf and hockey mask under the text, ‘This Halloween season, protect your family from the scariest threats.’ The back of the mailer highlights Smoak’s opposition to abortion rights and expanding Medicaid.”

— The Fairfax County School Board is expected to vote Thursday on whether to rename J.E.B. Stuart High. The school, currently named after a major Confederate general, could be renamed Justice High if the board approves the change. (Debbie Truong)

— Maryland’s spike in opioid deaths came almost entirely from fentanyl-related fatalities. Deaths tied to heroin and prescription opioids appear to have leveled off after years of increases. (Mary Hui)

VIDEOS OF THE DAY:

Trevor Noah went after Bill O’Reilly following the latest revelations of his sexual harassment settlements:

The Post’s Glenn Kessler fact-checked whether Trump has done more than Obama to fight ISIS:

The White House press secretary addressed her relationship with reporters at a George Washington University event:

Ralph Northam, Virginia’s Democratic gubernatorial candidate, drew upon his rural roots in a new campaign video:

The Iditarod is facing a doping scandal:

And thousands participated in the « Zombie Bike Ride » in Key West, Fla.:

The Clinton camp and DNC funded what became the Trump-Russia dossier: Here’s what it means

This post has been updated.

The Washington Post broke the story Tuesday night that the Hillary Clinton campaign and the Democratic National Committee helped pay for that now-famous dossier of research on President Trump.

The Post’s Adam Entous, Devlin Barrett and Rosalind S. Helderman report that powerful Democratic attorney Marc E. Elias retained the firm Fusion GPS for information, and Fusion GPS later hired Christopher Steele, a former British intelligence agent who was versed in Russia-related issues.

The dossier, which was published by BuzzFeed News in January, has been partially confirmed, though its most salacious allegations have not been.

There is a lot to sort through here. Below are four key points.

1) Clinton supporters — though not the campaign itself — were previously reported to fund the dossier

The fact Democrats were behind at least some of the funding for the dossier is not totally new. When CNN first reported on the dossier’s existence back in January, it said it was originally funded by President Trump’s GOP opponents and then, when he won the nomination, by those supporting Clinton.

Until now, though, the dossier had not been tied specifically to the Clinton campaign or the DNC.

Here’s what CNN reported back then:

The raw memos on which the synopsis is based were prepared by the former MI6 agent, who was posted in Russia in the 1990s and now runs a private intelligence gathering firm. His investigations related to Mr. Trump were initially funded by groups and donors supporting Republican opponents of Mr. Trump during the GOP primaries, multiple sources confirmed to CNN. Those sources also said that once Mr. Trump became the nominee, further investigation was funded by groups and donors supporting Hillary Clinton.

2) Trump’s allegation of FBI payments is still dubious

After the story posted, some seized upon The Post noting the FBI had agreed to pay Steele for information after the campaign. The argument seemed to be that the FBI was engaged in a witch hunt against Trump using Democrats’ sources.

But The Post originally reported on the FBI’s agreement back in February. At the time, it also reported it never actually paid for the work after the agent was identified in news reports:

The former British spy who authored a controversial dossier on behalf of Donald Trump’s political opponents alleging ties between Trump and Russia reached an agreement with the FBI a few weeks before the election for the bureau to pay him to continue his work, according to several people familiar with the arrangement.

. . .

Ultimately, the FBI did not pay Steele. Communications between the bureau and the former spy were interrupted as Steele’s now-famous dossier became the subject of news stories, congressional inquiries and presidential denials, according to the people familiar with the arrangement, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter.

Despite there being no proof the FBI actually paid Steele, Trump suggested it might have in a tweet last week — along with “Russia . . . or the Dems (or all). » Of those three groups, only Democrats have been reported to have actually paid Steele. And again, that was already kind-of known.

3) The appearance problems for Democrats

There is, presumably, a reason Democrats haven’t copped to funding the dossier — something they still haven’t publicly confirmed. Fusion GPS threatening to plead the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination also raised eyebrows last week.

First among those reasons is paying a foreigner for opposition research for an American political campaign. Given Democrats’ argument that Russia’s interference on Trump’s behalf was beyond the pale, the Clinton camp and the DNC paying a Brit for information would seem somewhat problematic.

(The Clinton campaign has also, notably, denied working with the Ukrainian government to dig up dirt on Trump. Republicans have pushed dubious comparisons between the Ukraine allegation and Russia’s alleged Trump advocacy.)

Some on the right even alleged that Democrats paying Steele amounts to « collusion » with foreigners. But Russia-Steele comparisons aren’t apples-to-apples. The British after all are, unlike the Russians, America’s allies. Also, Steele was not acting as an agent of a foreign government, which is what would likely be required to prove collusion in the case of the Trump campaign and Russia.

Separately, the firm that the Clinton camp and the DNC paid also has alleged ties to the Kremlin. In Senate testimony in July, Hermitage Capital Management chief executive William Browder accused Fusion GPS and its head, Glenn Simpson, of running a smear campaign against Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian whistleblower who in 2009 was tortured and killed in a Russian prison after uncovering a $230 million tax theft. Magnitsky worked for Browder, and he is the namesake of a law containing sanctions that was passed by Congress and is a sore spot between the U.S. government and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Browder said the smear campaign was run by Fusion GPS with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya and Russian-American lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin. You might remember them from the meeting with Donald Trump Jr. that took place in June 2016. Veselnitskaya was the Russian lawyer with alleged Kremlin ties who arranged the meeting.

As The Post reported in July of Browder’s accusations:

They were all allegedly working with the law firm Baker Hostetler to defend the Russian company Prevezon from charges it laundered funds stolen in the fraud Magnitsky uncovered.

“Veselnitskaya, through Baker Hostetler, hired Glenn Simpson of the firm Fusion GPS to conduct a smear campaign against me and Sergei Magnitsky in advance of congressional hearings on the Global Magnitsky Act,” Browder will testify. “He contacted a number of major newspapers and other publications to spread false information that Sergei Magnitsky was not murdered, was not a whistleblower and was instead a criminal. They also spread false information that my presentations to lawmakers around the world were untrue.”

Fusion GPS has confirmed it worked on a lawsuit involving Veselnitskaya for two years, The Post’s Josh Rogin reported. It denied any involvement in the Trump Jr. meeting.

The firm has worked with both Democrats and Republicans over the years.

4) Yes, the dossier was funded by Democrats

Some of the pushback on the left has focused on the fact that a still-unidentified Republican client retained Fusion GPS to do research on Trump before the Clinton campaign and the DNC. Thus, they argue, it’s wrong to say the dossier was just funded by Democrats.

But the dossier’s author, Steele, wasn’t brought into the mix until after Democrats retained Fusion GPS. So while both sides paid Fusion GPS, Steele was only funded by Democrats.

Star Wars: The Last Jedi BTS Video Reveals New Footage

Star Wars: The Last Jedi behind-the-scenes video that reveals fresh footage from the film and a new image of Luke Skywalker standing by his Jedi history library have been released online. With under two months until the highly-anticipated sequel reaches theaters, Lucasfilm is ramping up their marketing efforts to 11 – increasing the already fervent levels of hype. This month saw the grand unveiling of the full theatrical trailer and poster, raising numerous questions about the nature of the story. Die-hard fans would prefer to not see anything else from the movie until December, but the studio is just getting started in terms of promotion.

The TV commercials have already started, showcasing new Last Jedi dialogue as people try to piece the plot together. Pretty soon, international trailers and spots will be flooding the internet, and as a primer, Lucasfilm has unveiled a new featurette that takes fans behind-the-scenes of production (watch it above), as well as another look at Luke on Ahch-To.

Released as exclusives to USA Today, there isn’t much new information to be gleaned from either, but they’re still fun to check out. The video is very reminiscent of the sizzle reel that debuted during the D23 Expo, featuring quotes from Daisy Ridley, John Boyega, and Mark Hamill about the exciting new directions to story goes in. Writer/director Rian Johnson also discusses his personal connection with the Star Wars franchise, remarking how he balanced being a fan and filmmaker on the set. This video does include some new shots, most notably a quick glimpse of Benicio del Toro’s DJ walking alongside Finn and Rose Tico in First Order disguises. Much has been made about the codebreaker’s enigmatic nature, but this makes it seem like he’s aligned with our heroes. There’s also a short look at Ridley working with Johnson in what seems to be Supreme Leader Snoke’s throne room, which could be from a scene depicted in the latest trailer.

<!–[if IE 9]![endif]–>Star Wars Last Jedi Luke Ahch To Books Star Wars: The Last Jedi BTS Video Reveals New Footage

As for the Luke photo, it’s very clearly taken from a sequence on Ahch-To, with the Jedi Master standing in front of a book shelf inside a cave. Considering Episode VIII covers “age-old mysteries of the Force and shocking revelations of the past,” it should be interesting to watch this scene play out in the movie. It’s long been presumed these publications detail the history of the Jedi and the Force, which makes sense given Luke is on a quest to find the first Temple. Skywalker is wearing his darker-colored costume that’s been prevalent in other marketing materials, so this scene could be from later on in the film. The Last Jedi picks up just moments after The Force Awakens (a first for the franchise), so in the beginning, Luke will be wearing his lighter-toned Episode VII outfit. Most likely, Rey is in the cave with Luke, learning more about her powers and (possibly) her heritage.

Going back to the video, it’s abundantly apparent Johnson had the time of his life in the galaxy far, far away, getting lumps in his throat as he boarded the Millennium Falcon and frequently stepping back to reflect on his amazing opportunity to add to the Star Wars legacy. At this point, the only thing left is to see what the critical response to The Last Jedi is, so hopefully Johnson’s enthusiasm for the material translated into an entertaining and heartfelt chapter of the saga and sets the stage for an even better Episode IX.

Source: USA Today