Search for: "Margaret Taylor, Benjamin Wittes" Results 121 - 139 of 139
Sort by Relevance | Sort by Date
RSS Subscribe: 20 results | 100 results
22 Apr 2019, 8:22 am by William Ford
Benjamin Wittes will moderate. [read post]
20 Apr 2019, 4:16 am by Victoria Clark
Lev Sugarman posted the executive summaries of both volumes, and Mikhaila Fogel shared a special edition Lawfare Podcast that summarizes the report in under an hour: Scott Anderson, Victoria Clark, Fogel, Sarah Grant, Susan Hennessey, Matthew Kahn, Quinta Jurecic, Sugarman, Margaret Taylor, and Benjamin Wittes shared their initial analysis of the Mueller Report. [read post]
19 Apr 2019, 1:25 pm by Matthew Kahn
Scott Anderson, Victoria Clark, Mikhaila Fogel, Sarah Grant, Susan Hennessey, Quinta Jurecic, Matthew Kahn, Lev Sugarman, Margaret Taylor and Benjamin Wittes published an initial analysis of the Mueller report. [read post]
6 Apr 2019, 4:04 am by Lev Sugarman
Margaret Taylor wrote on this Congress’s first subpoena authorizations, seeking information on security clearances, the census, and the Mueller report. [read post]
4 Apr 2019, 8:22 am by Lev Sugarman
Jen Patja Howell shared a new episode of Rational Security in which Tamara Cofman Wittes, Shane Harris, Susan Hennessey and Benjamin Wittes discuss malware at Mar-a-Lago, U.S. [read post]
30 Mar 2019, 4:24 am by Lev Sugarman
Wittes shared a video of a discussion hosted by Brookings on the week’s events featuring Hennessey, Mary McCord, Margaret Taylor and himself. [read post]
28 Mar 2019, 1:16 pm by Lev Sugarman
ICYMI: Yesterday on Lawfare Margaret Taylor unpacked the White House’s resistance to congressional oversight on the Trump administration’s security clearance policies. [read post]
2 Mar 2019, 6:57 am by Mikhaila Fogel
As Molly Reynolds correctly predicted, the hearing was a procedural nightmare, but Elena Kagan cut out the nightmare-ish elements of the hearing to bring listeners of the Lawfare Podcast a no-bull audio version of the hearing: Mikhaila Fogel, Quinta Jurecic, Matthew Kahn, Margaret Taylor and Benjamin Wittes contextualized Cohen’s testimony in terms of L’Affaire Russe and other investigations of the president. [read post]
28 Feb 2019, 9:26 am by Matthew Kahn
Mikhaila Fogel, Quinta Jurecic, Matthew Kahn, Margaret Taylor and Benjamin Wittes analyzed the Cohen testimony. [read post]
16 Feb 2019, 6:43 am by Lev Sugarman
Matthew Kahn shared the official proclamation, and Scott Anderson and Margaret Taylor examined the legal authorities cited in the declaration. [read post]
2 Feb 2019, 6:42 am by Lev Sugarman
Mikhaila Fogel shared a edition of the Lawfare Podcast Shorts featuring Wittes’s reading of the article: In light of the flurry of congressional investigations expected to heat up in the coming months, Margaret Taylor examined how a showdown between the congressional subpoena power and presidential assertion of executive privilege could play out. [read post]
31 Jan 2019, 1:51 pm by Lev Sugarman
ICYMI: Yesterday on Lawfare Margaret Taylor explored how congressional subpoena power could fare against White House assertions of executive privilege. [read post]
26 Jan 2019, 8:05 am by Lev Sugarman
Susan Hennessey, Quinta Jurecic, Matthew Kahn, Lev Sugarman, and Benjamin Wittes offered an analysis of its contents and implications. [read post]
22 Jan 2019, 7:53 pm by Jen Patja Howell
To find out, Benjamin Wittes spoke last Friday with Brookings senior fellow and expert on all things Congress, Molly Reynolds, and Brookings fellow, Lawfare senior editor, and former Chief Democratic Counsel for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Margaret Taylor. [read post]
12 Jan 2019, 4:52 am by William Ford
Margaret Taylor suggested that the president’s statutory authorities to construct a wall at the southern border are more expansive than they initially seem. [read post]
9 Jan 2019, 5:37 am by Quinta Jurecic
Writing on Lawfare, both Robert Chesney and Margaret Taylor have taken a look at the legal authority under which Trump might, as he has threatened, build a wall pursuant to a declared state of emergency. [read post]
8 Jan 2019, 7:36 am by Scott Harman
Margaret Taylor considered what existing statutory authorities the president could rely on to use already-appropriated funds to build the wall. [read post]
5 Jan 2019, 5:22 am by William Ford
As the 116th Congress began, Margaret Taylor argued that the legislative branch should exercise its constitutional powers and once again serve as an effective check on the president. [read post]
22 Dec 2018, 6:17 am by William Ford
” Jurecic posted the memo, and Mikhaila Fogel and Benjamin Wittes dissected it, asserting that Barr’s argument is premised on made-up facts. [read post]