Month: December 2019

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Le cinéaste italien Ermanno Olmi, qui avait reçu la Palme d’or au Festival de Cannes en 1978 pour le drame historique “L’Arbre aux sabots”, est mort dimanche à l’âge de 86 ans.

Le cinéaste italien Ermanno Olmi, qui avait reçu la Palme d’or au Festival de Cannes en 1978 pour le drame historique L’Arbre aux sabots, est mort dimanche à l’âge de 86 ans. C’est le ministère de la Culture italien qui l’a annoncé.

Le réalisateur, autodidacte et pionner du cinéma documentaire, était malade depuis des années et s’est éteint à l’hôpital d’Asiago, près de Vicence dans le Nord de l’Italie.

“La disparition de Ermanno Olmi prive la culture italienne d’un géant, un très grand maître du cinéma italien. Intellectuel profond qui a sondé et exploré les mystères de l’homme et raconté, avec la poésie qui caractérise ses œuvres, le rapport entre l’homme et la nature, la dignité du travail, la spiritualité”, a déclaré le ministre de la Culture, Dario Franceschini.

Ermanno Olmi, issu d’un milieu modeste de paysans venus à la ville, était entré au lycée des Beaux Arts puis à l’Accademia d’Arte Drammatica de Milan avant d’être engagé par la compagnie Edison-Volta. Jusqu’en 1961, il y réalise plusieurs courts métrages en 35 mm et transforme l’un deux, Le Temps s’est arreté, en long métrage. 

Il crée ensuite sa société de production, 22 Diciembre, et tourne des documentaires et des fictions pour la télévision, avant de revenir vers le cinéma en 1968 avec Un certain jour. C’est L’Arbre aux sabots, fresque historique sur les paysans, qui lui apporte la consécration internationale. Le film reçoit la Palme d’or en 1978, ainsi que le César du meilleur film étranger en 1979. 

A la fin des années 1980, La Legende du saint buveur lui vaut de remporter le Lion d’Or à Venise. En 2001, il fait un passage remarqué à Cannes avec Le Métier des armes, et en 2008, il est de nouveau honoré à Venise, pour l’ensemble de sa carrière. En 2005, il co-réalise Tickets avec Abbas Kiarostami et Ken Loach. Son dernier film, Torneranno i prati, est sorti en 2014. 

Redécouvrez un extrait de L’Arbre aux sabots, d’Ermanno Olmi :

L'Arbre aux sabots Extrait vidéo VO

 

Dramatic scene played out on a Vistara Airlines flight from Amritsar to Kolkata after a three hours delay.

The flight on Friday morning first got delayed in Delhi after a family requested to be offloaded due to a personal emergency.

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Following this the flight had to return to bay and undergo mandatory security rescreening, causing the plane to be delayed by nearly 1.5 hours.

Vous ne savez pas quoi regarder ce soir ? La Rédaction d’AlloCiné vous indique les films et séries à voir à la télé. Au programme : un film de potes culte, Oscar Isaac erre en musique et Matthew McConaughey défend un riche play-boy.

« Permis de mater »

Un éléphant, ça trompe énormément d’Yves Robert avec Claude Brasseur, Jean Rochefort (OCS Géants, 20h40) : “Une référence absolue en matière de “films de potes”, suivant quatre amis parisiens à l’approche de la quarantaine et en proie à diverses interrogations existentielles (notamment à propos des femmes). Les situations sont drôles et les dialogues finement écrits par Yves Robert et Jean-Loup Dabadie. Mais l’atout majeur du film réside dans son casting de haute volée, emmené par le regretté Jean Rochefort qui trouve dans ce personnage d’Etienne, sympathique bourgeois marié mais amoureux d’une autre femme, l’un de ses meilleurs rôles.” Laurent Schenck

Inside Llewyn Davis Bande-annonce VO

Inside Llewyn Davis de Joel Coen et Ethan Coen avec Oscar Isaac, Carey Mulligan (Arte, 20h50) : “L’histoire d’un loser comme seuls les frères Coen savent les écrire : un antihéros aussi agaçant que touchant essaie de trouver sa place dans le milieu de la folk. L’obsession du détail des cinéastes se ressent dans chaque scène, la photo est aussi belle que les personnages secondaires (Carey Mulligan, Adam Driver, Garret Hedlund…). On suit avec mélancolie les errances de ce musicien, symbole de tous ces artistes sur le déclin, bercées par la voix suave d’Oscar Isaac, une véritable révélation à l’époque. Une pépite toute en sobriété dans la filmographie des Coen qui a amplement mérité son Grand Prix au Festival de Cannes.” Caroline Langlois

La Défense Lincoln Bande-annonce VO

La Défense Lincoln de Brad Furman avec Matthew McConaughey, Ryan Philippe (France 3, 20h55) : “Un habile petit thriller judiciaire bien sombre comme on les aime. Los Angeles est filmée de manière originale et Matthew McConaughey trouve dans ce film un rôle profond et complexe.” Laurent Schenck

« Permis de parler »

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Et sinon, parmi tous les films qui passent ce soir, quel est votre favori ?

Pour retrouver l’ensemble des programmes, accédez directement à la grille en cliquant ici.

Le restaurant new-yorkais Goodfellas Diner, à l’intérieur duquel avait été tournée une scène mythique des “Affranchis” de Martin Scorsese, a été entièrement détruit par un incendie.

Un incendie a réduit en cendres un célèbre décor des Affranchis de Martin Scorsese hier soir à New York. Le Goodfellas Diner (en référence au titre original du long métrage, The Goodfellas) a en effet été ravagé par les flammes aux alentours de 4h30 du matin, nécessitant l’intervention de 60 pompiers. L’enquête n’a pour le moment pas déterminé les causes exactes du sinistre.

Au-delà du simple fait divers, cette information est évidemment un pincement au coeur pour tous les fans des Affranchis, puisqu’une scène mythique du film y a été tournée : Henry (Ray Liotta) et Jimmy (Robert De Niro) s’y retrouvent pour petit-déjeuner pendant que leur associé Tommy (Joe Pesci) est promu caïd par les pontes de la mafia. Mais un coup de fil dans la cabine située à l’extérieur du restaurant leur apprend finalement que leur ami a été tué, en représailles au meurtre de Billy Bats (Frank Vincent). Cet événement marquent alors pour les deux personnages le début de la fin.

La scène tirée des Affranchis de Martin Scorsese :

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Le chanteur Charles Aznavour est décédé ce lundi 1er octobre, à l’âge de 94 ans, vient d’annoncer l’AFP. Avec plus de 50 films à son actif dont le célèbre “Tirez sur le pianiste” ou encore “Un taxi pour Tobrouk” (1960).

1. Dans "Tirez sur le pianiste" (1960)
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© Capture d'écran

Chanteur au succès international, Charles Aznavour a également été comédien dans plus de 50 longs métrages. Sur scène, pour certaines chansons, Aznavour instillera du jeu d’acteur dans ses prestations, rappelant sans cesse sa longue carrière sur le grand écran en parallèle de sa carrière musicale. En 1997, il avait reçu un César d’honneur venant saluer entre autres son jeu chez Truffaut ou Henri Verneuil.

Chansons et premières figurations

Né à Paris de parents arméniens, Charles Aznavour commence, dès 9 ans, à arpenter les auditions et entre au Théâtre du Petit Monde. Il joue alors les rôles d’enfants au théâtre pendant les années 30. Il fait également de la figuration dans divers films. Parallèlement, il entame sa carrière de chanteur, rencontrant successivement le parolier Pierre Roche et Edith Piaf qui lui offre son premier voyage aux Etats-Unis.

Tirez sur le pianiste !

Devenu un chanteur reconnu sur les scènes parisiennes telles que l’Olympia et l’Alhambra, Charles Aznavour fait ses véritables débuts au cinéma, en 1958, dans La Tete contre les murs de Georges Franju et rencontre Jean-Pierre Mocky avec qui il tournera l’année suivante, Les Dragueurs et Les Vierges en 1963. En 1960, il trouve un de ses plus beaux rôles dans Tirez sur le pianiste sous la direction de François Truffaut. Le succès du film aux Etats-Unis lui ouvre alors les portes du célèbre Carnegie Hall à New York.

Acteur international

Au milieu des années 60, il est véritablement reconnu comme un artiste complet capable à la fois de jouer la comédie, chanter et de se produire sur scène. Il est adulé sur les scènes du monde entier et, en 1968, il tourne son premier film en anglais : Candy de Christian Marquand avec Marlon Brando, Richard Burton et James Coburn.

Au cours des années 70, il tourne d’ailleurs majoritairement dans des productions anglo-saxonnes avec notamment Les Aventuriers et Intervention Delta. Il participe également à la première adaptation des Dix petits nègres en couleurs, aux côtés notamment d’Orson Welles et Gert Fröbe. En 1979, il joue également en allemand, dans Le Tambour de Volker Schlöndorff qui obtient l’Oscar du meilleur film étranger. Héros dramatique, il tourne également sous la direction de Claude Chabrol en 1982, Les Fantômes du chapelier dans le rôle d’un homme écrasé et réservé.

Une voix mythique

En 1986, après avoir composé de nombreuses musiques pour ses films depuis le milieu des années 50 et écrit les dialogues de Les Intrus de Sergio Gobbi en 1972, il écrit le scénario de la comédie de Paul Boujenah, Yiddish Connection. Dans les années 90, il se fait plus discret au cinéma, tournant principalement des téléfilms.

En 2002, il tient le rôle principal de son film le plus personnel : Ararat d’Atom Egoyan sur le génocide arménien, avant d’interprèter son propre rôle dans Emmenez-moi (2005), comédie chantée qui rend un bel hommage au chanteur. Un an auparavant, il avait incarné le Père Goriot pour la télévision. Sa dernière participation à un long métrage date du film Pixar Là-haut, dans lequel il prête sa voix au personnage principal dans les versions françaises et québecoises du film.

“Tirez sur le pianiste” de François Truffaut, avec en premier rôle Charles Aznavour :

Tirez sur le pianiste Bande-annonce VF

 

Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg has taken aim at one of the most progressive planks in the platforms of his rivals Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren — eliminating tuition charges at public universities.

In an ad running in Iowa, the first primary battleground state, Buttigieg attacks their proposals for making college “free even for the kids of millionaires.”

Buttigieg’s comment was called out by Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), a Sanders supporter, who labeled it “a GOP talking point used to dismantle public systems.”

Hillary Clinton, 2016

Here’s the bottom line on this campaign dustup: Buttigieg is wrong, and AOC is right.

The argument that public programs designed to be universal are somehow flawed because they benefit all echelons of society, rich and poor alike, indeed is a common Republican talking point. It’s so superficially logical, in fact, that it’s not uncommon to hear it leaching into Democratic Party policy debates.

Hillary Clinton, for instance, used it to great effect against Sanders’ free college plan during a Democratic debate in 2016: “I don’t think taxpayers should be paying to send Donald Trump’s kids to college.” At the time I fell into this same trap in a critique of Sanders’ proposal.

Yet as Ocasio-Cortez observed, the argument has a nasty subtext and ugly consequences. Social programs that serve limited economic groups, especially the middle-class and poor, are always more vulnerable to political attack than those that serve everyone. Since diminishing the ability of government to assist those in need is Republican orthodoxy, supporters of social programs should be very wary of applying this applause line to programs they value.

What’s more, limiting social programs by economic status leads to a particularly noxious and demeaning procedure known as means-testing, which can allow officials to pry into the most private aspects of applicants’ lives. The process tends to discourage applications, thus serving the goal of making the programs less useful for beneficiaries.

For examples of how this system works, consider three government assistance programs: Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, or TANF, which is commonly described as welfare; food stamps; and Medicaid. What all three have in common is that they’re income- or asset-based and means-tested — applicants generally have to show that their financial resources fall below a certain floor.

What they also have in common is that they’re the targets of relentless conservative assaults. TANF recipients are subjected to numerous restrictions and rules beyond simply showing their financial need. Congressional Republicans have tried for years to cut food stamp benefits, which are by no means lavish, and to dictate which foodstuffs they can be used for.

The Trump administration and Republicans in Congress have consistently called for “block-granting” Medicaid, an arrangement almost certain to diminish Medicaid’s ability to serve the healthcare needs of its beneficiaries, their communities and their states.

Not uncommonly, these attacks are typically infused with the utmost hypocrisy. My favorite example comes from a 2013 effort in the then-GOP-controlled House to cut $20 billion from food stamps over 10 years, which would throw some 2 million recipients off the rolls.

Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) argued that the food stamp program was a sign of “oppressive” government and that helping the poor is better left to individuals and churches because then “it comes from the heart, not from a badge or from a mandate.”

As it happens, LaMalfa and his family had been the recipients of $5.1 million in government crop subsidies over the previous 17 years.

Among universal programs, Social Security is often the target of proposals for means-testing. Typically the argument refers to billionaires like Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, who are eligible for Social Security checks although Lord knows they don’t need the money.

The pioneer of this argument was hedge fund billionaire Pete Peterson, who waged a years-long campaign to cut Social Security benefits on the grounds that America, then as now the richest land on Earth, couldn’t afford them. But it gains its force from the constant overblown drum-beating about Social Security’s fiscal “crisis”; the idea is that cutting off benefits to the rich will help balance Social Security’s books.

The reality is that only a minuscule portion of Social Security benefits goes to the wealthy. As Dean Baker and Hye Jin Rho of the Center for Economic and Policy Research showed in 2011, only 0.6% of all benefits go to recipients with non-Social Security income of $200,000 or more, while 90% go to retirees with less than $29,000 in outside income. For means-testing to have a meaningful impact on Social Security’s finances, benefits would have to be cut for households earning as little as $40,000.

Social Security retains its broad public support largely because it is universal: If you’ve touched even a minimal amount of covered earnings over a career, contributing payroll tax all along the way, you’re entitled to your benefits, end of story.

The same goes for other universal programs and services deemed to be public goods, such as K-12 education and public libraries. We understand that they’re investments in the future that yield more in benefits than they cost. No one argues for banning the kids of millionaires from public schools or public libraries, even though they can afford to attend private schools or buy their own books (and do).

When it comes to higher education, this basic truth seems to have fallen to the wayside. The principle underlying critiques of the Sanders and Warren proposals such as Buttigieg’s is that universal public college will allow rich kids to shoulder middle-class and poor students out of the way.

In its most absurd version, conservative commentator Stuart Butler attacked a plan for free community college proposed by Barack Obama in his 2015 State of the Union address by suggesting that it would attract rich kids to these two-year colleges, despite abundant evidence that the wealthier the family, the more likely its offspring will opt for four-year universities, generally private.

As Warren and Sanders understand, the cost of public higher education has become a major burden on middle-class and low-income families. In part that’s because state governments have bailed out as funding sources. In California, for example, the state general fund now contributes less than 10% of the University of California budget.

The state government’s cheeseparing forces UC to accept more out-of-state students, who pay $43,800 a year compared to state residents’ $14,000. The harvest can be seen in acceptance statistics. Among students admitted as freshmen this year, only about 66% were Californians. The rate was about the same at Berkeley but lower at the system’s other premier campuses such as UCLA (about 61%) and San Diego (57%).

That amounts to an abandonment of what was long regarded as a key to California’s economic growth — free tuition at UC and California State University. As we’ve reported in the past, California educated a host of great Americans effectively for free. Among UC’s graduates in the era before tuition were Earl Warren, a governor and chief justice, diplomat Ralph Bunche, Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley, physicist Glenn Seaborg, and writer Maxine Hong Kingston. (To be fair, UC started charging students a nontuition “incidental” fee of $25 in 1921, the equivalent of about $340 today.)

The truth is, of course, that some seemingly universal programs have features that might be interpreted as subtle forms of means-testing. Social Security benefits are lower as a percentage of lifetime earnings for high-income recipients than for those at the lower end of the earnings scale. A higher proportion of benefits paid to the wealthy are subject to income tax, too. Medicare charges higher premiums for retirees with higher incomes.

That points to the right way to keep even universal programs “progressive,” in the sense of delivering proportionately greater benefits to those who need them more: Raise taxes on the wealthy so they pay more to support universal programs.

In recent years, America has gone in the opposite direction. We’ve cut taxes on the very rich, then pointed to the higher deficits resulting from the tax cuts as an argument for cutting social programs. Keep your eye on this sleight of hand whenever Republicans start moaning about the cost of “entitlements.”

In light of all this, the problem with Buttigieg’s complaints about free public higher education should be clear. For any such program to retain public support it needs to be truly all-encompassing, not an assistance program for just some of us. He should embrace universality, not decry it as a giveaway.


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WASHINGTON — 

President Trump’s pick to succeed Rick Perry as Energy secretary won easy Senate confirmation Monday, despite a Democratic senator’s objections that the nominee hadn’t fully answered questions related to the Trump impeachment investigation.

Several other Democrats joined Republicans in approving Deputy Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette’s promotion, 70 to 15.

Confirmation of Brouillette, who’d been responsible for day-to-day operations at the Energy Department for two years under Perry, came a day after Perry’s resignation became effective.

Perry has said that his departure had nothing to do with his energy work in Ukraine for the Trump administration and that he was focused on long-standing U.S. policy to lessen that country’s dependence on Russia for fuel. A House impeachment panel is scrutinizing Trump’s push for Ukraine to investigate a company employing a son of political rival Joe Biden.

Perry has refused to testify before the panel. Some other administration officials who have appeared before impeachment investigators described Perry as one of what the Trump White House reportedly called the “three amigos” — administration figures who consulted with Trump personal attorney Rudolph W. Giuliani, one of the main focuses of the impeachment inquiry, on Ukraine issues.

Brouillette, a veteran in state and federal energy regulatory matters, easily won bipartisan support since Trump nominated him Nov. 7. He told a Senate committee hearing last month that he knew nothing about any of the Ukraine conversations under scrutiny.

However, Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon accused Brouillette of failing to detail what he knows about Perry’s meetings with natural gas officials and others in Ukraine. Wyden told the Senate on Monday that Brouillette was waging a “full-court stonewall.”

Another Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, took the floor to call Brouillette a “good man.”

“He has been forthcoming. He has not held anything back,” Manchin said.

Perry, a former Texas governor, used his job in part to promote U.S. oil and gas overseas, while also stressing the value of the national research labs and other cutting-edge work overseen by the Energy Department. Republican senators in Brouillette’s committee confirmation hearing made it clear they expected him to keep using the agency to advocate for U.S. fossil fuels, although Brouillette’s first remarks at the hearing stressed the department’s research on supercomputers and other scientific efforts.


WASHINGTON — 

Former Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein told the FBI that he was “angry, ashamed, horrified and embarrassed” at the way James B. Comey was fired as FBI director, according to records released Monday.

Several weeks after Comey’s firing, Rosenstein was interviewed by FBI agents as part of special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation into ties between Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign and Russia. An FBI summary of that interview was among roughly 300 pages of documents released as part of public records lawsuits brought by BuzzFeed News and CNN.

The records also include summaries of FBI interviews of key Trump associates, including Hope Hicks, Corey Lewandowski and Michael Cohen. They provide additional insight into Mueller’s two-year investigation, which shadowed the first part of Trump’s presidency and preceded an ongoing impeachment inquiry centered on his efforts to press Ukraine for investigations of political rival Joe Biden.

Hicks described efforts to prepare for media scrutiny of a 2016 Trump Tower meeting between Russians and the president’s oldest son. Lewandowski told investigators that the president prodded him to tell then-Atty. Gen. Jeff Sessions to make an announcement that the scope of the Russia investigation had been limited to future election interference.

And Cohen, who is now serving a three-year prison sentence for campaign finance violations and lying to Congress, told investigators he advised Trump’s personal lawyer that there was more detail about a proposed deal for a Trump Tower in Moscow than what he had shared with lawmakers.

Cohen said the lawyer, Jay Sekulow, told him that it was not necessary to elaborate or provide additional details and to “stay on message” and to “not contradict Trump,” the FBI said.

Cohen also said he “vaguely recalled” telling Sekulow about a call he had “with a woman from the Kremlin,” and said Sekulow’s response was “in line with ‘so what’ and the deal never happened,” according to the FBI document.

Sekulow told the Associated Press on Monday night that Cohen’s statements were false and that Cohen never told him anything about any call with a woman from Russia.

Rosenstein, who left his Justice Department post in the spring, was interviewed about his role in Comey’s May 2017 firing. Rosenstein wrote a memo harshly criticizing Comey for his handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigation, a document held up by the White House as justification for his firing.

Rosenstein said he was asked during a White House meeting one day before Comey’s firing to produce a memo laying out his concerns with the FBI chief. He said he knew when he left the office that day that Comey would be fired, though he said he did not expect his memo to be immediately released and was surprised by the portrayal in the media that the termination was his idea instead of the White House’s, according to the FBI document. Rosenstein also said his goal in writing the memo was not to get Comey fired.

He said he expected Comey would be contacted by either Trump or Sessions so a meeting could be scheduled and he could be fired in person. Comey instead learned of his firing from television while speaking with agents in Los Angeles.

When he learned of how Comey was fired, he was “angry, ashamed, horrified and embarrassed. It was also humiliating for Comey,” an FBI agent wrote of Rosenstein’s reaction.

At one point during the interview, as Rosenstein was describing how he had “always liked Jim Comey” but disagreed with his decisions in the Clinton case, the deputy attorney general “paused a moment, appearing to have been overcome by emotion, but quickly recovered and apologized,” according to the FBI.


WASHINGTON — 

The House is plunging into a landmark impeachment week, with Democrats who once hoped to sway Republicans now facing the prospect of an ever-hardening partisan split over the question of removing President Trump from office.

Lawmakers were getting their first look at the House Intelligence Committee’s impeachment report Monday night behind closed doors. The findings are expected to forcefully make the Democrats’ case that Trump engaged in what the panel’s chairman, Adam B. Schiff, calls impeachable “wrongdoing and misconduct” in pressuring Ukraine to investigate Democrats and Joe Biden while withholding military aid to the ally.

For Republicans offering an early rebuttal ahead of the report’s public release, the proceedings are simply a “hoax,” with Trump insisting he did nothing wrong and his GOP allies in line behind him. Trump tweeted his daily complaints about it all and then added a suggestive, if impractical, question: “Can we go to Supreme Court to stop?”

With the House Judiciary Committee set to have its first hearing Wednesday, the impeachment proceedings are presenting a historic test of political judgment in a case that is dividing Congress and the country.

Departing for a NATO meeting in London, Trump criticized the House for pushing forward Monday with proceedings while he was heading overseas, a breach of political decorum that traditionally leaves partisan differences at the water’s edge.

He predicted Republicans would actually benefit from the entire impeachment effort against him, though “it’s a disgrace for our country.”

For the Democrats, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi faces a crucial moment of her leadership as she steers the process ahead after resisting the impeachment inquiry through the summer, warning it was too divisive for the country and required bipartisan support.

Speaking to reporters at the international climate conference in Madrid, Pelosi declined to engage with impeachment questions. “When we travel abroad, we don’t talk about the president in a negative way,” she said. “We save that for home.”

Possible grounds for impeachment are focused on whether Trump abused his office as he pressed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a July 25 phone call to launch investigations into Trump’s political rivals. At the time, Trump was withholding $400 million in military aid, jeopardizing key support as Ukraine faced an aggressive Russia at its border.

The report, which the Intelligence Committee will vote on Tuesday and make public, also is expected to include evidence the Democrats say suggests obstruction of Congress, based on Trump’s instructions for his administration to defy subpoenas for documents and testimony.

The next step comes when the Judiciary Committee gavels open its own hearing with legal experts to assess the findings and consider potential articles of impeachment ahead of a possible vote by the full House by Christmas. That would presumably send it to the Senate for a trial in January.

The Democratic majority on the Intelligence Committee says its report, compiled after weeks of testimony from current and former diplomats and administration officials, will speak for itself in laying out the president’s actions toward Ukraine.

Republicans pre-empted the report’s public release with their own 123-page rebuttal.

In it, they claim there’s no evidence Trump pressured Zelensky. Instead, they say Democrats just want to undo the 2016 election. Republicans dismiss witness testimony of a shadow diplomacy being run by Trump lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani, and they rely on the president’s insistence that he was merely concerned about “corruption” in Ukraine — though the White House transcript of Trump’s phone call with Zelensky never mentions the word.

“They are trying to impeach President Trump because some unelected bureaucrats chafed at an elected president’s ‘outside the Beltway’ approach to diplomacy,” according to the report from Republican Reps. Devin Nunes of California, Jim Jordan of Ohio and Michael McCaul of Texas.

Jordan appeared to be the only lawmaker who viewed the Democratic report Monday evening when it became available behind closed doors for members of the intelligence panel. He said it was “long.”

Jordan declined to discuss details but said it was the same “lame case” Democrats presented throughout impeachment hearings.

“The president did nothing wrong,” Jordan said. “The facts are on our side.”

Trump on Monday pointed to Zelensky’s recent comments as proof he did nothing wrong. The Ukrainian president said in an interview he never talked to Trump “from the position of a quid pro quo,” but he didn’t say Trump did nothing wrong. In fact, he had strong criticism for Trump’s actions in the Time magazine interview.

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With Ukraine at war with Russia, he said, its partners “can’t go blocking anything for us.”

Schiff said the GOP response was intended for an audience of one, Trump, whose actions are “outside the law and Constitution.”

Democrats could begin drafting articles of impeachment against the president in a matter of days, with voting in the Judiciary Committee next week.

Republicans on the committee, led by Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, plan to use procedural moves to stall the process and portray the inquiry as unfair to the president.

The White House declined an invitation to participate, with Counsel Pat Cipollone denouncing the proceedings as a “baseless and highly partisan inquiry” in a letter to Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.).

Trump had previously suggested that he might be willing to offer written testimony under certain conditions, though aides suggested they did not anticipate Democrats would ever agree to them.

Cipollone’s letter of nonparticipation applied only to the Wednesday hearing, and he demanded more information from Democrats on how they intended to conduct further hearings before Trump would decide whether to participate.

Nadler said Monday if the president really thought his call with Ukraine was “perfect,” as he repeatedly says, he would “provide exculpatory information that refutes the overwhelming evidence of his abuse of power.”

House rules provide the president and his attorneys the right to cross-examine witnesses and review evidence before the committee, but little ability to bring forward witnesses of their own.

Asked why not have his lawyers participate, Trump said Monday: “Because the whole thing is a hoax. Everybody knows it.”


UCLA linebackers Tyree Thompson and Noah Keeter announced on social media Monday that they had entered the transfer portal, hoping to continue their college careers elsewhere.

Thompson, who sat out all of the 2019 season after undergoing foot surgery in August, has exhausted his eligibility but indicated on Twitter that he intended to petition the NCAA for a waiver that would allow him to play an additional season. He started every game for the Bruins in 2018 and finished fourth on the team with 55 tackles.

Thompson was recognized with the departing seniors before UCLA’s season finale against California on Saturday.

“I am grateful to have had the opportunity to compete at the Rose Bowl with my coaches and teammates,” tweeted Thompson, who played one season at Sacramento State and another at Los Angeles Valley College before coming to UCLA. “I am so proud to say that I have a degree from the number one public institution.”

Keeter, a true freshman who was a three-star prospect out of Buchholz High in Gainesville, Fla., did not appear in any games this season.