Conservative former Judge J. Michael Luttig spoke to MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace on Thursday about the attacks on judges and law firms by President Donald Trump's administration.
Trump issued an executive order targeting the prominent law firm Perkins Coie, which represented former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign. It was swiftly blocked Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell in Washington, D.C., who will preside over the case.
Wallace and Luttig connected it to a broad effort by Trump and his allies to intimidate lawyers, judges, and those who refuse to follow his directives.
Special government employee and tech billionaire Elon Musk posted on X that judges who rule against Trump should be impeached. Musk said the judges are "grossly undermining the will of the people and destroying America." He called impeachment "the only way."
Luttig called the threats on judges from Musk and Trump part of "the same cloth of assault on, on the rule of law and the independent judiciary in America."
"Yes, the vice president teased or provoked the issue of the possible defiance by the administration of court orders," Luttig recalled, citing a Feb. 9 post on X and a 2021 appearance on a conservative podcast by Vice President J.D. Vance. "The vice president is an intelligent man. He knew what he was doing, and he did that intentionally."
Three Republicans in the House have introduced Articles of Impeachment, Axios reported Tuesday.
He remarked that it's worth pausing over such statements.
"Nicolle, this is a direct threat to the judiciary of the United States, and it includes the Supreme Court justices themselves," said Luttig.
"I know for a fact that these threats and then these actual articles of impeachment have shaken the federal judiciary. But I also know that they — the federal judiciary — remain unshaken in their resolve to remain an independent branch, as the founders intended, and as the Constitution provides. And that they, as collectively as the federal judiciary, will not yield to these threats."
He cautioned that if the judiciary doesn't hold now, "it will be the end of the rule of law in America and change our country forever."
A good bit has changed about the nature of the Cincinnati Reds roster mix since last we gave our best guess at who might be included on it come Opening Day.
Spencer Steer’s shoulder maintained its issues, and he received a cortisone shot back on March 1st. Andrew Abbott, though, has seen his shoulder progress well enough that he threw a pair of IP in a AAA game just yesterday. Rhett Lowder is still behind schedule, unfortunately, but at least it looks like he’s moving forward and not backwards. Speaking of ‘back,’ Tyler Stephenson headed for an MRI after lingering back pain.
Rule 5 draftee Cooper Bowman was sent back to the Oaksacvegas Athletics, while former top prospect Noelvi Marte was officially sent down to AAA.
That’s a lot to process, as are the risks of losing players in camp as non-roster invitees if they aren’t selected to start the season. Same goes for players with no options remaining, as they very well could be scooped up on waivers if not placed on the roster from day one.
With Opening Day now less that two weeks away (!!), here’s our latest, greatest estimate of which Reds will make up the Opening Day roster.
Catcher
I’ve got Tyler Stephenson(1) still on here alongside Jose Trevino (2), as all initial reports on Ty Steve’s back are that his issue is minor. It may mean we see more of Jose in the lineup early on, so far there’s nothing to suggest these aren’t the two backstops they’ll carry from day one.
Infielders (5)
Elly De La Cruz (3) and Matt McLain (4) are the cornerstones of this team, and they’ll form the middle infield. Christian Encarnacion-Strand (5) and Jeimer Candelario (6) seem to be locks in the corner rotation, while Santiago Espinal (7) has solidified his spot as the do-it-all infielder in reserve.
Gavin Lux
Gavin Lux (8)! He’ll see time at 3B, 2B, LF, and even at DH when the time is right. Since I’ve got Spencer Steer beginning the year on the IL, Lux’s versatility will help offset that usually created by having Steer on the roster for the time being.
Outfielders (5)
TJ Friedl (9) is back and healthy and poised to be the everyday CF and leadoff man all 4-WAR style once again. He’ll be flanked by Jake Fraley (10) and Austin Hays (11) most days, with Stuart Fairchild (12) a RHH option on days when Terry Francona wants to stack those up against southpaws. That brings us to Blake Dunn (13), whose RHH ability wins out in this mix over Will Benson since Lux, a LHH, is filling the ‘move anywhere when it’s time to switch’ role previously occupied by Steer, a RHH. In other words, I think Francona will choose to have one more righty bat around than another lefty.
Starting Rotation
Hunter Greene (14) will start on Opening Day, as well he should. He’ll be flanked in some order by each of Nick Martinez (15), Brady Singer (16), and Nick Lodolo (17) for sure at this point. Since the season is long as all heck, I just don’t think the Reds will rush back Andrew Abbott at anything less than ‘full stretched out,’ so I expect him to begin on the IL and miss a turn or two through the rotation - if anything, that may make him even more valuable down the stretch in August/September. I think the Reds carry Carson Spiers (18) as something of ‘starter on an expected bullpen day’ for the time being.
Bullpen
I don’t believe Graham Ashcraft (19) starts the year in the minors - rather, I think he’s carried as the piggyback guy for Spiers’ turn through the rotation with the expecation that he can fill-in for multiple IP when needed in a role akin to how Martinez began last year. Brent Suter (20), Sam Moll (21), and Taylor Rogers (22) form the LHP corps in the ‘pen, while Alexis Díaz (23) will resume his role as the closer. RHP options Emilio Pagán (24) and Scott Barlow (25) have guaranteed money on their deals, so they’ll be down there until they prove ten times they shouldn’t be, leaving one final spot that I’m expected to be filled by Tony Santillan (26) - he pitched well enough last year to deserve it and he’s out of options, so that’s a no-brainer.
Notes
Steer and Abbott are the two notable omissions here. Despite how dismal the Reds have begun seasons in recent memory (and how much that has folded any and all optimism entering those years immediately), I just think they’ll play it safe with them (and Lowder). Abbott getting ~27-28 starts is still very much viable, as is Steer surpassing 550 PA.
Ian Gibaut being back in camp is cool, and he’s fanned 8 against a lone walk in 7.0 IP so far this spring. He’s not on the roster, however, as a NRI on a minor league deal, so I don’t expect him to beat out the rest of the options above. That said, I do think he’s showing enough right now to firmly be in the mix as the first bullpen arm promoted when the inevitable dings happen to the rostered names ahead of him.
Chase Petty has looked really, really solid so far in camp, and at this rate he’ll make his debut (and more) as a Red at some point this year...just not on Opening Day or in the first few turns of the rotation, assuming all goes well elsewhere.
В Подмосковье сотрудники Росгвардии задержали подозреваемого в незаконном обороте наркотиков в крупном размере
Отделение СФР по Москве и Московской области проактивно открыло свыше 178 тысяч СНИЛС новорожденным
Отделение СФР по Москве и Московской области с 2025 года автоматически установило надбавки к пенсиям более 743 тысяч жителей региона с инвалидностью I группы и гражданам старше 80 лет
DатаРу запускает программу поддержки технологических стартапов