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China Fears Taiwan’s Democracy the Most, Island’s President Says in Election Pitch

Former Trump Campaign Official Rick Gates Sentenced to 45 Days in Jail, Probation

Rick Gates, a former campaign to then-candidate Donald Trump, was sentenced to 45 days in jail and received three years probation by a federal judge on Tuesday. Gates was a longtime aide to one of 2016 Trump’s campaign managers, Paul Manafort, and who also testified to former special counsel Robert Mueller. Gates, 47, was fined $20,000 and ordered to carry out 300 hours of community service. What’s more, Gates will be allowed to serve his jail time on the weekends or under a schedule set by probation officers, CBS News reported. He pleaded guilty in February 2018 for financial fraud and lying to investigators. In a plea deal, he sat for more than 500 hours with state and federal prosecutors, Politico reported. He agreed to cooperate with investigators, leading to…

China Fears Taiwan’s Democracy the Most, Island’s President Says in Election Pitch

TAIPEI—What Communist Party rulers in China fear the most is Taiwan’s democracy, President Tsai Ing-wen said on Dec. 18, describing Beijing as a threat seeking every day to undermine Taiwan and criticizing her main opponent for being too close to China.

Tsai, who faces re-election on Jan. 11, has repeatedly warned of the danger posed to self-ruled Taiwan by China, which claims the island as its own territory to be brought under Beijing’s control by force if needed, a message Chinese leader Xi Jinping reiterated in January.

Taipei-Beijing relations have soured since Tsai won office in 2016, with China believing she is moving toward a formal declaration of independence for the island. Tsai says Taiwan is already an independent nation, called the Republic of China, Taiwan’s official name.

In a live televised pre-election policy address by the three presidential candidates—a debate comes later this month—Tsai accused the main opposition party, the Kuomintang, of cozying up to China, pointing to presidential hopeful Han Kuo-yu’s meeting with senior Chinese officials earlier this year.

“What China fears the most is the unity of Taiwan’s people. What China fears the most is Taiwan’s democracy,” Tsai said. “We must be aware that China is infiltrating and dividing Taiwan’s society in an all-round way.”

Referring to the pro-democracy protests in Chinese-ruled Hong Kong, Tsai said that Taiwan cannot accept “one country, two systems,” the method Beijing uses to rule the city which is meant to grant a high degree of autonomy and which China hopes eventually to apply to Taiwan.

“The situation in Hong Kong makes it very clear to all of us that democracy and authoritarianism are in conflict. The two systems cannot coexist in one country,” she said.

Tsai’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party advocates Taiwan’s formal independence, while the Kuomintang, which ruled China before fleeing to Taiwan in 1949 at the end of a civil war with the Communists, advocates close ties with China.

By Ben Blanchard

This article is from the Internet:China Fears Taiwan’s Democracy the Most, Island’s President Says in Election Pitch

Justice Department Releases Decades-Old Legal Opinions Backing Trump

The Department of Justice (DOJ) has recently released several older legal opinions that back the position of President Donald Trump on resisting congressional subpoenas. The opinions support the position that the president’s executive privilege covers not just himself, but also his advisers who can thus refuse subpoenas from Congress. “A Congressional demand for testimony from a close adviser to the President directly implicates a basic concern underlying the Executive privilege, ‘the valid need for protection of communications between high Government officials and those who advise and assist them in the performance of their manifold duties,’” says a July 23, 1982, opinion (pdf) written by Theodore Olson, then-assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) for Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s current personal attorney who was an Associate Attorney General at…