Anonymous wrote:The guy Trump wanted to be the Attorney General of the United States of America didn’t appear in federal court today, and had to be told by the judge that he had to file a waiver of appearance.
Anonymous wrote:Jeffrey Clark’s lawyers did not have any success arguing that his case should be in federal court because he was just doing his job
“…according to CNN, a “visibly frustrated and annoyed” U.S. District Judge Steve Jones grilled Clark’s attorneys to such an extent on Monday that one of Trump’s attorneys, who was in the courtroom, muttered, “This is not good.” Clark is accused, among other things, of writing a letter to Georgia election officials in the wake of the 2020 election that made bogus claims of irregularities. Jones questioned Clark’s attorney on why Clark included irregularity claims when his superiors at the Justice Department told him the claims were false. Similarly, former DOJ official Jody Hunt testified that Clark’s division didn’t even have the authority to investigate election fraud.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/trump-co-defendant-jeffrey-clark-has-a-rough-day-in-court
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your last statement is wrong. President is one of the offices where once you hold the office, even after you leave the office, you retain the title. All of the POTUSes still retain the title of President X after they leave office.
According to who?
The federal government for one. This is only one quickly Googleable source, but many government rules and regulations stipulate the same:
https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/orders/cm/appc.htm#:~:text=(c)%20A%20person%20once%20entitled,title%20throughout%20his%2Fher%20lifetime.
(c) A person once entitled as Governor, Senator, Judge, General, The Honorable, His Excellency, or similar distinctive title may retain the title throughout his/her lifetime.
This also holds for military titles.
Wow, an appendix to a Federal Highway Administration Highway Correspondence Manual. And it doesn't even mention the title President!
https://emilypost.com/advice/addressing-a-former-president-of-the-united-states
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your last statement is wrong. President is one of the offices where once you hold the office, even after you leave the office, you retain the title. All of the POTUSes still retain the title of President X after they leave office.
According to who?
The federal government for one. This is only one quickly Googleable source, but many government rules and regulations stipulate the same:
https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/orders/cm/appc.htm#:~:text=(c)%20A%20person%20once%20entitled,title%20throughout%20his%2Fher%20lifetime.
(c) A person once entitled as Governor, Senator, Judge, General, The Honorable, His Excellency, or similar distinctive title may retain the title throughout his/her lifetime.
This also holds for military titles.
Wow, an appendix to a Federal Highway Administration Highway Correspondence Manual. And it doesn't even mention the title President!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your last statement is wrong. President is one of the offices where once you hold the office, even after you leave the office, you retain the title. All of the POTUSes still retain the title of President X after they leave office.
According to who?
The federal government for one. This is only one quickly Googleable source, but many government rules and regulations stipulate the same:
https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/legsregs/directives/orders/cm/appc.htm#:~:text=(c)%20A%20person%20once%20entitled,title%20throughout%20his%2Fher%20lifetime.
(c) A person once entitled as Governor, Senator, Judge, General, The Honorable, His Excellency, or similar distinctive title may retain the title throughout his/her lifetime.
This also holds for military titles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your last statement is wrong. President is one of the offices where once you hold the office, even after you leave the office, you retain the title. All of the POTUSes still retain the title of President X after they leave office.
According to who?
(c) A person once entitled as Governor, Senator, Judge, General, The Honorable, His Excellency, or similar distinctive title may retain the title throughout his/her lifetime.