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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
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Richard Luscombe

Steve Bannon vows ‘very vigorous appeal’ to four-month prison sentence – as it happened

Steve Bannon arrives at federal court for a sentencing hearing Friday in Washington.
Steve Bannon arrives at federal court for a sentencing hearing Friday in Washington. Photograph: Nathan Howard/AP

Closing summary

We’re closing our live blog now at the end of another tumultuous day, and week, in US politics. Thanks for joining us.

  • The House panel investigating Donald Trump’s January 6 insurrection issued a subpoena to the former president for documents and testimony.

  • Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief strategist, was sentenced to four months in prison for contempt of Congress, and fined, for defying his own subpoena. But he was allowed to remain free pending his appeal.

  • The White House dismissed claims by Russia’s ambassador to the US that it had shut down communication with Moscow as the war in Ukraine continues. US defense secretary Lloyd Austin spoke with his Russian counterpart Sergey Shoygu earlier.

  • The Washington Post reported that documents seized by the FBI at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida contained secrets about Iran’s missile program, and China.

  • Joe Biden touted a “record” reduction of the federal deficit, $1.4tn since last year and the largest one year drop in American history, the president said.

  • A Miami judge dismissed one of the 19 voter fraud prosecutions loudly trumpeted by Florida’s Republican governor Ron DeSantis. Former felon Robert Lee Wood, 56, voted after being sent a registration card by the state.

Updated

Biden: student debt relief program 'a game changer'

Joe Biden is appealing to younger voters in a speech Friday afternoon touting his student debt relief program. The president is addressing students at the historically black Delaware state university in Dover.

Ahead of his address, the supreme court gave Biden a lift on Thursday by refusing a request by a taxpayers’ group in Wisconsin to block the program, which cancels up to $20,000 in student debt for millions of borrowers.

Joe Biden greets students at Delaware state university.
Joe Biden greets students at Delaware state university. Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP

Biden addressed an enthusiastic crowd:

You are an example of why I’m so optimistic about the future. You are the most involved, the most educated, the most engaged, least prejudiced generation in American history.

Biden says the debt relief program is changing lives, and urged those qualified to sign up online:

This is a game changer. We’re hearing from people all over the country. Over 10,000 students have written me letters so far. It’s as easy to sign up as hanging out with your friends or watching a movie.

My commitment when I ran for president was if I was elected I’d make the government work and deliver for the people.

And he attacked congressional Republicans for attempting to block the aid “to their own constituents”:

As soon as I announced my administration’s plan on student debt they started attacking it and saying all kinds of things. Their outrage is wrong and it’s hypocritical.

But we’re not letting them get away with it. They’ve been fighting us in the courts. But just yesterday, state courts and the supreme court said no, we’re on Biden’s side.

Read more:

Updated

White House: communication channels with Moscow 'fully open'

The Biden administration’s strategic communications coordinator has dismissed claims by Russia’s ambassador to the US that Washington is blocking conversations with Moscow over the Ukraine war.

Newsweek reported on Thursday the belief of Anatoly Antonov that no direct open lines of communication existed between the countries similar to the Kremlin-White House hotline credited with preventing nuclear war during the 1962 Cuban missile crisis.

“The attempts of Russian diplomats in Washington to re-establish such contacts have been futile,” he said. “The administration is unwilling to talk with us as equals.”

John Kirby.
John Kirby. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP

But in an interview on CNN Friday, John Kirby, the national security council coordinator for strategic communications, said that was not true.

He pointed to defense secretary Lloyd Austin’s conversation with his Russian counterpart Sergey Shoygu earlier today, their first known contact for more than four months, as evidence:

There’s many channels open with Russia even down to the fairly low operational level. We still have a deconfliction line set up in Europe so that we can properly deconflict operations with respect to Nato’s eastern flank.

You saw today the secretary of defense spoke with with his counterpart. The secretary of state has an open line of communication with foreign minister [Sergey] Lavrov if needed. There are many channels at various levels throughout our government to continue to communicate with Russia.

That’s important, particularly now when when bellicose rhetoric by [Russian president Vladimir] Putin about the potential use of nuclear weapons only could lead to confusion and miscalculation.

Maya Yang reports…

The rightwing TV network Newsmax has said it had no plans to interview Lara Logan again, after the award-winning war correspondent turned rightwing pundit launched a QAnon-tinged tirade on air.

Lara Logan.
Lara Logan. Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

Speaking to host Eric Bolling, Logan said “the open border is Satan’s way of taking control of the world” and claimed world leaders drank children’s blood.

QAnon is a pro-Trump conspiracy theory which holds that leading liberal figures in US and world politics are, among other things, secretly murderous pedophiles.

Logan told Bolling: “God believes in sovereignty and national identity and the sanctity of family, and all the things that we’ve lived with from the beginning of time.

“And he knows that the open [southern US] border is Satan’s way of taking control of the world through all of these people who are his stooges and his servants.

“And they may think that they’re going to become gods. That’s what they tell us … You know, the ones who want us eating insects, cockroaches and that while they dine on the blood of children? Those are the people, right? They’re not going to win. They’re not going to win.”

Newsmax said in a statement it “condemns in the strongest terms the reprehensible statements made by Lara Logan” and had “no plans to interview her again”.

Full story:

The White House won’t comment specifically on the subpoena issued to Donald Trump by the January 6 House panel this afternoon. But it has thoughts on the direction of the inquiry.

Press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre is addressing reporters aboard Air Force One as the Joe Biden makes his way to Delaware to speak on his student loan forgiveness program.

Asked if she believed Trump would comply, Jean-Pierre said:

I’m going to speak broadly, as we do not comment on any ongoing investigation, the department of justice is independent, but the president has spoken to this many times, it is important to get to the bottom of January 6.

January 6 was one of the darkest days in our nation, and it’s important for the American people to know exactly what happened, so that it doesn’t happen again, so we don’t repeat that very dark day in our nation.

January 6 panel: Trump 'personally orchestrated' insurrection

The subpoena issued by the January 6 House panel this afternoon demands that Donald Trump provide documents and testimony under oath.

It requires documents to be submitted to the committee by 4 November, and for Trump to appear for deposition testimony beginning on or about 14 November.

“As demonstrated in our hearings, we have assembled overwhelming evidence, including from dozens of your former appointees and staff, that you personally orchestrated and oversaw a multi-part effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election and to obstruct the peaceful transition of power”, a four-page letter accompanying the subpoena said.

It was signed by panel chair Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, and vice-chair Liz Cheney, the Wyoming Republican.

In a tweet, the panel says the vote to issue the subpoena was approved by a unanimous vote. The nine-member committee includes two Republican House members, Adam Kinzinger of Illinois and Cheney.

Updated

Shortly before news broke that Donald Trump has been issued a subpoena by the House panel investigating his 6 January insurrection, the former president was lashing out over another episode.

The Washington Post drew Trump’s ire for its story that classified papers seized by the FBI at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida allegedly included documents containing secrets about Iran and China.

Predictably, in a statement, Trump claims it’s a hoax:

The FBI and the department of ‘justice,’ which paid a man $200,000 to spy on me, and offered a $1 million ‘bounty’ to try and prove a totally made up and fake ‘dossier’ about me (they went down in flames!), are now leaking nonstop on the Document Hoax to the Fake News.

Who could ever trust corrupt, weaponized agencies, and that includes Nara [the US national archives and records administration] who disrespects our constitution and Bill of Rights, to keep and safeguard any records, especially since they’ve lost millions and millions of pages of information from previous Presidents.

Also, who knows what NARA and the FBI plant into documents, or subtract from documents – we will never know, will we?

It’s safe to say Trump will have other things on his mind as the afternoon wears on.

January 6 panel issues Trump subpoena

The House January 6 select committee has issued a subpoena to Donald Trump, compelling the former president to provide an accounting under oath about his potential foreknowledge of the Capitol attack and his broader efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

The subpoena of constitutional and investigative consequence made sweeping requests for testimony about some of the most key moments before January 6, as well as documents and communications about his role in multi-pronged schemes to return himself to office.

It comes on the same day as Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief strategist, was sentenced to four months in prison for refusing to comply with his own subpoena.

We’ll have more details soon …

Updated

Our Washington bureau chief, David Smith, has filed a terrific interview with Maggie Haberman of the New York Times, the crack reporter and “Trump whisperer” whose new book seeks to explain the rise and fall and rise (and rise and fall and rise, ad infinitum) of the 45th president. It’s certainly worth your time this lunchtime. Here’s a taster, with a link at the bottom to follow:

“He’s become something of a Charles Foster Kane-like character down in Mar-a-Lago these days,” observes Maggie Haberman, a Pulitzer-winning reporter for the New York Times, political analyst for CNN and author of Confidence Man: The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America, which has a black-and-white photo of Trump on its cover.

Charles Foster Kane.
Charles Foster Kane. Photograph: Rko/Allstar

Her analogy raises the question: what is Trump’s Rosebud, the childhood sled that symbolised Kane’s lost innocence? “His father is Rosebud, and I don’t think it’s one particular moment,” Haberman replies. “There’s no single childhood memory that is the key. It’s a series of moments that interlock and they point back to his father.”

Fred Trump was a property mogul who had been disappointed by his eldest son Fred Jr’s lack of commitment to the family business. Donald Trump, by contrast, impressed his father by cultivating a brash “killer” persona and became heir apparent. Decades later, in the first weeks of his presidency, Trump had one photo on the credenza behind him in the Oval Office: his father, still watching.

Speaking by phone from her car in midtown Manhattan, Haberman reflects: “His father basically created this endless competition between Trump and his older brother Freddie, and pitted them against each other. Donald Trump spent a lot of time seeking his father’s approval and that became a style of dealing with people, which was certainly better suited for a business than for a household.”

“But it became one that Trump recreated in all aspects of his life. It became how he dealt with his own children. It became how he dealt with people who worked for him and then, in the White House, you read a number of stories about these battles that his aides would have. A lot of it was predetermined by lessons from his father.”

But if Trump is Kane, who is Haberman?

The Biden administration is taking steps to protect residents of nursing homes, promising what it calls “aggressive action… to keep American seniors safe”.

A White House fact sheet released Friday lays out measures including financial penalties for failing nursing homes, improved safety standards and more and better technical support for homes in need.

The labor department is providing $80m in grants for nursing training and development, while the department of health and human services providing a further $13m for education and training initiatives.

“Covid-19 laid bare the challenges in America’s nursing homes,” Biden’s domestic policy adviser Susan Rice said in a tweet.

“Today, we’re announcing new steps to improve nursing home quality and accountability”.

Joe Biden may have coined a phrase earlier, or tried to coin one at this late stage in the midterms race, when he said Republican economic policy amounted to “Maga-mega trickle down”.

Joe Biden.
Joe Biden. Photograph: J Scott Applewhite/AP

Trickle down economics is the idea that slashed taxes on the wealthy mean benefits for all those below them. Liz Truss was a devotee. She was also British prime minister for all of 45 days before announcing her resignation yesterday, after crashing the markets and cratering the UK economy.

Biden may have been seeking to remind any Americans even vaguely aware of events across the pond when he told reporters: “If Republicans get their way, the deficit is going to soar, the burden is going to fall on the middle-class … They’re not going to stop there. “It’s Maga-mega trickle down.”

For the avoidance of doubt, here’s how Larry Elliott, the Guardian’s economics editor, defines “trickle down”:

The theory is simple. Governments should cut taxes for the better off and for corporations because that is the key to securing faster growth. Entrepreneurs are more likely to start and expand businesses, companies are more inclined to invest and banks will tend to increase lending if they are paying less in tax.

Initially, the beneficiaries are the rich, but gradually everyone gains because as the economy gets bigger well-paid jobs are created for working people. Governments should stop focusing on how the economic pie is distributed and focus on growing the pie instead.

Supporters of trickle down often cite the work of the US economist Arthur Laffer as proof that the theory works. Laffer said tax cuts for the wealthy had a powerful multiplier effect and any revenues lost by governments from reducing tax rates would be more than compensated for by the fruits of higher growth.

For the further avoidance of doubt, Maga, written like that here because of Guardian style rules on acronyms, stands for “Make America great again”, aka Donald Trump’s campaign slogan in 2016.

Biden was speaking at the White House, about the US deficit and efforts to reduce it. He said: “The federal deficit went up every year in the Trump administration – every single year he was president. On my watch, things have been different. The deficit has come down both years I’ve been in office, and I’ve just signed legislation that will reduce it even more in the decades to come.”

Republicans will counter that Biden has passed a lot of legislation increasing government spending. And so the dance toward election day goes on.

Mar-a-Lago documents concerned Iran and China – report

It’s a busy Friday again…

In a bombshell scoop launched just as Steve Bannon, Donald Trump’s former campaign chair and White House adviser, was handed a four-month jail sentence for contempt of Congress, the Washington Post reports that some of the classified documents recovered from Trump’s Florida home in August included “highly sensitive intelligence regarding Iran and China”.

The Post cites anonymous sources who said that “if shared with others … such information” as found by the Department of Justice at Mar-a-Lago “could expose intelligence-gathering methods that the United States wants to keep hidden from the world”. Exposure of such information, the paper reports, could endanger people aiding US intelligence efforts or invite retaliation from the powers concerned.

The Post also says at least one document described Iran’s missile programme while others described “highly sensitive intelligence work aimed at China”.

Trump or his spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment, the paper said.

The FBI search of Mar-a-Lago on 8 August set off a monumental tussle between the former president and the Department of Justice. The contest has gone back and forth in the courts ever since, lawyers for Trump fighting a delaying action, a watching nation wondering if Trump might yet be indicted.

Trump claims to have done nothing wrong by taking records from the White House after he was beaten by Joe Biden in 2020. Most observers say otherwise.

More:

Biden touts 'record' $1.4tn deficit reduction

Joe Biden is speaking at the White House about the achievements of his economic plans, and what he says is a “record” reduction of the federal deficit.

“This year the deficit fell by $1.4tn, the largest one year drop in American history,” the president said.

“We’re rebuilding the economy in a responsible way.”

In an earlier treasury department statement, the Biden administration said the annual deficit plummeted from $2.8tn in 2021 to about $1.4tn this year, the Washington Post reported.

Joe Biden speaks about his administration's deficit reduction in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Friday.
Joe Biden speaks about his administration's deficit reduction in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Friday. Photograph: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images

Biden is touting a “historic” Covid-19 vaccination effort for saving lives and helping the economy recover from the pandemic, and hailing successes in passing bipartisan bills such as the inflation reduction act, the Chips act boosting semiconductor production, and last year’s infrastructure act.

Today’s speech is, however, a thinly disguised party political broadcast on behalf of the Democrats barely two and a half weeks before midterm elections in which they are expected to cede control of at least one chamber of congress.

Warming to that theme, Biden said:

Congressional Republicans love to call Democrats big spenders. And they always claim to be for less federal spending. Let’s look at the facts. The federal deficit went up every single year in the Trump administration, every single year he was president, and went up before the pandemic, and went up during the pandemic.

In three years before Covid hit, the deficit ballooned by another $400bn. One big reason for that is the Republicans voted for a $2tn Trump tax cut, which overwhelmingly benefited the wealthy and the biggest corporations. That racked up the deficit significantly.

On my watch, things have been different. The deficit has come down in both years that I’ve been in office.

Here’s Hugo Lowell’s report on the Steve Bannon sentencing hearing this morning:

Donald Trump’s top former strategist Steve Bannon was sentenced Friday to four months in federal prison and $6,500 in fines after he was convicted with criminal contempt of Congress for refusing to comply last year with a subpoena issued by the House January 6 select committee.

The punishment – suspended pending appeal – makes Bannon the first person to be incarcerated for contempt of Congress in more than half a century and sets a stringent standard for future contempt cases referred to the justice department by the select committee investigating the Capitol attack.

Steve Bannon and lawyers David Schoen and Matthew Evan Corcoran talk to reporters after today’s sentencing hearing.
Steve Bannon and lawyers David Schoen and Matthew Evan Corcoran talk to reporters after today’s sentencing hearing. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

The sentence handed down by the US district court judge Carl Nichols in Washington was lighter than recommended by prosecutors, who sought six months in jail and the maximum $200,000 in fines because Bannon refused to cooperate with court officials’ pre-sentencing inquiries.

Bannon, 68, had asked the court for leniency and requested in court filings for his sentence to either be halted pending the appeal his lawyers filed briefs with the DC circuit court on Thursday or otherwise have the jail term reduced to home-confinement.

But Nichols denied Bannon’s requests, saying he agreed with the justice department about the seriousness of his offense and noting that he had failed to show any remorse and was yet to demonstrate that he had any intention to comply with the subpoena.

The far-right provocateur now faces a battle to overturn the conviction on appeal, which, the Guardian first reported, will contend the precedent that prevented his lawyers from disputing the definition of “wilful default” of a subpoena, and arguing he had acted on the advice of his lawyers, was inapplicable.

Read the full story:

Bannon: I 'fully respect' four-month sentence

Steve Bannon has just spoken with reporters outside the courthouse in Washington DC, telling them he “respects” the judge’s sentence, and veering off quickly into an attack on Joe Biden’s administration.

In a brief, and chaotic appearance at the microphone, Bannon said of judge Carl Nichol’s four-month sentence:

The sentence he came down with today is his decision. I fully respect it, I’ve been totally respectful this entire process on the legal side.

Donald Trump’s former chief strategist, who chose to remain silent during his sentencing hearing this morning, also claimed, somewhat implausibly, to have been the most talkative of all the former president’s insiders:

I testified before the Mueller commission for more hours. I testified in front of [congressman Adam] Schiff in the House intelligence committee more than any other person in the Trump administration. I testified in front of the senate intelligence [committee], I think more than anybody, about the issues related to Russiagate, to all of that. The same process every time.

I had lawyers that were engaged, they worked through the issues of privilege. At that time, I went and testified. And this thing about I’m above the law is an absolute and total lie.

Seizing his moment to attack Biden, and referring to the upcoming midterm elections, a defiant Bannon added:

Today was my judgment day by the judge. And we’ll have a very vigorous appeals process. I’ve got a great legal team, and there’ll be multiple areas of appeal.

But as that sign says right there, vote. On November 8, there’s gonna have [sic] judgment on the illegitimate Biden regime and, quite frankly, Nancy Pelosi and the entire [January 6] committee. And we know which way that’s going.

This is democracy. The American people are weighing and measuring what went on with the justice department and how they comported themselves. Merrick Garland will end up being the first attorney general that’s brought up on charges impeachment, and he’ll be removed from office.

Updated

Bannon sentenced to four months in prison for contempt

Steve Bannon has been sentenced to four months in prison for contempt of Congress.

Donald Trump’s former chief strategist was sentenced to serve four months on each of the two contempt counts for defying a congressional subpoena issued by the January 6 House panel investigating the former president’s efforts to reverse his defeat by Joe Biden.

The prison terms will be served concurrently, district court judge Carl Nichols ruled. But the judge said he would stay the sentence pending an appeal by Bannon, as long as the legal paperwork is filed promptly.

The statutory minimum was one month in prison on each count.

We’ll have more details shortly…

Updated

Steve Bannon’s sentencing hearing is becoming something of a spectacle, with a defense attorney ripping into one of Donald Trump’s legal team.

David Schoen, who is arguing that his client should receive only probation for defying a congressional subpoena from the panel investigating Trump’s 6 January insurrection has called Trump’s counsel Justin Clark “a thug” and a liar.

“He is nothing but a thug. I wouldn’t believe a thing he says, one of what one might call the Three Stooges… He has lied to me personally. He has ripped me off personally,” Schoen said.

The Guardian reported in July that Bannon’s legal team was pointing to a letter written by Clark as proof that former president Trump asserted executive privilege over his interactions with his chief strategist, meaning he was not required to comply with the subpoena and testify.

But a follow-up email from Clark showed Trump’s legal team expressly did not think Bannon had “immunity” from the investigation.

Bannon, meanwhile, won’t be speaking in his own defense at today’s hearing. “My lawyers have spoken for me,” he tells district court judge Carl Nichols.

Updated

Judge rebukes DeSantis's 'election fraud' efforts

A Florida judge has rebuked Ron DeSantis’s much publicized “office of elections integrity” and dismissed charges against one of the defendants the Republican governor insisted would “pay the price” for criminal election fraud.

DeSantis staged a media event in August announcing what he said was an “opening salvo” in his administration’s efforts to crack down on election fraud, namely the arrest of 20 felons he said had illegally voted.

But it soon emerged that most had been sent voter registration cards by authorities and accordingly believed they were eligible to vote. And earlier this week, footage emerged of the bewilderment and confusion of law enforcement officers and those being arrested.

On Friday, Miami judge Milton Hirsh dismissed charges against Robert Lee Wood, 56, who was facing up to five years in prison and $5,000 in fines for voting in the 2020 election.

DeSantis’s office of the statewide prosecutor (OSP) had no authority to be bringing such a case, Hirsh ruled. Any such crime must have taken place in two or more judicial circuits, or be an organized criminal conspiracy, neither of which occurred in Wood’s case, he said, according to the Sun-Sentinel.

“‘His arms spread wider than a dragon’s wings,’” the judge wrote in the order, quoting Shakespeare, the Sentinel reports.

“How much wider even than that does OSP seek to extend its reach? In the case at bar the answer is simple: wider than the enabling statute contemplates, and therefore too wide”.

Prosecutors: Bannon showed "no remorse"

Steve Bannon has shown “no remorse” for his actions, the judge at his sentencing hearing in Washington DC has said.

Judge Carl Nichols also says he’s not minded to give Donald Trump’s former chief strategist any credit for accepting responsibility for defying the January 6 House panel subpoena.

Nichols says he’s also in agreement with prosecutors’ arguments seeking up to six months in prison for each of the two counts of contempt Bannon was convicted for in July.

Prosecutor JP Cooney told Nichols that Bannon “had an interest in making a public spectacle of the committee’s hearings”:

Throughout this entire case the defendant has tried to make it about nothing but politics and retribution.

The defendant’s claim of executive privilege was merely a smoke screen.

Defense attorney David Schoen has been arguing that no mandatory minimum exists, given the circumstances of the case, and that probation would be appropriate. Nichols appears unmoved.

In a brief aside into the world of the midterm elections… we’re learning that Florida has become the first state to pass one million votes already cast.

That’s according to elections analyst Michael McDonald at the University of Florida. He’s been looking at the state by state figures for early voting, and also says this morning that more than six million ballots have already been cast nationwide.

With a number of intriguing races at federal and state level, Florida is seen as a key bellwether for the November elections.

Polling released by RMG research makes for bleak reading for Democrats. Charlie Crist, who is challenging incumbent Republican governor Ron DeSantis, trails by 10%, and Val Demings, who is looking to unseat sitting Republican senator Marco Rubio, is five points behind.

In a moment that could yet be relevant during an appeal, Steve Bannon has affirmed at his sentencing hearing this morning that he is “satisfied” with the legal counsel he’s received throughout his case.

We’ve already reported that Donald Trump’s former strategist is seeking to appeal his conviction for contempt of Congress. One of the grounds could be that his refusal to comply with a January 6 House panel subpoena investigating Trump’s insurrection was on the advice of his legal team.

We’re expecting to learn Bannon’s sentence imminently.

A number of protestors shouting “traitor” and “fascist” greeted Steve Bannon on his arrival at district court in Washington DC.

He waved a newspaper in acknowledgement and paused briefly at a bank of microphones to denounce the “illegitimacy” of the Biden administration, his words largely drowned out by the shouts from the crowd.

Steve Bannon has arrived for his sentencing hearing in Washington DC, and has made his way through court security, according to reporters on the ground.

While we wait for proceedings to get under way, here’s my colleague Hugo Lowell’s look at the latest developments, news that Donald Trump’s former chief strategist is planning to appeal his contempt of Congress convictions to a federal appeals court, whatever happens this morning.

Steve Bannon arrives for his sentencing hearing in Washington DC this morning.
Steve Bannon arrives for his sentencing hearing in Washington DC this morning. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

Bannon, of course, was convicted in July on two counts of defying a subpoena from the January 6 House panel investigating then-president Trump’s efforts to overturn his election defeat to Joe Biden.

Bannon’s appeal is expected to make the case that the legal precedent that prevented US district court judge Carl Nichols from allowing his lawyers to argue the definition of “willful” defiance used at trial, as well as the fact that he had relied on the advice of counsel, was inapplicable.

Good morning politics blog readers, and a happy Friday.

Steve Bannon will be sentenced this morning for his contempt of Congress conviction, prosecutors seeking a six-month prison term and $200,000 in fines for Donald Trump’s former lead strategist, while his defense lawyers are pleading for probation.

Either way, Bannon, who was convicted in July on two counts for denying a subpoena from the January 6 House panel looking into Trump’s efforts to overturn his election defeat, is set to appeal, the Guardian has learned.

We’ll be following Bannon’s sentencing hearing, which is coming up in short order this morning.

Here’s what else we’re watching today:

  • Joe Biden will deliver remarks on deficit reduction at about 11am, taking credit for reducing the nation’s debt burden and presumably delving once again into his post-midterms spending plans.

  • The president is then traveling to Delaware state university to speak this afternoon about his student loan cancelation program.

  • The White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, will give her daily briefing at lunchtime to reporters on board Air Force One en route to Delaware.

  • The treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, will be talking about the economy in Virginia this morning.

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