[ Posted Monday, April 10th, 2023 – 16:10 UTC ]
Republicans seem to be increasingly fond of using the levers of government -- any levers of government they control -- to get their own way, no matter what. Perhaps this was spurred by Donald Trump's attitudes (and/or lawlessness) or perhaps it is the end result of a gradual Republican slide towards authoritarianism, but whatever the actual cause Republicans are now engaged in rather extraordinary uses of government power to punish those whose political opinions they disagree with. This is a far cry from the traditional Republican stance against "Big Government" it should be noted -- just one more in a long list of previous ideological positions they have completely abandoned in the Trumpian era. They now seem to have settled on: "The era of Big (Republican) Government is at hand!" as a guiding principle.
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Friday, April 7th, 2023 – 18:01 UTC ]
Today's Republican Party is not just the Party of Trump, it also is now the Party of Trumpism -- or to put it in plainer terms: authoritarianism. "We're going to do whatever we want to do, because we can" seems to be the new rallying slogan for Republicans. Never mind what the public thinks or wants, never mind the possible political backlash, it's just going to be full steam ahead for as long as they can get away with it.
The week began with the new episode of the continuing saga of The Trump Circus (this week's episode: "Merry Arrestmas!"), where the nation was treated to the spectacle of a former president being charged with 34 felonies in New York City. The best single sentence summing up the day's events came from a Washington Post article:
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Thursday, April 6th, 2023 – 15:56 UTC ]
The Tennessee state house chamber just took a step down a very dangerous path. It voted to expel one of its members on purely partisan lines (this is as of this writing -- votes on expelling two others are expected shortly). Expulsion has historically been used only in the most drastic and serious instances, such as when a member has been convicted of a crime but refuses to resign their seat. This time around, three Democrats are up for expulsion for mounting a political protest on the chamber's floor. That's it -- there was no other underlying reason. They're getting kicked out for being rude.
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Wednesday, April 5th, 2023 – 17:29 UTC ]
Significant political news was made yesterday, and it happened far from a New York courtroom. Two elections were held, in Wisconsin and Chicago, and in both cases the progressive candidate emerged victorious. This will have some wider repercussions on the Democratic Party, so it's worth taking a look at what just happened in a little more detail.
Wisconsin Supreme Court
This was the big one, both for those who live in Wisconsin and for Democrats in general. A seat on Wisconsin's Supreme Court opened up, when a conservative retired at the end of her term rather than seek re-election. The balance of power on the court had been 4-3 towards the conservatives, which had empowered the rest of the state's Republicans to go on an ideological spree that reaches back to the days of Governor Scott Walker. The Wisconsin Supreme Court came within one vote of overturning their electoral results in 2020 and throwing the election to Donald Trump, which shows how conservative this court has been (one lone conservative voted against doing so, which saved us all from such a disastrous and undemocratic outcome). So the race for the swing vote was a very big deal indeed.
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Tuesday, April 4th, 2023 – 18:58 UTC ]
[Written before Trump's evening remarks]
As I write this, America is in an extended intermission between Act 1 and Act 2 of today's political drama. Donald Trump has surrendered himself to the New York authorities, been arraigned, been charged with 34 felonies, and been released. He is currently en route to Florida, where he will later give a speech and/or press conference from his own golf resort.
The television networks heavily covered the morning's events and I expect they will break into regular programming once again for Trump's comments. Indictment or not, this is the type of breathless news coverage Trump has been missing, so I expect he'll be back to his old self for his remarks, revelling in the nationwide attention.
I have not read the legal filings yet, so I am going to refrain from commenting on the relative weakness or strength of the actual charges. There'll be plenty of time to do so later. Instead I merely offer up a few observations from watching the day's events unfold.
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Monday, April 3rd, 2023 – 16:57 UTC ]
Some news was made over the weekend, as another Republican unofficially threw his hat into the presidential primary ring. This, depending on how you count them, brings the list of serious declared candidates to either three or four. Or you could count the number of people who are definitely running (whether they have announced or not), which would make Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson either the sixth or the seventh candidate in the race. Hutchinson made his pre-announcement announcement this weekend on a Sunday morning television show, which came as a surprise to many -- myself included (mostly because I don't think he has even a prayer of winning the nomination). Many others, hearing the news, reacted with: "Asa who?"
Hutchinson is apparently running just in case the Republican Party suddenly emerges from its current Trumpian haze, rededicates itself to its historical ideological roots, and decides that sunny optimism is what it truly wants in a candidate. Which, quite obviously, is why I am of the opinion that he doesn't have a prayer of winning over today's Republican base voters. Hutchinson will attempt to occupy the "Aw-shucks down-home sunny Reaganism lane" in the primary horserace. He is the darkest of horses -- the longest of longshots -- because this lane likely does not even exist anymore.
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Friday, March 31st, 2023 – 16:45 UTC ]
Donald Trump's typographical mistakes were already legendary. But up until now, none have truly been as historic as the one he posted immediately after a New York grand jury indicted a former United States president for the first time in American history [bizarre capitalization in original, of course]: "These Thugs and Radical Left Monsters have just INDICATED the 45th President of the United States of America...." Um, well, yes... the grand jury just indicated that Donald Trump was worthy of indictment.
Buffoonery aside, this is indeed a historic moment. Because the New York grand jury went first, the relative merits of the Stormy Daniels case will be endlessly dissected and discussed in the coming days, but as of this writing nobody outside of the grand jury or the prosecutor's office is fully aware of either: (1) the exact charges against Trump (said to be on the order of 30 separate charges, but no details have been released yet), or: (2) the evidence which convinced both the prosecutor and the grand jury that Donald Trump had not just broken the law but that this could be proved beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. Nobody knows -- and we won't even begin to know until next Tuesday at the earliest. That's when rumor has it that Trump will surrender himself in New York City to get his mug shot and fingerprints taken and to face arraignment for the charges. At that point the charges will become publicly known, but the full weight of the evidence against Trump will not be revealed to the public before the case actually comes to court. This is an important fact to keep in mind -- whether you think Trump is guilty as sin or pure as the driven snow. Nobody really knows at this point, beyond pure bias and speculation.
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Thursday, March 30th, 2023 – 16:30 UTC ]
Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, facing the same intransigence within his caucus that has been present since the rise of the Tea Party, issued a laughably empty threat today. The headline in the Washington Post read: "House GOP Eyes Bill To Cut Spending, Raise Debt Ceiling Amid Stalemate." In poker terms, this is nothing short of a monstrous bluff. It is so far removed from the reality of the situation that the only real response from President Joe Biden and the Democrats should be: "Go right ahead -- please don't let us stop you!"
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Wednesday, March 29th, 2023 – 15:52 UTC ]
It hasn't happened quite yet, but I predict there's about to be a geographic shift in the political media's attention. Their focus for the next few weeks might head south in a rather literal fashion, down the coast from New York City to Fulton County, Georgia. Which could wind up being a good thing, in the end.
I can make this prediction because I've been closely watching both grand juries which are reportedly poised to indict Donald Trump. There are also two big federal cases waiting in the wings as well, but the state-level investigations seem to be getting closer to an actual indictment than the federal ones (although the federal ones also seem to be entering their final phases, to be fair).
Continue Reading »
[ Posted Tuesday, March 28th, 2023 – 16:17 UTC ]
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy just made his opening bid in the high-stakes poker game he wants to play with President Joe Biden over raising the debt ceiling. Biden's position from the start has been that America can't afford playing games with the full faith and credit of the United States on the table, and he has called on McCarthy to play exactly the same game of poker that gets played every year, but with only the usual stakes -- which, at worse, might lead to a temporary government shutdown. Biden wants a clean bill to raise the debt ceiling from Congress and then he will be open to holding negotiations for the annual federal budget (which is an entirely separate matter).
McCarthy's bid came in the form of a letter sent to Biden, in which he mightily attempts to put his own political spin on the situation. You could even call it gaslighting, since it ignores a few salient facts and pushes forth an alternate version of reality. McCarthy's hand is weak, though, and it doesn't look like it's going to get much stronger any time soon. The House Republicans can apparently only agree on very vague statements along the lines of: "Gosh, it'd be nice to save some money," without any specifics about much of anything. What will change this (if and when it happens) is when the House Republicans start publicly releasing their own budget plans, complete with actual line items and actual budget numbers. Which, from all reports, is not likely to happen before May (at the earliest).
Continue Reading »