ChrisWeigant.com

Friday Talking Points -- Trump Still Doesn't Care About You

[ Posted Friday, May 15th, 2026 – 18:17 UTC ]

We began writing this column series lo these many years ago to help tongue-tied Democrats formulate snappy lines to use when being interviewed on television and/or to use in their campaign ads. These days, however, we have to wonder whether we should just pack it in and not even bother. We say this because Donald Trump keeps providing the best talking points Democrats could ever hope for, serving them up on a weekly basis. And this week's was an absolute doozy.

When a reporter asked Trump if Americans' financial situation was motivating him to make a deal with Iran as soon as possible, Trump responded: "Not even a little bit... I don't think about Americans' financial situation. I don't think about anybody."

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Should California Change Its Primary System?

[ Posted Thursday, May 14th, 2026 – 16:23 UTC ]

With less than a month to go before California holds its primary election, it now looks as if the state's Democrats are going to avoid disaster. That is good news for Democratic voters in the state, who outnumber Republican voters by about 3-to-2. But even the fact that we got so close to disaster is going to spur efforts to reform the state's current primary system.

Primary elections can be designed in a number of different ways. For the past 15 years, California has held what is usually called "top-two jungle primaries." Every candidate for every office from every party all appear on the same primary ballot, all jumbled together. The two candidates who finish in first and second places move on to the general election in November. All other candidates are out of luck, because there isn't even a write-in line on the November ballot.

This system has its benefits, but it also has its flaws -- some of which are pretty major. Reforming the system could involve just minor tweaks to the current system (such as allowing for write-in candidates on the general election ballot), or it could involve completely scrapping what we've got and choosing another system entirely.

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Senate Takes A Baby Step In The Right Direction

[ Posted Wednesday, May 13th, 2026 – 16:36 UTC ]

The U.S. Senate did some interesting things today, including voting on yet another motion to end the war in Iran -- which would have actually passed if John Fetterman had voted with his fellow Democrats, since there are now three Republicans backing the idea. But what caught my eye was a 99-0 vote (!) that is mostly symbolic and merely a baby step, but it is at least a baby step in the right direction.

To state the obvious, very few things pass unanimously in the Senate these days. So a 99-0 vote is rather startling on any issue. All the senators voted to advance a measure proposed by John Kennedy, but there will be a few more votes before it actually passes the Senate. The measure would withhold senators' pay during government shutdowns. This is actually an issue that I have long advocated for (in fact, since George W. Bush was president), in one form or another. Especially after seeing how well it worked at the state level, here in California.

Before you get too excited about this prospect though, let's first examine why it is merely a baby step and why it may never actually happen. Note that word used there: withhold. The measure would not actually forfeit their pay, it would just be held back until the shutdown was resolved. Once the federal government was fully up and running and funded again, the senators would get all this back pay in a lump sum.

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Trump Doesn't Care About You

[ Posted Tuesday, May 12th, 2026 – 16:10 UTC ]

Donald Trump is stuck in a trap of his own making, it seems. He has finally met his match in stubbornness. And we're all paying the price for it. But Trump doesn't care -- which he will even flat-out admit, as he did today.

Trump was asked by a reporter to what extent "Americans' financial situations are motivating him" to quickly strike a deal to end the war with Iran. His answer: "Not even a little bit." He later expanded upon his answer: "I don't think about Americans' financial situation. I don't think about anybody."

[Aside: Look for these quotes to appear in a Democratic campaign ad near you, real soon now!]

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Trump Goes To China (Maybe)

[ Posted Monday, May 11th, 2026 – 16:45 UTC ]

The political highlight of this week was supposed to be Donald Trump flying to China to meet with Xi Jinping. Now there are doubts whether this will even happen, or whether it will be postponed yet again. This summit meeting was initially scheduled for the middle of last month, but it had to be postponed because of the war Trump had started with Iran. Trump had hopes of wrapping the whole war up in early April just before he went to China, but those hopes were (obviously) never realized. This time around, Trump could actually decide to start attacking Iran once again, unilaterally ending the fragile ceasefire and escalating his war of choice. If this happens, it is doubtful whether Trump would spend a few days in China during a critical phase of the conflict, but then again with Trump, you never know what he'll wind up doing.

Today the prospect of reaching a short-term deal with Iran seems to have fallen apart completely. Last week, the U.S. proposed a one-page deal (Trump famously refuses to read long documents) that would have had a solution to the short-term problems both countries faced, while pushing out until later negotiations on the longer-term issues. The Strait of Hormuz would have been opened, the U.S. blockade of Iranian ports would have ended, and the war would have been declared over. Then a 30-day period would have begun, where issues such as Iran's nuclear enrichment and U.S. sanctions would have been discussed, with a long-term deal to (hopefully) follow. That was the plan, at any rate.

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Friday Talking Points -- Trump's Lies Getting More And More Obvious

[ Posted Friday, May 8th, 2026 – 18:37 UTC ]

As Donald Trump's war of choice stumbles and staggers into its third month, you'll be happy to hear that not everyone has been economically hit hard by the rise in prices it has caused. That's right -- there is one clear winner in all of this disruption. This headline sums it up: "Shell Reports Nearly $7 Billion Profit Amid 'Unprecedented Disruption'." Good to know that somebody's doing well, right?

Well... no. Not really. It's no comfort to everyone who is footing the bill for these monumental windfall profits to know that a whole lot of the money they are paying at the pump isn't because the price per barrel of oil has gone up, but is instead just going to line the pockets of Big Oil. But then, that's the way it has always worked, really.

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More Trump War Lies Exposed

[ Posted Thursday, May 7th, 2026 – 16:02 UTC ]

The Washington Post has done an exemplary job this week exposing the lies that the American public has been getting from Donald Trump and his administration over the progress and success of his war of choice with Iran. Yesterday we learned that Iran's attacks on the U.S. military have been a lot more destructive than previously known. Today we learned that America's attacks on Iran have been a lot less destructive than all the boasting and bragging Trump and the Pentagon have been feeding us. Because apparently we haven't actually achieved anywhere near the level of success that has been claimed, from the earliest days of the war onward.

Here's how this new article begins:

A confidential CIA analysis delivered to administration policymakers this week concludes that Iran can survive the U.S. naval blockade for at least three to four months before facing more severe economic hardship, four people familiar with the document said, a finding that appears to raise new questions about President Donald Trump's optimism on ending the war.

The analysis by the U.S. intelligence community, whose secret assessments on Iran have often been more sober than the administration's public statements, also found that Tehran retains significant ballistic missile capabilities despite weeks of intense U.S. and Israeli bombardment, three of the people familiar with it said.

Iran retains about 75 percent of its prewar inventories of mobile launchers and about 70 percent of its prewar stockpiles of missiles, a U.S. official said. The official said there is evidence that the regime has been able to recover and reopen almost all of its underground storage facilities, repair some damaged missiles and even assemble some new missiles that were nearly complete when the war began.

Trump painted a rosier picture in Oval Office remarks on Wednesday, saying of Iran: "Their missiles are mostly decimated, they have probably 18, 19 percent, but not a lot by comparison to what they had."

Later, the article provides a baseline number:

On the matter of Iranian weapons, the confidential intelligence assessment says that Iran's inventory of missiles and mobile launchers remains formidable.

Iran is thought to have had roughly 2,500 ballistic missiles before the war began, as well as thousands more unarmed drones [*]. Iran has used those weapons to launch retaliatory strikes against U.S. allies in the Gulf as well as U.S. military sites across the region. A Post visual investigation found that Iranian airstrikes have damaged or destroyed at least 228 structures or pieces of equipment at U.S. military sites in the Middle East, a level of destruction far larger than what has been publicly acknowledged by the U.S. government.

The timeline for when Iran can again start producing ballistic missiles in substantial quantities has shortened, one of the U.S. officials said.

So by using some basic math, that means the U.S. intelligence community now thinks Iran still has around 1,750 ballistic missiles left. That's a lot of missiles, and it runs directly counter to all the "we've obliterated them all" happy-talk from Trump and other administration war cheerleaders.

In fact, it raises a very serious question of attrition: does the U.S. even have enough interceptor missiles left to defend against that arsenal? The American military apparently has a policy of launching two interceptors at each incoming missile (in case one of them fails), so that would mean we'd need 3,500 such interceptors to defend our interests in the region, just against Iranian missiles alone. It's doubtful we still have that many, and even if we do it would be doubtful that we'd commit them all (because if we ran out we'd leave the American military wide open to such attacks all over the world).

That's a pretty dire situation to contemplate, obviously. And it's not just missiles we have to worry about. The article also points out: "In early April, the U.S. intelligence community assessed that more than half of Iran's missile launchers were still intact and that it had thousands of one-way attack drones in its arsenal." That makes the problem of supply shortages of interceptor missiles even more dire.

Perhaps this is why Donald Trump has seemed a lot more eager to reach a deal to end this war than the Iranians. He's been blustering and threatening for weeks that he's on the brink of restarting the bombing campaign (and perhaps even worse), but he has never followed through on any of these threats. If the danger to American troops and military stockpiles is a lot more severe than the public has been led to believe, this would go a long way towards explaining this reluctance.

Trump has also been overstating the effects of his blockade of Iranian ports as well, it seems:

[T]he CIA estimate says Iran can survive the U.S. blockade for 90 to 120 days -- and maybe longer -- before facing more severe economic hardship, the four people familiar with it said.

. . .

One of the U.S. officials who spoke to The Washington Post said they thought Iran's capacity to endure prolonged economic hardship is far greater than even the CIA estimate. "The leadership has gotten more radical, determined and increasingly confident they can outlast U.S. political will and sustain domestic repression to check any resistance" inside Iran, the official said. "Comparatively, you see similar regimes lasting years under sustained embargoes and airpower-only wars."

If this is true, then Iran not only has time on their side but also holds more "cards" (as Trump likes to frame the issue) militarily than Trump. It's not just U.S. forces who may be running low on interceptors, it is also Israel and our allies in the region, meaning a restart to the sustained missile and drone attacks by Iran might start to cause a lot more damage than they already have, as the militaries are forced to reprioritize which targets are worth defending with their remaining interceptors.

Americans don't like being lied to by their leaders when they are at war. Unfortunately, presidents have been doing just that, to various degrees, stretching all the way back to Vietnam. Sometimes the lies are more minor and innocuous, but sometimes they are such a blatant denial of reality that they wind up with disastrous consequences, both in domestic support for the war and on the battlefield. And with both of the Post's big revelations this week, you have to wonder what else we're being lied to about as well.

 

[*] [Program Note: Later in the day, the Washington Post ran a correction to the article cited here. Here is their correction notice, in full:

An earlier version of this article said that Iran still possesses thousands of unarmed drones. The drones are unmanned, not unarmed.]

-- Chris Weigant

 

Follow Chris on Twitter: @ChrisWeigant

 

The Damage Iran's Military Has Caused

[ Posted Wednesday, May 6th, 2026 – 16:14 UTC ]

The Washington Post today released what might normally be called a "bombshell report," but should more literally be called a "missile and drone report." It shows that Iran has been far more successful in its attacks on U.S. military bases in the Gulf region than anyone in the administration of Donald Trump has yet admitted. The Post analyzed before-and-after satellite photos to identify the destruction Iran's missiles and attack drones have caused. And what they found was pretty eye-opening:

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Will Trump's Grip Slip Tonight?

[ Posted Tuesday, May 5th, 2026 – 16:25 UTC ]

Is Donald Trump about to become a lame duck? Well, that's probably optimistic, but the possibility that people will shortly begin using the term about him does actually exist, and tonight's Republican primary election returns in Indiana will give some sort of indication as to the likeliness of it happening.

Of course, technically Trump won't become a true lame duck (by the traditional definition of the political term) until after the 2028 elections. This year, what may happen is that we see the Republicans in Congress enter into their own lame-duck period, if they lose control of one or both of the chambers of Congress. From the November election until the new Congress is sworn in early next year, Republicans will still be in charge but with the clock ticking until their power will disappear. This is the traditional "lame duck" definition -- the period between an election and when the victors get sworn into office.

However, when used for presidents, the term is a lot more flexible nowadays. If the Democrats do indeed manage to wrest control of Congress away from the Republicans, then for the next two years Trump will frequently be referred to as a lame duck. He will still be in power, occupying his office, but his power will be reduced and the clock will be ticking on his remaining time in office.

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Trump's Ad-Libbed War

[ Posted Monday, May 4th, 2026 – 16:33 UTC ]

As we enter our third month of what might be called "war by impulse," it's pretty easy to see that Donald Trump is flailing around and grasping at straws. He gets a bee in his bonnet, rants about it on social media for a while and then makes an ill-prepared stab at implementing it, only to change his mind and reverse course when it doesn't work out the way he thought it would. That's been the defining feature of this war from almost the very beginning.

The whole thing has been ad-libbed, from the very start. Israel said they were going to bomb an above-ground meeting of Iran's leaders, and Trump was talked into going along for the ride. A massive campaign of missiles and bombs followed, but Iran proved a lot more resilient than expected, sending their own waves of missiles and drones into neighboring countries (including Israel). The U.S. was forced to use so many of their high-tech interceptors to counter these attacks that the stores of such defensive weapons are now reportedly running low.

Iran then played the card that everyone who had ever studied what a war with them would look like fully expected -- they halted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz by launching attacks on undefended civilian ships. This drove the worldwide price of oil through the roof, which meant a whole lot of global economic pain far from the battlefield. Since then, Trump has alternated between threatening to destroy Iran's very civilization and trying to bluster them into agreeing to some sort of deal that he can tout as "total victory." So far, neither one has worked.

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