Opinion

This psychological analysis explains the 'transgressive pleasure' Trump supporters obtain from the president

Many of today’s politicians appear to appeal to the basic human need for safety, presenting their versions of strong leadership as the best hope for order and safety in a fearful world of growing instability and risk. Much evidence confirms that this appeal is certainly an important factor in the political landscape.

Keep reading... Show less

Here's how Democrats may have undermined their case for impeachment

In the summer of 2016, President Barack Obama and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump didn't agree about much, except for one obscure issue of U.S. foreign policy: lethal military aid to Ukraine.

Keep reading... Show less

An old Ted Cruz quote proves he had a very different opinion on the core of Trump’s impeachment just months ago

Republican Sen. Ted Cruz Texas was once a fierce opponent of Donald Trump in the 2016 election, but he’s now become a happy warrior for the president, especially in the face of impeachment.

Keep reading... Show less

Why Alan Dershowitz’s outrageous defense of Trump leads to completely absurd conclusions

As President Donald Trump’s Senate trial moved on to the question and answer period on Wednesday, attorney Alan Dershowitz — perhaps the most controversial and inflammatory lawyer on the team — began pushing the White House’s arguments to extremes.

Keep reading... Show less

John Bolton and John Kelly turn on the boss at last — and Trump loyalists respond with fury

Many people wondered what exactly House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was thinking when she decided to delay delivery of the articles of impeachment against President Trump until after the holiday recess. That question has never been adequately answered, but if it was because Pelosi had a feeling — or perhaps knew for sure — that more evidence of Trump's abuse of power would trickle out almost daily, she was absolutely right.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump impeachment trial: The big picture -- and 10 things you need to keep in mind

Don’t get bogged down by the marathon minute-by-minute coverage of the Senate impeachment trial stretching late into the night. Don’t get overwhelmed by all the complex procedural maneuvers aimed at securing a fair and open trial with witness testimony and new documents that Republicans want to prevent at all costs.

Keep reading... Show less

Mike Pompeo's behavior is straight out of Nixon VP's playbook: historians

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s expletive-laden dust-up with NPR reporter Mary Louise Kelly is on message for the Trump-led Republican Party. Complaining that Kelly’s question about Ukraine was “another example of how unhinged the media has become in its quest to hurt President Trump and this Administration,” Pompeo has rallied the Republican base by slamming a journalist doing her job.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's EPA is about to give a big gift to the coal industry

Trump's EPA administrator wants to redraw our nation’s mercury standard to benefit coal-fired power plants that belch out nearly half the nation’s mercury emissions. But the agency’s Science Advisory Board is balking.

Keep reading... Show less

Legal battles sparked by Trump’s behavior could affect how the US government works for generations -- long after his impeachment trial is over

After the last Senate staffer turns out the lights, major questions remain to be decided outside of the Capitol about the limits of presidential power, the willingness of courts to decide political questions and the ability of Congress to exercise effective oversight and hold a president accountable.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's threats of violence should warn us what's coming after impeachment

Donald Trump is an authoritarian and an autocrat. For him and others of such ilk, violence is political currency in the form of raw power. Autocrats and authoritarians such as Trump are de facto crime bosses who just happen to be leaders of their respective countries.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump’s lawyers are betting on their audience having no idea how the law works

President Donald Trump’s lawyers are staking out bold ground by claiming that abuse of power — which is, to many, the quintessential impeachable offense — is not actually grounds for removing a president at all.

Keep reading... Show less

The disturbingly long afterlife of Trump's impeachment battles

The legal and constitutional battles sparked by President Trump’s behavior could affect how the U.S. government works for generations, long after the impeachment trial is over.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's team isn't focused on a legal defense of their client -- they just want to create viral content for Fox News

On Sunday, the New York Times released leaked revelations from John Bolton's upcoming book about his stint as national security adviser to Donald Trump, which in a different world would have upended the president's impeachment trial in the Senate. Bolton reportedly affirms in the book that Trump personally told him military aid was being withheld from Ukraine in an effort to force the Ukrainian president to announce investigations meant to bolster Trump's conspiracy theories about Democrats. This revelation was received in the media as a big deal, because Trump's defense team has been trying, laughably, to argue that Trump withheld the aid for some purpose other than cheating in an election. Bolton's eyewitness account would seem to blow a hole through those efforts.

Keep reading... Show less