Opinion

Republicans are 'reeling' from Trump's erratic 'policy whiplash' -- and this is their lousy excuse for it

When the Washington Post reporters Seung Min Kim and Erica Werner write that Donald Trump’s advisers and Republican lawmakers are “reeling” from “policy whiplash” with Trump, they’re probably understating the situation. There’s the ongoing saga of Trumpcare with Trump deciding unilaterally that he would tell the courts to destroy the Affordable Care Act and that he was tapping three senators to write the legislation to replacement, a pronouncement that was news to those three and their leader Mitch McConnell. Then it was off, because McConnell told him no, and then back on because Trump is fixated and can’t shut up about it.

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Trump's biggest lie is also a marker for pathological narcissism -- or pure idiocy

Donald Trump’s latest flip-flops on healthcare and the Mexican border continue a pattern of promises, and reversals, that gets far too little attention. His flip-flops show that Trump ignores the interests of the party he latched onto in favor of whatever crazy idea pops into his head.

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Republicans are flailing on health care because they backed themselves into a corner with no hope of escape

Republicans in the Senate breathed a sigh of relief Tuesday as President Donald Trump backed away from his push to bring forward a GOP health care plan in the next two years. But their relief is ill-founded, and no matter what Trump does, it’s hard to see how they aren’t completely cornered on the health care issue.

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How far will Trump go to suppress the Mueller report?

We’re not breaking any news when we observe that Donald Trump is corrupt, destructive and dishonest. Stop the presses, I know. Nevertheless, it’s endlessly laughable to me that anyone believes his serial corruption will stop short of tampering with the Mueller report.

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I had a front-row seat to hate and was physically assaulted: The liberal-washing of white nationalism

The horror of the New Zealand terror attack that targeted two mosques during Friday congregational prayers and left 50 people dead has raised important questions about the kind of ideas that inspire this senseless violence. In Canada, the 2017 Québec mosque shooting that left six Muslim men dead also forced the question: what drives the hate that leads to white nationalist terror?

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Recent outbreak of violence was a long-planned strategy by the white power movement: historian

On March 15, in an event that shocked the conscience of the world, an avowed neo-Nazi and white supremacist murdered 50 people (and injured more than 40 others) in attacks on two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. His killing spree ended only because he was confronted by an unarmed man named Abdul Aziz, who forced him to flee.

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Kellyanne Conway reveals her deep cluelessness as drug policy adviser with bogus claim

Among other roles in the Trump administration, Kellyanne Conway is the White House’s opioid crisis czar. But a comment she made last month demonstrates how totally clueless and unqualified for the job she is.

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Trump's inept and mean-spirited decisions are endless -- and bound to backfire

In January, I was in Washington for a couple of days and early on a Saturday morning took a Lyft car from Capitol Hill to Georgetown for a meeting with friends. The driver and I began to talk.

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Here's how to bypass Mitch McConnell's obstruction and get Medicare-For-All right now

It’s 2009. Barack Obama has just been elected president, and Democrats hold commanding majorities in both chambers of Congress.  The Academy Award-winning documentary "An Inconvenient Truth" recently prophesied a coming climate cataclysm and engendered a new surge in environmental activism. Former Republican Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich and current Democratic Speaker Nancy Pelosi even appear together in TV ads agreeing that "both sides" want action on global warming.

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How Donald Trump will bankrupt America

Recently, I did something rare in my life. Over a long weekend, I took a few days away and almost uniquely — I might even say miraculously — never saw Donald Trump’s face, since I didn’t watch TV and barely checked the news. They were admittedly terrible days in which 50 people were slaughtered in New Zealand. Meanwhile, the president indulged in another mad round of tweeting, managing in my absence to lash out at everything and everyone in sight (or even beyond the grave) from John McCain, Saturday Night Live, and the Mueller “witch hunt” to assorted Democrats and even Fox News for suspending host Jeanine Pirro’s show. In his version of the ultimate insult, he compared Fox to CNN. And I was blissfully ignorant of it all, which left me time to finally give a little thought to… Donald Trump.

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Trump had a cynical plan to put the Russia scandal behind him -- but Americans aren't buying it

It's been a week since Attorney General William Barr released his four-page letter with a summation of Robert Mueller's conclusions, along with his own. As most of us noted at the time, Barr's letter raised more questions than it answered, leading to more demands that the full report be released to the public. Nonetheless, President Trump and his Republican supporters have been robotically declaring nonstop that he has been totally exonerated, and many in the media jumped the gun to help them do it. They obviously hope to set a narrative that will put skeptics in the position of having to overturn it, which is often a difficult task.

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Trump's white evangelical supporters are nostalgic for an American past that never existed for blacks: historian

In 2013, I received an email from Rev. Ray McMillan, the pastor of Faith Christian Center, a conservative evangelical and largely African American congregation in Cincinnati, Ohio. McMillan was writing to ask me if I might be interested in participating on a panel at an upcoming conference on evangelicals and racial reconciliation, to be held later that year at Wheaton College, a Christian liberal arts college in western suburban Chicago. I was initially surprised by the invitation. I cared about racial reconciliation, but I had never spoken at a conference on the subject. I was not an expert in the field, and even my own historical work did not dive explicitly into race or the history of people of color in the United States.

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