Opinion

Panicked Trump brings in an even sleazier legal B-team after Rudy Giuliani melts down and falls apart

The president of the United States isn't taking this whole impeachment thing very well is he? From his red-faced tarmac tirades last week to his hysterical tweeting over the weekend, it's clear that he is losing whatever tenuous hold he had on his emotions. Here's just a sample of the most powerful man in the world's state of mind right now:

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Here is your user's guide to the impeachment of President Donald J. Trump

This is why I'm glad I'm not Nancy Pelosi. Well, one of many reasons. Now that we're done castigating her for all the condescension, normalization and foot-dragging of the last three years, and have moved on to declare her the Avenging Queen of the Republic, maybe we can acknowledge that the truth is more mundane: She's a political leader, trying to navigate an ambiguous task she didn't particularly want.

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Why Trump's brazen disregard for the law may derail Dems' efforts to pursue a 'narrowly focused' impeachment inquiry

Welcome to another edition of What Fresh Hell?, Raw Story’s roundup of news items that might have become controversies under another regime, but got buried – or were at least under-appreciated – due to the daily firehose of political pratfalls, unhinged tweet storms and other sundry embarrassments coming out of the current White House.

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Trump's trail of treasonous behavior leads directly back to Nixon

Donald Trump is not the first Republican to abuse American foreign policy to improve his chances of winning a presidential election. At least some of the people around Trump are well aware of this. They are continuing a tradition of ruthless partisanship, always unethical and potentially illegal, that is traceable back more than half a century, when Richard Nixon scuttled a peace process that could have ended the Vietnam War.

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Donald Trump has been an unhappy president from day one -- because he knew he was engaging in treason

On Jan. 20, 2017, immediately after giving his inaugural address, Donald J. Trump and his wife Melania, who had just become the First Lady, climbed the steps of the Capitol and made their way to their places on the dais of the congressional luncheon traditionally given to the newly inaugurated president of the United States. It is usually a joyous occasion, especially for the new president. His long campaign is finally over. He has completed the transition. Some of his cabinet secretaries have already testified at their confirmation hearings, as Jeff Sessions, the nominee for attorney general, had already done. Later in the day, the new president would make the drive along Pennsylvania Avenue, take up residence in the White House and officially occupy the Oval Office, signifying the power and prestige of having been elected president of the United States.

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Will Constitutional outlaw Trump implode with lies before he's impeached?

Donald Trump said he believes the Constitution lets him do "whatever I want as President." In over two and a half years, Trump has been a serial violator of the Constitution, unmatched by any president in American history. Just about every day he is a constitutional outlaw.

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David Cay Johnston: The future of Trump's presidency is up to Fox News

Finally, a major breach in Donald Trump's wall of secrecy. But before America can rid itself of this con artist one more development must occur.

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The elite consensus on impeachment: We're deeply sad and wish it would go away

Maybe you can’t blame House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for being dismissive and condescending about impeachment from the moment Democrats took control of the House, and for slow-walking herself into a process she never wanted in the first place — and that she now clearly wants to get over with ASAP.

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Trump’s Ukraine plotting has been happening in plain sight -- so why didn’t we see it?

ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

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Trump consumed with self-pitying paranoia as the Ukraine scandal spirals out of his control

Under what was reportedly mounting pressure from Republicans, the White House was forced to release two damning documents this week that will likely lead to the impeachment of the president: a memorialized telephone conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and a whistleblower report about that call and many other things, including how far the White House went to cover it up. The fact that this material was released so quickly indicates that the White House expects to lose the impeachment vote in the House and are counting on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, the "gravedigger of democracy" himself, either to refuse to hold a trial at all or to ensure that no such trial produces a two-thirds majority for conviction. That's probably a good bet.

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Circling the wagons: Republicans' refusal to comment on the whistleblower's explosive allegations is deeply revealing

President Donald Trump's corrupt behavior toward Ukraine has triggered a series of events that have accelerated far beyond the White House's control, and the GOP seems unable to keep up.

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A widening scandal now surrounds Team Trump, Rudy Giuliani and William Barr

New release of an explosive whistleblower report and corroborating Congressional testimony by Joseph Maguire, the acting Director of National Intelligence filled in a lot of the blank spots in the dramatic series of events being cited as a reason for the impeachment of Donald Trump.

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Impeach Trump: But for all his crimes -- not just over Ukraine scandal

Donald Trump and Republicans have a plan to handle this Ukraine scandal: Gaslighting. On Wednesday, the White House released a suspiciously short reconstruction of Trump's call (falsely labeled a "transcript") with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, in which Trump demanded a "favor" from Zelensky after the Ukrainian leader requested U.S. military aid that had already been authorized by Congress. The "favor"? Manufacturing a scandal against former Vice President Joe Biden that Trump could deploy in the 2020 presidential campaign.

What's going on here — extortion, bribery and abuse of office — is crystal clear. But Republicans have a plan, which is to flat-out pretend not to see a problem, and instead suggest that Democrats are crazy to object.

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