Opinion

'Fire DeJoy before he burns down USPS': Postmaster General pushes plan for slower mail and higher prices

Undeterred by the backlash and widespread delays that followed his disruptive operational changes at the U.S. Postal Service last year, Postmaster General Louis DeJoy is reportedly planning to roll out another slate of policies that would significantly hike postage rates and further slow the delivery of certain kinds of mail.

While the plan has yet to be finalized, new details of the proposal—first reported by the Washington Post—intensified pressure on President Joe Biden to take decisive action before DeJoy inflicts any more damage on the most popular government institution in the country.

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Mitch McConnell condemned Trump for the Capitol attack — but he’s just as guilty

After voting to acquit former President Donald Trump of inciting an insurrection on Jan. 6, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell did something few were expecting.

He took to the Senate floor and explained why Trump was guilty.

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Trump lawyer was worse on TV than in the Senate -- which is saying something

If you thought Trump quasi-lawyer Michael van der Veen looked like an idiot in the U.S. Senate in the past two days -- ridiculed by dozens of U.S. senators howling with laughter -- you should have seen him afterwards on national TV. It was special.

In what had to be one of the more bizarre interviews of her career, respected CBS journalist Lana Zak endured more than seven minutes of scowling, venomous abuse from van deer Veen. He filibustered much of the interview with a raving assault on Zak's integrity and that of the media. Then he threw his microphone down and skulked off at the end.

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Trump’s acquittal is a sign of ‘constitutional rot’ – partisanship overriding principles

by John E. Finn, Professor Emeritus of Government, Wesleyan University

The Senate's decision to acquit former President Donald Trump in his second impeachment trial may have been a victory for Trump, but it is a clear sign that democracy in the U.S. is in poor health.

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These 43 radical GOP senators stand with Trump, Capitol rioters and cop killers

Despite late-inning impeachment drama, our Senate voted to drop charges against Donald Trump. Yes, it was a 57-43 majority that pinned the blame for the incitement of the Jan. 6 insurrection on Trump, but not the two-thirds needed for conviction. Seven Republicans supported conviction.

We'll have to listen to Trump exclaiming exoneration, but after these days, few could have any real question about the central role Trump played in bringing about an attack on his own government in a riot that killed five, left 140 police injuries, put lawmakers in fear of their lives and threatened an end to American democracy.

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Democrats snatch defeat from the jaws of victory on impeachment

Just when it appeared that the Republicans were rattled and on the ropes at the Trump impeachment trial -- distraught at the unexpected prospect of witnesses extending the proceedings -- the Democrats inexplicably let them off the hook.

It was unbelievable. At the moment the Democrats had won their easy, bipartisan, 54-46 victory this morning on the issue of calling witnesses, the Republicans were clearly rattled. Trump's third-rate personal-injury lawyer was blathering about calling 100 witnesses or more and drew loud and spontaneous laughter from the Senators by insisting depositions would be held "in my office in Philly-delphia."

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Marjorie Taylor Greene buried for threat against GOP colleague offering to be Trump impeachment witness

Never one to stay on the sidelines, controversial Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) issued a veiled threat on Twitter aimed at Rep. Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-WA) for coming forward and offering to testify that Donald Trump was well aware the Capitol was under assault when he spoke with Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) on Jan. 6th.

Herrera Beutler posted a statement late Friday night offering up information and calling on other "patriots" to come forward and testify against the former president.

That, in turn, led Taylor Greene to respond, "The gift that keeps on giving to the Democrats. First voting to impeach innocent President Trump, then yapping to the press and throwing @GOPLeader under the bus, and now a tool as a witness for the Democrats running the circus trial. The Trump loyal 75 million are watching."

Those comments were perceived by many on Twitter as Taylor Greene inciting "mob violence" against her Republican colleague.

You can read some comments below:

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Trump lawyer mocked for 'meltdown' on Senate floor: 'Multiple screws are loose there'

On Saturday, after the House impeachment managers announced their intention to call witnesses in the trial, former President Donald Trump's defense attorney Michael van der Veen threw a tantrum on the Senate floor, saying he wants to call 100 witnesses and interview each of them in his office in Philadelphia, and shouting in anger as senators laughed at him. His outraged rant was swiftly followed by a bipartisan vote to authorize new witness testimony.

Van der Veen's performance drew widespread mockery from commenters on social media, with some saying it was the most bizarre legal proceeding they had ever witnessed.

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How Trump's legacy will be marred by disturbing 'violent extremism'

Former President Donald Trump's base may remember his legacy as one to be honored and praised in the history books but news outlets and historians likely will not agree.

Although Democratic lawmakers have presented a solid case to prove that Trump did, indeed, incite the deadly insurrection on the U.S. Capitol, it does not appear enough Senate Republicans will hold him accountable for his actions which could lead to an upsetting acquittal.

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Donald Trump's last stand: How his desperate attempt to overturn the election failed

Many things have confounded me about Donald Trump over the last five years, but perhaps most confounding has been the spectacle of so many Republicans cowering and shivering in fear of his almighty tweets. I simply could not understand why they were so afraid of him. Yeah, I read all of the analysis pointing to the likelihood that if Republicans didn't go along with Trump's every little whim, he would insure they were "primaried" the next time they came up for election. They were in fear for their political careers, it was said. I got it. I've watched many men during my lifetime exhibit abject cowardice in the face of nothing more fearsome than an unreasonable asshole of a boss. Some of them had wives and kids and mortgages and didn't want to lose their jobs. Others simply got comfortable where and were willing to put up with crap from their superiors so they could stay put. So it's understandable, if hardly commendable, that so many Republicans lived in dread of the fearsome Tweeter in Chief.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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Here are the most bizarre lines Trump's legal defense team used during his second impeachment trial

Former President Donald Trump's second impeachment trial has been a wild rollercoaster over the last few days. After Democratic lawmakers laid out their case against the former president, his legal defense team took the floor.

As expected, they've attempted to explain why they believe Trump did not incite the deadly insurrection on the U.S. Capitol. But, in the process, things have taken a bizarre turn and now some of the most ridiculous moments in the trial are being highlighted, according to HuffPost.

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Senate GOP left embarrassed and humiliated thanks to Trump's costly impeachment defense strategy

Day three of former President Donald Trump's impeachment trial was not quite as harrowing as day two, with its never before seen security footage of officials and staff being evacuated just steps away from a frothing mob, but it was startling nonetheless. Having meticulously laid out the case that Trump spent months stoking the fury of his voters the day before, Thursday's arguments took a look further back into his long history of violent rhetoric and drove home the point that if Trump is not held accountable and barred from running for office he will do it again.

Lead House Manager Jamie Raskin, D-Md, rested the case with encouraging words from Thomas Paine:

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The difference between yelling fire and setting one

"This case is much worse than someone who falsely shouts fire in a crowded theater. It's more like a case where the town fire chief, who's paid to put out fires, sends a mob not to yell fire in a crowded theater, but to actually set the theater on fire."

This was how lead House impeachment manager Jamie Raskin (D-MD) explained Trump's role in the January 6 insurrection to the senators trying the former president Trump for inciting that insurrection.

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