Opinion

The top 20 stupidest things Donald Trump said in 2020

President Donald Trump excels at finding the worst possible thing to say and the worst possible moment to say it. It has been quite a year of absurdity as the president faced off against multiple foes he couldn't defeat. Whether the coronavirus, the economy or President-elect Joe Biden, Trump managed to exceed the expectations for the preposterous to the nonsensical.

See the top 20 stupidest things Trump said in 2020 below:

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Trump's ham-fisted extortion effort blows up in his face -- again

Donald Trump is clearly unhappy with having to sign the stimulus bill meant to relieve the massive economic pain from his bungled response to the coronavirus pandemic. Why else would he sign it abruptly, as he did late Sunday, to no fanfare? After all, this is a man who demands adulation at his every waking moment. Yet when it came to signing a bill that will send checks to millions of Americans, Trump was curiously camera-shy. Trump eschewing a camera is like a dog rejecting his favorite treat — clearly, the manbaby president isn't feeling so hot about how the stimulus standoff ended.

The reason is not particularly mysterious. Signing the bill, for Trump, was yet another massive failure in his long list of massive failures.

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Trump is unconsciously reenacting his teenage trauma as he scrambles to overturn his election loss

After entertaining extreme ideas such as a redo of elections under martial law, appointing as special counsel a conspiracy theorist to investigate voter fraud, and downplaying a massive Russian cyberattack on the U.S. government, Donald Trump jeopardized over Christmas weekend a pandemic relief bill that would offer an economic lifeline to millions of desperate Americans and avert a government shutdown.

As Trump is consumed with overturning Joe Biden's election win, denying his defeat with five dozen lawsuits, two Supreme Court appeals, and pursuit of election reversal in Congress, refusing to leave peacefully, what we are likely watching unfold in the White House is a grand reenactment of an earlier, traumatizing experience that he had at age 13.

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Trump supporters short-circuit after the New York Post tells him to 'stop the insanity'

When you lose the New York Post, you've lost the padded room.

Loyalists of Donald Trump have short-circuited over the Post's betrayal of him in Monday's cover-story editorial calling for him to accept his loss to President-elect Joe Biden. It was a bridge too far for an army of followers that knows a little something about buying bridges.

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Conservative polling firm faces furious backlash over 'deranged' scheme for Pence to steal the presidency for Trump

The conservative-leaning Rasmussen Reports polling firm apocryphally quoted Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin to suggest Vice President Mike Pence might hand the election to President Donald Trump.

The series of tweets set off fact-checks from legal experts and historians, as well as baffled mockery and anger, and the pollster later responded by pointing out the analysis, and the quote wrongly attributed to Stalin, had originally been written by right-wing game developer and blogger Alexander Macris.

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Trump’s pardons to war criminals undermine rule of law, endanger US troops

The most grotesque Christmas gift from President Donald Trump, amongst his raft of pardons to criminals, was the ones bestowed on four Blackwater security guards convicted of a notorious massacre at Baghdad’s Nisour Square. The unprovoked murder of 17 unarmed civilians in 2007, including women and children, was a horror show that enraged Iraqis, even after years of violence following the U.S. invasion. It took seven years for the surviving Nisour Square victims and their families to get justice in a U.S. federal court for 14 of the killings. Yet Trump set the Blackwater criminals free. “This i...

Should senators be allowed to trade stocks at all? Probably not

When asked during a recent debate whether members of Congress should trade stocks, Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., attempted to dodge a real policy issue by claiming that the American dream was at stake in the election. She's not entirely wrong. Many Americans dream of an open and honest government setting fair rules for free markets. Today, active trading by senators undermines confidence in government and markets.

Although Loeffler's stilted stammering did not inspire confidence, her fellow Georgia Republican, Sen. David Perdue —who also faces a tough runoff election on Jan. 5 that will decide control of the Senate — provides the most troubling example of speculative stock trading by a sitting senator, with 2,596 securities transactions during his single six-year term in office. For perspective, Perdue's thousands of transactions account for almost a third of all trades by U.S. senators disclosed during that period. Collectively, Perdue's active trading and concentrated positions raise both conflict of interest and insider trading concerns.

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There's a secret message buried in Trump's pardons everyone seems to have missed

The 24 pardons that Donald Trump granted last week drew a lot of attention, but no one seemed to notice the message Trump sent by not issuing pardons. Trump's choices made it clear that he is a white-collar crime boss.

Trump pardoned four mercenaries who murdered Iraqi civilians, but not Jeremy Ridgeway the soldier-for-hire who plead guilty to manslaughter, testified against the others, and was sentenced to a year and a day in federal prison

Trump pardoned Roger Stone, his dirty trickster confidant; General Michael Flynn his national security adviser who was on the Kremlin payroll; and his 2016 campaign manager Paul Manafort, but not Manafort deputy Rick Gates, who turned state's evidence and confessed to his crimes.

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Critics slam 'sadistic' Trump for teasing 'good news' after letting millions lose unemployment

Minutes after CNN published a report revealing President Donald Trump had planned to sign the coronavirus relief bill Christmas Eve at Mar-a-Lago in a big show, but changed his mind at the last minute, Trump posted a tweet teasing out "good news."

"Good news on Covid Relief Bill. Information to follow!" the president said, ignoring the fact that by not signing the bill by midnight Saturday, 12-14 million Americans will be kicked off their extended unemployment insurance benefits.

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How Devin Nunes loves filing those big lawsuits he opposes for others

With the tantrums of the Mad King sucking the oxygen out of every news cycle, it's easy for the chaos to overshadow even the swampiest behavior of swamp creatures in Washington D.C.

Take Congressman Devin Nunes. Please.

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People can't understand why Trump is mum on Nashville bombing after two days: 'Pardoning the bomber?'

It has been 48 hours since the Nashville Bomber exploded an RV in the entertainment district of downtown Music City. Millions in damage was caused and only from the heroism of first responders and residents was no one but the bomber killed. In those two days, however, President Donald Trump has been silent on the issue through his favorite platform Twitter.

There was a "thoughts and prayers" style statement that one of Trump's aides released, however. "The president is grateful for the incredible first responders and praying for those who were injured."

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Marco Rubio facing furious backlash after calling Dr. Anthony Fauci a liar and an elitist

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) is potentially facing a campaign against Ivanka Trump in 2022 and appears to be desperately trying to appeal to the far-right supporters of President Donald Trump. In his latest move, Rubio went after National Institute of Health virologist Dr. Anthony Fauci.


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Critics bury Kayleigh McEnany after she calls Jake Tapper accusations of her lying 'baseless'

Following an appearance by "State of the Union" host Jake Tapper on "CNN's "Reliable Sources" -- where he revealed that he had banned Kayleigh McEnany from his show for her shameless lying, the outgoing White House press secretary tweeted out the clip and complained it was a baseless personal attack."

She wrote, "This is a therapy session for a broken network, and

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