Opinion

A Trump-RFK Jr. ticket is the ultimate MAGA Trojan horse — and it’s being built in New Hampshire

CONCORD, N.H. — Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed his presidential candidate status in New Hampshire by filing a declaration of candidacy and paying a $1,000 filing fee; that's all it takes in the Granite State — sign your name and put up some chump change.

Identifying as a Democrat and purchasing real estate on the presidential primary ballot gives insight into the RFK Jr. campaign strategy: run as a Democrat while serving as the MAGA Trojan Horse.

Keep reading... Show less

The point of Chris Christie’s campaign

If you think the point of Chris Christie’s presidential bid is winning the presidency, I think you may be misunderstanding it. Yes, I know what he says. He says he’s an alternative to Donald Trump. But he also touched on something larger during an interview with “CBS News Sunday Morning.”

Reporter Bob Costa asked what he’s going to say to Trump during the first GOP debate later this month. The former New Jersey governor said: “I can guarantee I’m going to tell the truth for 90 minutes, because the truth matters, and I think Republican voters need to hear the truth” (my italics).

Keep reading... Show less

Don’t use Florida’s children as pawns in political games

This is what we believe to be true about Florida parents: They don’t want the government indoctrinating their kids, or usurping their own decisions when it comes to belief systems, sexuality, faith or politics. That’s true of Republicans. Of Democrats. Of those who have rejected partisan labels, and those who don’t care about politics at all. Politicians understand that as well. That’s why they often pitch their most egregious efforts to interject themselves into those family conversations as responses to attacks on parental freedom from “the other side.” Liberals and conservatives alike have ...

History must record Trump's plan for a nationwide 'Kent State' massacre

Although it’s generally only mentioned in passing in the mainstream media, there are two particularly chilling passages in Jack Smith’s indictment of Trump.

Both, to my mind, invoke Kent State, but on a much larger scale.

With that crime, you’ll recall, on May 1, 1970, Ronald Reagan called students protesting the Vietnam war across America “brats,” “freaks” and “cowardly fascists,” adding, as The New York Times noted at the time:

Keep reading... Show less

Donald Trump asked for this

All he had to do was gracefully concede defeat and vow to do better next time …

All he had to do was what every losing presidential candidate has ever done during the last three centuries in this country …

Keep reading... Show less

The world must leave room for people such as J. Robert Oppenheimer and Alan Turing

The movie “Oppenheimer” reminds us that a healthy society must leave room for people who face down power to pursue truth, who introduce new ways of thinking or who choose to follow alternative life paths. A brilliant but eccentric scientist, J. Robert Oppenheimer led the world into the Atomic Age only to run afoul of government investigators. He also calls to mind a similar account in Great Britain in which Alan Turing, who led the world into the computer age and helped crack the German military codes in World War II, was convicted on a morals charge and eventually took his own life. Both men ...

Trump indictment lays out an attack on democracy itself

For months, speculation around the prosecution of Donald J. Trump has focused on one key question: How would special counsel Jack Smith establish that Trump’s words and actions led to the violent upheaval of Jan. 6, 2021, when a maddened mob of his supporters crashed through barriers, beat Capitol police officers, broke into House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office and threatened the life of Vice President Mike Pence? A grand jury’s conclusion, unveiled in a four-count indictment released late Tuesday, was devastating in its simplicity. While the Jan. 6 riots were clearly criminal, they are not the...

The season for accountability has finally arrived

A democracy has the right – no, the obligation — to defend itself against those who attack it and seek to destroy it. That’s what Capitol Police were forced to do on Jan. 6, as they physically fought off thousands of attackers. It’s what special counsel Jack Smith, operating in a different role, has now done in Washington with the indictments announced Tuesday, and what Fani Willis apparently will do soon in Fulton County.

Because make no mistake: Donald J. Trump’s assault on democracy was all-out and multi-pronged, and is being sustained even today. Consider his actions just here in Georgia:

Trump tried to strong-arm Brad Raffensperger to “find” him 11,800 votes, even hinting at criminal prosecution if Georgia’s top elections official refused. Trump pressured the U.S. attorney for north Georgia, B.J. Pak, to “find” evidence of fraud when none existed, then fired him for failing to uncover what did not exist. Trump tried and failed to intimidate Gov. Brian Kemp, House Speaker David Ralston and Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan into calling an illegal special session of the state Legislature to overturn the legitimate decision of Georgia voters.He tried and succeeded in intimidating U.S. Sen. David Perdue and U.S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler into backing his coup attempt on the campaign trail and in Congress. He sent a team of legal hacks, led by Rudy Giuliani and John Eastman, south to Georgia to tell us blatant lies, to feed us what we know now and knew then to be bluster and bullcrap, including attacking public servants who were simply doing their job honestly and competently.He and others engineered creation of a slate of “false electors” to substitute for the real thing, the legitimate thing, the constitutional thing, with the intent to use that false slate to subvert the voters’ intent.He and his team abused our state courts, filing nonsensical cases void of evidence, logic or legal basis, searching vainly for a judge who would collude with him.He encouraged allies deep in the U.S. Department of Justice to claim, falsely, that they had “identified serious concerns that may have impacted the outcome of the election” in Georgia and elsewhere, and to claim that “a special session (to overturn the election outcome) is warranted and in the national interest.”

Keep reading... Show less

One GOP congressman provides a blueprint for his party on Biden impeachment

As the walls close in on Donald Trump and the GOP squabbles over spending, House Republicans are flirting with the idea of an impeachment inquiry against President Joe Biden. At least one of them isn’t thrilled about it. Rep. Ken Buck, a Colorado Republican, recently accused his colleagues of using impeachment to distract from their own party turmoil, calling it “impeachment theater.” Buck isn’t a moderate — he represents one of the reddest districts in his state and is a member of the ultraconservative House Freedom Caucus. But he’s one of the lone Republicans in the House who is willing to p...

'Lucky slaves'

Ron DeSantis has stated, so it must be true,
Slaves were given quite useful vocations to do.
When freed, they could use these nice skills they’d received
To build useful lives, all their burdens relieved!

So let’s give a great cheer for the owners of slaves,
And the good deeds they did for those out-of-work knaves!
The lucky folks, seized so they’d never more roam,
Were much better off than those left back at home.

For those seized, lucky souls, would gain skills, would be trained —
At least those who survived, at least those who remained.
Of the 12 million chained in those lovely ships’ holds,
Perhaps 10 million made it in time to be sold!

From the start of the slave trade — 1525 —
'Til the day Lincoln freed them, many million slaves died.
Almost all slaves, excluding those who took flight,
Would never see freedom or its holy light.

Most slaves were forbidden to read or to write,
But they certainly worked, so DeSantis is right!
Most worked picking cotton, tobacco all day,
While a few lucky souls got to cook, clean and pray.

These lucky slaves lacked all the burdens of life,
Like the need to take care of a child or a wife.
Because a slave’s loves might be sold, sent away,
She could easily focus — just work and obey!

And that’s just what DeSantis demands for today.
“Work hard and be careful, and watch what you say!
“Don't teach of a system designed to oppress.
“Such ideas you’re no longer allowed to express!”

Carolyn McGiffert Ekedahl is the former deputy inspector general for inspections at the Central Intelligence Agency and co-author of “The Wars of Eduard Shevardnadze.”

DeSantis keeps failing the most basic test in politics: denouncing Nazis

Ron DeSantis’ presidential campaign recently fired a staffer who reportedly either retweeted or made a video that included Nazi imagery superimposed onto the Florida governor’s face. Great. That’s a no-brainer. But where’s the denunciation — from a presidential candidate, no less — that surely should accompany that news? We’re still waiting. It doesn’t matter much whether the staffer, former National Review writer Nate Hochman, made the video, as Axios reported, or just retweeted it on the @desantiscams account. DeSantis’ campaign obviously had to expel anyone pushing something so abhorrent. I...

You know America is in crisis when Barbie has more integrity than 6 Supreme Court justices

Sam Alito wrote in The Wall Street Journal last week that:

“No provision in the Constitution gives them [Congress] the authority to regulate the Supreme Court — period.”

He’s deeply, profoundly, and constitutionally wrong: in fact, the Constitution requires Congress to regulate the Supreme Court. I’ll get to that in a second, but first the important stuff: Barbie!

Keep reading... Show less