Opinion

How America will change if Trump wins

Today, following both Vance’s and Trump’s speeches at the RNC, the future trajectory of America if they’re elected is pretty clear.

First, it’s important to acknowledge that this is no longer your (or my) father’s GOP. Vance is the pre-packaged, well-massaged “product” of a group of Silicon Valley billionaires who are enamored of the writings of Ayn Rand and David Koch’s Libertarian movement. Trump has made it clear he’s happy to go along with the Galt’s Gulch crowd, particularly if it makes him more money.

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Reminding ourselves what we’re fighting for

George Washington was elected president 236 years ago. Since, there have been 59 presidential elections (including the one this November).

Washington could have been president for life but preferred returning home to Virginia and life as a private citizen. He established a pattern for the presidency that has served the nation well.

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Inside the GOP's mysterious agenda for America’s future

“If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace.”

—Thomas Paine, The Crisis, December 23, 1776

Marjorie Taylor Greene told Republicans at the RNC this week that Donald Trump “will make us wealthy.”

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Trump reaped what he sowed

The Washington press and pundit corps are this week working hard to convince you that the attempted assassination of Donald Trump is the superlative example of what happens when polarization goes too far.

They are telling a story in which the leading characters are the former president and his Republicans, and Joe Biden and his Democrats. The plot is about a nation on fire, a people at war with themselves, and so forth. Some have even depicted Sunday’s prime-time address by the president as if he were “bothsidesing” the issue of political violence.

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Donald Trump and the gathering darkness threatening U.S. politics

In America, we resolve our differences at the ballot box … not with bullets. The power to change America should always rest in the hands of the people, not in the hands of a would-be assassin.

So said the US president, Joe Biden, in an Oval Office address to the nation the day after the attempted assassination of his rival in November’s presidential election.

US president, Joe Biden, calls on America to ‘lower the temperature’ in US politics.

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Conspiracy theories on the Trump assassination attempt are spreading like wildfire

Members of the Secret Service quickly surrounded Trump, who fiercely pumped his fist towards the crowd. It was during this moment an instantly iconic photo was taken as Trump stood, fist raised, in front of the US flag – blood running from his ear to his cheek.

Almost immediately, conspiracy theorists from all parts of the political spectrum began to speculate over the attempted assassination.

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Stop calling Kyle Rittenhouse a hero. He killed two unarmed people

Kyle Rittenhouse, who shot three men at a riot in Kenosha, Wisconsin, killing two of them, was acquitted of all criminal charges.

He has been hailed as a hero. He has been feted by politicians, including Donald Trump. He has been compared to John Wayne as a symbol of law-abiding people fighting back against lawlessness. When he took a rifle to a protest over the earlier police killing of Jacob Blake, Rittenhouse said his intention was to protect property against violence.

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R.I.P. GOP

A lot happened at the RNC yesterday, but the most telling moment predicting the future of America’s conservative movement and the GOP was when Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell was soundly and loudly booed by the assembled delegates and participants, and then JD Vance was selected for VP.

It was the death knell of the old order, the Republican Party that has held a relatively consistent set of values since the 1880s, and the beginning of something entirely new.

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Waco was a pilgrimage, not a rally, for the far-right's newest martyr

Did we need another sign that Donald J. Trump is mobilizing antigovernment white supremacists in his bid for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination? Not really. But we have one.

Over the weekend, and facing criminal indictments in the coming weeks, Trump held his first big campaign rally in Waco, Texas. As Julia Manchester at The Hill characterized it, Waco was “friendly territory” for Trump. This is something that could not be said unequivocally about Austin, Houston or San Antonio, cities with far more liberal voting constituencies.

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Iowa caucuses will be first test of GOP’s standards after Trump indictment

The latest round of indictments against Donald Trump — 37 federal indictments, including 31 for violating the federal Espionage Act — has implications for the 2024 Iowa Republican Caucuses.

They will now do a lot more than simply pick a winner in the first official contest as the party begins its presidential nominating process. They will provide the first answer from Republican voters to an increasingly urgent and vital question: Does the Republican Party have meaningful, minimum standards for who it is willing to nominate for president of the United States?

Does character count? Loyalty to America and to democracy? Competence? Is being a skilled problem solver still an asset? Or is it enough for Republicans these days for its leaders to simply seethe with grievance, mostly imagined? Is it necessary to obey the law?

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Why do we use 'cult' to describe normal illiberal politics?

Hillary Clinton said during a recent presentation that Donald Trump’s followers won’t abandon him no matter how many criminal indictments are brought against him. The former Democratic presidential candidate added, “that it’s more of a cult than a political party at this point and they’re going to stick with their leader.”

With that, “cult” became the appellation of the week in the right-wing media apparatus, which is global in scale, because anything Clinton says about Trump and his followers is a cut so deep that it demands a week’s worth of outrage.

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Trust Trump’s impunity for the law. Trust democratic politics, too

I can’t think of anything good to say about him except maybe this: Donald Trump is predictable. We can trust his impunity for morality and the law. But we can trust something else just as much. We can trust democratic politics.

Consider the new news. Same as the old news.

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How the racist 'Great Replacement' theory keeps fueling Trumpism

The white nationalism that remains a virulent strain throughout Donald Trump’s MAGA base received a jump start with the election of a U.S. president.

But white nationalism alone didn’t bring the man now known as “Inmate #P01135809” into power in 2016.

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