Opinion

Expert on Congress maps out what’s next after Jim Jordan speaker fiasco

I have to admit. I was getting pretty nervous. For a minute there, it looked like Ohio Congressman Jim Jordan had built up enough momentum over the weekend to become the next House speaker.

That would have been bad for reasons I recount here and here (the latter link includes an interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Will Bunch – highly recommended). A Speaker Jordan would have added more chaos to an already chaotic House of Representatives. The whole point of his career has been going to war with democratic institutions.

By Monday, it looked like he’d beaten into submission enough “moderates” to win. Even Fox’s Sean Hannity took a turn at lobbying for one of Donald Trump’s favorite toadies. All that remained was a floor vote, scheduled for Tuesday evening, to see who remained.

Keep reading... Show less

Why it's impossible for right-wing governments to handle a crisis

Over at The New York Times yesterday, Jerusalem-based reporter Isabel Kershner writes about the horrors of the past two weeks and the worries Israelis have for how the ongoing war against Hamas may go.

“All this is happening,” she notes in the article’s third paragraph, “amid a total breakdown of trust between the citizens and the state of Israel, and a collapse of everything Israelis believed in and relied on.”

Keep reading... Show less

How about we pray for our ghastly hypocrisy?

I have been hesitant to weigh in on the terrible attacks in Israel by the Hamas terrorist group because I am not an expert on the region, nor the ongoing, many-decades-long disagreements between the Israelis and Palestinians.

Old age has taught me to try to stick to writing about what I know, and to be damn careful when commenting on the ongoing events in this region, where opinion on both sides can strike with lightning, and is lodged in solid, immovable rock.

Keep reading... Show less

In the fight to end AIDS, girls and young women matter

The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR — which has saved 25 million lives over the past 20 years and allowed 5.5 million babies to be born HIV-free— demonstrates what’s possible when leaders, countries and communities hold each other accountable and work together to advance health systems and increase access to care for vulnerable populations.

However, there’s more work to be done. Many of the babies born HIV-free are now adolescent girls or young women who once again face significant risk of HIV exposure.

On Putin's ability to get MAGA Republicans to mouth his talking points

In a very real way, the US and Russia have been at war for eight years now.

Russian partisans will tell you that the US started it when Victoria Nuland was representing US interests in Ukraine in 2014, around the time Russia invaded and seized Crimea. Robert Mueller and the FBI will tell you it really started in 2015 and 2016 when Russia spent millions (via the Internet Research Agency) to successfully intervene in the US election and put Trump into the White House.

Keep reading... Show less

Red state conservatives are dying thanks to the people they vote for

— What threat does ‘Day of Jihad’ pose to American cities? As US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken was giving a press conference yesterday in Doha, the capital city of Qatar, right down the street at the international headquarters of Hamas (yes, Qatar hosts them and nobody has arrested them) that terrorist organization’s leader was calling for yesterday to be a “Day of Jihad”: a call for Muslims across the world to attack Jews and anybody or any nation perceived as Israel’s ally. New York City mobilized its entire police force and there were a few incidents of people being knifed around the world, but it seems to have been a bust. With their attack on Israel, Hamas has clearly overreached (much like Al Qaeda did with 9/11), and the challenge now will be for Israel not to make the same mistakes Bush did by overreacting in response. If there ever was a time that needed diplomacy along with police/military action to respond to terrorism, this is it. That said, I have a lot of faith in Anthony Blinken.

Voting rights had a bad day in the Supreme Court. The decision won’t come down for months, but the questioning around the South Carolina gerrymandering case suggests the Republicans on the Supreme Court are going to go along with the GOP in drawing districts that cement in Republican rule even when the majority of state voters cast ballots for Democrats (much like right now in North Carolina, Kentucky, and Wisconsin). Meanwhile, in Virginia, which is currently in the midst of an election for every member of that state’s legislature, Republican Governor Glen Youngkin is fielding criticism for removing thousands of Democrats from the voting rolls and a GOP-aligned group, Virginia “Fair” Elections, is reportedly fielding over 10,000 “poll watchers” who will challenge people of color and other voters in largely Democratic districts. In some places, these kinds of challenges force voters to go home and get birth certificates, marriage licenses and change-of-name/marriage certificates (this hits women particularly hard), etc., if they want their votes counted. They’re planning to take this “Virginia model” of vote suppression national for the 2024 election, although it’s just an extension of William Rehnquist’s old “Operation Eagle Eye” from the 1960s when the man who leveraged his activism into becoming Chief Justice of the Supreme Court used to stand outside polling places in his native Arizona and loudly (and effectively) challenge/intimidate Hispanic and Native American voters. The Republican effort that I documented in my book The Hidden History of the War on Voting rolls along (and is picking up steam). Based on everything I’m seeing them doing publicly, without even considering what they are probably planning privately for the last minute, I’m guessing they will successfully suppress several millions of votes in 2024. We already saw some of the fruits of this: when Ron DeSantis started parading Black people in shackles for the cameras because they had voted after getting off parole in a state where a referendum had legalized that, Black voter participation dropped.

Keep reading... Show less

The horrible price of lies, paranoia and distrust

It has been a horrific week. The gruesome slayings of Israelis by Hamas militants are ricocheting around the world, testing the skeins of civility even on the streets of New York. Meanwhile, Putin’s brutality continues to wrench the heart of Europe.

America’s capacity to govern itself is also being tested. The U.S. House of Representatives continues without a speaker — the person essential for the chamber (and therefore much of the rest of government) to function, and who is next in line after the vice president in presidential succession.

Keep reading... Show less

How Nevada is normalizing its fake Trump electors

Nevada’s fake electors were indispensable to Donald Trump’s plot to steal the 2020 presidential election and the accompanying assault on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. And so for a minute there earlier this year, it looked like Nevada might make it a punishable offense to be a fake elector.

Instead, the Nevada Secretary of State’s office asked one to make a presentation to its Advisory Committee on Participatory Democracy last month.

It was a bizarre turn of events, since both participatory democracy and the constitutional authority of the Secretary of State’s office were what Nevada’s fake electors were trying to overthrow when they signed bogus electoral college certificates and sent them to Congress.

Keep reading... Show less

Why Trump and the GOP are burning the entire system down

Today’s Republican Party is dedicated to destroying what they call the “deep state” and the rest of us call the American government. From Trump followers in MAGA hats at rallies to Republican US Senators, they’ll all tell you this without a moment’s hesitation.

Steve Bannon even proclaimed it as the main goal of the Trump presidency in their first months in the White House, saying Trump’s goal was the “deconstruction of the administrative state.” Talking about government regulations that protect the environment, punish companies and con men who rip off consumers, and provide for a safe workplace, Bannon said in March, 2017:

“That’s all gonna be deconstructed and I think that that’s why this regulatory thing is so important.”

Keep reading... Show less

Why everyone hates Matt Gaetz

If Matt Gaetz were a character in “Animal House,” he’d be Douglas Niedermeyer, the fascist frat bro who ends up being killed in Vietnam by his own troops.

Everybody hates Matt Gaetz.

Keep reading... Show less

Fundamental issues brought us to the verge of fascism — and we’re ignoring them every day

“Saved at the last minute” is pretty much the story of our culture.

It’s built into our major salvationist religions, particularly Christianity and Islam. Even when killed or facing death, Jesus and Muhammed managed to ascend to heaven at the last minute and claim eternal life.

By this worldview, no matter how terrible a life you’ve lived, if you say a handful of magic words at the last minute before you die, you’re guaranteed a spot in paradise. There’s always the last minute.

Keep reading... Show less

How the Supreme Court's corruption could end Social Security — and America

Republicans are “this close” — just a matter of months away — from ending Social Security, a goal they’ve worked toward ever since 1935. They’re hoping to use six Republicans on a corrupted Supreme Court to get there.

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse points out, in his book The Scheme and his YouTube series about same, that American oligarchs launched a campaign to seize control of the Supreme Court — and, thus, the American government — over 40 years ago and they’re now close to their goal of turning America back to the 1920s.

Keep reading... Show less

Six ways Jim Jordan and Steve Scalise are creepy

Popcorn sales are exploding inside the Beltway as the Republican Civil War moves to its next skirmish: Selecting between “cockeyed” and “more cockeyed” to replace dethroned House Speaker Kevin McCarthy.

The tastelessness test presently pits Reps. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) and Steve Scalise (R-LA) in a contest to determine who is most MAGA while not seeming so MAGA as to offend the hundreds of Republican members of Congress who bow to MAGA but are furious at MAGA-on-steroids extremist wing of the party.

One interesting historical note that has long been forgotten: It’s not the first time Jordan and Scalise have been pitted as rivals. In 2012, House Speaker John Boehner replaced Jordan with Scalise as head of the Republican Study Committee. Here’s how Bloomberg reported it:

Keep reading... Show less