Opinion

Why 'it’s the economy, stupid' no longer applies

I don’t buy the idea, widespread among opinion-havers, that the more the president talks up the economy, the more annoyed people are going to get with him. I don’t buy this idea because I don’t buy the reciprocal nature of it. If people are feeling like the economy is bad, they’re going to feel that way no matter what Joe Biden says about it.

But do people really feel like the economy is bad? I don’t know more about economics than you do, but let’s say yes and no. Yes, in that prices are too damn high, higher than most of us are accustomed to, especially the price of groceries and housing. These are not options. They are necessities. That’s going to make the economy feel bad.

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GOP efforts to keep major issue off ballots in 2024 is an 'implicit admission'

On Friday, the Associated Press released the results of new polling that should raise concerns among liberals and Democrats who argue that “democracy is on the ballot” in the coming presidential election. They should challenge the idea, accepted as true by many liberals and Democrats, that a vote for democracy is also a vote for Joe Biden.

Moreover, the polling results should spur debate about messaging. Should Democrats favor an abstraction like “democracy”? Or should they favor concrete goals achievable only by way of democratic politics? The real answer is likely both. (Why not cover all the bases?) But by the time you get to the end of this piece, I hope you’ll see that concrete goals, like abortion rights, are probably the better choice.

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Trump claims ‘witch hunt’ but the real numbers just don’t add up

Former President Donald Trump has recently been crying wolf by declaring America’s legal system is a “witch-hunt” against him. Trump claims the New York, Georgia, Florida and District of Columbia court cases – with 91 felony charges – are politically motivated to restrict his ability to run for president in 2024.

Anyone with a modicum of intelligence would realize the hypocrisy of Trump’s current ploy if they knew he never once declared “witch-hunt” in the 62 lawsuits he filed and lost while contesting the 2020 election. Note: Trump-appointed judges were among the 80-plus magistrates who dismissed his election fraud lawsuits.

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Democracy doesn’t have to be a hostage crisis

Donald Trump’s campaign said yesterday that it planned to appeal a decision by Maine’s top election official to remove the former president from that state’s Republican presidential primary ballot.

Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat, had said that Trump is “constitutionally barred from appearing on the state’s primary ballot under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment,” according to NBC News.

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On the 'I won’t vote for the lesser of two evils' rubbish

Some people tell me they hate Trump but don’t particularly like Biden. They say Biden is too old, or he’s not doing enough to stop Israel’s bombing of Gaza, or he’s caved to Big Oil, or he isn’t tough enough.

So they tell me they’re not going to vote next November. Or they’ll vote for a third-party candidate.

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Why Marjorie Taylor Greene is channeling centuries of racist rhetoric

As one of Georgia’s most high-profile racists (a high bar in that state), Marjorie Taylor Greene has a reputation to uphold. Which is probably why this week she posted an attack on the Blackrock investment firm for having DEI or Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs at that company.

“Corporate communists believe they have to force behaviors,” Greene wrote on her Xitter feed. “They only need to remember as a corporation or business their ONLY job is to SERVE THEIR CUSTOMER with the best job possible to make their customers happy! It’s not about gender, sex, race and blah blah blah.”

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Trump looks stronger than he actually is

There is some debate about whether Donald Trump is weak or strong coming out of last night’s caucuses in Iowa. On the one hand, he won the state by 51 percent. The AP called the race by 7:30. Some caucus-goers hadn’t cast their ballots yet. Altogether, this would suggest that his “stranglehold” on the Republicans is tighter than ever.

But on the other hand, only 110,000 people participated in the caucus this year compared to 187,000 in 2016, a drop of nearly 40 percent. Of that number, nearly half picked someone who is not Donald Trump. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis won more than 21 percent. Former UN ambassador Nikki Haley won nearly 20 percent. (Vivek Ramaswamy won nearly 8 percent before dropping out and endorsing Trump.)

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Ron DeSantis could be Trump’s most insightful critic — if he weren’t trying to be him

I think Bill Scher is right. (He usually is.) The politics editor of the Washington Monthly said that we can forget about New Hampshire’s primary next week. After Donald Trump’s dominance of the Iowa caucuses Monday, “the Republican nomination isn’t up for grabs.”

“Historically, Iowa Republicans weren’t reflective of Republicans elsewhere, but today, they are,” Bill said. “Trump’s Hawkeye State romp roughly tracks the 50-point national Republican primary polls. To most Republicans, he is simply the incumbent and they’re sticking with him.”

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Why Trump was the worst boss ever — according to 12 of his top White House officials

As a filmmaker and documentarian who has made scores of social justice movies and videos, there’s one aspect of Donald Trump’s latest bid for the presidency I can’t get over.

People who worked in the Oval Office with Trump and acted on his orders — most are Republicans — keep saying he must not be president again.

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It took months of humiliation for DeSantis to realize 2028 would be better

I said last week that if Ron DeSantis had not been so busy trying to be Donald Trump’s doppelgänger, by now he might be known as one of his sharpest critics. Over the weekend, he gave voice to yet another bit of wisdom, which is that the Washington press corps has gone easy on Trump. He added, while campaigning in South Carolina, that if Trump wins the Republican nomination, “the polls are going to turn on a dime,” meaning polls suggesting weakness on Joe Biden’s part are going to flip.

As you know, I think he’s right, but no one is going to give him credit for speaking the truth, because after saying that, and just two days before New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation primary, he dropped out. Then he endorsed Trump for president, leaving Nikki Haley as his lone challenger. Trump is going to win that state and the nomination. And when those polls turn, it will be in part because DeSantis accelerated that turning.

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The GOP represents a confederacy inside America

Anne Applebaum has a new piece in The Atlantic in which she blames the sudden collapse of American support for Ukraine’s war against Russia on “political incompetence.”

“By abandoning Ukraine in a fit of political incompetence, Americans will consent to the deaths of more Ukrainians and the further destruction of the country,” she wrote.

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There is no justice in America

Last week, I wrote about why Joe Biden and the Democrats are going to demolish the traitor, Donald Trump, and his morally busted, anti-American party of cowards in November.

The reasons for my confidence are many, and are rooted in what I see and feel from an activated electorate that will vote as if their rights and the future of our democracy depend on it — because they most certainly do.

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Inside the Special Counsel's smear of Joe Biden

Plainly visible behind the melodramatic release of a special counsel report on President Joe Biden's retention of classified documents -- and its unprofessional partisan personal attack on him -- are several basic facts that ought to be understood by every American.

First is the character of Robert Hur, the special counsel, a Trump Republican who abused Attorney General Merrick Garland's good-faith appointment of him. Hur larded his report exonerating the president with irrelevant remarks that were obviously designed to inflict political damage. By doing so, Hur clearly violated Justice Department protocols and has earned investigations of his own misconduct by the department's Office of Professional Responsibility and inspector general.

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