Opinion

This Trump enabler has done more damage than the rest of them combined

John Roberts came to the U.S. Supreme Court professing the best of intentions. In his 2005 Senate confirmation hearing, he promised to serve as chief justice in the fashion of a baseball umpire, calling only “balls and strikes, and not to pitch or bat.” Two years later, in an interview with law professor Jeffrey Rosen, he mused that the court’s many acrimonious 5-to-4 decisions could lead to “a steady wasting away of the notion of the rule of law” and ultimately undermine the court’s perceived legitimacy as a nonpartisan institution.

Roberts said that as the court’s leader, he would stress a “team dynamic,” encouraging his colleagues to join narrow, unanimous decisions rather than sweeping split rulings.

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Want to save Medicaid from GOP greed? Here's how

As members of Congress return to their districts for what is traditionally called the August congressional recess, Republican members will be working overtime to sell their constituents on the benefits of the Trump mega-bill (technically the “One Big Beautiful Bill”).

Republicans know well that this August will determine the outcome of the crucial 2026 midterm elections. In a memo from the Republican National Campaign Committee (NRCC) obtained by Politico, GOP members of Congress were advised:

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Trump has only one way out of this scandal

I have been hopeful about the effect of the Jeffrey Epstein scandal on Donald Trump. It put a wedge between him and his supporters. With daylight between them, democracy has its best chance for survival in years.

But I should consider the less sunny side. Trump has escaped scandal before. The most famous and consequential came on January 6, 2021, when the president led an attempted paramilitary takeover of the United States government. That was high treason. Yet here we are.

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These grovelers are greedily betraying us all

The rules of authoritarianism are pretty simple: Do as the leader says... or else.

This lopsided power equation runs counter to the checks and balances that are baked into the DNA of any healthy democracy. The early framers of American democracy understood this, which is why they codified the basic rights to free expression and an independent press as checks against power.

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Raiders of the Lost Archive

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

Must we choose between saving democracy and saving the Earth?

Some people tell me that I should be talking more about the climate crisis than the crisis of democracy.

But you know something? We can’t deal with the climate crisis unless our democracy is saved.

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These appalling cruelties reveal the true aim of Trumpism

Early this month, ICE agents detained a 6‑year‑old Honduran boy battling leukemia as he left an immigration court in Los Angeles with his mother and sister.

A child fighting for his life was ripped from his fragile medical routine and locked away for over a month, interrupting his treatment, crying himself to sleep night after night in a concrete cell instead of a hospital bed.

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This decadent Roman emperor's fall holds lessons for Trump

By Kirk Freudenburg, Brooks and Suzanne Ragen Professor of Classics, Yale University.

President Donald Trump’s first term saw a record-high rate of turnover among his cabinet members and chief advisers. Trump’s second term has, to date, seen far fewer cabinet departures.

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They torpedoed Medicaid already. Is this precious program next?​

Medicare turned 60 years old on Wednesday. Former U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed it into law on July 30, 1965, giving seniors a guarantee of health coverage that never existed before. Prior to Medicare's enactment, it was nearly impossible for older people to obtain health insurance, as they were considered a "bad risk."

Medicare provides universal coverage to Americans over 65 years of age. The law created Medicare Part A as a national hospital insurance program. Part B is a voluntary program for doctor visits and other medical services. Medicare Part C is another name for the privatized, for-profit version of the program called "Medicare Advantage." And Part D is the prescription drug program enacted in 2003.

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Every single American will be hurt, and many will die, thanks to this Trump betrayal

Americans pay more for medications than anybody else in the world. We’re the planet’s suckers: although everybody uses, by and large, the same meds, the drugs that carry the highest prices are — you guessed it — ours, the ones sold here in the USA.

And Donald Trump is committed to making it even worse. He’s barely been back in the White House six months and he’s already lobbed a grenade straight into America’s medicine cabinet, and he was grinning when he pulled the pin.

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One Arizona man showed the power of marching for your beliefs

The last time I saw Alfredo Gutierrez was at this year’s May Day rally outside the State Capitol.

He was standing toe-to-toe with a MAGA supporter who had shown up at the protest and was marching through the crowd, wielding an oversized Trump flag, determined to start trouble.

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Trump is not just a conman on climate

When I was a cub reporter at the New Yorker in the early 1980s, New York City was actually a somewhat seedy and dangerous (if fascinating) place (sort of fitting the image currently assigned it by MAGA ideologues who have ignored its almost complete makeover into a remarkably safe enclave). In those days, anyone wandering the Times Square neighborhood where I worked could count on seeing a three-card monte game on every block, with fast-talking card sharps hustling the tourists. It wasn’t very sophisticated, but it must have worked because they were out there every day.

The grift playing out this week in the federal government around climate is no more complicated, but it too relies on speed and distraction. On the first day of his term, U.S. President Donald Trump set up the con by asking the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to evaluate its 2009 finding that greenhouse gas emissions were dangerous. Yesterday, EPA czar and former failed gubernatorial candidate Lee Zeldin dutifully made his long-awaited announcement: Nothing to fear from carbon dioxide, methane, and the other warming gases.

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This is what fascist control looks like

Today I want to describe for you the specific mechanism of control the Trump regime is using over the core institutions of America — the media, higher education, our largest corporations, and Wall Street.

It's all in the fine print.

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