Opinion

Trump allies work to undermine election safeguards that withstood 2020 pressure campaign

Last fall, James McWhorter was summoned to appear before the DeKalb County Board of Elections to save his precious right to vote.

It wasn’t the first time he had been forced to do so.

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The stunning reason Donald Trump thinks he’s going to win

It doesn’t look it, but Donald Trump is weak. It doesn’t look it, because he keeps saying scary things. That gives the impression of strength. He’s weak, though. My evidence? Those scary things he keeps saying.

No presidential candidate in his right mind would say out loud for everyone to hear that he wants to establish for himself, in the words of Time magazine reporter Eric Cortellessa, “an imperial presidency.”

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Thank GOD we're safe from Hunter Biden!

Hunter Biden, President Joe Biden’s troubled son, has just been convicted on federal gun charges, and thank GOD for that, people.

I don’t know about you, but I feel safer already. I mean, who lies while trying to purchase a gun in America?

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The economy hasn’t been this good in 50 years

One of the happy outcomes of publishing a daily newsletter about politics in plain English for normal people and the common good is it tends to attract like-minded people who are equal parts liberal, informed and shrewd. When I ask open-ended questions on Twitter, I typically get serious, practical and often illuminating responses.

My most recent question (or “public thread”) was prompted by the latest jobs report. The US economy added 272,000 jobs in May, “reflecting a booming labor market that continues to fuel the economy with workers benefiting from wages that are outpacing inflation,” the Post said Friday. “Job creation accelerated from the previous month, rising above the average monthly level of growth so far this year, which was already strong, after a period of cooling for part of 2023.”

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A neuroscientist explains how the ‘Streisand Effect’ will help Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

The first debate between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump is less than three weeks away, and despite independent Robert F. Kennedy Jr. consistently polling in the double digits, he is currently not scheduled to participate in the CNN-hosted event.

The network, RFK Jr. says, has “rigged” the debate by creating qualifications that appear aimed at keeping him off the stage. He has even filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission, arguing that CNN colluded with the Biden and Trump campaigns to exclude Kennedy — in violation of campaign finance law.

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The importance of Merrick Garland stating the obvious

One of the eternal questions among liberals and leftists is whether Donald Trump and the Republicans believe what they are saying.

These days, they’re saying Joe Biden manufactured the former president’s felony conviction in an effort to interfere with the 2024 election. They’re saying the president’s “weaponization of the legal system” is the reason for their own weaponization of it in the future.

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Some of the false, curious and just weird things a rambling Trump said in Las Vegas Sunday

“Virtually 100 percent of the new jobs under Biden have also gone to illegal aliens. Did you know that? A hundred percent.”

That was one of the false claims Donald Trump asserted during an address in Las Vegas Sunday that was predominantly about immigration but that veered wildly in multiple directions, including insulting his teleprompter provider, mulling the prospect of being killed by an electric boat as opposed to a being killed by a shark, and reading a poem about a snake.

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Trump hides the worst scandal in American history in plain sight

It’s been nearly two weeks since Donald Trump echoed his 2016 public request for Vladimir Putin’s help in winning a presidential election, and the press remains determined to ignore it.

The convicted felon, presumptive GOP nominee and wannabe dictator instructed the dictator of Russia to continue holding Wall St. Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich hostage until the election.

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Republicans weaponizing ignorance is a dangerous game

Donald Trump’s felony convictions are fueling another disinformation campaign, this one equal in destructive force to his Big Lie. Orchestrating a unified response reminiscent of Germany in the 1930s, House Speaker Mike Johnson and his Trump acolytes are weaving Trump’s criminality into a false indictment of the American legal system.

Republicans are falsely blaming Joe Biden for outcomes over which a sitting U.S. president has no control: convictions of Trump on 34 felony counts, pursued by an independently elected DA, pursuant to a state criminal code, as determined by 12 independent jurors, selected with the help of Trump’s own trial team.

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In the political shadow of Trump, a Kansas felon runs for Congress

Call it trickle-down politics.

On Monday, just hours before the filing deadline, a Topeka man with a violent criminal history submitted the paperwork necessary to run for Congress.

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How right-wing media turned racism into a machine that generates billions a year

The politically cancerous pattern of using racism for political gain and financial profit dates back to the earliest days of our republic, but now, amplified by Donald Trump, is again increasingly in our faces.

Black workers at a General Mills plant in Georgia are suing over white management allegedly sanctioning a “Good Ole Boys” club that uses Confederate symbols and open racism to intimidate and cow them.

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Trump isn’t in the same league as Tony Soprano

Convicted felon Donald Trump has absolutely no heroic qualities. He’s a bully and a coward. There’s no doubt that he’d use a baby as a human shield like Martin Sheen in The Dead Zone. However, a specific demographic of Americans — “dummies” — still admires him.

The Times ran an article Tuesday titled ‘Antihero’ or ‘Felon’: 11 Undecided Voters Struggle With How to See Trump Post-Verdict. These geniuses, on which our democracy hinges, aren’t quite sure how to view a man convicted of 34 felony counts and who, a jury determined, repeatedly defamed the woman he sexually assaulted. The word “criminal” seems an ideal descriptor, but I’m getting ahead of myself.

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Mitt Romney bows to Trump — because that's what Republicans do

Utah Senator Mitt Romney has been one of Trump’s most vocal GOP critics. He voted to convict Trump in his impeachment trial following the January 6 coup attempt. Since then, he’s called Trump a “demagogue” and a “whack job,” among other epithets. He’s made it clear that he thinks Trump is a danger to the Republican Party, a danger to the republic and a man who should never serve as president again.

So you’d think that Romney would be celebrating Trump’s conviction on 34 counts of falsifying business records, right? Romney thinks Trump is horrible. Here, he has been held accountable for one aspect of his horrifyingness. Three cheers from Romney!

Ha ha no.

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