Opinion

How Harris and Walz are fighting Trump with joy and positivity — and winning

Evolutionary biologists know why humans spend disproportionate energy on negative thoughts compared to positive: Teasing out threats, real or perceived, is a basic tool of survival.

Around 3 a.m. isn’t the only time negative thoughts seize us. Even when we’re at ease, evolutionary instincts cause us to seek out whiffs of threat. Commonly called the human “negativity bias,” we train our mental energy on perceived danger, releasing cortisol and triggering flight or fight instincts that have served mammals from the beginning.

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Why isn't the media reporting on Trump's increasing dementia?

Today, Trump held an hourlong news conference in the main room at Mar-a-Lago. He insulted Kamala Harris’s intelligence, lied about the state of the U.S. economy, and claimed the country would be in mortal danger if he didn’t win the election.

In other words, the usual Trump torrent of lies and insults.

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Trump's insatiable ego is destroying the former president

Just before I posted this piece, the former president gave a press conference. The questions weren’t as difficult as those he faced at last week’s convention of the National Association of Black Journalists, but if the current Theory of Trump is accurate, they aren’t going to help Donald Trump. They’re going to hurt him. We should all be so lucky.

The current Theory of Trump comes from Sarah Longwell. She’s the publisher of The Bulwark, a former Republican and a pollster. She’s often on cable news talking about what swing voters want. Last week, after the NABJ’s interview, she said the more people see Trump, the lower his approval ratings are. The less they see, the higher they are.

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Trump’s health questioned after news conference but what do we know about J.D. Vance?

During and after Donald Trump's "rambling, weird, scary," and “lie-filled” press conference Thursday afternoon, reporters, casual observers, political experts, and even his own former aide, expressed concern about the 78-year old's physical and mental health. But if the ex-president wins re-election, his running mate, JD Vance, could at some point become president, and the Trump campaign has not told America much if anything about the freshman U.S. Senator from Ohio's health.

"The surface layer of Trump cracked yesterday. Even his most ardent supporters could [see] someone unhinged and out of step with the times," warned former Trump communications director and former longtime friend Anthony Scaramucci, on Friday, after Thursday's presser.

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Quiet quitting? Trump's Mar-a-Lago 'meltdown' fuels speculation

The first question during Donald Trump's "angry," "rambling, incoherent, demented," "complaining," and "lie-filled" Thursday afternoon news conference from Mar-a-Lago was about campaign strategy, and would he be changing it. No, Trump insisted. Another question – which the ex-president declared "stupid" – was about his lack of campaign events.

In the weeks since President Joe Biden's campaign-ending debate performance, Donald Trump has hit the campaign trail barely more than a handful of times. In 42 days, Trump has held just eight rallies.

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Harris has figured out Trump’s greatest liability

There are many things to say about Tim Walz’s debut last night as Kamala Harris’ vice presidential pick. But I want to zero in on one thing he said, a throwaway joke about JD Vance, that says something important about pundits, parties and politics. It was about that couch.

That what?

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Harlan Crow helped fund Swiftboating. Trump campaign continues that legacy in Walz attack

The year was 2004. U.S. Senator John Kerry was the Democratic presidential nominee running to unseat President George W. Bush. The Iraq War was a major campaign issue and Sen. Kerry campaigned against it by accurately attacking his Republican opponent.

"Saying there are weapons of mass destruction in Iraq doesn't make it so. Saying we can fight a war on the cheap doesn't make it so. And proclaiming mission accomplished certainly doesn't make it so," Kerry declared upon accepting the Democratic nomination.

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Trump’s smear job climaxed prematurely — and now he’s stuck

A question occurred to me last week as I was watching a clip from the former president’s rally in suburban Minnesota: Why was the former president campaigning in suburban Minnesota? No Republican nominee has won that state since Richard Nixon in 1972, yet Donald Trump has campaigned there numerous times over the summer.

I’m told Trump's been campaigning in a solidly blue state, because he believes he could win it. At that time, polls suggested he was on course to defeating Joe Biden. He believed he could expand the electoral map. But Biden dropped out on July 21. Trump’s latest rally was last week. Why? I’m told it’s because he hasn’t adjusted to Kamala Harris yet.

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Yes: VP pick Tim Walz matters for winning the election. History shows it.

Growing up in Texas, we were treated to stories of colorful political characters. Few could top John Nance “Cactus Jack” Garner, who once pronounced that the vice-president position “is not worth a bucket of warm spit.” (Some say Garner said worse.)

That seems to be the opinion of more than a few pundits and political scientists. National Public Radio, The Economist and Politico have all run articles asserting how little impact a vice presidential pick makes on the ultimate outcome of a presidential election.

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House Dems demand Heritage leader come clean on Project 2025's secret 180-day plan

Dozens of House Democrats on Tuesday called on the president of the Heritage Foundation to disclose the details of Project 2025's so-called "Fourth Pillar," a section of the far-right agenda that has been kept under wraps as Republican nominee Donald Trump attempts—unconvincingly—to distance himself from the unpopular project.

In a letter to Roberts, Reps. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.), Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.), and 36 other congressional Democrats highlighted the "glaring problem" that Project 2025's Fourth Pillar "remains shrouded in secrecy" despite organizers' pledge to be "an open book" about their agenda.

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Prosecutors’ report on Marion newspaper raid leaves questions dangling

If you read special prosecutors’ report about last year’s raid on the Marion County Record newspaper, the abuse of power by law enforcement sounds like an immaculate deception.

Officials who carted off computers and cellphones from the Record on a flimsy pretext didn’t do so out of ill will, according to Marc Bennett and Barry Wilkerson. The fact that a Marion County Record reporter had investigated Police Chief Gideon Cody? The fact that 98-year-old newspaper co-owner Joan Meyer died the day after the raid? Both dismissed as immaterial. The damage done to journalism and journalists across the United States? Simply not the their problem.

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Kamala Harris was not ‘the most liberal senator’ — take conservatives' word for it

Every four years, it seems Republicans claim that the Democratic Party presidential or vice presidential nominee is “the most liberal senator” (just as they did for Barack Obama).

This year is no different. Many conservatives, including Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, have argued that Kamala Harris was the nation’s most liberal senator during her four years (2017 to 2021) representing California.

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Delusional 'Fat Elvis' Trump thinks he can keep spinning the old hits

I hear it frequently on my radio/TV program: Americans are baffled about what’s happened to Donald Trump.

He used to seem so formidable, a very real threat to American democracy, the pal of dictators around the world. Now even Putin is dissing him, cutting the very prisoner deal with President Biden that Trump said a few weeks ago the Russian dictator would do only with him.

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