Opinion

The real reason Republicans oppose efforts to cancel student debt

I don’t get it and I’m hoping you can help me figure it out. Why do Republicans oppose President Biden’s efforts to cancel student debt?

This Tuesday, seven states, led by Missouri’s Republican Attorney General, sued the Biden administration to stop his most recent attempt to reduce student debt. In a separate lawsuit, ten other Republican-controlled states filed a separate lawsuit to try to block the same Biden effort.

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Mark Robinson is in trouble

Even in the current tumultuous political times, Mark Robinson’s rapid rise from an obscure former factory worker with a rather checkered personal past to the highest-ranking Republican in North Carolina state government has been a remarkable one.

Six years ago, Robinson was an unknown citizen with zero experience in public service or politics. Amazingly, however, all that changed overnight — a change so rapid that Robinson himself uses only a single sentence on his gubernatorial campaign website to summarize his entire political career prior to being elected Lt. Governor:

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Inside the GOP's either/or trap

Last week, I told you about a pattern of rightwing malice that, once citizens see it and recognize it for what it is, they can make choices without also getting trapped by the very same pattern of malice.

That pattern of malice is this: when bad things happen, rightwingers, who already hate people who exist on the margins of society, find a way to blame them for those bad things. In this case, it was the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. It fell because a freightliner weighing scores of thousands of tons ran into it. Rightwingers, who already hate Black people, found ways to blame it on “diversity.”

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How to understand next week's Trump criminal felony trial

Trump’s first criminal trial — the first criminal trial of a former president, ever — is scheduled to begin Monday. The 34-count business falsification case may be the only case against Trump to reach a verdict before the November election.

Many people I speak with are worried that this is the weakest of Trump’s four pending criminal trials because it has to do with an illicit affair.

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A criminologist explains why Trump’s Manhattan trial is the biggest threat to his freedom

Donald Trump has always been terrified by the thought of going to prison. At the same time, his fear of imprisonment has always been mitigated by his Houdini-like ability to evade the administration of criminal justice.

Ergo, Trump’s myriad repeated motions — legitimate and illegitimate — to delay or dismiss his four criminal trials from ever coming to fruition.

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The case for centering Biden’s stutter

The Republicans are taking a cue from Donald Trump by behaving as if the president’s stutter was some kind of character flaw. That’s why they’re asking for the audio files of the special counsel’s interviews with Joe Biden. They’re looking for content with which to smear him.

Liberal and Democratic allies are reasonably defensive. Whenever a Republican gets on television to suggest that there’s something not quite right with Biden, they leap at the chance to point out when his accusers stumble over their own words. Such hypocrisy-hunting was on display last night when California Congressman Eric Swalwell, commenting on House Republican Darrell Issa’s remarks on the US Department of Justice’s refusal to release the audio files, said: “Issa literally stutters as he takes a cheap shot against Biden’s stutter.”

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The GOP's plan for American workers

Recently, you may have noticed that the hot weather is getting ever hotter. Every year the United States swelters under warmer temperatures and longer periods of sustained heat. In fact, each of the last nine months — May 2023 through February 2024 — set a world record for heat. As I’m writing this, March still has a couple of days to go, but likely as not, it, too, will set a record.

This story originally appeared on TomDispatch.

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White rural rage: The secret political force shaping America's future

Rural white voters have, in many cases, far more political power than suburban or urban voters, and they’re using that outsized power to push our nation toward disaster. While they’re only 20 percent of the country, for example, because of gerrymandering they control fully 42 percent of seats in the House of Representatives.

The authors of new book, White Rural Rage: The Threat to American Democracy point out that rural whites are measurably more bigoted and xenophobic than suburban or urban voters, 13 points more likely to hate on queer people, 15 points more likely to support Trump’s Muslim ban.

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A neuroscientist explains how Trump is using existential fear to win the election

The 2024 election is heating up, and Donald Trump is back to using his number one political strategy to grab Americans’ attention and galvanize his base: fear.

And why wouldn’t he? It worked for him in the past, and a social psychology concept called terror management theory suggests it will work for him again.

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How Trump’s lawyers would fail my constitutional law class

Former President Donald Trump claims that the president of the United States is absolutely immune from criminal prosecution.

On March 19, 2024, Trump filed his brief with the U.S. Supreme Court in the case brought by special counsel Jack Smith for Trump’s alleged criminal attempts to overturn the 2020 election.

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How Trump supporters' brains prevent them from changing their minds

As the 2024 election inches closer, the choice we Americans are about to make could have dire national and global consequences. Both sides of the aisle are gearing up for what promises to be one of the most divisive electoral battles in history. With stakes higher than ever, the mission for progressives is clear: stop Trump at all costs.

As it stands now, polls have Trump and Biden effectively tied, meaning that there’s an opportunity, some might call it a moral imperative, to sway the country away from the dystopian future in which Trump triumphs.

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How to fix a Supreme Court filled with corrupt stooges for the morbidly rich

When the Mifepristone case came before the Supreme Court, Clarence Thomas and Sam Alito bizarrely brought up their desire to see the Comstock Act again enforced.

Even arguably worse, they’re in part responsible for giving Trump months of delay in the case Jack Smith has brought against him for trying to overthrow our form of government. As Liz Cheney, apparently quite pissed off at the Court herself, said this week:

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'Set things straight': Chilling poll shows how far Republicans are willing to go

Regular readers know that I have a profound disdain for political, horse race polling. It’s inaccurate, dangerous and is released with so many caveats these days, it’s a wonder anybody would look at them and take them seriously.

That lecture aside, I came across a poll this weekend, and despite myself had a look.

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