Opinion

Columnist zeroes in on an under-the-radar Trump official working hard to 'sabotage' Biden

When President-elect Joe Biden is inaugurated on January 20, he will inherit a long list of problems — from a deadly pandemic to a painful recession to domestic terrorism by white nationalist groups. Regardless, many GOP partisans obviously have no desire to help Biden's incoming administration, and journalist Dana Milbank cites Russell Vought as one of the worst partisans in a Washington Post column published on New Year's Eve.

"If, in the new year, pandemic vaccines aren't available as promised, Americans can't return to work because economic relief isn't delivered or an adversary successfully attacks the United States because national security agencies couldn't pay for new defenses, a hefty share of the blame should be placed on a man you've probably never heard of: one Russell Thurlow Vought," Milbank writes.

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'If you call death an improvement': Conservative buried for claim Trump 'improved' most Americans’ lives

Washington Post conservative author Marc Thiessen is under fire for claiming President Donald Trump "improved the lives of a majority of Americans" in a New Year's Eve column titled, "The 10 best things Trump did in 2020."

"Despite the worst pandemic since 1918, the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression and the worst racial unrest since the 1960s, a record 56 percent of Americans told Gallup before the election that they were better off now under Trump than they were four years ago," Thiessen writes.

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'There is no excuse’: Conservative demolishes Republicans' arguments for defying the 2020 election

David French would not be unhappy if a traditional Reaganesque Republican were being sworn in as president on January 20, but the conservative journalist has been a vehement critic of President Donald Trump. And he is not only glad that Joe Biden defeated him, but also, has been lambasting the Trump supporters who refuse to acknowledge Biden as president-elect. In a blog article posted on New Year's Eve, French slams the House and Senate Republicans who are planning to contest the Electoral College results at a joint session of Congress on January 6.

"One of the most dispiriting aspects of a dispiriting year has been watching the supremely cynical post-election contest by conservative lawyers and conservative politicians who know exactly what they're doing," French laments. "Intimidated by Trump and desperate for the approval of Trump's base, they have lent their own gravitas to utterly frivolous arguments, used their platforms to falsely whip up public concerns about election integrity, and then used the concerns they helped create as the justification for continuing a fruitless fight."

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Trump's 'HAPPY NEW YEAR' tweet greeted with 'you lost -- now start packing' from critics

Outgoing president Donald Trump was reminded in no uncertain terms that he is a one-term president on New Year's Day after he kicked off the morning by tweeting out "HAPPY NEW YEARS!" only to have critics suggest that he "start packing."

Trump, who is still hoping that Republicans in Congress will help his stay in office by contesting the election results, returned early to Washington D.C. from his Mar-a-Lago resort in anticipation of an attempt by GOP lawmakers to disrupt Congress when it reconvenes to certify the Electoral College votes that show former Vice President Joe Biden won.

Tweeting out a simple, "HAPPY NEW YEAR!" the president was immediately told "back atcha, big guy. now go pack your big smelly bags, you're toast."

That was the general tenor as you can see below:


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Why America must hold Mike Flynn accountable

When Donald Trump finally vacates the White House on Jan. 20, his departure won't exorcise the political demons that have infested the nation over the past four years. The cult of personality that surrounds Trump has combined with his own profound disdain for constitutional norms, fulfilling the worst fears about his rise to power. He will surrender the presidency only after seeking to overturn a legitimate election, while encouraging demands among his followers for "martial law" and a turn toward dictatorship.

This article first appeared at the National Memo.

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Mike Pence shoots down lawsuit by fellow Republicans pushing him to overturn the 2020 election

Attorneys for Vice President Mike Pence on Thursday filed a response in federal court to a lawsuit brought by Republican Rep. Louie Gohmert of Texas, who hopes to overturn the 2020 presidential election. On behalf of Pence, the Justice Department lawyers asked the court to throw out the suit.

It was an exceptionally bizarre lawsuit to bring before a court from the start. Gohmert sued the vice president — a member of his own party — asking the court to declare that he has the power to reject votes of the Electoral College.

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Tensions heat up among Republicans over Trump's push to undo the election

Tensions are escalating among Republicans in Congress over the January 6 certification of President-elect Joe Biden's victory over President Donald Trump in the Electoral College. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has been urging Republicans not to contest Biden's certification, but Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri announced, this week, that he will defy McConnell's request — and CNN's Jake Tapper is reporting that "at least 140" House Republicans plan to "vote against the Electoral College results showing President-elect Biden won."

The Republicans who agree with McConnell and have publicly acknowledged Biden as president-elect include, among others, Nebraska's Ben Sasse, Utah's Mitt Romney, Pennsylvania's Pat Toomey and South Dakota's John Thune in the Senate to Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger in the House. And Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama has been feuding with Kinzinger and is quite vocal about his plans to contest the Electoral College results.

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Kelly Loeffler makes mysterious last-minute donation to her own campaign

Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., the unelected multimillionaire facing a tight runoff against Democratic rival Rev. Raphael Warnock next week, has submitted a number of irregular last-minute contribution reports with the Federal Election Commission, failing to disclose employment information for hundreds of donors in the final weeks of the campaign. For some donors, the reports show what appears to be misleading information about their employer or their position — including lobbyists and executives — some of them with notable names or corporate or personal ties to the appointed senator.

This article first appeared in Salon.

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Why the mutant coronavirus is ‘a potential catastrophe’: report

Many health officials are being asked whether or not they believe that the new COVID-19 variant that has been spreading rapidly in the U.K. could reduce the efficacy of the vaccines now being distributed. Socoiologist Zeynep Tufekci notes that so far, "many scientists" believe that this variant "will not decrease vaccine efficacy much, if at all." But Tufekci, in an article published by The Atlantic on the last day of 2020, also warns that even if the variant slamming the U.K. doesn't limit the vaccines' efficacy, the variant's arrival is still terrible news.

"A more transmissible variant of COVID-19 is a potential catastrophe in and of itself," explains Tufekci, a native of Istanbul, Turkey who now lives in the United States. "If anything, given the stage in the pandemic we are at, a more transmissible variant is, in some ways, much more dangerous than a more severe variant. That's because higher transmissibility subjects us to a more contagious virus spreading with exponential growth — whereas the risk from increased severity would have increased in a linear manner, affecting only those infected."

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Conservative writer reveals 3 main fears insiders have about Trump's last days in office

Bill Kristol, like Charlie Sykes and many of his other colleagues at the conservative website The Bulwark, has been expressing his concerns about things that could go wrong before President-elect Joe Biden is inaugurated on January 20. In a Twitter thread posted on the last day of 2020, the Never Trump journalist offers some reasons why Americans "should not panic but should worry, even be a bit alarmed" during this lame duck period. And Kristol describes his concerns as the three I's: Iran, the Insurrection Act and "insanity."

"I've been speaking with former Trump Administration officials and with other former senior national security types who remain plugged in to the Pentagon," he said.

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'Now you're just sounding insane': Trump fans freak out after attorney Lin Woods claims Jeffrey Epstein is alive

Lin Wood, an attorney attempting to help Donald Trump dispute the election returns in Georgia, set off a flurry of controversy on Wednesday night after he tried to implicate Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts in the death of late Justice Antonin Scalia, and then suggested that Robert's two children were adopted with the help of Jeffrey Epstein.

Thursday morning, the attorney doubled-down and claimed that Epstein -- who died under mysterious circumstances in a New York City jail -- was still alive.

As Wood tweeted, "I am fully aware of the onslaught of attacks being made against me based on my revelations about Chief Justice John Roberts. Before attacking me, maybe fair-minded people would first ask Roberts to tell the truth. Or ask Jeffrey Epstein. He is alive."

That set off a wave of stunned reactions on Twitter, with fans of the president worrying that the attorney's bizarre pronouncements would damage his case on election fraud.

As one fan wrote, "Come on, Lin. I'm on your side, but now you're just sounding insane."

You can see his tweet and responses below -- including from some supporters who are swallowing his story hook, line and sinker.


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Inside the GOP's coming Jan 6 assault on democracy

Last week I wrote about "the GOP's January 6th assault on democracy," warning that GOP senators had to be called, pressured, hounded by their constituents to not cave into Trump's demands during the normally routine Congressional certification of the election next week, on January 6th.

This story first appeared at The Signorile Report.

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America is a failed state -- and Trump leaving the White House won't suddenly change that

In the waning days of the Trump presidency, there's a steady drumbeat coming from the corporate news media and its pundits: the suggestion that, come Jan. 21, everything will suddenly and magically return to "normal."

Never mind the mounting COVID death toll, which on several days this month has spiked above 3,000 a day.

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