Opinion

It's not too late for GOP to dump Trump and pick Nikki

It is time for Republicans who care about foreign policy, are hawkish on national security, or who want to win back the White House to get behind Nikki Haley. The former South Carolina governor and UN ambassador has what it takes to keep America safe. What she does not have is enough support from Republican primary voters. Haley’s campaign comes at a time when GOP voters are increasingly isolationist, prefer personality over policy and seem soft on Russian President Vladimir Putin. Can Haley land her message of carrying a big stick, following in the footsteps of the 26th president of the Unite...

State leaders muzzle Floridians who want to speak out

Floridians, take notice. Your right to a representative government is being stolen away. Recent headlines document angry eruptions among an audience of people who show up to meetings ready to tell their leaders what they think — only to be muzzled by time limits that shut down somewould-be participants before they could utter a single word. More often, however, the exclusion is happening quietly and secretly, in meetings that never take place. Closed doors that should be open. A row of empty seats on a dais, facing a roomful of chairs that are also empty. The result, however, is the same: The ...

How Democrats stormproof democracy from Hurricane Donald before Election Day

Donald Trump has some big plans for his second term should he be reelected, and they would be disastrous for American democracy.

Trump’s plan is called Project 2025, and it would involve replacing more than 50,000 career civil servants in the federal government with Trump loyalists. It’s a project being headed by the Heritage Foundation, and it’s so far backed by more than $20 million in funding. With those loyalists installed, Trump would be able to increase his power and abuse that power as he pleases.

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We must do better on traffic safety

With World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims being commemorated tomorrow, it’s a good time to praise recent efforts to make our streets safer and to remind ourselves how much work lies ahead.

Earlier this month, for example, Bayonne, N.J., took the proactive step of expanding its prohibition on U-turns along its main drag, Broadway, from the business district to its full length.

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How to keep Gen Zers from fleeing America

Young Americans have a resource those of us who came of age before the late 1990s lacked: instant and easy access to information about people and life in other countries. Between the Internet and social media, Gen Zers have a better understanding of what life is actually like overseas, and they’re liking what they’re seeing.



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Show-and-tell, Bibi and Joe

By Martin Schram

It happens occasionally, but only rarely.

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You might think the NFL is racist. An insider says he’s about to prove it in court.

Jim Trotter’s new job at NFL.com began with the former ESPN and Sports Illustrated staffer noticing there were no Black people in decision-making positions at the National Football League-backed news website and multimedia hub.

This was five years ago, and at first, Trotter complained to NFL business managers, noting that the NFL’s workforce includes nearly 60 percent Black players. When no Black people got big jobs at NFL.com, he began to complain in media appearances.

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When bribery was legalized in America

“When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it.” — Frédéric Bastiat, Economic sophisms, 2nd series (1848)
Virtually every crisis America is facing right now is either caused or exacerbated by the corruption of our nation’s third branch of government.

A branch of government — the Supreme Court — that this week laid out one of the most absurd charades in its history, pretending to do something about their own corruption and utter lack of ethics with a sham “Code of Conduct.”

They are responsible for our crises of gun violence, the drug epidemic, homelessness, political gridlock, our slow response to the climate emergency, a looming crisis for Social Security and Medicare, the situation on our southern border, even the lack of affordable drugs, insurance, and healthcare.

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'Sadistic': Clinical psychologist explains the 'creepy depravity' of Trump’s 'fascism'

During a recent rally in New Hampshire, Donald Trump said something he’s been saying for some time. He said the indictments against him are reason enough to bring indictments of his own against his enemies once he regains the presidency. “This is third-world-country stuff, ‘arrest your opponent,’” he said. “And that means I can do that, too.”

At first glance, this is the height of hypocrisy. Just because there are indictments against him – which, by the way, were brought for good reasons – doesn’t mean Trump can turn around and bring indictments of his own against perceived enemies, just because he feels like it.

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Unholy night: A Trump White House Christmas coup caper

It was a Christmas party at the Trump White House, and despite the festive decorations, the trees and the wreaths and the red-and-green bunting, the mood must have been grim.

A few days earlier, the U.S. Supreme Court had firmly rejected a lawsuit filed by the state of Texas seeking the overthrow of election results in Georgia and several other states. That seemed to have been Donald Trump’s last, best hope of staying in office, and with that decision reality was setting in.

Over drinks, Trump campaign attorney Jenna Ellis apologized for the failure to Dan Scavino, Donald Trump’s social-media alter ego. But as Ellis later recounted the conversation to Fulton County prosecutors, an excited Scavino told her not to fret:

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Democracy and constitutional government is under assault in Ohio

If you’re worried about the state of the nation, welcome to the club. For at least a decade, a number of troubling signs have emerged which raise questions about the health of the American republic. Make no mistake. The warning indicator sensor light is indeed flashing red.

The most telling indicators of stress on the body politic include blatant gerrymandering, where politicians get to pick their voters, voter roll purging, and voting restrictions designed to suppress electoral turnout. The 2020 election result, which at 66.6% featured the highest percentage of voter turnout since the election of William McKinley in 1900, provided a further incentive for some legislatures across the nation to create roadblocks in the democratic process.

There are two key events which started the slow death of our electoral system. The first, Citizens United v. FEC, decided in 2010, allowed a tidal wave of dark money from corporations to contaminate the system. Moreover, astroturf organizations are proliferating, shielding the original s ource of political donations and thus skirting reporting requirements and the accountability that comes with them. Indeed, it was none other than Mitt Romney who framed the new post-Citizens United political landscape in 2011 when he famously said that “Corporations are people, my friend.”

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The Supreme Court's new ethics code is just a pathetic attempt at pacifying the public

Monday, the Supreme Court announced an ethics code for the justices. But the code is utterly empty. It has no enforcement mechanism and no mechanism for the public to lodge complaints of misconduct.

It’s public relations pablum.

The court effectively admitted this, saying that “the absence of a Code … has led in recent years to the misunderstanding that the justices of this court, unlike all other jurists in this country, regard themselves as unrestricted by any ethics rules.”

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Why did NBC go along with GOP lies about Social Security?

Why did NBC’s Kristen Welker use an incomplete frame for her question about Social Security at last week’s GOP debate, and why didn’t Lester Holt or anybody else correct her?

Here’s her question:

KRISTEN WELKER: “Americans could see their Social Security benefits drastically cut in the next decade because the program is running out of money. Former President Trump has said quote, ‘Under no circumstances should Republicans cut entitlements.’ Governor Christie, first to you, you have proposed raising the retirement age for younger Americans. What would that age be specifically, and would you consider making any other reforms to Social Security?”

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