Opinion

'Slow moving coup': Outrage after Trump quietly fires State Department inspector general

Democratic lawmakers and progressives erupted with anger after President Donald Trump on Friday night quietly removed the State Department's Inspector general from his post, the latest example of the White House's hostility to oversight and investigation.

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Supreme Court election year vacancy 'would be different' this time from Merrick Garland: Lindsey Graham

Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee Sen. Lindsey Graham said in an interview airing Sunday that the public should not expect a vacancy on the Supreme Court to remain open this election year, despite what happened last time.

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Internet stunned by 'Mad King' Trump's 'Mitch, I love you' plea to McConnell to go after Russia collusion hoaxers

In a bizarre retweet of a Federalist editor's claim that Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has been ignoring "the Russian collusion hoax," Donald Trump professed his love for the Senate majority leader and said it was true and could cost him the Senate in November.

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To stay afloat in the pandemic, doctors forced to turn to GoFundMe

A few weeks ago, I received an unsettling email. The staff at my daughter's pediatrician's office — a family-run private practice in Brooklyn that serves more than 3,800 patients — was shifting to part time. The practice had applied for the Small Business Administration's Paycheck Protection Program, meant to help small businesses weather the economic turmoil brought by the Covid-19 pandemic. But the money wasn't coming, at least in the initial round of funding

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As millions lose insurance, states cut Medicaid in response to the coronavirus crisis

States are announcing deep Medicaid cuts due to budget shortfalls stemming from the coronavirus pandemic, at the same time that millions of people lose their employer-based health coverage.This article first appeared on Salon.During the Great Recession, state Medicaid programs slashed coverage for services like dentistry, podiatry, and insulin pumps amid steep budget cutbacks. The current crisis "is going to be the '09 recession on steroids," Matt Salo, the executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, told Politico. "It's going to hit hard, and it's going to hit fast."

Medicaid, which is one of the largest programs funded by states, covers about 70 million low-income adults and children — the same population that has been hit hardest by the coronavirus. Though the federal government pays more than half of the Medicaid cost, governors ultimately determine the scope of the program in each state.

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Trump slammed for praising his 'GREAT job on COVID response' as death toll climbs

Donald Trump kept up his tweet barrage on Saturday morning, attacking Democrats and the media, and then turning around and praising himself for the job he is doing battling the coronavirus pandemic.

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Donald Trump will say literally anything to get re-elected

Everyone who covers President Donald Trump with even the slighted bit of integrity will tell you he’s prone to lie and distort the facts with little compunction. But the media is still struggling to cope with this fact.

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Here are 6 key moments from Rick Bright's bombshell whistleblower testimony

It was obvious that Rick Bright’s Thursday testimony before the House Committee on Energy and Commerce was really getting to President Donald Trump when he denounced the former director of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority as a “disgruntled employee” — which is exactly the type of insult that Trump resorts to when someone gets under his skin (journalist Scott Martelle, in a Los Angeles Times op-ed, argued that Trump’s insult only adds to Bright’s credibility).

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Trump rolls out an utterly nonsensical 'Obamagate' conspiracy that he can't even explain -- and it sets the media ablaze

Even Donald Trump can't tell us what "Obamagate" is — other than his newest obsession, designed to distract from his total failure to handle the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting economic catastrophe. But with a news media still and always eager to prove it's equally tough on "both sides," it's conceivable that Trump can make Obamagate a thing.

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Whether overwhelmed, bored or just plain lazy, it looks like Trump's done fighting the pandemic

Apart from the rah-rah claims from the White House, the theme repeatedly popping up is that Donald Trump has simply given up fighting the coronavirus — even with 83,000 U.S. deaths.

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Trump is a 'wartime president' all right -- and he thinks the coronavirus culture war will save him

A few weeks ago, in one of his many branding brainstorms during this COVID-19 crisis, President Trump started calling himself a "wartime" president who was valiantly leading the country in the battle against "the invisible enemy." This was rolled out like a campaign slogan, indicating that it was part of a planned strategy to put Trump at the center of the response to the pandemic.

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Racial battle fatigue and the pandemic: A modern-day lynching in Georgia

The coronavirus pandemic has caused the American people great pain and suffering. More than 86,000 people have been killed by the virus — and the true number of dead is likely higher. Public health experts are predicting that, ultimately, hundreds of thousands of Americans may die from this pandemic, which will also have long-term negative health consequences for many people who are infected and survive. Individuals and entire communities are experiencing severe mental trauma because of the overall impact of the coronavirus on their sense of safety, security and well-being.

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Is Trump’s advantage in the Electoral College slipping away?

Hillary Clinton’s loss in 2016 is seared into the memories of her supporters of President Donald Trump’s critics, so much so that there’s a risk they could be over-learning the lessons of the past in fear of not repeating old mistakes.

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