Opinion

The United States will keep hurtling toward autocracy unless we undo Reagan's assault on the middle class

The destruction of the middle class is destroying democracies and paving the way for authoritarian rule.

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Trump is in ‘full panic’ mode as impeachment inquiry moves ahead: Conservative columnist

President Donald Trump has weathered one scandal after another, from close allies (or formerly close allies) going to federal prison to allegations that he had extramarital affairs with an adult film star and a Playboy model and paid them hush money to keep quiet. But it was the Ukraine scandal that finally set off an impeachment inquiry, and conservative Washington Post opinion writer Jennifer Rubin asserts in her October 3 column that Trump is now in “full panic” mode.

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Trump just had a psychotic meltdown in the Oval Office -- here are the 5 craziest moments

President Donald Trump on Wednesday went off on a psychotic tirade against his enemies in the Oval Office, which included rants against the Democrats, the news media, and the intelligence community whistleblower who accused him of abusing his office.

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Trump's desperation has exposed the craven duplicity at the heart of conservative media

Attorney General William Barr has been gallivanting around the world trying to enlist foreign government to assist Donald Trump’s campaign discredit the US intelligence and law enforcement agencies that exposed Russia’s active measures campaign in the 2016 election. To put into perspective just how inappropriate it is for the nation’s highest law enforcement officer, who is ostensibly independent from the White House, to play that role, just consider that when former President Bill Clinton chatted with then-Attorney General Loretta Lynch for 15 minutes or so while their private jets were sitting on an Arizona tarmac in 2016, conservatives considered it to be a significant scandal–and convinced many mainstream reporters and pundits to treat it as such–because Lynch’s agency oversees the FBI, which was investigating Hillary Clinton’s emails at the time.

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Yes, it's this bad: Conspiracy-hunter Bill Barr is roaming the globe under Trump's orders

Now that the House of Representatives has officially begun an impeachment inquiry, recollections of the other two impeachment proceedings in recent years inevitably come to mind. Bill Clinton's impeachment was just 20 years ago so most people over the age of 35 or so have a good recollection of how that went. Those of us who are older remember Watergate, which is much more analogous to what we're seeing now than the farce of the Ken Starr investigation and the absurd, prurient charges leveled against Clinton. Watergate was very serious business, exposing corruption on a scale never seen before.

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What exactly did Rudy Guiliani do on his overseas excursions?

One thing never really fully explained amid all the dust kicked up by impeachment talk is the increasingly shadowy role being played by Rudy Giuliani.

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Now you know how weird this whole Ukraine thing really is

Everyone understands a blow job.

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Cornered Trump desperately turns to implied threats of violence to fight impeachment

Donald Trump, frantic that Democrats are finally going to hold an impeachment inquiry that looks seriously at the vast criminal conspiracy in and around the White House, has quickly escalated his rhetoric to thinly veiled threats of violence.

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Mitch McConnell might throw Trump under the bus

Ever since Nancy Pelosi first announced the launching of an impeachment inquiry, many of us jumped forward in time to the Senate trial that would follow an impeachment vote in the House, wondering out loud whether Mitch McConnell would block Donald Trump’s trial from ever taking place. I thought for sure McConnell would pull a Merrick Garland stunt and insist that the trial couldn’t take place within a year of the presidential election, and then perhaps hold a procedural vote to back up his would-be scam.

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The real lesson of Ukraine-gate: Trump will do anything to win in 2020

Amid the impeachment furor, don’t lose sight of the renewed importance of protecting the integrity of the 2020 election.

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Fear is only natural: Trump has escaped before. But the tide is turning — and the hope you feel is important

Novelist Jonathan Lethem told me in a recent interview that President Donald Trump is dreaming, and there's a whole industry committed to keeping him asleep. In the several months since Lethem offered that wisdom, I have kept on wondering what happens when Donald Trump is finally forced from his slumber?

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The GOP's latest rush to undermine the Ukraine whistleblower reeks of desperation

President Trump and his allies have trotted out a tired defensive strategy against mounting allegations that Trump entangled a foreign government — or perhaps several of them — in his personal and political destiny. It reeks of desperation.

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Trump is flailing as his weakness catches up to him

Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. There’s a long way to go, and it’s going to feel longer by the time we get to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s soft deadline of year’s end. But last week demonstrated that more Americans are now more aware of Donald Trump’s extraordinary weakness, and that we are approaching a tipping point at which that weakness is going to compound itself exponentially. The weaker this president becomes, the weaker this president will get; the closer we get to the end, whatever and whenever that is, the more Trump’s behavior is going to prove the case against him.

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