Opinion

The 2018 'blue wave' was not enough -- here is how we dump Trump in 2020

When Rep. Rob Woodall, R-Ga., announced last week that he wouldn’t seek re-election next year, it was a timely reminder not to forget about the House of Representatives in the 2020 election cycle. Woodall's 2018 challenger, Carolyn Bourdeaux, who came within 500 votes of beating him, has already announced she will running again. Also consider Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, who is finally coming under fire for his long history of overt racism, has been stripped of his committee assignments and already has a Republican primary opponent. Then there's Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., who is under indictment and whose 2018 Democratic opponent, Ammar Campa-Najjar, is ready for a rematch.

Keep reading... Show less

Is Trump the laziest president in US history? Here's how the current 'stable genius' stacks up

No one doubts the job of president of the United States is stressful and demanding. The chief executive deserves downtime.

Keep reading... Show less

There is only one answer for 'Dictator Trump -- Impeachment should start immediately': ex-Clinton official

A president who claims he has an absolute right to declare a national emergency and spend government funds that Congress has explicitly refused to appropriate for the ends he seeks, is assuming the role of a dictator.

Keep reading... Show less

Fox News’ Sean Hannity dictated Trump’s national emergency plan — and his next demands are even more frightening

Fox News host Sean Hannity published an op-ed on Wednesday laying out exactly how he thought President Donald Trump, to whom he serves as an informal adviser, should move forward with congressional border security negotiations:

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's real emergency: Democrats are winning and he's in deep trouble

Now that President Trump is declaring a national emergency to build a border wall, one question should be on the lips of every journalist, pundit and politician talking about this issue: If this is a real emergency, why did Trump wait more than two years to do anything about it?

Keep reading... Show less

Andrew McCabe, Paul Manafort and Mueller's theory: A criminal conspiracy implicating the president?

Valentine's Day 2019 was a day to remember. Americans woke up to news about Andrew McCabe, the former acting director of the FBI, and his new book that outlines the wild days in May of 2017 when members of the Justice Department allegedly considered invoking the 25th Amendment to remove President Trump from office.  By that night we had word that Trump would go through with his threat to declare a national emergency so he can circumvent the will of Congress and order the construction of his border wall.

Keep reading... Show less

Democrats brilliantly outplayed Trump on the wall negotiations — and got an even better deal than it seems

As President Donald Trump prepares to sign a new government funding deal that ends the ongoing negotiations about border security spending, Democrats have mostly kept their heads down. They want him to sign the deal, so they're not gloating about it.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's economy is leaving his right-wing base stranded in poverty -- and it's getting worse

You’ve heard me talk about inequalities of income and wealth and political power. But another kind of inequality needs to be addressed as well: widening inequalities of place.

Keep reading... Show less

How the grisly dreams of the neocons set us on the path to President Trump

What dreamers they were! They imagined a kind of global power that would leave even Rome at its Augustan height in the shade. They imagined a world made for one, a planet that could be swallowed by a single great power. No, not just great, but beyond anything ever seen before -- one that would build (as its National Security Strategy put it in 2002) a military “beyond challenge.” Let’s be clear on that: no future power, or even bloc of powers, would ever be allowed to challenge it again.

Keep reading... Show less

This overlooked phenomenon is literally tearing America apart

You’ve heard me talk about inequalities of income and wealth and political power. But another kind of inequality needs to be addressed as well: widening inequalities of place.

Keep reading... Show less

Susan Collins gets some very bad news from a Maine newspaper

On Thursday, the Supreme Court temporarily blocked Louisiana from implementing the same type of abortion provider restrictions that were struck down in Texas in 2016. But no thanks to President Donald Trump’s latest addition to the bench, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who wrote a dissent explaining how he would have preferred to let the law take effect, effectively reverse the two-year-old precedent on an emergency appeal, and revisit the issue after the law had a chance to shut down most of the state’s clinics.

Keep reading... Show less

Did the Senate find 'no direct evidence' of collusion? That doesn't mean what Trump wants it to

Senate Intelligence Committee chair Richard Burr, a North Carolina Republican and former Trump campaign advisertold CBS News last week: "If we write a report based upon the facts that we have, then we don't have anything that would suggest there was collusion by the Trump campaign and Russia." That comment didn't garner much notice on its own, since Burr said exactly the same thing last September. But yesterday NBC News reported that the committee as a whole had concluded that there was no evidence of collusion and that Democrats on the panel were in agreement.

Keep reading... Show less

Trump's boasts about the economy could come back to haunt him as signs of a recession loom

While President Trump is determined to tout the strength of the economy, recent metrics suggest that a recession could be in the offing.

Keep reading... Show less