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Hush money isn’t a crime. Slush money is

Editor’s Note: The following first appeared in Political Junkie, Claire’s newsletter. –JS

Thursday, Michael Cohen, former president Donald Trump’s former attorney and fixer, completed his third day on the stand in People v. Donald J. Trump. The prosecution is expected to rest its case. So far, we have been reminded of all kinds of delicious facts about Cohen, a man from central casting if there ever was one. For example, that after Trump abandoned him, he said things like: “You better believe I want this man to go down and rot inside for what he did to me and my family.”

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How The Onion’s founding editor finds humor in the dismal age of Trump

Sometimes this election seems a lot more dangerous and existential than just a scary Joe Biden-Donald Trump debate, as parodied by The Onion.

As the presidential rematch bounces between an edgy legal thriller and a Stephen King horror story, a good laugh is perhaps the best medicine.

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‘Wildly irresponsible’: NY Times blasted over debunked Parkinson’s doctor ‘innuendo’

The New York Times is under fire after publishing a report Monday critics call "wildly irresponsible" and "not journalism," which – at least in its headlines – implies President Biden has Parkinson's, or might have Parkinson's, despite the White House and the White House Physician point-blank stating he does not.

"Parkinson’s Expert Visited the White House Eight Times in Eight Months," was The Times' headline. The print edition, The Times noted, ran this headline: "Parkinson’s Expert Visited White House 8 Times in 8 Months, but Why Is Unclear."

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Why not Whitmer?

Although Kamala Harris’ presidential candidacy is just a week old, the conventional wisdom congealed almost instantly that the vice president will pick a male running mate.

And if some reports from over the weekend are correct, Harris has indeed narrowed the field to three men: U.S. Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper.

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Trump's greatest heist

For once, the Chief Thief’s told the truth —

His tone as usual uncouth.

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Traitorous Trump is way beyond 'weird'

I’m glad Democrats are finally hitting back at Trump. Enough with the “high road.”

They’re calling him “weird.”

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The scapegoating of Haitians in Springfield is being used as a distraction

Why, when presented with verifiable facts, did Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance double-down on lies that have subsequently terrorized his constituents in Springfield, Ohio with threats to more than 20 places so far? Why did the Republican candidate running against Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown, Bernie Moreno, pile on to those lies with comments about “illegal” immigrants flooding the southwestern city when he also knew the vast majority of the Haitian immigrants were there legally?

Why did Ohio congressman and chair of the House Judiciary Committee, Jim Jordan, tweet about “illegal aliens” taking over Springfield when he, too, knew his home state had welcomed the legal Haitians to the city under a temporary protected status (TPS) allocated to them because of the violence and unrest in their country?

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How the government can stop ‘churches’ from getting treated like real churches by the IRS

The Family Research Council is a conservative advocacy group with a “biblical worldview.” While it has a church ministries department that works with churches from several evangelical Christian denominations that share its perspectives, it does not represent a single denomination. Although its activities are primarily focused on policy, advocacy, government lobbying and public communication, the Internal Revenue Service granted the council’s application to be treated as “an association of churches” in 2020.

Concerned that the IRS had erred in allowing the council and similar groups to be designated churches or associations of churches, Democratic members of the House of Representatives sent the Treasury secretary and the IRS commissioner letters in 2022 and 2024 expressing alarm. The House Democrats pointed to what appeared to be “abuse” of the tax code and asked the IRS to “determine whether existing guidance is sufficient to prevent abuse and what resources or Congressional actions are needed.”

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Why millions of Americans just voted against their own self-interest

In 2016, when Pennsylvania was called for Trump and he won the election in the early hours of the morning, I had tears in my eyes as I lay in bed and posted on social media that we would fight. It was a complete aberration, I remember thinking, a jarring anomaly.

Last night, as the returns were coming in, again stunning so many of us, I felt differently.

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Trump proves there's no such thing as an imposter

Writing, for me, is easiest from the confines of a small, dark room. When I was younger I preferred a view, but now we live on a river where an unidentified bird or duck glues the binoculars to my face. It’s hard to care about rotating Trump buffoonery when a green Heron is standing in stealth, watching his breakfast have its last swim beneath the surface.

Writing columns for a national audience I’ll never meet can feel isolating, but it is ultimately an act of hope. Sussing out man’s inhumanity toward man (and animals) is an expression of shared humanity, an understanding that we are capable of evolving, that eventually we will do better.

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Ron Johnson’s crusade for simplicity

Back during President Donald Trump’s first administration, Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson was known as Trump’s most reliable ally in the U.S. Senate. He led investigations into Hunter Biden, Hillary Clinton and alleged irregularities in the 2020 election that Trump lost. A proponent of conspiracy theories about COVID-19 vaccines and climate science, Johnson is not one of those Republicans who had to overcome principle to get in line behind Trump.

He is completely at ease with the new administration — including the pardons of the Jan. 6 rioters who stormed the Capitol, battered police officers and sought to hang then-Vice President Mike Pence. The blanket pardon for the rioters, including those convicted of violent crimes, was “maybe a little more sweeping than I wanted to see,” he averred during a Politico breakfast this week. But, overall, Johnson said, the Jan. 6 defendants were victims of a “grotesque miscarriage of justice.” So Trump was right to pardon them.

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Trumps want you to buy their meme coins — but history should make us cautious about hype

Emmanuel Mogaji, Keele University

Just before assuming office as the 47th president of the United States, Donald Trump introduced his meme coin – $Trump. The digital token attracted lots of attention, and a couple of days after its launch the combined value of the coins was nearly US$8.5 billion (£6.9 billion).

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Why working people need a political movement of their own: opinion

There is no question that the Democratic Party, once the party of the working class, is now the party of the professional managerial class.

Workers have been voting with their feet, while the Democrats have been marching in the other direction:

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