Opinion

The shutdown's true costs are chilling

After 43 days, the U.S. government shutdown finally came to an end late on Nov. 12, 2025, when Congress voted through a long-overdue funding bill, which President Donald Trump promptly signed.

But the prolonged gap in government-as-usual has come at a cost to the economy.

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MAGA senator’s rampages go far beyond mere defensiveness

Let’s talk about what happens when Josh Hawley gets angry.

Missouri’s senior U.S. senator doesn’t take criticism lightly — whether from the press, his colleagues or anyone he perceives as an enemy. His approach? If you get hit, hit back harder.

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A true monument to Trump's legacy

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

The GOP's hero called this the backbone of America. Trump just broke it

The American media refuses to call them out, so I guess the job falls to me: you can cut the racism with a knife, it’s so thick. With the Trump administration, the Confederacy is actively rising again, using the Lost Cause mythology/lie as its basis.

Trump this past week, apparently just in time for Veterans Day, erased tributes to Black U.S. soldiers who died fighting fascism — removing displays and plaques honoring African American liberators in Europe and removing similar memorial content at home — not merely to rewrite history but to say that only white men’s stories matter.

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Trump spent years building this Epstein denial — a Karoline Leavitt slip just destroyed it

Donald Trump just showed up — allegedly — somewhere no one would ever want to be found.

”Spending time” at Jeffrey Epstein’s house with one of the convicted child-sex predator’s victims.

The allegation is one of several politically radioactive revelations in emails released by the Democrats on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Wednesday. They are part of a trove of materials provided to the committee by Epstein’s estate.

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Squirming Trump now all alone as allies admit this terrible truth

It appears the extent of President Donald Trump's involvement with Jeffrey Epstein is about to finally fall into the open. Left unanswered is whether anything means anything anymore. But even in this cynical age, perhaps almost quaintly, the matter of the infamous late financier and child sexual abuser probably still does. The world will soon find out.

Now, everyone sentient and sensible has long suspected that Trump was grossly involved in Epstein's world. How, we don't know — though of course, Trump was found liable for sexual abuse in another case, involving E. Jean Carroll. But he had to have knowledge of what Epstein did to his girls. At one point, the two men were best friends. Epstein surely wasn't the one who called his own plane "the Lolita Express." Those around him did.

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The Epstein puzzle is about to be solved

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.

Trump just sent an ominous warning with his latest manufactured crisis

For decades, Washington has sold the world a deadly lie: that “regime change” brings freedom, that US bombs and blockades can somehow deliver democracy. But every country that has lived through this euphemism knows the truth — it instead brings death, dismemberment, and despair. Now that the same playbook is being dusted off for Venezuela, the parallels with Iraq and other US interventions are an ominous warning of what could follow.

As a US armada gathers off Venezuela, a US special operations aviation unit aboard one of the warships has been flying helicopter patrols along the coast. This is the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR) — the “Nightstalkers” — the same unit that, in US-occupied Iraq, worked with the Wolf Brigade, the most feared Interior Ministry death squad.

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This supposed GOP silver bullet doesn't work, and other lessons from Dem election wins

Within hours of the 2024 presidential election, we saw lots of blame being thrown on Democrats’ championing of LGBTQ rights and, in particular, trans rights, as a major reason for Kamala Harris’s loss.

This, even as Harris hardly discussed trans rights. Incessant attention was nonetheless paid to one anti-trans ad that research even showed didn’t actually effectively sway many voters.

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Here's why Democrats are so undisciplined — and Republicans so regimented

Chuck Schumer couldn’t hold his senators together at a time when their unity and toughness were essential. Yet Trump cracks the whip and gets all Republicans to do his bidding.

Does this mean Schumer should go? Yes.

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One simple step will help Dems fight Trump and avoid more humiliating defeats

What we witnessed this weekend in the United States Senate wasn’t “compromise.” It was surrender: the kind of gutless, morally bankrupt capitulation that betrays American families and feeds the billionaires devouring our democracy.

Eight senators who caucus with the Democrats joined Republicans to end the government shutdown, not in victory, not to secure healthcare for millions, but to hand Donald Trump and his morbidly rich cronies a gift-wrapped political win.

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Seven reasons Dems should drop this failed leader — now

If the Democrats want the best possible chance of winning the midterms, Chuck Schumer needs to step aside now. Even when the Senate Minority Leader does the right thing, as he did in standing up for Obamacare subsidies during the shutdown, he does it badly. And the Democrats have now caved on this because he couldn’t hold his caucus together. So just as Abraham Lincoln repeatedly changed generals in the middle of the Civil War, helping the Union win, it’s time to replace Schumer without delay.

Schumer isn’t the only reason for the Democrats’ dismal 33 percent approval rating, which stays that low even as Donald Trump’s wrecking ball leadership combines with strong Democratic candidates and grassroots energy to produce nationwide Democratic wins. But as minority leader, Schumer has been the party’s most salient public voice — every day and in crises like the shutdown. And he functions as a dead weight anchor, with a -26 percent net favorability rating and 62 percent of Democrats in a recent poll supporting new leadership.

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Trump voters do the unthinkable — and prove they aren’t untouchable after all

While the media has covered extensively Democratic successes in the 2025 off-year elections, there is one story that has been dramatically undercovered. This is the fact that the 2025 Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races show that Democrats can win over Trump voters.

Granted, these are not dramatic slices of the Trump coalition, but they are enough in these hyperpolarized times to win elections.

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