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Opinion

These clownish villains may actually bring down Trump

President Donald Trump stumped with promises to rescue the forgotten man, telling his MAGA base he'd bring down the globalist "left" by exposing the Epstein empire and destroying the pillars of domestic democracy, one at a time, all in accord with Project 2025. That process is ongoing — fortunately for the rest of us, Trump's problem is that he couldn't and still can't find the cast to ensure it all gets done before his own implosion creates a historic mile marker in American self-government.

Similarly, Trump promised a strong economy, only to reliably set that aside and focus instead almost solely on remedying personal grievances and shockingly clear fraudulent enrichment.

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Every Trump accusation is a confession. This tantrum showed he knows he's cooked

Donald Trump’s tariff tantrum in front of the entire world should set off a massive MAGA migration. It was like watching your extra-drunk racist uncle on Facebook who didn’t get the right flavor of Jell-O for Thanksgiving dessert at the Mar-A-Lago Memory Care Center. This is what the alleged leader of the free world did when the Supreme Court wouldn’t let him keep grifting American taxpayers.

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A key Epstein associate quit her job but evades real scrutiny. Why?

Working in corporate America for nearly three decades, I learned that the most feared person in any organization isn’t necessarily the CEO. It’s the chief counsel. They’re the ones who know where the bodies are buried.

That’s why one name in the Epstein files has consistently given me pause. Perhaps more than anyone besides Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's convicted sometime partner, this person may know where the proverbial bodies are buried. Certainly her association with the late financier and sex offender has proved close enough that she was prompted to quit as chief counsel to one of the most powerful financial firms on the planet — though shockingly, she will still serve until June.

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This absurd spectacle provided a brief respite from Trump's horror show

Last week I watched the Attorney General of the United States sneer at the rule of law, and felt sick. I’ve been a federal trial lawyer for decades, and there was the titular head of American law defecating on it to applause from Fox News, who called Pam Bondi’s performance “entertaining.”

Our legal system has never been perfect, but pre-Trump, it was the best in the world except for the Scandinavians (who passed Americans on the evolutionary chart years ago). Stuck where we are on our slow-moving timeline, watching Bondi serve up contempt as surrogate for legal accountability, trashing the only thing I’ve ever believed in, instilled a grief I haven’t been able to name or shake.

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Bernie and AOC wouldn't be known without this American giant

By Bert Johnson, Professor of Political Science, Middlebury College.

Jesse Jackson’s two campaigns for president, in 1984 and 1988, were unsuccessful but historic. The civil rights activist and organizer, who died on Feb. 17, 2026, helped pave the way for Barack Obama’s election a generation later as the nation’s first – and so far only – African American president.

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This almighty blow to Trump is about much more than tariffs

A 6-3 majority of the Supreme Court decided yesterday that Donald Trump cannot take core powers that the Constitution gives Congress. Instead, Congress must delegate that power clearly and unambiguously.

This is a big decision. It goes far beyond merely interpreting the 1997 International Emergency Economic Powers Act not to give Trump the power over tariffs that he claims to have. It reaffirms a basic constitutional principle about the division and separation of powers between Congress and the president.

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This vile Trump sidekick is a gift for Dems

Kristi Noem is the political gift that keeps on giving for Democrats.

They need her running the Department of Homeland Security a lot worse than Donald Trump does. And she does run it worse than anyone else.

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Dramatic developments show Trump's presidency on the verge of collapse

We’ve only had one genuinely failed presidency in the modern era: Richard Nixon’s. I believe we’re on the verge of the second, and for very similar reasons. If it plays out the way I expect, the consequences could be world-changing, and will certainly alter how our politics work for decades to come.

The tipping point began in a big way when Attorney General Pam Bondi went before Congress to defend Donald Trump. When asked how many of Epstein’s co-conspirators she’d indicted, she refused to answer and instead completely lost it, going off on a bizarre rant that included:

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Panicking Trump proves he sees a real threat

The pattern is clear: Corporate billionaires who either own or are purchasing U.S. media are censoring content to support Donald Trump. Trump’s blatantly illegal carrot is the conditioning of federal contracts, mergers, licensing, tax and regulatory relief on partisan fealty. His stick? Threatening the FCC licenses of networks that criticize him.

In January, singling out left-leaning shows like Saturday Night Live, The View, Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert, Trump’s FCC Chairman Brendan Carr resurrected a long dormant “equal time” policy to issue new regulatory guidance requiring these shows to give “equal time” to political candidates in an election period. The rule was originally adopted in 1934, but the shows Carr is now targeting had been subject to a “news” exemption since 1959.

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An American institution just stained its legacy by kowtowing to Trump

Note to the decision-makers at the Gallup Organization, which for nearly 90 years has tracked presidential approval ratings: Capitulation never works.

I learned this the hard way as a teen playing basketball on D.C. playgrounds. I regretted my fecklessness.

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This shocking arrest proved the president isn't invincible

Police in the United Kingdom have arrested Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, the former Prince Andrew and Duke of York, on suspicion of misconduct in public office — after the disclosure of emails between Mountbatten-Windsor and the late disgraced banker Jeffrey Epstein.

We don’t know yet the specific charges. But we do know that the late Virginia Giuffre, an Epstein victim, accused Mountbatten-Windsor of raping her.

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This shock Epstein move means huge trouble for Trump. How he'll lash out is chilling

Everyone except me seems terrified that their name is going to turn up in the Epstein Files. And to be honest, even I’m a little nervous, given that Epstein was my mother’s maiden name.

But I’m honestly not all that preoccupied by the notion that all sorts of men and even women from all walks of life were on the periphery of Jeffrey Epstein’s life, either as part of his business ventures or as attendees at one of his parties or visitors to his island.

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Trump MRI scans bare all — with some privacy protections

Nick Anderson is a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist.