SmartNews

'Coming from the left': Another PA Republican blames Dems after gov mansion firebombed

The violent attempt to firebomb the mansion of Gov. Josh Shapiro (D-PA) sent shockwaves rippling through the political sphere, particularly as it has become clear the suspect, Cody Balmer, has a deep-seated antisemitic hatred for the Jewish governor. But as far as the Pennsylvania GOP chair is concerned, Shapiro himself ought to be condemning his own party as responsible for the attack.

"My heart goes out to Governor Shapiro and his family, and we thank God that he's fine and they're fine," said Greg Rothman on Newsmax. "But he needs to, as a member of the Democratic Party, call out this violence. Just last month, the Republican state headquarters in New Mexico was firebombed, and you know what's going on in the Tesla dealerships."

Keep reading... Show less

'Civic uprising': Conservative sees Trump regime as break-glass emergency

Conservative New York Times columnist David Brooks is widely seen as a measured figure who frequently calls out anything radical or removed from the center — but that's decidedly not the tone he struck in his latest article, calling for a "civic uprising" to defend American values against the assault of the Trump administration.

"Over the centuries, people built the sinews of civilization: Constitutions to restrain power, international alliances to promote peace, legal systems to peacefully settle disputes, scientific institutions to cure disease, news outlets to advance public understanding, charitable organizations to ease suffering, businesses to build wealth and spread prosperity, and universities to preserve, transmit and advance the glories of our way of life," wrote Brooks. "These institutions make our lives sweet, loving and creative, rather than nasty, brutish and short."

Keep reading... Show less

'Put that on a monument': CNN legal analyst lauds court's rebuke of Trump as 'work of art'

A former federal prosecutor gushed over a judge's rebuke of the Trump administration, calling it a "beautiful exercise in writing" and declaring, "put that on a monument."

Judge J. Harvie Wilkinson III of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit issued a strongly worded, unanimous opinion earlier Thursday rejecting the Trump administration’s request to pause a lower court order in the case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Maryland father who was mistakenly deported to El Salvador. The appeals court’s decision allowed the district court judge to continue trying to require the administration to facilitate Garcia’s return and review what steps have been taken to comply with previous orders.

Keep reading... Show less

'Dismal': Economic outlook falls to 30-year low amid topsy-turvy Trump term

Economic worries created by President Donald Trump’s massive tariff campaign have sunk investor sentiment into one of its lowest points on record – even lower than the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic.

That’s according to a report in the Independent, which detailed a new survey that found attitudes among global fund managers have now entered their fifth lowest point on record.

Keep reading... Show less

Bare-breasted state flag now banned in some Texas classrooms

A Texas school district scrubbed a lesson about the Commonwealth of Virginia from its curriculum, reported Axios on Thursday — because the state flag depicts a woman's bare breast.

"Lamar CISD, a school district around 30 minutes from Houston, last fall removed a section about Virginia from its online learning platform used by 3rd-5th graders, Texas Freedom to Read Project co-director Anne Russey tells Axios," said the report. "The reason: The bare breast on Virginia's flag, a picture of which was included in the lesson, violated the district's recently adopted ban on any 'visual depictions or illustrations of frontal nudity' in elementary school library material."

Keep reading... Show less

'Trump's the only one who's blinked': Reporter gives blunt takedown of president's remarks

A CNN reporter delivered a blunt assessment as he pushed back on President Donald Trump's claim his administration has been in active negotiations with China to strike a deal amid a trade war that sent tariffs to 145%.

A reporter asked Trump on Thursday, "They've reached out since the 145% tariffs?"

Keep reading... Show less

'Met his match': Ex-official warns 'power-crazed lackeys' could doom Trump regime

President Donald Trump has spent his first few months in office threatening and targeting various institutions he dislikes and using the power of the presidency to coerce them into making concessions, ranging from universities to law firms to media companies. But he's hit a brick wall with three in particular who just might not be in a mood to negotiate with him, former Clinton administration Labor Secretary Robert Reich wrote for The Guardian on Thursday.

"Encouraged by the ease with which many big US institutions caved in to their demands, the Trump regime – that is, the small cadre of bottom-feeding fanatics around Donald Trump (JD Vance, Elon Musk, Russell Vought, Stephen Miller and RFK Jr) along with the child king himself – have overreached," wrote Reich. "They’ve dared China, Harvard and the Supreme Court to blink. But guess what? They’ve met their matches. None of them has blinked – and they won’t."

Keep reading... Show less

'Literally a federal crime': Expert tears into new Trump threat

President Donald Trump’s latest threat against his political opposition was doused with the reality that he could be violating federal law for publicly airing his retaliatory request, according to American Immigration Council senior fellow Aaron Reichlin-Melnick.

Trump on Thursday openly floated the possibility of the IRS changing the tax status of organizations that disagree with his administration’s MAGA policies, including immigration and environmental rights organizations.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Trojan horse’: Analyst flags Supreme Court case Trump team 'not sure it's going to win'

A Thursday decision by the Supreme Court to take up President Donald Trump’s effort to end birthright citizenship in the United States was described as “huge” by CNN’s Paula Reid.

“We've seen this tension between the White House and the judiciary building, and nothing vexes President Trump more than the fact that lower court judges can – a single judge – can block his policy for the entire country,” Reid, the network’s chief legal affairs correspondent, said.

Keep reading... Show less

'Outlast the bully': Retired law prof vows Harvard will beat 'vindictive' Trump

Retired Harvard Law professor Laurence Tribe applauded his institution for standing firm in the face of President Donald Trump's efforts to shake it down on Thursday — and said Trump will lose this fight badly in court.

Trump demanded that Harvard University crack down on student protesters, in much the same way he forced an agreement from Columbia University. When the school refused, Trump froze billions of dollars in scientific grants and tens of millions in government contracts, and is now threatening to strong-arm the IRS into revoking Harvard's tax-exempt status.

Keep reading... Show less

'True recklessness': Boston-born attorney stunned as Trump admin. orders her to leave US

An Arizona immigration attorney who was born in Boston and is an American citizen expressed astonishment after receiving a letter from the Department of Homeland Security telling her she must leave the United States.

Pamela Rioles Saeed told KNXV-TV she received an email from DHS informing her that her parole had been revoked and she must depart the country within a week.

Keep reading... Show less

‘Turmoil’: WSJ’s conservative editors turn on Trump's 'policy errors'

The Wall Street Journal’s conservative editorial board blasted Donald Trump on Thursday in a blistering opinion piece that urged the president to back off the feud he opened up earlier in the day with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell.

“President Trump’s tariff war isn’t going well, with market ructions and evidence of a slowing economy,” the Journal’s board wrote bluntly as it recapped Trump’s early morning reaction to Powell’s critical remarks of the administration’s tariffs – and refusal to lower interest rates.

Keep reading... Show less

'Freakishly incoherent': Trump DOJ official dragged after 'poorly written' threat

The interim U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., is being derided online after sending a threat letter critics call "nonsensical."

Ed Martin penned the page-and-a-half note to the editor-in-chief of the medical journal for the American College of Chest Physicians, in Illinois, on Monday, asking for information about the "partisan" slant of the journal.

Keep reading... Show less