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A writer must “know and have an ever-present consciousness that this world is a world of fools and rogues… tormented with envy, consumed with vanity; selfish, false, cruel, cursed with illusions… He should free himself of all doctrines, theories, etiquettes, politics…” —Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914?). “The nobility of the writer's occupation lies in resisting oppression, thus in accepting isolation” —Albert Camus (1913-1960). “What are you gonna do” —Bertha Brown (1895-1987).
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We’ve discussed Trump’s ongoing efforts to prevent the
release of former Special Counsel Jack Smith’s report on the now-dismissed
classified documents prosecution against the president. That issue has now
resurfaced. As we discussed at the time, Judge Aileen Cannon, who was appointed
by Trump and has always ruled in his favor, was never going to order the
release of Volume II of the Special Counsel Report, which covers the classified
documents found at Mar-a-Lago. But now the matter is in the hands of a different
court, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, which has not hesitated to
correct Cannon’s errors in the past.
There is a fascinating resonance between Cannon’s decision to prevent the release of Volume II and the issue we’ve seen surface in Trump v. IRS, the case whose “settlement” led to the creation of the slush fund Trump can use to give taxpayer dollars to January 6 defendants while erasing his and his family’s liability for debts owed to the government, like back taxes from tax audits.
The common thread is cases where, instead of a
legitimate adversarial process, with opponents duking it out in court, Trump is
the actual party in interest on “both sides of the v.” In both of these
situations, it’s Trump v. Trump, which leaves the president to decide what
positions government agencies will take in these supposed legal conflicts. In
the case of the special counsel’s report, DOJ, which would normally argue for
its release, has taken Trump’s side. And Judge Cannon has played along.
On Inauguration Day, she issued an order blocking the Justice Department from sharing the
Volume II with leaders of the House and Senate Judiciary committees, who were
set to receive it in accordance with the typical practice after a special
counsel concludes their work. With DOJ on Trump’s side, there was no one to challenge
it.
Then, in February in a piece appropriately titled, “If DOJ is Trump’s Law Firm, Aileen Cannon is his Judge,” we discussed Cannon’s next move. She ruled on what she characterizes as two “unopposed” motions, one by Trump, one by his co-defendants in the Mar-a-Lago case, both designed to prevent release of Volume II.
At the time I noted, “If
it weren’t such a serious matter, ‘unopposed’ would be funny—these motions
preventing the routine release of a special counsel’s report are only unopposed
because the Attorney General, who should have filed an opposition, lives in
Trump’s hip pocket. Cannon has managed to hold up the release of Volume II for
over a year at this point.”
While Judge Cannon was doing everything possible to prevent the release of Volume II, two groups of journalists, American Oversight and the Knight First Amendment Institute, asked to intervene in the case to ensure a truly adversarial proceeding, with the parties presenting opposing views on whether the report should be released.
Cannon
dealt with that by dragging her feet, simply refusing to rule on the request.
That went on until November, when the matter reached the Eleventh Circuit and
she was given 60 days to rule. The Eleventh Circuit pointed to
“undue delay.” Cannon predictably ruled against permitting intervention, and
the issue was appealed to the Eleventh Circuit.
Now, the Eleventh Circuit has ordered a briefing schedule
on the requests to intervene and argue in favor of the release of the report.
The timing is fast, with the next set of briefs due 14 days from the date of
the order, and all of the briefing to be concluded by July.
The scheduling order is signed by Judge Nancy Abudu, who was appointed to the Eleventh Circuit by President Biden. The court will have to consider the issues once the briefs are in, but the ruling over Cannon’s foot dragging signaled they were out of patience with her efforts to keep her thumb on the scale for Trump.
There is good reason to be optimistic here, even
if the process takes time. Assuming the media entities are permitted to join
the proceedings, there would still have to be briefing on the issue of release,
but here again, Cannon was an outlier, and there is good reason to believe the
Eleventh Circuit would not agree. DOJ’s accidental release earlier this year of a document
detailing some of the work in the case gives us reason to believe there could
be interesting material in the report.
Is it coincidence that two separate cases, involving two of the most important challenges to Trump’s ability to exert control over the government and pervert the rule of law, are coming to fruition at the same time? Perhaps so.
But what’s at stake here is a core constitutional principle.
Article III of the Constitution gives federal courts jurisdiction to
decide actual “cases” or “controversies,” which means there
must be opposing parties with conflicting interests. The Supreme Court has held
that the “case or controversy” requirement means there has to be a genuine,
active dispute between genuinely adverse parties for a court to have
jurisdiction. Trump has elicited favorable decisions in both the IRS case and
the release of the report case by trying to avoid that requirement. But it’s
starting to look like time is up.
If this doesn’t sound like an enormous development,
admittedly, it’s a bit inside baseball. But by forcing Trump to act within the
confines of the rule of law, courts can create accountability. Refusing to let
Trump him get away with using them as a sham vehicle for perpetrating frauds
that allow him to extract government funds for his personal use or avoid
accountability for past conduct is an important reassertion of real guardrails.
The one-two punch of courts requiring him to face an actual adversary would
be a welcome development.
Trump’s past is finally catching up with him.
Pieces like this one take time — tracking cases across
multiple courts, connecting the legal dots, and translating what actually
matters into plain English. If that kind of analysis is valuable to you,
consider becoming a paid subscriber. It helps keep Civil Discourse going and
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We’re in this together,
Joyce Vance
Two hundred and fifty… years of the most powerful, most
resourced, most theoretically capable nation in the history of human
civilization and here is what we have to show for it.
Forty million people on food stamps, thirty million
without health insurance, the highest maternal mortality rate in the developed
world, the highest incarceration rate on earth, an opioid crisis that has
killed over half a million people and counting, a housing market so broken that
working people cannot afford to live in the cities they work in, an education
system that buries young people in debt before they earn their first dollar,
infrastructure that is literally collapsing, a life expectancy that is going
backwards, a political system so thoroughly purchased by concentrated wealth
that the laws it produces bear almost no relationship to what the public
actually wants or needs, a working class that has not seen meaningful real wage
growth in thirty years, a mental health crisis so severe we normalized it, a
gun violence epidemic so routine we don’t even act when preschoolers are
slaughtered, and a climate hurtling toward catastrophe while the people paid to
address it collect checks from the industry causing it.
Two hundred and fifty years of that. And to celebrate, we
built a wrestling arena on the White House lawn.
Not a hospital, or a school, or a housing development. Not a single fucking thing that addresses a single goddamn item on the list above. A wrestling arena. With cranes and pyrotechnics and a steel arch that probably cost more than the annual budget of three rural counties combined, erected in front of the building where Lincoln and Roosevelt and every president who ever tried to make any of this mean something once lived and worked and, in some cases, died trying. Truthfully, this is not a departure from American values. This is the fullest possible expression of them. Because this is what we chose. Every single time the choice was presented.
We built a culture where a football coach makes forty
times what a physics professor makes and then expresses genuine bewilderment at
the outcomes. Where a reality television star becomes president and a school
district cuts its art program in the same fiscal year. Where children know
every statistic of every player on their favorite sport team and cannot locate
their own country on a map. Where scientific consensus on vaccines, climate,
evolution, and basic nutrition gets weighed against a Facebook post and the
Facebook post wins at the dinner table. Where the school that wins the state
championship gets a parade and the school that produces a Nobel laureate gets a
budget cut.
We chose the bomber over the teacher. The tank over the
clinic. The aircraft carrier over the water treatment plant. We spend more on
military than the next ten countries combined, including our allies, while
veterans sleep on the streets of the cities they came back to. We built the
most expensive killing apparatus in human history and then told the nurse she
made too much money. We sent young men to die in wars that made defense
contractors rich and called it freedom and put a yellow ribbon magnet on the back
of the car and called that support. We made the soldier and the police officer
into sacred untouchable symbols of national identity and then cut their
benefits, denied their PTSD claims, let them die waiting for VA appointments,
and sent them back for third and fourth tours because it was cheaper than
taking care of them when they came home.
We worshipped the uniform and neglected the human inside
it because the uniform is a symbol and symbols are cheaper than healthcare and
housing and the therapy that would actually help. We built bases in a hundred
and fifty countries and could not build enough affordable housing in fifty
states. We funded a military budget that could have ended homelessness and
medical debt and student debt several times over and we did it with bipartisan
enthusiasm and called the people who questioned it unserious.
We chose entertainment over education so many times and for so long and at every available level of society that we forgot there was a distinction worth making. Spectacle over substance, performance over policy, the aesthetics of greatness in place of the actual thing, and the feeling of winning instead of asking what was being won and who was paying for it and what it would cost the people who came next. Rome had bread and circuses. We Americans have food stamps and a wrestling ring outside the Oval Office.
Two hundred and fifty years. This is what we built. This
is what we chose. This is what we are celebrating. And the most perfectly,
catastrophically, irreducibly American thing about all of it is that anyone
pointing at this image and asking what it means will be called unpatriotic by
people watching it on a television they bought on credit they cannot afford to
pay back, rooting for a sport they cannot explain, in a country they cannot
describe, celebrating a birthday they cannot contextualize, for a nation that
has spent two and a half centuries confusing the noise it makes with the work
it never did, all while claiming to be the greatest country on Earth.
Happy Birthday America! You have never looked more like yourself!
-Oliver Kornetzke
Trump’s second term has been marked by levels of
corruption unprecedented in US history. But the regime’s creation of a $1.8
billion slush fund for the president to dole out to insurrectionists and other
political allies is perhaps the most corrupt, lawless act of all.
In the United States, Congress has the power of the
purse. Only they have the constitutional authority to apportion funds. If a
president can raid the treasury through sham lawsuits and dole out our taxpayer
dollars as they choose, that’s an end-run around our constitutional order that
makes the executive not a coequal branch of government, but an autocratic one.
Congress cannot accept this usurpation of its power and subversion of our constitutional order. There are already several pieces of legislation in Congress that could block this money and create guardrails around federal settlement funds.
Every Member of Congress, regardless of party, should be opposed to this egregious overreach, and the good news is, members of both parties are. But we need to demand they go beyond concerned statements and actually act. The slush fund not only threatens to reward people who attempted to overturn a free and fair election, it incentivizes Trump’s rabid supporters to try to help him do so again.
And there’s no reason to expect this to be a one-time
gambit. If Congress doesn’t act, Trump could sue his own administration again
for some other imagined slight, order his underlings to settle, and draw new
funds for whatever program or patronage system he wants to implement.
But while the slush fund is unimaginably dangerous,
it’s equally unpopular. Polling shows that even a majority
of Republican voters oppose it. The fund is so unpopular that
it spurred a backlash on Capitol Hill and caused the GOP’s reconciliation bill
to stall in the Senate last week. Vulnerable Republicans in Congress know that
Trump’s corruption will be a liability in the midterms -- we need to keep up
the pressure and make them act, if not for loyalty to their oaths of office,
then in a desperate bid for political survival.
Congress will be back in session on Monday. Let’s
make sure when they return, their inboxes are flooded with demands to shut down
Trump’s corrupt slush fund.
If you’ve already emailed your Members of Congress, you
can drive the message home by calling as well. Click here to call your representative's office and
then contact your senators here.
In solidarity,
Indivisible Team
P.S. -- Today, a federal judge temporarily halted
payouts while legal challenges against the fund move through the courts. This
is good news, but we still need Congress to act, and we need every Member of
Congress on the record supporting or opposing the Trump regime’s corruption.
The lawsuit, filed by the New Civil Liberties Alliance in
the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, targets the
state's Firearm Owners Identification (FOID) Act. The case, Laurent v. Kelly,
argues that requiring citizens to obtain and carry a state-issued ID to simply
own firearms violate Second and Fourteenth Amendment rights. [1,
2]
The Plaintiffs
Christopher Laurent (Navy Veteran) & Kim Dalton
(Chicago Restaurateur): Both wish to keep firearms in their homes for
self-defense but refuse to apply for FOID cards, arguing Americans should not
have to seek government permission to exercise a constitutional right.
Justin Tucker: Holds a valid FOID card but objects to the
mandate that requires him to physically carry it on his person whenever he is
in possession of a firearm or ammunition. [1]
The Legal Challenge
The Core Argument: The lawsuit contends that Illinois and
Massachusetts are the only two states that require a government-issued license
to possess any type of firearm. The NCLA argues this "show your
papers" mandate is an unconstitutional barrier to a fundamental right.
Second & Fourteenth Amendments: The suit alleges that
the FOID law burdens residents with securing government approval before they
are legally allowed to exercise their right to bear arms.
The Defendants: The lawsuit targets top state and county
officials, including Illinois State Police Director Brendan F. Kelly, Attorney
General Kwame Raoul, and Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O'Neill Burke. [1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6]
Next Steps and Potential Impacts
Plaintiffs are seeking an injunction to block the enforcement of the FOID law entirely across the state. If the federal court rules in favor of the plaintiffs, it could invalidate a licensing system that has been on the books since 1968. State officials are expected to respond, and the case could ultimately be appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
-Lawsuit could block Illinois' FOID law | The Chicago
Report
The war Donald Trump started with Iran in February is now
collapsing, slowly and predictably, into the same theater of fraud he’s run his
entire life. So get ready for the next Big Lie: it’s coming as surely as the
sun will rise tomorrow morning.
Three months in, his bombing campaign has done less
damage than he claims, the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, gas is pushing five
bucks a gallon, his own Pentagon admits Iran’s nuclear program was only set
back a few years rather than “completely obliterated,” and the negotiations
he’s been bragging about in Islamabad are, by Iran’s own foreign ministry’s
careful phrasing, simultaneously “very far and very close” to a deal.
Translation: there is no deal and it’s unlikely there
will be one anytime soon, at least on terms Trump can honestly defend. And so,
just as Wall Street learned to call his serial lies, bluffs, and retreats on
tariffs the “TACO trade” — Trump Always Chickens Out — we’re about to watch the
wartime version of the same play.
He’ll declare “Total Victory” (complete with the
caps), the billionaire-owned right-wing media will trumpet it as the greatest
foreign policy triumph since Yalta, and the rest of us will be expected to
swallow this newest Big Lie and just shut up about it.
But a brutal reality is still there, even if the White
House won’t acknowledge it. Under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) that Obama
signed in 2015, Iran shipped 98 percent of its enriched uranium out of the
country, capped enrichment at 3.67 percent (what was needed for their one
nuclear power plant), dismantled thousands of its most advanced centrifuges,
redesigned the Arak reactor so it couldn’t produce weapons-grade plutonium, and
accepted IAEA cameras and inspectors at every nuclear facility on its soil.
The deal pushed Iran’s breakout time back hard and was
verified by international inspectors who reported to the world every ninety
days. Trump stupidly tore it up in 2018 because Black President “Barack Hussein
Obama” had negotiated it, and within three years Iran was enriching to 20
percent and barring inspectors.
Then Trump bombed the sites he himself had freed Iran to
build, and now he’s trying to negotiate his way back to something resembling
what Obama already had, except he doesn’t have the leverage Obama had, because
he’s shown the world he’d rather bomb than talk and he’s already used up so
many of our munitions that it’s become a crisis for the Pentagon.
As a result, what he’ll come up with, if he comes up with
anything, will be a fraction of the JCPOA dressed up in red, white, and blue
bunting and sold to the rubes as a miracle produced by a “true genius.” Just
ask any of his Cabinet members, who spend one in every six sentences during their “Apprentice”
TV meetings slobbering over how wonderful, strong, and manly Trump is.
On February 29, 2020, in Doha, Trump’s envoy Zalmay
Khalilzad signed a withdrawal agreement with the Taliban that excluded the
elected Afghan government entirely, freed 5,000 violent Taliban fighters from
prison, and set a hard deadline of May 1, 2021, for full American
withdrawal.
If Hillary Clinton has put together such as surrender on
the Taliban’s terms, we would’ve had hearings for a decade, but the GOP
pretended it wasn’t happening. Biden inherited that contract, extended the
deadline by a few months, and got blamed for the wreckage Trump had wired to
explode.
The pattern’s identical to what we’re watching now with
Iran: Trump makes a catastrophic decision, walks away, and either he or his Fox
“News” chorus blames the cleanup crew. This time, since Trump’s in the White
House instead of Biden, my bet is he’ll find a way to blame Whiskey Pete or
maybe his Joint Chiefs.
Now layer NATO on top. While the Iran war drags on and
the Strait of Hormuz stays closed, Trump’s been quietly gutting the most successful peacekeeping military alliance in human
history. He’s already pulled 5,000 troops out of Germany and is threatening
deeper cuts in Spain and Italy.
Most recently, his envoy Alexander Velez-Green told
NATO allies behind closed doors that the U.S. will slash its fighter jet commitment to the alliance
by a third, withdraw destroyers from NATO’s naval pool, and pull every
single American submarine out of European waters. This is a major disaster for
the alliance, as these American military assets are irreplaceable over the
short term.
The single biggest beneficiary of every one of these
moves, without exception, is Vladimir Putin. The Butcher of Moscow now watches
the alliance built to contain him hollowed out by an American president whose
family business was, according to investigative journalism by Craig Unger, kept
solvent through the 1980s and 1990s by what amounted to billions in today’s
dollars from Russian organized crime laundering money through Trump real estate
after Donald had bankrupted himself repeatedly.
Now he’s bankrupting the rest of us, taking the nation
down with him, with economists around the world predicting a severe recession
or even a second Republican Great Depression. America is the newest version of
Trump University, Trump Steaks, and the Trump Casinos.
We don’t need to draw a complicated chart to see
what’s happening, this treason in plain sight, and neither do the leaders of
the world’s other countries. Look at the foreign policy moves and ask one
question: “Who benefits?”
— An Iran war that goes nowhere and leaves Tehran’s
mullahs in charge? Russia and China both win, because the U.S. is bogged down
and gas prices spike.
— This insane NATO drawdown? Putin wins, openly and obviously.
— Cruelly abandoning Ukraine? Putin.
— Trashing USAID and creating the conditions for the Ebola outbreak now spreading through
East Africa? China expands its influence into the void.
— Killing the Voice of America and shuttering Radio Free Europe? Putin and Xi
both throw parties.
Meanwhile the Trump family is taking a $400 million 747 from Qatar, cutting $2 billion crypto deals with the UAE, and pocketing additional billions from the Saudis. Every single move on the international chessboard either lines Trump’s pockets, advances Putin’s interests, or both. This man Eisenhower would have called a traitor and Reagan would have called an obvious Russian asset is now running the country after having seized control of the party those two built.
Most Americans are watching this with a growing sense of
helpless horror — the deconstruction of USAID, the killing of Voice of America,
the abandonment of allies, the protection rackets dressed up as diplomacy, the
construction of hundreds of concentration camps, the lies stacked on lies, the
arming and masking of lawless thugs who’re literally killing American citizens,
the self-dealing grift — and the Republican Party, the party of Eisenhower and
Reagan and even the patrician George H.W. Bush, can’t find ten senators willing
to stand up and say “enough.”
Republican senators and members of Congress know what’s
happening. They know who Trump is really working for. Many
have even said so, albeit before Trump had power. They’ve read the same
intelligence we have, but they say nothing because they’re afraid of a primary
challenge funded by the same billionaires who’re profiting from the wreckage.
So, get ready. The Big Lie about Iran is coming, and it’s
going to be loud. Trump will declare a “total and complete victory” he didn’t
win, just as he declared one he didn’t win in 2020. Hegseth will hold a
Pentagon presser and tell us, as he already has, that America won “a capital-V victory” and
Fox “News” will run the chyron in bright red.
The rest of the press, terrified of Trump’s lawsuits, his
FCC, and his street thugs (who he’s now trying to pay off), will increasingly
fall in line.
And the truth — that Trump started a war he couldn’t
win, lost it, walked away with less than Obama had a decade ago, gutted NATO in
the process, and handed Putin his greatest geopolitical prize since the fall of
the Berlin Wall — will be told only by writers and reporters operating outside
the captured corporate press.
Which is why what you do next matters. Call your
senator and your representative through the Capitol switchboard at 202-224-3121
and tell them you expect them to demand congressional oversight of any Iran
deal Trump signs, to defend NATO and stop his military hardware withdrawal, and
to investigate the financial ties between Trump’s family and the foreign
governments he’s enriching.
Find your state legislators at openstates.org and make sure they’re on record.
Register everyone you know to vote at vote.org, because the 2026 midterms are now the firewall.
If you can support independent journalism — including this newsletter — please
do so, and please share this piece widely. The billionaire-owned media won’t
tell the truth about what Trump is about to claim. That job falls to us.
-Thom Hartmann
Help keep billionaires out of newsrooms
Like so many of this newsletter’s readers, Louise and
I have children and grandchildren who’ll inherit the consequences of this man’s
foreign policy, so when we watch him repeat the same pattern across continent
after continent it doesn’t feel like ordinary political disagreement. It feels
like watching someone systematically dismantle the country they’ll grow up in.
P.S. Consider Afghanistan. Trump blamed the chaotic exit
from Kabul in August 2021 on Joe Biden because Biden was the one in
the chair when the helicopters lifted off, but the deal that forced that timeline was Trump’s.
The second Trump presidency has proved beyond doubt that cowardice is contagious. A blustering, mentally unstable bully has cowed powerful law firms, giant media companies, venerated universities and mighty tech billionaires. And Congress. Where there should have been challenge, there has been timid acquiescence from Republicans who depend on his patronage. Barely a muffled squeak of protest or questioning.
After 250
years of independence, this is where we are.
This past week has shown Trump at his most mind-blowingly
corrupt – confident in the knowledge that America is now a
land with few of the checks and balances supposedly put in place by the 1787
Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. And yet it is just possible that a
few worms have begun to turn.
Let’s start with this week’s staggering act of
corruption. Trump, as president, sued
his own Internal Revenue Service (IRS) for an astonishing $10bn over
the leak of his personal tax records. It was the ultimate art of the deal:
Trump facing himself across the courtroom table. There could only be one
winner. And – surprise! – Trump won. Not in actual court – why risk a judge,
even if he has many of those in his pocket? No, instead, he reached a
settlement with himself. The deal Trump thrashed out with Trump was to create a
$1.8bn political slush fund, supposedly to compensate anyone who had been a
victim of government “lawfare”.
Trump’s acting attorney general, Todd Blanche, wouldn’t rule out the possibility that 1,600 rioters at the US Capitol on 6 January 2021, would receive payouts. That could include those convicted of assaulting police officers. The fund will be administered by a panel, which Trump will effectively control. The money was soon dubbed “stupid on stilts” and “payout for punks”.
Blanche,
who obviously relies on Trump’s patronage to secure his position, went further
by granting Trump and his family virtual immunity from any kind of
investigation into his financial affairs. The United States – under President
Trump – agrees that it is “FOREVER BARRED and PRECLUDED from prosecuting or
pursuing” President Trump, his eldest sons or any of their businesses. The
agreement covers matters “whether presently known or unknown” and cases that
“have been or could have been asserted” by the government.
The document which Trump signed this week will prevent
any cases against the Trumps by the IRS or other agencies or departments. That
seems to mean that the Justice Department is also barred from ever charging the
Trumps with other crimes.
Trump’s Supreme Court had already granted immunity for
the president for any “official” actions while in office. He now has civil
immunity. The law, as one observer commented this week, has become adapted to the man.
A New York Times editorial was headlined. “There Has Never Been an
Example of Presidential Corruption Like This.”
But this was just one story in a week of grotesqueries.
The US media barely had the bandwidth to fully explore Trump’s revelation that
his big, beautiful ballroom is effectively the cherry on top of a massive six-story underground
bunker-cum-military complex with its own hospital and bomb and bio-defense
shelters. He wants to add the estimated $1bn cost onto an immigration
enforcement bill.
Simultaneously – and by no means coincidentally – Trump
has been whacking any Republicans who
have shown less than total loyalty to him. Congressman Thomas Massie of
Kentucky had questioned Trump’s policy on Iran and demanded the release of
sensitive Epstein files. So, Trump ended
his career this week by endorsing a rival.
In Louisiana, Trump actively campaigned against Senator
Bill Cassidy, who had voted to impeach the president over the January 6
riot. So
Cassidy is now toast. The same fate befell the Georgia official who
couldn’t “find” the 11,780 extra votes to overturn Joe Biden’s 2020 victory in
that state. And, in Texas, Senator John Cornyn is doomed
for being insufficiently loyal. Offering to rename a
1,800-mile highway “The Trump Interstate” was not enough to save his skin. The
president has endorsed a rival.
If it all feels a bit Tony Soprano, that’s because it is.
“I don’t know what’s with him,” Trump said this week of a GOP representative
who voted to end the war in Iran. “He likes voting against Trump. You know what
happens with that… doesn’t work out well.”
But Trump knows that, come November’s midterms, the Republicans are almost certain to lose the House. So, he’s six months left in which to behave as lawlessly as he likes – and no one’s getting in his way. Or are they? It’s just possible that Trump has gone too far this week and that the people he has contemptuously treated like voting fodder have had enough.
The thing about January 6 is that it was a terrifying
attack on the very people Trump now needs. Multiple representatives thought
they were about to die or be taken hostage. Some whispered final goodbyes to
their loved ones; others quietly removed their congressional pins so they
wouldn’t be targeted in the hallways by the rampaging mob.
So, when Todd Blanche turned
up at the Capitol on Thursday to drum up support for Trump’s $1.8bn slush fund,
which could be used to compensate those convicted of violent crimes on January
6, he, the acting attorney general, had a rough ride from Republicans. Blanche
reportedly came in for withering questioning and criticism from incredulous
lawmakers.
“So, the nation’s top law enforcement official is asking
for a slush fund to pay people who assault cops?” said Senator Mitch McConnell,
Republican of Kentucky. “Utterly stupid, morally wrong – take your pick.”
At the same time, Senate Republicans refused to hand over
the money for the “ballroom” project, and House Republicans cancelled a vote on
a resolution on the war in Iran (remember that?). GOP lawmakers are said to
bitterly resent Trump’s mafia-style approach to disposing of his perceived
enemies.
So, finally, the unthinkable happened. The Senate refused Trump his money. On Thursday, they closed up shop and went home. A pattern is developing. Harvard fought rather than folded. The universities which moved quickly to appease Trump now look weak, isolated or permanently vulnerable to further demands. The elite law firms which defied Trump’s extortionate claims now bask in public approval, while the firms which struck deals with Trump look like shabby stooges.
As Trump becomes more unhinged and reckless, more people
and players will discover their backbones. This week may have been the week
defiance began to look stronger than accommodation. Trump’s spell may finally
have been broken.
- By Alan
Rusbridger, Newsbreak