Unmasking the far right: An extremist paid a price when his identity was exposed online after a violent clash in Washington

Washington Post logo

In a flash, Laura Jedeed was surrounded by screaming men. The freelance journalist was filming a group of Trump supporters walking the streets of the District after the “Million MAGA March” on Nov. 14 when a man wearing an American flag gaiter mask approached her, stepped on her toes and began yelling.

“What’s up, you stupid b—-?” the man shouted, his mask slipping down his face.

Jedeed yelled at the man to stop touching her. A crowd formed around her and another journalist, with unmasked men screaming at them from all directions. Jedeed kept her camera rolling, and when she got away from the crowd, she uploaded video of the incident to YouTube and Twitter, and it went viral. Continue reading.

‘Craven cynicism’: Blistering editorial slams GOP for preaching law and order while honoring ‘anti-democracy thugs’

Raw Story Logo

On June 15, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the police officers who defended the U.S. House of Representatives against a violent insurrectionist mob on January 6. It was a 406-21 vote, and the 21 House members who voted against it were Republicans. Meanwhile, in Missouri, Republican Gov. Mike Parson recently signed into law a bill that calls for fines of police departments if they enforce federal gun laws. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch’s editorial board, in a blistering editorial published on June 20, cites these controversies as examples of the fact that the GOP has no business calling itself the “law and order party.”

“It was more than half a century ago that Richard Nixon successfully branded the GOP as the ‘law and order’ party, creating a political banner that has since been wielded, very effectively, by generations of Republicans,” the Post-Dispatch’s editorial board explains. “It was infused with some hypocrisy from the start — Nixon would ultimately be driven from the White House for his crimes in office — but in principle, at least, it aligned with a central tenet of conservatism: that respect for the law provides the restraint of passions that is necessary for society to thrive. So how on Earth did that Republican Party become the one we see now?”

The Post-Dispatch’s editorial board goes on to slam the 21 far-right House Republicans who voted against giving the Congressional Gold Medal to the police officers who defended the Capitol on January 6, including Rep. Paul Gosar of Arizona. Other Trumpistas who voted against the bill included Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Rep. Andy Biggs of Arizona and Rep. Andrew Clyde of Georgia. Continue reading.

The economy isn’t going back to February 2020. Fundamental shifts have occurred.

Washington Post logo

A new era has arrived of greater worker power, higher housing costs and very different ways of doing business

The U.S. economy is emerging from the coronavirus pandemic with considerable speed but markedly transformed, as businesses and consumers struggle to adapt to a new landscape with higher prices, fewer workers, new innovations and a range of inconveniences.

In late February 2020, the unemployment rate was 3.5 percent, inflation was tame, wages were rising and American companies were attempting to recover from a multiyear trade war.

The pandemic disrupted everything, damaging some parts of the economy much more than others. But a mass vaccination effort and the virus’s steady retreat this year has allowed many businesses and communities to reopen. Continue reading.

Biden’s First Task at Housing Agency: Rebuilding Trump-Depleted Ranks

New York Times logo

An exodus of top-level officials during the previous administration has left the Department of Housing and Urban Development short of expertise even as its role expands.

WASHINGTON — During the 2020 campaign, President Biden pledged to transform the Department of Housing and Urban Development into a frontline weapon in the fight against racial and economic inequality.

But when his transition team took over last fall, it found a department in crisis.

The agency’s community planning and development division, the unit responsible for a wide array of federal disaster relief and homelessness programs, had been so weakened by an exodus of career officials that it was faltering under the responsibility of managing tens of billions of dollars in pandemic aid, according to members of the team. Continue reading.

‘Not good signs for the Republican Party’: GOP lawmakers have a problem with their own voters

Raw Story Logo

In a column for the Los Angeles Times, longtime political observer Doyle McManus pointed out that the Republican leadership is finding itself put into a corner by the more extreme elements in the party — from far-right GOP lawmakers who excuse violence and conservative voters who see no problem with it.

With Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) excusing the rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan 6th and Rep. Andrew S. Clyde claiming the insurrectionists were merely “tourists,” Republicans are now confronted with the optics of being the party that condones violence.

According to McManus, Republicans refusing to take a firm stance against political violence is not a good sign for a party that just lost the Senate and the White House. Continue reading.

Tucker Carlson Calls Journalists ‘Animals.’ He’s Also Their Best Source.

New York Times logo

His platform on Fox News made him a big player in Donald Trump’s circle. Off camera, he shapes the coverage of Trump’s world and Fox’s own internal politics.

Last month, I texted Tucker Carlson to ask him a question that was on my mind: “Did you get vaccinated?”

“When was the last time you had sex with your wife and in what position?” he replied. “We can trade intimate details.”

Then we argued back and forth about vaccines, and he ended the conversation with a friendly invitation to return to his show. “Always a good time.” Continue reading.

WATCH: Ron Johnson booed after showing up at a Juneteenth celebration after trying to block the holiday

Senate voting and ethics overhaul stalls, but Democrats united in vote

Roll Call Logo

Klobuchar: ‘This is the beginning and not the end’

West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin III voted with his party Tuesday in favor of debating Democrats’ signature overhaul of elections, campaign finance and ethics laws, but the measure’s path to enactment still remains improbable.  

Republicans, as expected, opposed a procedural vote that would have let the Senate begin debate and given Manchin a chance to change a sweeping bill he had said earlier this month he would vote against. Senators voted 50-50 along party lines, leaving the motion short of the needed 60 votes for adoption. 

GOP senators called the bill a power grab by the other side of the aisle and argued it would give too much control to the federal government over elections. Democrats said they planned to press ahead, as  allied outside interest groups mounted a fresh round of pressure campaigns, including to end the legislative filibuster.  Continue reading.

Betsy DeVos left Washington 5 months ago. Her legacy is alive and well.

Politico logo

On issues like charter schools and sexual misconduct, conservative lawmakers and activists have stepped in to preserve the work of Donald Trump’s education secretary.

The Biden administration is trying to scrub Betsy DeVos’ policy fingerprints from the Education Department on everything from for-profit colleges to sex-based discrimination.

Standing in their way is an array of conservative politicians and advocacy groups eager to keep her policy agenda afloat after she has largely receded from public view.

DeVos’ devotion to using her government position to advocate for charter schools and those accused of sexual misconduct now relies on Republicans like Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton and Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) to defend her turf. Continue reading.

Rep. Phillips’ (CD3) Statement on Senate Filibuster of “For the People Act”

Rep. Phillips banner

WASHINGTON, DC — Rep. Dean Phillips (MN-03) issued the following statement after Senate Republicans voted to prevent debate on S.1, the For the People Act: 

“Today the Senate blocked the For the People Act, and despite repeated good-faith attempts to forge a bipartisan voting rights package, refused to even consider Senator Manchin’s compromise proposal. Our founding fathers never envisioned a government so unprincipled, so self-interested, and so unresponsive to the American people it is sworn to serve. If the minority believes that archaic procedure relieves it of its duty to deliberate and legislate, it’s time to modify the filibuster to ensure those who stand in the way of democracy cannot do so by simply raising a hand.”