The following article by Michael Tomasky was posted on the Daily Beast website August 16, 2018:
Tag: GOP
Past 48 Hours: Trump Sells Out Veterans & Workers, Corruption Reaches New Heights
Republicans had a rough night, and will have an even tougher road ahead. News over the past 24 hours is a big reason why: Trump and his administration’s corruption reached new heights, and he continued to sell Americans out. See for yourself:
Trump’s corrupt cabinet continues. Wilbur Ross ‘could rank among the biggest grifters in American history’ after he allegedly stole more than $120 million.
Forbes: “Over several months, in speaking with 21 people who know Ross, Forbes uncovered a pattern: Many of those who worked directly with him claim that Ross wrongly siphoned or outright stole a few million here and a few million there, huge amounts for most but not necessarily for the commerce secretary. At least if you consider them individually. But all told, these allegations—which sparked lawsuits, reimbursements and an SEC fine—come to more than $120 million. If even half of the accusations are legitimate, the current United States secretary of commerce could rank among the biggest grifters in American history.” Continue reading “Past 48 Hours: Trump Sells Out Veterans & Workers, Corruption Reaches New Heights”
So Does That ‘R’ Stand For Republicans — Or Russians?
The following article by Gene Lyons was posted on the National Memo website July 24, 2018:
How long do you suppose, before the initial “R” signifying “Republican” is also understood to mean “Russian?”
Let’s assume that special counsel Robert Mueller produces strong evidence that shady GOP campaign officials such as, say, Paul Manafort, conspired with Russian operatives. What would it take for your Trump-loving brother-in-law to transition from “witch hunt!” to “thank God Putin saved us from Hillary Clinton?”
Three days? A week?
Alleged Russian agent Maria Butina ordered to remain in custody after prosecutors argue she has ties to Russian intelligence
The following article by Tom Jackman and Rosalind S. Helderman was posted on the Washington Post website July 18, 2018:
The Russian woman arrested this week on charges of being a foreign agent has ties to Russian intelligence operatives and was in contact with them while in the United States, federal prosecutors said Wednesday.
Maria Butina, 29, also cultivated a “personal relationship” with an American Republican consultant as part of her cover and offered sex to at least one other person “in exchange for a position within a special interest organization,” according to a court filing.
After a hearing on Wednesday afternoon, U.S. Magistrate Judge Deborah A. Robinson denied Butina’s request to be released on bail, finding that no combination of conditions would ensure her return to court.
View the complete article on the Washington Post website here.
Poll: Corruption message gaining traction against GOP
The following article by Natasha Korecki was posted on the Politico.com website July 17, 2018:
The Trump administration’s scandals threaten to take a toll on Republicans in battleground districts this fall, according to new polling suggesting “culture of corruption” messaging is gaining traction.
Fifty-four percent of voters across 48 Republican-held congressional districts said Republicans are “more corrupt” than Democrats, compared with 46 percent who said Democrats are “more corrupt.”
According to the online survey of 1,200 registered voters, conducted for the progressive Center for American Progress Action Fund from July 2-5, an even higher number of independents hold Republicans responsible for corruption: 60 percent.
The Trump administration has a new argument for dismantling the social safety net: It worked.
The following article by Jeff Stein and Tracy Jan was posted on the Washington Post website July 14, 2018:
Correction: An earlier version of this story misattributed a statement to Nikki Haley, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, that no more than 250,000 Americans are in “extreme poverty.” The statement was made by the Permanent Mission of the United States to the United Nations and Other International Organizations in Geneva
Republicans for years have proclaimed the federal government’s decades-old War on Poverty a failure.
“Americans are no better off today than they were before the War on Poverty began in 1964,” House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) wrote in his 2016 plan to dramatically scale back the federal safety net.
Now the Trump administration is pitching a new message on anti-poverty programs, saying efforts that Republicans had long condemned as ineffective have already worked.
View the complete article on the Washington Post website here.
Getting Restless Under the Rule of the Republican Minority
The following article by Gene Lyons was posted on the National Memo website July 3, 2018:
Assuming that the White House errs on the side of sanity, Democrats may be unable to prevent President Trump’s Supreme Court pick from being confirmed. But if they play their cards right, they may be able to highlight the single most important issue now confronting American democracy: increasingly unrepresentative minority rule.
On issue after issue, majority views are stifled. Regarding the Supreme Court, Republicans have become precisely what they have long pretended to abhor: a party relying upon unelected, “elitist” judges to win political disputes in the courts that they can’t win at the ballot box.
As New York‘s Jonathan Chait trenchantly points out, Democrats have received more votes than Republican nominees in six out of the last seven presidential elections—starting with Bill Clinton in 1992.
Analysis: The Wrong Fight at the Wrong Time for the GOP
The following article by Stuart Rothenberg was posted on the Roll Call website June 21, 2018:
The more quality of life issues dominate the election cycle, the worse it will be for Republicans
You need to hand it to President Donald Trump, his entire administration and his party. It takes more than a little chutzpah to act in a way that seems callous to the concerns of children. First, it was gun control. Now it is immigration in general, and separating children from their parents in particular. If this is the way to winning the midterms, it’s hard to see how.
Republicans have talked for decades about crime, drugs, national security, traditional values, the dangers associated with big government and helping businesses produce economic growth.
GOP candidates are comfortable talking about those themes during campaigns, and the party’s voters have become accustomed to hearing those issues addressed. Continue reading “Analysis: The Wrong Fight at the Wrong Time for the GOP”
Trump’s older white voters are ditching the GOP
The following article by Kaili Joy Gray was posted on the ShareBlue website April 9, 2018:
If Republicans can’t even count on older white voters, they’ve got no hope this November.
Republican prospects this November are so bad that some are already writing off the House and worrying about trying to hold on to the Senate.
And now there’s more evidence of trouble ahead: Their base of older, educated white voters is abandoning them.
A new Reuters poll shows a stunning 12-point swing, which Reuters calls “one of the largest shifts in support toward Democrats” in the past two years. And it’s not as if there are large untapped demographics where Republicans could make up the difference. Continue reading “Trump’s older white voters are ditching the GOP”
Republicans Are Becoming Less Educated
The following article by Kali Holloway was posted on the AlterNet website March 31, 2018:
Nerds to the left.
There are several key attributes that define the Republican Party in its modern incarnation: its overwhelming whiteness; its self-reported religiosity; its slavish devotion to a man who boasts he could shoot someone and not lose a single vote, thus proving his point. Moving forward, that list should probably also include as a distinguishing factor the fact that the party is less educated than its Democratic political rivals, and growing increasingly more so.
That’s according to a study released earlier this month by the Pew Research Center. The polling organization now finds “the widest educational gap in partisan identification and leaning seen at any point in more than two decades” between Republicans and Democrats. In 1994, the majority of U.S. residents with four-year college degrees leaned or identified as Republican, at 54 percent; just 39 percent of college graduates leaned or identified as Democrats. As of 2017, those numbers have switched exactly, with the majority of college degree holders now leaning Dem-ward. Continue reading “Republicans Are Becoming Less Educated”