Jesse Dollemore: Scott Jennings GOT OWNED SO HARD – No Choice But To SHUT HIS MOUTH!!!

“Jesse talks about a humiliating moment for Scott Jennings. He was asked a fundamental Constitutional question about who possesses the authority to declare war, and he unsurprisingly got the answer wrong.”

Source:Jesse Dollemore actually does watch “cable news”. That might be a newsflash for some.

From Jesse Dollemore

From Mediate:

“On Thursday night’s edition of CNN NewsNight, Phillip and a panel comprised of Jennings, Xochitl Hinojosa, Batya Ungar-Sargon, Donte Mills, and Van Lathan discussed Trump’s invocation of the Alien Enemies Act.

When Jennings asserted that “we are at war” with suspected gang members, Phillip popped a Schoolhouse Rock-style quiz on him:

JENNINGS: These individual judges are overstepping. If what you’re essentially saying is that the president, who is the commander-in- chief, cannot determine when we are being invaded, an individual district court judge is going to decide that? No, thank you.

PHILLIP: Can I just ask a simple question? Who gets to decide whether the United States is at war or not?

JENNINGS: The president, in my opinion.

PHILLIP: No.

JENNINGS: If we’re being invaded, I want the commander-in-chief in that —

PHILLIP: Scott, no. It’s actually the Congress.

JENNINGS: You’re asking if we’re being invaded.

PHILLIP: I’m asking —

JENNINGS: You want to call Congress and see if we’re being invaded?

PHILLIP: I’m asking a basic constitutional question.

JENNINGS: We’ll be taken over before they ever get to the committee.

PHILLIP: (INAUDIBLE) will decide whether the United States is at war, the answer is Congress.

JENNINGS: I’m talking about if we’re being invaded.

PHILLIP: When the president says we’re at war, he has to show proof —

JENNINGS: Show we’re actively at war, not —

PHILLIP: And what he needs to do is go to Congress and —

(CROSSTALKS)

LATHAN: Wait a second, though. I thought the genius of our system was that we weren’t beholden to one guy’s opinion, that the genius of the American system of government was that we had three co-equal branches, and in those co-equal branches decisions, were made about how we go about doing things.

Now, we want to tear that to shreds so that we can kowtow to one guy’s opinion, then we are in a monarchy. We’re being ruled.”

From Mediate

So even though Jesse Dollemore says he doesn’t watch these prime cable talk shows… somebody watches them for him? I guess he could be more frank and say: “I watch them so you don’t have to”.

Which is sort of what some reporters who cover Donald Trump say: “I listen to the President’s speeches so you don’t have to”.

I gave up “cable news” at night, which was the only time that I ever had to watch it anyway, right after 2024 General Elections. That election night was so depressing, I just gave it up. But I get so much news during the day anyway from people doing their own reporting and videos online, all the newsletters, etc, I’m much happier this way anyway. And it frees up my nights to do things that make me happy and that I actually enjoy, instead of:

Should grown men be allowed to compete in women’s sports?

Do reporters have a constitutional right to question the President of the United States?

Do judges have a right to rule against the President of the United States?

Do students have a constitutional right to wear t-shirts that might offend other students?

I mean that’s the level of discussion and programming that we now get from the so-called news networks during prime-time now. And not just from MSNBC, or FNC, or Newsmax, but CNN as well.. it’s basically just political, tabloid, culture war, gossip.

From what I’ve read about Scott Jennings background, the only Congressional experience that he has was working for Senator Mitch McConnell’s 2002, 2014 reelection campaigns. But you don’t need to be a Congressional expert to know that only Congress (House & Senate) gets to officially declare war in America:

“The U.S. Constitution grants Congress the sole power to declare war. This power is explicitly stated in Article I, Section 8, Clause 11. While the President is the Commander-in-Chief of the military, only Congress can formally declare war.”

From Senate.GOV.

So when CNN anchor Abby Phillip told Scott Jennings last night:

“Who will decide whether the United States is at war, the answer is Congress.”

Al she was doing was giving Mr. Jennings a 10th grade social studies lesson, to a guy with a college degree. So when Mr. Jennings says:

“These individual judges are overstepping. If what you’re essentially saying is that the president, who is the commander-in- chief, cannot determine when we are being invaded, an individual district court judge is going to decide that? No, thank you.

We’ll be taken over before they ever get to the committee.”

According to MAGA, we only have a Constitution, when there’s a Democratic President… especially a Democratic President, with a Democratic Congress, But when MAGA is in charge, the Constitution is just basically just a manual that comes with a brand new TV or DVR: something there to use when you feel like you need some assistance.

Source:The New Democrat

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Jim Cramer’s Full Interview of Peter Navarro On 1st Quarter GDP Report

“Peter Navarro, White House senior counselor for trade and manufacturing, joins CNBC’s ‘Squawk on the Street’ to discuss the most recent GDP print, whether new trade deals are imminent, tariffs on semiconductors, and more…

Source:CNBC talking to the man with the longest job title in Washington.

From CNBC

From Newsweek:

“Peter Navarro, Donald Trump’s chief trade adviser, has claimed the economic data that showed the U.S. economy had contracted by 0.3 percent actually showed positive news.

Speaking to CNBC, Navarro said that, if the negative effect of the surge in imports because of Trump’s tariffs is removed, “you have three percent growth.”

Navarro said, “I got to say just one thing about today’s news, that’s the best negative print I have ever seen in my life. And the markets need to look beneath the surface of that.

“We had a 22 percent increase in domestic investment. That is off the charts. When you strip our inventories and the negative effects of the surge in imports because of the tariffs you have three percent growth, so we really like where we are at now,” he added…

From Newsweek

Earlier today on The New Democrat:

“When Americans spend less money because:

A. they don’t have it to spend

B. the costs of what they want to buy is now too expensive

C. is probably the right reason here: what they want to buy is not currently available because people stocked up on while they could still afford it and the prices went up on it because of tariffs.

The American economy (whether you like it, or not) is a consumer driven economy. It’s dependent on innovation and consumer spending to drive economic growth. So when you unilaterally make products that Americans want to buy more expensive, they buy less of them and that weakens economic growth.

And because of Donald Trump’s economic protectionism, America not just lost the $600 billion that it gained from the last quarter of 2024, but it lost an additional $100 billion during the 1st quarter of 2025.

So we can either blame President Trump’s tariffs for the lost of economic growth because his policy is driving it, or we could blame The Invisible Man. But since no one has ever seen or met The Invisible Man before, (ha, ha) the safe bet is President Donald J. Trump. ”

From The New Democrat

In case there’s any doubt left in the world about how little respect The New Democrat has for Peter Navarro… you obviously don’t read The New Democrat:

“If you think about it, Elon Musk could’ve been harder on Peter Navarro than he was and I’ll give you a few examples:

“What does a convicted felon know about economic policy anyway:

What does he know about prices in this country, other than what food and clothing costs at his prison commissary?

If Peter Navarro is so smart, how come he got caught, convicted, and landed in prison? Good thing for him, the 2024 RNC started the day he got out of prison, otherwise he would’ve had to watch it in the prison day room and wonder if he would even survived the experience.

When has Peter Navarro ever had a job in his life where he wasn’t working for Donald Trump? The President probably only hired him because he feels sorry for the poor schmuck, who can’t get a good job anywhere else, because he’s a convicted felon. And he didn’t want to embarrass Navarro by having him take his next order for a Diet Coke, quarter pounder, with fries, at a local McDonald’s.”

(Mr. President, you want fries with that? Yes, Peter. And please keep your voice down so no one here figures out that we know each other.)

Just for the record: I’m not saying that Elon Musk said any of these things about Peter Navarro… publicly…

From The New Democrat

“So I guess the answer to Senator Tom Tillis’s question: “Whose Throat Do I Get To Choke If Tariff Approach Fails?” would be: Peter Navarro. I guess you say Wall Street investor Ron Vara as well. But Peter Nevarro would be easier for Senator Tillis to find right now. Unless Mr. Navarro found some White House tunnel that not even the Secret Service knows about and is now hiding there. Sort of how he came up with his tariff policy that almost no one seems to believe in. The man seems to be able to find things that no one else can…

From The New Democrat

So there are a couple of things that really stand out about this interview:

1. “Peter Navarro, Donald Trump’s chief trade adviser, has claimed the economic data that showed the U.S. economy had contracted by 0.3 percent actually showed positive news.

Speaking to CNBC, Navarro said that, if the negative effect of the surge in imports because of Trump’s tariffs is removed, “you have three percent growth…

So President Trump’s “Assistant to the President, Director of Trade and Manufacturing Policy, and national Defense Production Act policy coordinator” (they would’ve gave him a longer job title. But the English language only has so many words) admitting that:

“If the negative effect of the surge in imports because of Trump’s tariffs is removed, “you have three percent growth…

Mr. Navarro is admitting that President’s Trump’s tariffs, are the reason for the negative GDP growth report yesterday. So he’s admitting that his own tariff policy (and this is the economic policy that he gave to the President, that the President adopted) sent the American economy into retraction during the 1st quarter of 2025.

If you watched the CNBC interview, you might have thought Jim Cramer gave Mr. Navarro a softball, or home run derby interview. But the fact that Mr. Navarro admitted on live, national TV, that President Trump’s tariff policy is responsible for the negative economic growth that we had in the 1st quarter, Cramer might have thought:

“He just admitted what I wanted to hear, but wasn’t expecting. I can play nice now”.

2. Peter Navarro saying: “I got to say just one thing about today’s news, that’s the best negative print I have ever seen in my life. And the markets need to look beneath the surface of that…

The 2nd Navarro quote takes me back to Donald Trump on the campaign trail both in 2016 and 2024 when he said: “I only hire the best and the brightest.” Really? Does that mean:

Mr. Trump only hires the “best and the brightest” who just got out of prison?

Perhaps Mr. Trump only hires white-collar felons and not violent felons, when it comes to his felon employment staff.

Wait, I got it: “the best and the brightest” is not available right now, because Donald Trump is currently President. So “the best and the brightest” is really just another way of saying “the best of what’s currently available”.

I mean saying:

“That’s the best negative print I have ever seen in my life… would be like saying:

A head coach (name the sport) saying: “That’s the best losing team I’ve ever had”.

Or a businessman saying: “That’s the least amount of money that my company has ever lost”.

Or a full-time political candidate (but only because they’ve never actually won an election) saying: “That’s the closest I’ve ever come to winning an election”.

And you are saying all of these things, or just 1 of those things, perhaps somewhere in-between… as if you are trying to impress someone. The Trump Administration right now looks like a full-time daycare facility, where the parents are thinking they can just leave their kids (meaning the Trump Economic Council) there indefinitely. With the staff at the facility thinking when will the adults come back and take back their damn kids.

Source:The New Democrat

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David Pakman: Donald Trump FLEES, Blames The Whole Thing On JOE BIDEN!

“Donald Trump publicly abandons any responsibility for economic policy and blames Joe Biden for the Q1 2025 GDP contraction”

Source:David Pakman Show with a look at how Dictator Don responds to real questions.

From the David Pakman Show

From the President of the United States:

“This is Biden’s Stock Market, not Trump’s. I didn’t take over until January 20th. Tariffs will soon start kicking in, and companies are starting to move into the USA in record numbers. Our Country will boom, but we have to get rid of the Biden “Overhang.” This will take a while, has NOTHING TO DO WITH TARIFFS, only that he left us with bad numbers, but when the boom begins, it will be like no other. BE PATIENT!!!”

From Donald J. Trump

From The New Democrat on Wednesday:

“So when the U.S. Government passes tariffs on another country, (like the People’s Republic of China) 2 things happen:

their products become more expensive in America because it’s not Chinese companies, or the PRC Government that’s going to eat those costs. It will be the American consumer.

And then 2nd, China starts sending fewer of their products to America, because now they’re too expensive because of the tariffs for most Americans and they take their business somewhere else, which weakens the supply chain in America.

What I’m giving you is really an economics 101 lesson that Mr. Hassett probably got in college 40 years ago. But he’s either forgotten that (because to work for Donald Trump, you have to lose your brain, first) or, (and this is my guess) he’s simply lying for his boss on national TV.”

From The New Democrat

I really don’t have anything to what Fred Schneider said about President Trump’s economic policy. I think he put it all out there as far as what people need to know about these tariffs on TND. I do have 1 response to what David Pakman said here and I’m probably in complete agreement here with him. And I’m going to drop a few facts (as the young people say. Or is that drop some knowledge?) about the state of President Biden’s economy, versus President Trump’s long, but just 1st quarter.

To sum up what David Pakman said: when things are great, it’s Donald Trump’s credit. But when they go bad., it’s everyone else in the world, first and never Donald Trump’s fault.

President Harry Truman who was about as honest and direct a politician that we’ve ever had in this country, had a famous expression: the buck stops here. Meaning the buck stops with the President. Whatever happens on the current President’s watch, the President gets the responsibility for what happened, because it happened on his watch. Whether that’s fair or not… not the issue. That’s just a real-life fact that every American President has had to live with, at least in the mass communications age.

Donald Trump obviously has created his own personal standard for himself, that apparently not even all of his supporters agree with him on:

“This will take a while, has NOTHING TO DO WITH TARIFFS, only that he left us with bad numbers, but when the boom begins, it will be like no other. BE PATIENT!!!”

I think is a pretty good clue there that when things go bad on his watch, he’s not even politically immune from his own base for that responsibility. How else to use explain a 42% approval rating? Which is about a 15% drop in his share in the popular vote in 2024 and a 22% drop from where he started out on January 20, when he was at 54%. But the personal standard that he’s set for himself is:

“I’m responsible for anything that goes well in America. And it’s always someone’s else’s fault.”

To put it more simply: The luxury items stop with DJT. The junk stops with anyone who is not Donald J. Trump.

In case facts still mean anything to anyone else in America: (perhaps not a safe bet at this point) I’m going to share some facts with you about President Biden’s economy versus President Trump’s.

In 2024, the American economy grew at 2.4%.

Last quarter under President Biden, the economy grew at 2.8%.

President Trump’s 1st quarter of 2025, the economy shrank at 0.3%.

The last full day of Joe Biden’s presidency the Stock Market closed at 43,487.83.

Yesterday under President Trump, the Stock Market closed at 40,669.36. Think about that last 1: the Stock Market hast lost almost 3,000 points. That’s not points in a sports sense. That’s trillions of dollars, net, that the American economy has lost under President Trump. $11 trillion to be exact. And we know why too and as Fred Schneider said on Wednesday:

“So when the U.S. Government passes tariffs on another country, (like the People’s Republic of China) 2 things happen:

their products become more expensive in America because it’s not Chinese companies, or the PRC Government that’s going to eat those costs. It will be the American consumer.

And then 2nd, China starts sending fewer of their products to America, because now they’re too expensive because of the tariffs for most Americans and they take their business somewhere else, which weakens the supply chain in America.”

When Americans spend less money because:

A. they don’t have it to spend

B. the costs of what they want to buy is now too expensive

C. is probably the right reason here: what they want to buy is not currently available because people stocked up on while they could still afford it and the prices went up on it because of tariffs.

The American economy (whether you like it, or not) is a consumer driven economy. It’s dependent on innovation and consumer spending to drive economic growth. So when you unilaterally make products that Americans want to buy more expensive, they buy less of them and that weakens economic growth.

And because of Donald Trump’s economic protectionism, America not just lost the $600 billion that it gained from the last quarter of 2024, but it lost an additional $100 billion during the 1st quarter of 2025.

So we can either blame President Trump’s tariffs for the lost of economic growth because his policy is driving it, or we could blame The Invisible Man. But since no one has ever seen or met The Invisible Man before, (ha, ha) the safe bet is President Donald J. Trump.

Source:The New Democrat

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Matt Lewis: The Cringe Campaign: Why Democrats Can’t Manufacture Cool

“Spring is in the air, and Democrats are rummaging through the political closet and trying on different looks. When just a little more than a quarter of registered voters have positive views about you, a makeover sounds appealing. But manufactured cool is cringe — and gimmicks won’t save a party that’s forgotten how to be real.

Rebranding advice is plentiful, if conflicting. James Carville thinks Democrats should just get out of the way and let Trump self-destruct (a strategy that might work for the midterms, but eventually a party has to stand for something). Meanwhile, David Hogg, the new vice chair of the Democratic National Committee, wants to spend millions purging the party’s incumbent geriatrics — a bold move that could sabotage a promising election night.

At least Hogg (who wants to replace the domesticated oldsters with more combative young progressives) is tapping into the zeitgeist. His scheme channels the inevitable “appeal to the youth” phase of an identity crisis — for the same reasons divorced dads buy convertibles. Americans, in general, tend to prioritize style over substance, especially when we’re spiraling.

The latest fad — which overlaps with some of Hogg’s goals — is the “dark woke” aesthetic (a fancy term for progressive politics dressed up in an edgy, confrontational style). The problem? Anyone who remembers that cringe TikTok video Dems put out back in March is aware that nothing screams “desperation” like an over-the-top attempt at relevance.

Because yes, the Democratic brand is cooked. Worse: It’s lame. People used to think the party was cool (or at least cool-adjacent). They had Barack Obama, George Clooney and a monopoly on cultural capital. Now they have the burden of being the “adult” party (and not the naughty kind). Adults pay taxes and send follow-up emails.

Democrats, amazingly, have become the hall monitors of American politics. And what do they have to show for taking on this responsibility?

Meanwhile, the GOP — formerly the domain of Dockers dads, pious prudes and Young Republicans — pulled off the unthinkable. They became the chaos agents. The punk rockers. The party of middle fingers. The reversal has been astonishing.

It’s no surprise that Democrats want to reclaim this low ground. They didn’t get into politics to be the spreadsheet managers of the republic. They wanted to wear sunglasses indoors and quote Aaron Sorkin dialogue in real life. They imagined themselves as the effortlessly cool John F. Kennedy, with that tousled movie-star hair, poolside tanned skin and those classic Ray-Bans that always made him look like he just walked out of a GQ shoot.

The problem? Cool doesn’t work when it’s forced. Ask any middle schooler (I’ve got two). When today’s Democrats lean too far into their edgy side, it doesn’t look like an organic vibe shift — it looks like panic in skinny jeans. “We’re raw now! We clap back! We vibe with Gen Z!” Yeah, sure. Right after the PAC luncheon and before the panel discussion on infrastructure reform.

Which brings us back to Hogg and his crusade to boot the boomers. In theory, replacing career politicians with meme-fluent progressives sounds refreshing. In practice, dumping millions of dollars to primary your own team is a) unlikely to actually happen and b) colossally stupid.

Let me be clear: Democrats should resist the temptation to attack their own incumbents and avoid cheap gimmicks overtly designed to be perceived as young or cool.

So what should Democrats do?

First, recognize that the top of the ticket is everything, and that choice won’t be made until 2028. The next Democratic presidential nominee will define the party’s brand. In the meantime, no one knows or cares if the assistant deputy whip is chic or if the ranking Democratic representative on the Armed Services Committee has a great social media presence.

What is more, while parties can try to select a certain type of standard bearer, the track record ain’t great. If the GOP establishment had their way in 2016, we’d have seen a ticket pairing a 45-year-old Cuban American male with a 44-year-old Indian American female. But there’s a reason you never saw any “Rubio/Haley” bumper stickers. GOP primary voters had other ideas about that “brand” identity, and — putting aside the chaos and authoritarianism — it sort of worked (at least, electorally).

Second — something you can control — prioritize doing your job and helping everyday people. Demonstrate authenticity and passion.

Talk like you mean it. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) does that. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) does too. Not because they’re trying to be cool — but because they aren’t. They show up, say what they believe, and don’t fake it.

Do stuff that matters. Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) just provided an example of that. Not exactly the hippest guy in the room — but he recently flew to El Salvador to meet with Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the man wrongfully deported under Trump and detained in a Salvadoran prison.

Van Hollen didn’t just show up for the cameras. He showed up because it mattered (for Garcia and for anyone who cares about due process and the rule of law). And honestly? That’s kind of cool.

Because when chips are down, authenticity, passion and substance are the only things that really matter. Get those right, and people might think: “Huh. They’re not trying to be cool. Maybe that means they are.”

And if not? At least you’re not the guy rapping about climate change through a TikTok filter while democracy collapses behind you.”

Source:NBC News with a look at DNC Vice Chairman David Hogg. Someone needs to remind Mr. Hogg that that the DNC is not a high school & he’s not the Vice Chairman of DNC High Student Senate.

From Matt Lewis

I think Matt Lewis made his point here when he said: “Meanwhile, the GOP — formerly the domain of Dockers dads, pious prudes and Young Republicans — pulled off the unthinkable. They became the chaos agents. The punk rockers. The party of middle fingers. The reversal has been astonishing.”

Whoever your “hipster hero” is, whether it’s George Clooney, (if you are a Gen-Xer like myself and Matt Lewis) perhaps Brad Pitt for my generation… maybe Bruce Willis or Sam Jackson for the Boomers… or whoever that person might be and from whatever generation, people who are “cool”… are just that. They don’t have to tell people that, they don’t have to act that way, because they just are. They’re genuine articles when it comes to “coolness”.

I think especially in politics and government when someone tries to look or seem “cool’… to “go viral” on social media, they look like the 45-50 year old dad, who has 3 kids, who is bored with himself and his life, so he decides the way to “fix his life” is to:

grow a goatee,

wear their heir back with an entire bottle of gel, everyday

speaks exclusively in pop culture references and catch phrases

is always seen staring at his phone and with a coffee cup, etc… they don’t look real. They look like someone who is suffering through a middle age, pop culture crisis. They look like they’re trying to be something that they’re not.

They start acting like a wannabe hipster guru, or something.

As Matt Lewis also said as well: “Rebranding advice is plentiful, if conflicting. James Carville thinks Democrats should just get out of the way and let Trump self-destruct (a strategy that might work for the midterms, but eventually a party has to stand for something).”

The next Democratic leader, will be their 2028 presidential nominee, or even presumptive nominee, whether they’re headed to the nomination, but don’t have enough delegates to make that official, or they officially wrapped up the nomination. And if that person is a successful politician, running a good campaign, etc, that campaign will go a long way in deciding what the Democratic Party is going to look like politically and culturally 3 years from now.

Until 2028, whether it’s considered “cool” or not, (especially by the Millennials and Gen-Zers) the job of the Democratic Party is to be the adults in the room. Not to become the issue themselves and remind voters why they didn’t like them in 2024. They didn’t like them in 2024, because Democrats were seen as out-of-touch, with everyday, hardworking Americans. And if anything were seen as too friendly with pop culture and let pop culture do their political work for them, instead of the politicians themselves. The Kamala Harris campaign is the perfect example of my last point.

Source:The New Democrat

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Chris Cillizza: Donald Trump’s Not Playing 3D Chess — Maybe Not Even Checkers

“In this video, Chris Cillizza explores a long-running debate about Donald Trump: Is he a master political strategist playing “3D chess,” or is he simply improvising and reacting in the moment? Drawing from a recent Atlantic interview and Trump’s own words in “The Art of the Deal,” Cillizza argues that Trump operates without a long-term plan, instead reacting instinctively to media, public reaction, and his own impulses. Like a stand-up comedian testing material, Trump gauges what resonates and doubles down on it, making his presidency more about tactical day-to-day reactions than strategic foresight.”

Source:Chris Cillizza has 10 words for Donald J. Trump.

From Chris Cillizza

This is the part of “The Art of The Deal” that Chris Cilliza is talking about:

“Most people are surprised by the way I work. I play it very loose. I don’t carry a briefcase. I try not to schedule too many meetings. I leave my door open. You can’t be imaginative or entrepreneurial if you’ve got too much structure. I prefer to come to work each day and just see what develops.

There is no typical week in my life. I wake up most mornings very early, around six, and spend the first hour or so of each day reading the morning newspapers. I usually arrive at my office by nine, and I get on the phone. There’s rarely a day with fewer than fifty calls, and often it runs to over a hundred. In between, I have at least a dozen meetings. The majority occur on the spur of the moment, and few of them last longer than fifteen minutes. I rarely stop for lunch. I leave my office by six-thirty, but I frequently make calls from home until midnight, and all weekend long.

It never stops, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. I try to learn from the past, but I plan for the future by focusing exclusively on the present. That’s where the fun is. And if it can’t be fun, what’s the point…

From Penguin Random House

So “The Art of The Deal” came up during 1 of Karoline Levitt’s “press conferences” 2 weeks ago. Safe bet she’s never read the book either:

“She never lets facts get in the way of whatever partisan argument that she’s trying to make.

I’m willing to bet that Karoline Leavitt has never read “The Art of The Deal” either. Or, she’s just lying about that. Either 1 could definitely be true. It’s easy to see why a businessman who went bankrupt 6-7 times, who is looking at a debt in New York State of 500-million-dollars because of how they did business in Manhattan, would try to run a federal government and national economy like this. To put it simply: President Trump doesn’t know what the hell he’s doing…

From The New Democrat

I don’t completely disagree with what Chris Cilliza is arguing here. I guess I would just put it differently and risk sounding more humorous. I don’t think Donald Trump plays chess or checkers.

I’ll tell you who Donald J. Trump reminds me of in how he operates and does business:

Cillizza and I are both Gen-Xers and we both remember the 1980s and 1990s fairly well. There was a popular ABC sitcom back then called Growing Pains. Kirk Cameron (who perhaps is famous for different reasons today) played Mike Seaver, the oldest child in Seaver family. His character was an immature, underachiever, born to be professional conman:

You could catch Mike Seaver redhanded walking out of store with a truck load of unpaid for merchandise, on videotape and he could lie his way out of that. He would say the truck is not his, someone stole his receipt, he would claim a casher ranged him up but now the cashier has either forgotten that, or is lying about not ringing him up in the first place.

And 1 of Mike Seaver’s favorite cons that he used to get people to do things for him, that they don’t want to do, or wouldn’t do for him voluntarily, would be tell his sister or brother: “Let’s flip a coin to decide who does this”. But Carol or Ben wouldn’t know that Mike’s coin is a one-sided coin and Mike always picks the correct side. It always comes up tails or heads.

To make a long example and reference shorter: Donald Trump also plays one-sided coin as well… but he always picks the wrong side, which is why he screws up so badly. He’s like the head football coach, whose team never even bothers to practice, let alone put any game plan together:

So no thought put into the costs of unilateral, across the board tariffs on everyone, (except Russia, of course) and the economy retracts 1st quarter 2025.

President Trump talked about firing Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell a couple weeks ago, even though he legally can’t fire Chairman Powell… the Stock Market suffers a huge loss that day and the President backtracks on that the following say. And then are many more examples like that.

My point here is Donald Trump’s off the cuff, make things up, take things as they come, strategy, works for him as an entertainer and reality TV star. But it didn’t work for him as a businessman. How many 6 time bankrupt successful businessman do you know of, who has to rely on the tax code and all the credits and deductions in it, just so he can pay his bills are you aware of? And it’s not working as President of the United States either. It didn’t work the first time and he’s now more unpopular than ever.

Source:The New Democrat

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Kasie Hunt: Kevin Hassett: Suppliers Bear The Tariff, Not US Consumer

“CNN’s Kasie Hunt and White House National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett discuss auto tariffs, the ongoing trade war and Amazon’s tariff charge.”

Source:CNN talking to Donald Trump’s economic propagandist Kevin Hassett.

From CNN

From The Hill:

“National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett defended President Trump’s sweeping global tariffs that have stoked concerns about the United States economy.

During a Sunday interview on ABC’s “This Week,” Hassett said he doesn’t believe there will be a “big effect on the consumer in the U.S.,” noting that more than 50 countries are also “coming to the table” to negotiate…

From The Hill

At risk of knowing the answer to my own question here: do you have to lose your brain, first, before you are even qualified to work for Donald Trump for anything? 15-20 years ago… even 10 years ago, Kevin Hassett was essentially a neoconservative supply sider on economic policy. He was someone who believed in open markets, tax cuts pay for themselves, deficits doesn’t matter… this is what he believed back then. He was someone who also didn’t like tariffs at all because he knows they’re not just taxes, but middle class tax hikes. And he goes from that to saying: “Suppliers bear the tariff, not US consumer”.

And if Mr. Hassett said that under oath, he probably technically could avoid a perjury charge when he says that it’s the suppliers bear the costs of the tariffs… But what he leaves out is that they only bear at first. Then they pass them down to their consumers.

So when the U.S. Government passes tariffs on another country, (like the People’s Republic of China) 2 things happen:

their products become more expensive in America because it’s not Chinese companies, or the PRC Government that’s going to eat those costs. It will be the American consumer.

And then 2nd, China starts sending fewer of their products to America, because now they’re too expensive because of the tariffs for most Americans and they take their business somewhere else, which weakens the supply chain in America.

What I’m giving you is really an economics 101 lesson that Mr. Hassett probably got in college 40 years ago. But he’s either forgotten that (because to work for Donald Trump, you have to lose your brain, first) or, (and this is my guess) he’s simply lying for his boss on national TV.

Source:The New Democrat

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Jesse Dollemore: Karoline Leavitt Talks About ARRESTING SUPREME COURT JUSTICES!!!

“Jesse talks about the interaction between Fox News’s Peter Doocy and White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt when Doocy asked if the White House was considering arresting Justices on the United States Supreme Court.”

Source:Jesse Dollemore with a look Dictator Don’s chief political propagandist, Karoline Leavitt. I wonder if her parents know that she skips kindergarten class every day to work at The White House.

From Jesse Dollemore

This is obviously very easy for me to say because I’m not a judge (Federal or otherwise) or a law enforcement officer or agent, prosecutor, etc. But we have a presidential administration that doesn’t believe in the rule of law or the Constitution. They only believe in the word and judgment of 1 man. Just like the national political cult that they are. So when I say something like:

“It’s your duty as a government official, especially if you are in law enforcement or in the judiciary, to stand up for the rule of law and the Constitution, even if that puts your own individual freedom at risk, you have to do that for the sake of your own country”.

That might sound something like: “Easy for you to say. You are not putting your own ass on the line here”.

Which is true. But if they can arrest judges simply because they don’t like the decisions that they make, they could arrest podcasters and bloggers for the opinions that they give and facts that they share.

But as long as we have law enforcement officials, prosecutors, judges, and members of Congress standing up for the rule of law and the Constitution, as long as we’re doing these things collectively… every time DOJ brings a bogus (to be real kind) case against someone and they do that simply because they don’t like what that person has to say or how they’re dong their jobs, but not for actually doing something illegal, we’ll all be protected from Donald Trump’s reality TV big government. And he’ll never become a king or dictator in America. And all these bogus (again, being kind) cases will get tossed out like the pieces of trash that they are.

Source:The New Democrat

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Michele Tafoya: Crisis? What Crisis?

“What is the Biggest Problem in America?
Is there a single one?

Numerous polls suggest there are many issues troubling people these days, but some issues rank higher than others.

As usual, the economy ranks high on most voters’ list of concerns. It is the one area that affects us all.

But the economy won’t mean a thing to anyone if America commits suicide. If we continue to focus on our immutable differences, ignore signs of social and cultural decline, and cave into Leftist and socialist ideology, we could find ourselves in a dark and scary place.

Ronald Reagan saw America as a “Shining city on a hill.” It baffles me as to why so many in this country seem to want this place tarnished and ransacked. Last week’s episodes examined what brought us to this stormy time. And we got the inside scoop about the making of “Reagan…

Source:Michele Tafoya from Minnesota. She should’ve stuck with sports.

From Michele Tafoya

Perhaps someone can explain to me (and good luck with this) how someone who is a clear Donald Trump and MAGA supporter, (whether Michele Tafoya has ever admitted that or not) now sounds like Jimmy Carter. If MAGA agrees with each other on anything other than that Donald Trump is not just better than Jesus Christ, but God himself, they agree that they hate President Carter. And yet you hear or read (depending on how you are getting this) 1 of their supporters say:

“Numerous polls suggest there are many issues troubling people these days, but some issues rank higher than others.

As usual, the economy ranks high on most voters’ list of concerns. It is the one area that affects us all.

But the economy won’t mean a thing to anyone if America commits suicide. If we continue to focus on our immutable differences, ignore signs of social and cultural decline, and cave into…

So in July of 1979, America was essentially trying to deal with an economic nightmare. Not just the economy was headed in recession, (which is bad enough for most politicians) but even if you were making a good living back in summer of 79, the basic necessities were too expensive for most Americans, because of double figure inflation and interest rates. Even if you could afford enough energy for your home, cars, business, etc… there wasn’t enough to go around. You had to like get on a waiting list or something, just to fill up your car. And President Carter knew all of this and decided to give a speech about it. It was called the “malaise speech” by network news and others. But it as his “crisis of confidence speech. And this is some of what he was talking about:

“The threat is nearly invisible in ordinary ways.

It is a crisis of confidence.

It is a crisis that strikes at the very heart and soul and spirit of our national will. We can see this crisis in the growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation.

The erosion of our confidence in the future is threatening to destroy the social and the political fabric of America.

The confidence that we have always had as a people is not simply some romantic dream or a proverb in a dusty book that we read just on the Fourth of July. It is the idea which founded our nation and has guided our development as a people. Confidence in the future has supported everything else — public institutions and private enterprise, our own families, and the very Constitution of the United States. Confidence has defined our course and has served as a link between generations. We’ve always believed in something called progress. We’ve always had a faith that the days of our children would be better than our own.

Our people are losing that faith, not only in government itself but in the ability as citizens to serve as the ultimate rulers and shapers of our democracy. As a people we know our past and we are proud of it. Our progress has been part of the living history of America, even the world. We always believed that we were part of a great movement of humanity itself called democracy, involved in the search for freedom; and that belief has always strengthened us in our purpose. But just as we are losing our confidence in the future, we are also beginning to close the door on our past.

In a nation that was proud of hard work, strong families, close-knit communities, and our faith in God, too many of us now tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption. Human identity is no longer defined by what one does, but by what one owns. But we’ve discovered that owning things and consuming things does not satisfy our longing for meaning. We’ve learned that piling up material goods cannot fill the emptiness of lives which have no confidence or purpose…

From American Rhetoric

If you were an average American back in 1979 and you watched and listened to President Carter’s speech that night… you probably wanted to hear the President talk about what we could do to bring down inflation, interest rates, produce and get more affordable energy. But instead what you got from the President of the United States, was:

“In a nation that was proud of hard work, strong families, close-knit communities, and our faith in God, too many of us now tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption. Human identity is no longer defined by what one does, but by what one owns. But we’ve discovered that owning things and consuming things does not satisfy our longing for meaning. We’ve learned that piling up material goods cannot fill the emptiness of lives which have no confidence or purpose.”

That’s what President Carter’s response to Americans concerns about the cost of living and not just the cost of energy, but the fact that there wasn’t enough energy to go around for everyone, even if you could afford it. His response to Americans who had these concerns was to blame them for their own problems and that he was powerless or unwilling to do anything about them. So when Michele Tafoya says:

“As usual, the economy ranks high on most voters’ list of concerns. It is the one area that affects us all.

But the economy won’t mean a thing to anyone if America commits suicide. If we continue to focus on our immutable differences, ignore signs of social and cultural decline…

I think of President Jimmy Carter from July 15th, of 1979, even though I was 3 years old at that point and obviously have no memory of that speech.

And then my second response here is, imagine if Kamala Harris was President of the United States right now and the economy was in the exact same condition as it is now and a President Harris had the same job approval and economic numbers that President Trump has now: would MAGA be talking about the “the state of American culture” and our “our crisis in American culture”? Of course not. They would be talking about how bad the economy is and probably calling for President’s Harris’s impeachment right now.

Source:The New Democrat

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Bill Scher: Budget Reconciliation Could Be the Beginning of The End of The Republican Party

“Civil War: Steve Bannon and House Speaker Mike Johnson represent dueling factions of the President’s coalition. Asked by a reporter on Wednesday if he supported a millionaire’s tax, President Trump replied, “I think it would be very disruptive because a lot of the millionaires would leave the country.” Credit: Associated Press

“Presidential campaigns are like MRIs for the soul,” said David Axelrod, Barack Obama’s former campaign strategist. I believe a corollary is that the budget reconciliation process is like an MRI for the soul of a political party.

The filibuster-proof process often begins with assumptions of party unity on major issues members and activists, only to discover fissures festering under the surface.

In 2017, Republicans found out the hard way they were not united around repealing the Affordable Care Act. After that reconciliation bill dramatically failed on the Senate floor with John McCain’s famous thumbs down, Republicans recovered with passage of a different reconciliation bill on the issue that had long kept the GOP together: tax cuts.

Eight years later, Donald Trump is again president, Republicans are again in control of both chambers, and they again struggle to reach a consensus around health care. The House budget resolution—nonbinding legislation but a necessary step in the reconciliation process—instructed the committee with jurisdiction over Medicaid to come up with $880 billion in spending cuts. But the Senate version did not follow suit, and several House Republicans signaled they wouldn’t vote for Medicaid cuts that large in the final bill.

It is not surprising that Republicans still lack unity on health care. The Affordable Care Act remains popular, but improving health care is a complicated subject, and complexity is not a strong suit of the modern GOP. Trump ran in 2024 claiming to have only
It is surprising that Republicans dove back into the health care thicket by making potentially unpopular Medicaid cuts a central focus of their budget reconciliation bill. And more surprising than that their other focus—taxes—is not uniting the party as it used to.

The Washington Post reported earlier this week:

President Donald Trump’s inner circle is weighing whether the White House should back raising taxes on Americans earning more than $1 million per year as part of the GOP’s 2025 tax legislation, according to two administration officials and three other people briefed on the matter.

While the prospect of a tax hike has gotten a largely chilly reception among Republicans on Capitol Hill, Vice President JD Vance and budget director Russell Vought have expressed openness to the idea in internal administration deliberations and are viewed as supportive, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private talks. Stephen K. Bannon, who served as the president’s chief strategist during his first term, has been publicly urging Trump to endorse the plan in part as a way to defang Democratic attacks on the GOP as the party of “concepts of a plan” regarding health care, an unintentionally farcical acknowledgment that there was little political upside in offering health care policy details.

the rich.

The Republican Party’s branding as the party of tax cuts has already been besmirched by Trump’s tariffs, which, in effect, are taxes on imported goods. But no Republican in Congress voted to impose those tariffs; Trump did it alone. The prospect of voting for an income tax hike is far more combustible for the Republican rank-and-file, so much so that Trump quickly put out the fire.

Asked by a reporter on Wednesday if he supported a millionaire’s tax, Trump replied, “I think it would be very disruptive because a lot of the millionaires would leave the country.” This is a bogus excuse. The Wall Street Journal noted, “To escape taxation, wealthy Americans would need to renounce their citizenship and pay capital-gains taxes as if they sold their assets. Even if they did that and moved abroad, they would still pay U.S. taxes on U.S.-sourced income.” But Trump’s public rationale is less important than the position itself. He appears unwilling to instigate an intra-party confrontation over taxing the wealthy.

However, the mere introduction of the idea may prove to be a fatal toxin injected into the party’s bloodstream.

Low taxes are not just an issue for the Republican Party; it’s the defining issue. As I cited earlier this month, the late conservative commentator Robert Novak once declared, “God put the Republican Party on Earth to cut taxes. If they don’t do that, they have no useful function.”

But Steve Bannon, the former Trump administration adviser and MAGA movement leader, has promoted a reorientation of the GOP away from the “donor class.” In January, Bannon told conservative New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, “I don’t want to increase taxes on the wealthy just because I believe in soak the rich. Maybe I do, but I would not want to be part of policy. I want to do that to get our financial house in order because we just can’t keep borrowing a trillion dollars every 100 days.”

(Bannon also told Douthat that he supports “significant spending cuts, starting in defense.” In keeping with his supposed working-class allegiance, “Medicare and Social Security are off to the side.” On his podcast in February, Bannon offered a mixed message on Medicaid cuts: “Get into that discretionary spending. Get into the Pentagon. Get into Medicaid. You got to be careful because a lot of MAGAs on Medicaid … You just can’t take a meat axe to it though I would love to.”)

Bannon could be discounted as just a loud guy with a podcast. But as the Washington Post story suggests, he appears to have a sympathetic ear with Vice President Vance, who is positioned to shape the post-Trump GOP. The Post reported: “Vance’s openness to higher taxes in some circumstances has provoked alarm among some conservatives given his strong position to claim the GOP presidential nomination in 2028. In 2023, Vance said he opposes further cuts to the corporate tax rate, which the president’s 2017 tax law lowered from 35 percent to 21 percent. While in the Senate, Vance also explored bipartisan measures to close tax loopholes for large businesses.”

And a few members of the House suggested they were willing to raise taxes on the wealthy. NBC News reported that Freedom Caucus member Chip Roy of Texas said in an interview, “he’s open to any policies that prevent new deficits, including allowing higher tax rates.” Representative Andy Harris, the Freedom Caucus chair, told Fox News, “Before the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the highest tax bracket was 39.6%; it was less than $1 million. Ideally, what we could do – again, if we can’t find spending reductions – we say, ‘OK, let’s restore that higher bracket, let’s set it at maybe $2 million income and above’ to help pay for the rest of the president’s agenda.”

These voices don’t come close to representing most of the House Republican Conference. Speaker Mike Johnson surely was speaking for the majority when he told Fox News on Wednesday, “I don’t think we’re raising taxes on anybody. What we’re trying to do is prevent the largest tax increase in U.S. history.”

The second sentence was likely a passive-aggressive shot at Trump’s tariffs, revealing the intra-party tensions and intellectual incoherence, threatening the party’s fundamental identity. Bannon argues for higher taxes on the wealthy to reorient the party away from the “donor class” and toward the “working class.” But Bannon is a huge supporter of Trump’s tariffs, which are regressive tax hikes that are disliked by a majority of all Americans.

Both sides of the GOP tax divide are trying to do the impossible. Bannon’s populists want to balance the budget, but, as Bannon told Douthat, “we’re not going to do it on the back of the little guy.” So he supports spending cuts and tax increases on the wealthy, but also tariffs and, to some degree, Medicaid cuts.” Traditional Republicans like Johnson want to balance the budget, but they refuse to raise taxes on the wealthy, which pushes them towards politically dangerous, draconian spending cuts for popular programs like Medicaid and (for some) Social Security and Medicare. On Wednesday Bannon, recognizing that he has likely lost the argument for a tax increase on the wealthy, vented on his podcast, “The simple math is: Unless you raise the taxes at the upper bracket, the math doesn’t work.”

Both camps seem to have forgotten the politically astute lesson from former Vice President Dick Cheney: “Deficits don’t matter.” Cheney’s running mate, George W. Bush, didn’t worry about deficits, pushed through traditionally conservative tax cuts, and tacked on a not-so-conservative expansion of Medicare to cover prescription drug costs en route to a re-election victory in 2004—the only time a Republican presidential candidate won an outright majority of the popular vote since 1988. (Then, in his second term, Bush tried to privatize Social Security, and his popularity sank.)

Prioritizing extreme deficit reduction forces Republicans to take positions that in one way or another threaten their coalition of business-class and working-class voters. This is why a budget reconciliation bill isn’t quickly and neatly falling into place.

In the worst-case scenario, Republicans’ reconciliation bill effort will collapse, and in the ugly aftermath, their intra-party rifts will harden into existential schisms. More likely, a reconciliation bill with tax cuts of some sort will be stitched together, and a veneer of unity will remain for the time being. But Republicans will have to worry about how long that unity can last.

The last major party to disintegrate was the Whig Party, which formed in opposition to Andrew Jackson’s aggressive exertions of executive power. Once Jackson was long gone and slavery became the dominant political issue, the Whigs no longer had a reason to exist, and so they didn’t.

Since the Civil War, Republicans and Democrats have found ways to adapt to changing political circumstances—hot wars, cold wars, economic crashes, civil rights movements—and stay relevant. Today’s Republican Party is in a delicate position because the changing political circumstances are its own president and his allies violating its longstanding principles and losing public support in the process.

In recent years, the GOP coalition has been held up by trust in Trump’s economic know-how, devotion to tax cuts, and culture war fearmongering. The faction of “Never Trumpers” during the first Trump administration wasn’t significant enough to prevent Trump’s takeover of the GOP. But the first Trump administration delivered a significant tax cut package and a few Supreme Court justices, to boot. This time, Trump’s tariffs have undermined the first two pillars, and the open discussion of tax hikes on the wealthy further destabilizes the second.

Is culture war fearmongering enough to justify and sustain a party’s existence? If not, then it won’t.”

Source:The Washington Monthly with a look at Steve Bannon’s MAGA Party. Mike Johnson is just a lieutenant or captain in Mr. Bannon’s Washington.

From The Washington Monthly

I guess where I would disagree with Bill Scher here is that I think when the Republican Party fell into line with Donald Trump in 2016-17, that was “the end of the Republican Party”.

Let’s just start with the fact that to be a “Republican” (in ideology, not registration) you have to first at least believe in the concept of a republic. If you don’t believe in the separation of church and state, or you want an official religion in your country, (whatever the religion is) you are not a “Republican”.

I was talking to my mother today about the Canadian Federal elections. She asked me who do I think is going to win. I said probably the Liberal Party. And then I asked her: “Do you want to know why Donald Trump doesn’t want the Conservatives to win in Canada?” She responded by saying: “Why?” And I told her because Donald Trump is not a Conservative. Canadian Conservatives probably remind Donald Trump of the so-called moderate Republicans in Congress. And he simply hates those people.

I mean that’s what Donald Trump’s political party is now. Sure, there are members of the “Republican Party” today who are still Conservatives, including in the Congress. Senator Rand Paul from Kentucky, Representative Mike Lawler from New York and perhaps a few others. But this is Donald Trump’s and Steve Bannon’s party now.

The MAGA Party is not:

pro-business

pro-rule of law

they are not a conservative constitutionalist party.

This is a party that puts cultural over everything else. And if they believe in conserving anything its, it’s Blue-Collar Joe from Youngstown, or whatever small, blue-collar town you want to name in America. They want to conserve small town, blue-collar culture in America. The MAGA Party is completely:

anti-cosmopolitan

anti-pluralist

anti-multiculturalism

anti-education,

anti-elitism.

They’re basically opposed to anything that has made America great and what made us Ronald Reagan’s shining city on a hill.

As far as the reconciliation process in Congress, this is what I posted about that in March and I have nothing to add to that right now:

“This key point from Bill Scher is also my point as well:

“Today’s GOP legislative agenda is severely constricted despite having a majority in both chambers. Congressional Republicans are mainly focused on what they can stuff into a reconciliation bill, which under Senate rules is filibuster-proof but can only include budget-related provisions. They are angling for radical cuts to Medicaid to finance huge tax cuts for the wealthy and may succeed. But we know from the Build Back Better bust of 2021 and the failed attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act in 2017 that passing party-line reconciliation bills is harder than it looks. ”

That fact that Congressional Republicans need reconciliation between the House and Senate, to avert a Democratic filibuster in the Senate, is all you need to know how effective the filibuster is.

And the fact that Republicans need around 900 billion dollars in budget cuts to pay for their 880 billion dollar economic package, that includes new military spending, border security, and new tax cuts for wealthy individuals and corporations, as well as to extend their tax cuts from 2017, that mostly went to wealthy individuals and corporations, proves that the filibuster is still alive and well.

Without the filibuster, Congressional Republicans wouldn’t need reconciliation. They could just borrow the 880 billion or so and leave Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, and Defense alone. Which would cause other problems for them as well. Which could be part of a future discussion.

But the fact that Congressional Republicans need 880 billion either in new cuts, or in new revenue, to pay for their economic package and how unpopular those cuts would be and politically painful they would be, especially for mainstream House Republicans, who have a solid number of Democrats and Independents in their districts, proves that the filibuster is still alive and well and very effective right now.”

From The New Democrat

Source:The New Democrat

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Sam Stein & Sarah Longwell: Donald Trump Goes Off The Rails in WILD New Interview

“Sarah Longwell and Sam Stein share their takes on Donald Trump’s wild interview with Time Magazine, which exposes his incoherent plans for immigration, tariffs, and the economy.”

Source:The Bulwark with Sam Stein & Sarah Longwell. They’re not talking about Donald Trump’s latest sandwich.

From The Bulwark

The TIME interview with the President of the United States:

“President Donald Trump emerges through a pair of handsome wooden doors on the third floor of the White House. On his way down the wide, carpeted staircase, he passes portraits of his predecessors. Nixon is opposite the landing outside the residence. Two flights down, he has swapped the placement of Clinton and Lincoln, moving a massive painting of the latter into the main entrance hall of the mansion. “Lincoln is Lincoln, in all fairness,” he explains. “And I gave Clinton a good space.” But it’s the portrait around the corner that Trump wants to show off.

It’s a giant painting of a photograph—that photograph, the famous image of Trump, his fist raised, blood trickling down his face, after the attempt on his life last July at a rally in Butler, Pa. It hangs across the foyer from a portrait of Obama, in tacit competition. When they bring tours in, everyone wants to look at this one, Trump says, gesturing to the painting of himself, in technicolor defiance. “100 to 1, they prefer that,” he says. “It’s incredible.”

Making his way out to the Rose Garden, he walks up the inclined colonnade toward the Oval Office, describing the other alterations to the decor, both inside and out. His imprint on his workspace is apparent. The molding and mantels have gold accents now, and he has filled the walls with portraits of other presidents in gilded frames. He has hung an early copy of the Declaration of Independence behind a set of blue curtains. The box with a red button that allows Trump to summon Diet Cokes is back in its place on the Resolute desk, behind which stands a new battalion of flags, including one for the U.S. Space Force, the military branch he established. A map of the “Gulf of America,” as Trump has rechristened the Gulf of Mexico, was propped on a stand nearby…

You can read the rest of yourself at TIME Magazine

When Donald Trump talks to anyone other than FOX News, Newsmax, some far-right, MAGA podcaster, or someone like that, he’s forced to listen to real questions. Instead looking at people standing in line to kiss his ass, or people in front of him paying him to kiss his ass.

So when the President had to deal with real journalists, he’s not getting questions like:

“Mr President, why do you love America so much?”

Mr. President, you still think America can be saved from the Un-Americans?”

Mr, President, what made you so successful as a businessman and reality TV star?”

He instead gets real questions like:

“Mr. President, the Supreme Court ruled 9-0 against you in the deportation case, saying you have to give these immigrants due-process. Are you currently enforcing that order?”

Or:

“Mr. President, you were elected President in 2024 to bring down the cost of living in America. But during your first 90 plus days as President, groceries and the cost of living in general has gotten more expensive. What’s your plan to make life more affordable for average Americans?’

And the problem is, Donald Trump doesn’t have any good answers to any of these questions. The Stock Market has lost 10 trillion on his watch. Imagine that happening to either President Biden or President Kamala Harris, if she were President right now. Thanks to the President’s trade war. But also prices are going up, people are stocking up right now because they’re worried that basic necessities will be too expensive for them a few months from now, which is hurting the supply chain in the economy.

So President Trump just goes back to the only play that he knows by heart and just talks about how great he thinks he is and how great he thinks America will be, with nothing to show why he believes those things, because he has nothing to show anyone right now.

Right now Donald Trump is like the incompetent lawyer in the courtroom, who has no case, whose client is obviously guilty and he’s simply just trying to buy time, before his client is either convicted, or he gets sanctioned by the judge.

Source:The New Democrat

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