Plus, Democrats will regret not stripping Trump’s dangerous war powers, and more...
Wednesday January 8, 2025 |
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After Trump unleashes some wildly crazed ideas to reporters, an expert in authoritarian rhetoric says Trump revealed deeper intentions that are dangerously alarming and designed to normalize the abnormal. |
By The Daily Blast with Greg Sargent |
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Sponsored by Industrial Policy for the United States |
From Trump's tariffs to Biden's CHIPS Act, industrial policy is back after decades of laissez-faire approaches. Here’s the new game plan to restore good middle-class jobs, grow valuable industries like semiconductors and robotics, and preserve our national security interests. |
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Biden and Congress squandered a chance to end the legal underpinnings of the forever war. The president-elect will once again reap the powers afforded to him. |
The president-elect says he’ll pardon January 6 rioters, many of whom assaulted police at the U.S. Capitol that day. Why won’t the unions condemn it? There’s a simple answer. |
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On February 12, TNR’s editor Michael Tomasky and staff writers Timothy Noah and Greg Sargent will host an important event to help you prepare for Trump 2.0. Live streamed from Washington, D.C., it will gather top minds in politics and culture determined to mitigate the possible damages of a second Trump term. |
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Donald Trump will not be going to jail. But his weaselly legal arguments must not be allowed to stand this week. |
If Strout was once a master at portraying quiet lives in a big way, she now relies on easy plays for emotional connection and tidy resolution. |
Donald Trump is once again begging the Supreme Court to let him get away with everything. |
By Ellie Quinlan Houghtaling |
Former Representative Matt Gaetz has decided what his next act will be. |
The far right is weaponizing a doctrine that granted rights and liberties in order to snuff out the citizenship of anyone who isn’t a white man. |
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Experience Ireland and Northern Ireland through a unique "dual narrative" perspective, with Catholic and Protestant tour guides sharing their communities’ histories and stories. You’ll enrich your understanding of the conflict’s personal nature, while gaining insight into how peace was built and the hard work so many are still doing to sustain it today. |
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