Trump's War on America

Submitted by Ben Bache on

“Donald Trump is compromised,” Republican political consultant Stuart Stevens told former CNN news anchor Jim Acosta on January 19. “He’s acting as a functional asset of the Russian federation,” Stevens, who at one time served as Mitt Romney’s top campaign strategist continued. “And if you are a Republican senator and you’re going along with Donald Trump, he is compromising you….

The degree to which the Republican party has been compromised by Russia, I think, is one of the great underreported, understudied stories of our time. And it's been going on for a while. I mean, you go back to early warning signs, the way that they [Russia] funneled all this money into the NRA, and they were compromised by this, and then they clearly compromised the Heritage Foundation. And now you have that consistently for decades the single greatest antagonist to the Soviet Union and then an expansive Russian Federation was the most conservative element of the Republican party. And now it's the beating heart of the pro-Putin [constituency].... You don't say that you're a Ronald Reagan Republican, the guy that stood in front of [the Berlin wall and said] "Tear down the wall Mr. Gorbachev," and you go along with Donald Trump. No.  Either you're lying then or you're lying now. I think all this stuff that we put out as principles for the party were just marketing slogans.

The Awful Alliterative Bill

Submitted by Ben Bache on
On July 3, just hours before Trump’s vaunted deadline of July 4, the House of Representatives passed the 900-page domestic spending bill that Trump had christened with an alliterative name that we will not dignify here. The bill passed with all but two Republicans voting for it, and all Democrats voting against. Key elements of the bill include extending tax cuts passed in 2017 during the first Trump administration, new tax cuts for income on tips and overtime, and increased funding for defense and so-called border security. It also cuts approximately $1 trillion from Medicaid, and more from other government assistance to the poor. It phases out tax credits passed during the Biden administration for clean energy projects. And it increases the federal debt limit to $5 trillion “a measure Republicans are typically unwilling to support,” in the words of the New York Times, but “necessary to avert a federal default later this year.”