Opinion · 119th Congress
Are Americans seeking justice tough enough to meet the moment?
And it’s not as though the hard work stopped in the years between the post-Civil War eight and Clyburn’s election in the 1990s.
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And it’s not as though the hard work stopped in the years between the post-Civil War eight and Clyburn’s election in the 1990s.
↵↵The speech's format was nothing new, mixing claims of massive success with claims of massive violence, the truth existing somewhere on the periphery.
↵↵But before the night was over, the president's Truth Social account posted a video on election integrity that closed with an offensive clip featuring the Obamas as apes.
↵↵Democrats, looking for an issue on which to take a stand against President Donald Trump and the Republican majorities in the House and Senate that have cut them out of the legislative process, insisted
Legendary Washington Post cartoonist Herblock repeatedly depicted Nixon emerging from the sewer covered in muck.
Trump himself, conjuring flashbacks to his most upset days as president on Twitter, fired off several posts on Truth Social — including a few that made little sense.
“A Massive Fraud of this type and magnitude allows for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution,” Trump wrote in a Dec. 3 Truth Social post.
A late September ABC News-Washington Post poll found that 52 percent of the electorate believes that Trump should be prosecuted, whether it’s for his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection, his mishandling of
But when it comes to post-presidencies, folks, we’re way beyond “Tricky Dick.” Nixon resigned the presidency at the behest of Republican leadership on Capitol Hill during the Watergate scandal.
In his Sept. 15 Truth Social post, he was referring to an op-ed penned by Scott, Cruz and Lee that called for a longer-term CR. But then Trump, again, lowered the boom on McConnell.
Meantime, on Truth Social … … The former president has shown he continues to lack the discipline of the Mattox Creek bald eagle.
Steve Schmidt, a longtime GOP strategist, went there in a recent Substack post.
After the opening day of the hearings in May 1973, Jules Witcover, in a front-page Washington Post story, noted the “five hours of mostly colorless and snail’s-pace testimony.”
In truth, Biden’s occasional verbal stumbles and overly blunt ad libs have been part of his political style for decades.
But, in truth, this shrewd decision can serve as a model for a big-tent crusade to preserve democracy during this time of deep fissures in our republic.
But Trump continues to get crucial support from people who are educated — the kind of people who, if they rejected Trump, would weaken him, encourage critics within the GOP, and turn the party back
Staff Ron Klain appears to be in charge as he stirs controversy with his penchant for tweets, while giving assurances to Democratic operatives that their progressive agenda is intact, as the New York Post
In an audio recording made by Washington Post reporters Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker during an interview for their book “I Alone Can Fix It,” Donald Trump described the crowd gathered for his pre-riot
Even the Trump team’s judicial maneuvers — almost all of them laughed out of court — seemed more like fundraising hustles rather than a well-grounded legal strategy.