Politics

Read about the latest political news, views and analysis

How the Supreme Court lost its real diversity

If you followed the nominations of Brett Kavanaugh and Merrick Garland, or the news after Stephen Breyer announced his retirement, you might have concluded that the country has never been more divided on what makes a good Supreme Court justice. Kavanaugh’s hearings were among the most divisive and brutal in history, but he at least had a hearing: Garland’s nomination was dead on arrival in the Senate. The selection of justices has become a preeminent political issue.

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Biden’s never-ending infrastructure week

Biden’s never-ending infrastructure week During the Trump years, “infrastructure week” became a lame Washington in-joke. “It’s infrastructure week!” someone would tweet sarcastically to underscore the administration’s ongoing failure to deliver the bipartisan infrastructure package that Trump promised early in his presidency. Biden has reversed the Beltway gag. The joke in Trump’s Washington was that it was that the president’s failure to deliver the bill meant that, Groundhog Day-style, it was always infrastructure week. In Biden’s Washington, it’s always infrastructure week because the president has failed to deliver on anything other than a bipartisan infrastructure package.

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Sorry, Freedom Convoy — fundraisers are only for left-wing criminals

It seems to be harder to donate money to the Canadian truckers protesting their country's vaccine mandate than it is to keep Hunter Biden out of a strip club. After GoFundMe seized millions of dollars raised on its platform for the Freedom Convoy, Christian crowdfunding site GiveSendGo stepped in and enabled donors to give nearly $10 million. GiveSendGo was promptly hacked and the personal information of 93,000 donors to the Freedom Convoy released to the public. The media — who largely resisted touching the Hunter Biden laptop story because it allegedly contained "hacked" information — jumped on the opportunity to shame and harass private citizens for donating to causes of which they don't approve.

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Freedom isn’t ‘white’

An op-ed in the Washington Post about the Canadian truckers’ protest tells us that the idea of freedom is “White” with a capital W and that the truckers’ belief in freedom is “a key component of White supremacy.” This is about as sensible as saying that the idea of gravity is “English” or that the Post reports the news. True, Newton’s apple fell in England and the Post looks like a newspaper, but gravity is universal. The same goes for stupidity, though that takes many forms, and for the impulse to be free, though that too takes many forms, some of them stupid. Taylor Dysart, the author of this insult to reason, is a white PhD student at private Ivy League university. Color me shocked.

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The Clinton campaign’s plot to politically assassinate Trump

There is a word for secretly collecting information about enemies or competitors to use against them. According to the latest court filing by Special Counsel John Durham, the Hillary Clinton campaign surreptitiously and likely illegally reached into protected White House and Trump communications data to try and show some link between Trump and Russia. The Clinton campaign during the election hid from FBI, CIA and the media that it was the source of the information gathered. Durham doesn't use the word "spy," but that in no way changes what happened. The recent filing relates to Durham’s September indictment of Michael Sussmann, an attorney who represented the Clinton campaign while at the Perkins Coie law firm.

The meaning of the truckers

What Canada’s truckers reveal about America’s realignment Every now and then, you can see the political realignment happening before your eyes: impossible-to-ignore examples of shifting voter coalitions and ideological sympathies that render old rules and assumptions redundant. And so it is seems with the Canadian trucker protests — and our reaction to them south of the border. The truckers’ proximate grievance is a Canadian mandate that would mean unvaccinated truckers would have to quarantine for two weeks every time they returned from the United States. But it’s about more than that too, of course: broader frustration at a whole regime of Covid rules.

The art of the Covid protest song

On February 14, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau issued an edict granting himself emergency powers to rule Canada by martial law with the intent of making all those trucks back up. He wants to confiscate them along with freezing truckers’ bank accounts. His soldiery is not altogether with him. Ottawa’s chief of police, Peter Sloly, abruptly resigned. Things aren’t looking bright for North America’s newest autocracy. But, OK.  Let’s back up. On December 18, 2020 a French musician known as HK (Kaddour Hadadi) and his group the Saltimbanks released on video a song titled “Danser encore” (“Dancing Again”).

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No, the Democrats’ problem isn’t their messaging

Why ‘correcting the record’ won’t save the Democrats Leaked documents from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee warn that Republican attacks have proved “alarmingly potent” in battleground districts. The memo warns that voters see Democrats as “preachy,” “judgmental” and “focused on culture wars.” Politico reports that the document is used by the DCCC to encourage incumbents not to ignore or deflect from what it calls GOP “culture war” attacks but to respond more directly. On a range of subjects from critical race theory to defunding the police, operatives argue that candidates should “correct the record” because “changing the subject risked confirming suspicions.

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Prince Andrew coughs up

Court documents filed on Tuesday morning by counsel for Virginia (Roberts) Giuffre revealed she had settled her high-profile human trafficking case against Prince Andrew. Although the documents omit both an admission of guilt by Andrew and a disclosure of the settlement sum, the Telegraph asserts that the beleaguered prince will pay Giuffre an estimated £12 million ($16 million) to resolve her case under New York’s Child Victims Act, and that the money will come from his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. The parties informed the court that they had reached a “settlement in principle” and anticipated filing a stipulation of dismissal of the case within the next month.

Little Justin and the secession of the plebs

Justin Trudeau, still the prime minister of Canada, is the first person in history to invoke the Emergencies Act, a law enacted in the 1980s to allow the government to take special, temporary action to deal with an “urgent and critical situation” that “seriously endangers the lives, health or safety of Canadians.” Little Justin is embarrassed by the thousands of truckers in Canada who are protesting, first of all, the country’s vaccine mandate but, more to the point, the government’s intrusion into the lives and livelihoods of the people. Justin is embarrassed. That’s the real national emergency. In response, Trudeau is transforming Canada into a police state. People with tow trucks, he said, will be “coerced” into moving the rigs of recalcitrant truckers.

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How crony capitalism makes tax season hell

For most Americans, tax season is accompanied by a soundtrack of wailing and gnashing of teeth. According to Pew Research Center, 56 percent of Americans hate or dislike doing their taxes, and 31 percent of those respondents say the process is too complicated. Filing your taxes is expensive, in both time and money: ProPublica reported in 2019 that "Americans spend an estimated 1.7 billion hours and $31 billion doing their taxes each year." When you're elbow-deep in documents and receipts, poring over tiny boxes filled with numbers and second-guessing whether you did, in fact, get married last year, you might ask yourself: does it really have to be this hard? The answer is no. Many other countries, like Germany, Japan, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, have "exact-withholding" systems.

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WATCH: Does AOC want to ‘euthanize the hell’ out of Texas?

Cockburn is a great admirer of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. In an age when even stand-up comics allow themselves to be intimidated by the woke scolds of the left, AOC is a one-woman Alamo, fearlessly defending her right to talk absolute gibberish. Republicans like to think that Democrats don’t know the country outside their blue-state cities, but AOC isn’t afraid to slum it in red America. In January, when her constituents in the Bronx were enduring the double blow of a New York winter and Covid checks before they could get indoors, AOC went clubbing in Florida, the magic kingdom of Ron DeSantis, went maskless in a drag bar and picked up a case of Covid as a souvenir.

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The flailing Chuck Schumer

What’s up with Chuck? The first six weeks of 2022 haven’t gone especially well for senior Democrats in Washington. But has anyone had a worse start to the year than Chuck Schumer? First, there was the doomed election legislation push. Neither the White House nor Schumer got remotely close to persuading Democratic holdouts of the need to amend the filibuster, while the Senate majority leader’s strategy, in which he insisted on a vote on the bill without debate or amendments, only made things worse. Then there’s the awkward silence on Build Back Better — or whatever is going to take its place. At the end of last year, a frustrated Schumer promised an up-or-down vote on the bill’s provisions “earlier in the new year.

Mask off, DC

The nation’s capital is finally dropping its vaccine and mask mandates…mostly. DC mayor Muriel Bowser reluctantly followed the science and ended the vaccine requirement for the district’s businesses effective Tuesday — rendering the city’s “get the vax to see the acts” campaign null and void. The decision to require proof of vaccination now falls to individual businesses in the city — a civil rights victory, surely, given that just under a quarter of DC’s black residents remain unvaccinated. Bowser’s move comes after a lengthy battle with venues such as The Big Board on H Street, which had its license suspended by the ABC Board earlier this month for refusing to enforce the mandate.

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Big Tech covers up Biden’s crack pipe giveaway

A throwaway line item in an otherwise innocuous spending package unveiled one way the Biden administration and the Democratic party sees "racial equity." The Washington Free Beacon revealed a week ago that the Department of Health and Human Services would be distributing free crack pipes to drug users to promote hygiene and advance racial equity. The cost was around $30 million and the program is similar to what left-wing fiefdoms like Seattle and San Francisco already do. The story had all the elements of tabloid gold — even better in clickability than the last Biden crack pipe story: Hunter’s laptop.

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Biden on inflation: clueless or callous?

Biden on inflation: clueless or callous? Judging by the gracelessness with which he tends to respond to questions about rising prices, Joe Biden appears to understand that inflation is his biggest liability heading into this year’s midterm elections. It was a question about inflation that prompted the president to call Fox News reporter Peter Doocy “a stupid son of a bitch” last month. And when Lester Holt asked the president about inflation in an interview that aired yesterday, he responded snarkily, “Well, you’re being a wise guy with me a little bit.” Forgive the humorless tone, but I suspect sassy clapbacks are not the best way for the president to answer questions about American households getting poorer in real terms under his stewardship of the economy.

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A plague of phony experts and elites

Quick: what do you think when someone tries to convince you of something by prefacing their remarks with the phase “Experts say”? I think of that rude, two-word imperative of Germanic origin that ends in “You.” As Laplace said in another context, it is par expériences nombreuses et funestes that I have this almost Pavlovian reaction. The “experts,” alas, are not expert, i.e, “possessing a high degree of skill in or knowledge of” a certain subject. For proof of my contention I offer the name of Anthony Fauci or the organization that glories in the acronym CDC, that is, the Centers for Disease Control. They are both a bit like Michael Avenatti, once championed everywhere as a genius and presidential material, but now universally exposed and discredited.

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Hanging up the MAGA hat

I’d like to state for the record that I’m officially sick of Donald Trump. Last Wednesday, Corey Lewandowski took to the airwaves with a bizarre announcement: Donald Trump is looking for someone to primary New Hampshire governor Chris Sununu. Lewandowski, who briefly ran Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, was speaking to Boston radio host Howie Carr. “The president is very unhappy with the chief executive of the state of New Hampshire, Chris Sununu,” said Mr. Lewandowski. “And Sununu, in the president’s estimation, is someone who’s never been loyal to him. And the president said it would be really great if somebody would run against him.” First of all, Sununu has always been fiercely loyal to Trump — much to the Eastern Establishment’s dismay.

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