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Month: August 2025

If The Institutions All Fail…

Build some new ones

I think everyone knows that I’m appalled by the fact that all of our civilian institutions like universities, law firms, corporations, media companies etc are failing us in epic fashion.

This makes me feel like all may not be lost:

A group of well-known Washington lawyers is opening a law firm focused on challenging President Donald Trump’s executive orders and agency actions as he strives to dramatically reshape the federal government during his second term.

The Washington Litigation Group, a new boutique non-profit firm, is composed of seasoned attorneys, judges and former government employees who lost their jobs when the president took office – with some even emerging from retirement. Its services will be free to those looking to push back on Trump’s use of executive power, and the group has already begun representing the head of an independent agency fired by the president.

The group is led by Tom Green, former head of Sidley Austin’s white-collar practice and a veteran attorney who defended clients during the Watergate investigation and Iran-Contra affair.

Nathaniel Zelinsky, an attorney with experience practicing before federal appeals courts as well as the Supreme Court, joins the firm from Milbank and Hogan Lovells.While there are other firms tackling similar cases to the Washington Litigation Group, Zelinsky told CNN in a phone call that their group stands out because of the number of people who have come out of retirement to work for the firm.

“I think that makes the firm different from other folks who are out there who are trying to do this work, in the sense that, we have this collection of extraordinary individuals who have come out of retirement to provide their mentorship and guidance and strategic vision,” Zelinsky said.

Zelinsky said that the firm is expected to be active in litigation regarding the unlawful removal of civil servants, agency dissolution and white-collar defense.

It’s taken longer than it should but it’s something. I would have loved to see academia band together and media corporations create some kind of organization to fight Trump’s anti-DEI edicts and obvious extortion. But this is a start.

Get Ready

This fall is going to be lit

Gird yourselves:

When Congress returns from its lengthy August recess, lawmakers on Capitol Hill will only have a few weeks to work something out before the government runs out of funding at midnight on Sept. 30. 

And Senate Democrats will quickly have to make a decision. 

In the upper chamber, legislation to fund the government is subject to the filibuster and requires 60 votes. That means Republican leadership will need a handful of Democratic votes and won’t be able to avert a government shutdown without the help of their colleagues across the aisle.

Meanwhile, the White House has spent much of 2025 freezing funds Congress has already appropriated, essentially robbing from the legislative branch its power of the purse. In July, congressional Republicans voted through a recissions package, signaling their approval of a small sliver of President Donald Trump’s funding freezes using a legislative process that required only 50 votes. No Democrats voted for the bill. 

“Now you have a dynamic where Republicans in Congress can make cuts with 50 votes to things that had to be agreed to with 60 votes,” Devin O’Connor, senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, told TPM. “And that’s a really poisonous dynamic.”

That set of facts hangs over the budget process to come. 

The Democrats are finally playing hardball (for the moment) it who knows where they will end up. Read the whole thing to get the gist of the dynamic but here’s just a little taste:

Senate Democrats can decide that they will strike a deal with Republicans, eventually giving them the votes they need to avoid a government shutdown, and cooperate with what would likely be a lengthy, bipartisan appropriations process. That is what might have happened under normal circumstances, in bygone eras when the executive branch hadn’t been holding up congressionally appropriated funds. A group of Democrats could also join Republicans to support a short- or long-term continuing resolution (CR) to keep the government open.

Or Democrats could decide they want to stand up to the ongoing impoundment by the Trump administration and follow Warren’s urging, refusing to vote for legislation unless the White House guarantees that funds will be distributed as appropriated. Doing so could lead to a stalemate if the White House refuses to cooperate, putting the country on track for a government shutdown — which Republicans in Congress would surely attempt to blame on Democrats, despite their own unwillingness to stand up to Trump to protect Congress’ power of the purse.

Even if Democrats choose to cut a deal with Republicans, it will be very difficult to work out a bipartisan group of bills in the time frame senators will have following the August recess. The fiscal year ends on Sept. 30. 

But more significantly, it is unclear whether Republican senators could get the White House to agree to any deal they might strike with Democrats — especially one that attempts to mandate an end to the administration’s lawless funding freezes. Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Russell Vought has already said he wants a “less bipartisan” appropriations process, part of his defense of the Trump administration’s strategy of impoundment and rescissions packages. 

“You cannot make a deal with someone who doesn’t want to make a deal,” Bobby Kogan, senior director of federal budget policy at the Center for American Progress, told TPM. “It is not possible to force someone to make a deal with you.”

Even if Democrats could extract a deal from Senate Republicans, experts tell TPM, there are serious questions around whether Democrats can and should trust Republicans when it comes to any bipartisan deal they might make to fund the government.

“How can you actually make a deal if one side’s ready to do a partisan breaking of the deal through rescissions later,” Kogan said.

Read it all. This is complicated. But Dems could make a stand and do something really important. If they choose to. ..

Killing Progress

This may end up being the worst thing Trump has done:

The Department of Health and Human Services will cancel contracts and pull funding for some vaccines that are being developed to fight respiratory viruses like COVID-19 and the flu.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced in a statement Tuesday that 22 projects, totaling $500 million, to develop vaccines using mRNA technology will be halted.

Kennedy’s decision to terminate the projects is the latest in a string of decisions that have put the longtime vaccine critic’s doubts about shots into full effect at the nation’s health department. Kennedy has pulled back recommendations around the COVID-19 shots, fired the panel that makes vaccine recommendations, and refused to offer a vigorous endorsement of vaccinations as a measles outbreak worsened.

The health secretary criticized mRNA vaccines in a video on his social media accounts, explaining the decision to cancel projects being led by the nation’s leading pharmaceutical companies, including Pfizer and Moderna, that offer protection against viruses like the flu, COVID-19 and H5N1.

“To replace the troubled mRNA programs, we’re prioritizing the development of safer, broader vaccine strategies, like whole-virus vaccines and novel platforms that don’t collapse when viruses mutate,” Kennedy said in the video.

A lot of people will suffer for this, many will die. This is among the most promising medical research of the last hundred years.

I’m shook.

The only good news is that other countries will pick up the slack so mankind will likely still benefit from this research. Whether Americans will be among them is an open question.

MAGA Justice

Let the show trials begin

Axios really has joined the resistance:

The MAGA movement has spent the past 10 years demanding the arrests of President Trump’s political enemies.

  • Now, for the first time, the levers of power are aligned to pursue that goal from inside the federal government.

Attorney General Pam Bondi’s decision to order a grand jury investigation into Obama-era intelligence officials is a watershed moment in the history of MAGA retribution.

  • The threat of criminal charges targeting Trump enemies, such as former FBI director James Comey and former CIA director John Brennan, is no longer confined to the base’s imagination.
  • With Trump at the peak of his powers — and the Justice Department brimming with loyalists, pretexts and political will — MAGA is primed for a historic reckoning.

Also Bill and Hillary Clinton, dontcha know. They’re being subpoenaed by the House Oversight Committee.

Here’s some projection for you:

Call it “MAGA justice.” The DOJ traditionally has investigated allegations of wrongdoing and brought charges if it deemed appropriate, but Trump’s base entered his second term with a preordained prison list.

  • “Unless we see people tried and held accountable and in orange jumpsuits and handcuffs, this is not going away,” the Conservative Partnership Institute’s Rachel Bovard said on Vince Coglianese‘s podcast Monday.
  • “Color me a little bit cautious here that we’re immediately going to get perp walks and indictments, but that is what we need,” activist Charlie Kirk said on his podcast Tuesday.

Ya think? And they’re just getting started:

MAGA’s hunt for political justice has expanded beyond the usual targets.

  • Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ordered the arrest of Democratic lawmakers this week who fled the state to block a redistricting vote.
  • Asked Tuesday whether the FBI should intervene to locate and arrest Democrats, Trump said “they may have to.”
  • No criminal statute was violated, but rhetoric in MAGA media is casting the state lawmakers as nothing short of fugitives.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) posted a scorecard Monday showing “zero” arrests for a grab bag of MAGA grievances — from the Russia probe to COVID to the Biden “autopen” controversy.

  • “Don’t talk about it if you aren’t going to do it,” the MAGA hardliner said in a veiled warning to the Trump administration.

I am girding myself for real show trials and prison terms for Trump enemies. When you come down to it, this is what MAGA is really all about.

DOGE Hacker Gets Carjacked

Trump will huff, and he’ll puff, etc.

Big Balls had a less than excellent adventure in D.C. over the weekend (The Hill):

Two teenagers were arrested in connection to the attempted carjacking of a former Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) staffer known as “Big Balls.”

Authorities said the 15-year-old suspects, who were charged with unarmed carjacking, were among several teens who allegedly approached the victim, Edward Coristine, and a woman police identified as his significant other near a car at approximately 3 a.m. Sunday in Washington’s Logan Circle neighborhood.

The group allegedly made comments about taking the car, before Coristine pushed his significant other into the vehicle for safety and prepared to confront the group, according to police.

Law enforcement officials said Coristine turned to face the teenagers, and several of them attacked him until police patrolling the area intervened. The group fled on foot when police approached, authorities said.

Lord Trump responded with a threat to take over run of the District, usurping another function of Congress (Article I, Section 8, Clause 17) to which congressional Republicans and SCOTUS conservatives would meekly acquiesece:

“Washington, D.C., must be safe, clean, and beautiful for all Americans and, importantly, for the World to see,” Trump added. “If D.C. doesn’t get its act together, and quickly, we will have no choice but to take Federal control of the City, and run this City how it should be run, and put criminals on notice that they’re not going to get away with it anymore.”

Crime in D.C. was down 35 percent in 2024 from the previous year, marking a 30-year low. Data from the district show violent crime is also down so far in 2025 compared with the previous year.

“If this continues, I am going to exert my powers, and FEDERALIZE this City. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!” Trump digitally bellowed. He’ll huff, and he’ll puff, etc.

I wouldn’t wish a beating like that on anyone and hope Mr. Balls recovers quickly. But one can’t help but wonder if the Universe was giving Balls a taste of the mugging he and his band of digital nihilists doled out to thousands of federal employees (and their families) going about their lives doing the people’s work.

* * * * *

Have you fought dicktatorship today?

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The Resistance Lab
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Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
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Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

E-Spamalot

No, you didn’t sign up for that list

Fair warning. This is in the weeds. But mostly in your in-box and texts. Stuff from groups like the one named above.

Adam Bonica at his On Data and Democracy Substack wondered if there was an outfit behind all those (or many) spam fundraising emails and texts that arrive unwanted from lists you can’t seem to unsubscribe from even when you do. He did: Mothership Strategies.

After studying the FEC filings of these PACs, Bonica explains:

To understand Mothership’s central role, one must understand its origins. The firm was founded in 2014 by senior alumni of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC): its former digital director, Greg Berlin, and deputy digital director, Charles Starnes. During their tenure at the DCCC, they helped pioneer the fundraising model that now dominates Democratic inboxes—a high-volume strategy that relies on emotionally charged, often hyperbolic appeals to compel immediate donations. This model, sometimes called “churn and burn,” prioritizes short-term revenue over long-term donor relationships.

After leaving the DCCC, Berlin and Starnes effectively privatized this playbook, building a business around the party’s most aggressive tactics and turning an internal strategy into a fundraising powerhouse for the Democratic Party—or so it might seem on the surface.

They became the operational heart of a sprawling nexus of interconnected political action committees, many of which they helped create and which now serve as their primary clients. These are not a diverse collection of grassroots groups; they are a tightly integrated network that functions primarily to funnel funds to Mothership. Their names are likely familiar from the very texts and emails that flood inboxes: Progressive Turnout Project, Stop Republicans, and End Citizens United to name a few.

F%cking D-Triple-C veterans. You might have known, huh? Bonica links to a list of PACs that are in bed with Mothership.

I've been getting lots of questions. Here is a quick 🧵 to help point in the right directions. First, this link will provide a complete list of every FEC committee that has made payments to Mothership. www.fec.gov/data/disburs…

Adam Bonica (@adambonica.bsky.social) 2025-08-04T20:57:36.718Z

But here’s the kicker. “Since 2018, this core network of Mothership-linked PACs has raised approximately $678 million from individual donors,” Bonica writes. But after consulting fees, $22.5 million to a text message delivery vendor, staff salaries, etc., Bonica drops the bomb:

My analysis of the network’s FEC disbursements reveals that, at most, $11 million of the $678 million raised from individuals has made its way to candidates, campaigns, or the national party committees.

But here’s the number that should end all debate:

This represents a fundraising efficiency rate of just 1.6 percent.

If you dig more into that data, you'll see that about $150m of what has been paid to mothership comes from PACs lead by a small group of treasurers–with $82m from a single treasurer who leads a cluster of connected PACs. Note that End Citizens United was founded by the Mothership.

Adam Bonica (@adambonica.bsky.social) 2025-08-04T20:57:36.719Z

Kamala Harris’s campaign warned its supporters last year not to fall for fundraising scams you’ve all seen (not all from Mothership-aligned groups. The Bulwark reported last summer:

One recent text included a picture of Barbra Streisand, the famed singer, actress, and longtime Democrat, saying how “excited” she is “to support KAMALA HARRIS!” and offering a “700% MATCH ACTIVE” for donations to help “crush” Donald Trump.

But the text wasn’t from Streisand or the Harris campaign. It was from “Democratic Power,” a group started in October 2022 at an address that appears to be a UPS store in Southeast Washington, D.C.

So not as organized as Mothership, but “part of a growing universe of entities that have taken advantage of loose campaign finance regulations and the proliferation of online giving to raise millions of dollars, which they then use to raise more cash.”

Lovely.

* * * * *

Have you fought dicktatorship today?

50501
The Resistance Lab
Choose Democracy
Indivisible: A Guide to Democracy on the Brink
You Have Power
Chop Wood, Carry Water
Thirty lonely but beautiful actions
Attending a Protest Surveillance Self-Defense

Trump Says Migrant Farmworkers Are Special

“They don’t get bad backs”

He’s not racist, not at all:

The president said that “people that live in the inner city” won’t do the work.

“They’ve tried. We’ve tried, Everybody’s tried. They don’t do it. These people do it naturally. Naturally,” Trump said. “I said ‘what happens’ — to a farmer the other day — ’what happens if they get a bad back?’ He said, ‘They don’t get a bad back, sir, because if they get a bad back, they die.’ I said, ‘That’s interesting.’ In many ways, they’re very, very special people.”

Trump did not say who told him this.

The imaginary farmer in his mind told him this. It’s disgusting.

A Tiny Bit Of Good News

Poor, poor pitiful Trump:

Having live-tweeted yesterday’s CNBC interview with Elizabeth Warren, Donald Trump decided it was his turn for the guest chair this morning. The president appeared on Squawk Box, during which he reasserted his fever dream belief that the jobs numbers were “rigged” and outlined why he believes banks were discriminating against him. There were not enough tiny violins in the background to do it justice. And if you didn’t feel bad enough for our beleaguered president, he gave you a bit more to sob over: He said he probably won’t run for president again, even though he’d like to (though is not allowed to). 

Yippie!

The Resistance Has Some New Members

The Democrats

Dave Dayen at the American Prospect notes, much to his and everyone’s surprise, the Democrats are (finally) fighting back. I’ll let him give you the details, but suffice to say that he is right:

It’s been clear for a while that the dividing line in the Democratic Party in the midst of an authoritarian power grab is entirely about whether or not you’re willing to fight on behalf of the country. It’s amazing that there was ever anyone on the “unwilling” side of that line, given the role of an opposition party and the threat Trump posed. But backs against the wall, Democrats are finally figuring out their purpose.

From Washington to California to Austin to Chicago they are deploying whatever tactics are at their disposal to stop the onslaught. They may very well fail but they are at least coming out publicly on the right side and showing the majority of America that they are cognizant of the threat. That makes a difference.

He’s Getting Desperate

And that’s dangerous

Brian Beutler has a great piece today about the possible Trump crack-up. He begins by recalling an episode I think most of us have forgotten but which foreshadowed the recent firing of the BLS administrator:

When COVID-19 reached the U.S. five and a half years ago, Donald Trump—then in his first term—had made little progress purging the government of civil servants willing to level with the public.

So we got the truth. Just not from him.

What he said was: “You know, a lot of people think that goes away in April with the heat—as the heat comes in. Typically, that will go away in April.” And then: “You have 15 people, and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero, that’s a pretty good job we’ve done.”

The truth was: we were in the early days of a pandemic that would badly disrupt our economy and way of life. And we know he knew the truth because, when he knew his comments would remain secret for months or years, he told Bob Woodward the coronavirus was “deadly stuff.” He said it would be “more deadly than your, you know, your—even your strenuous flus.”

So when, just two weeks after his interview with Woodward, the CDC’s top respiratory infection and epidemic specialist Nancy Messonnier warned the public that “disruption to everyday life might be severe,” Trump had her muzzled.

He knew the best possible analysis painted a bleak picture, so he created a huge disincentive for anyone in government to share good analysis. Tell the public the truth and imperil your career. The key is that this impulse of his only kicks in when he knows the stakes of looming developments are large, negative, and likely to implicate him. When people might blame him for calamity, or turn to him for the kind of steady-handed leadership he’s incapable of providing.

If he’d been told that the coronavirus would sweep through the U.S. quickly, one and done, killing about as many people as seasonal flu, nobody would have been muzzled.

Thanks to this defect in Trump’s character, we’re about to learn whether a president can shield himself from the political consequences of a slowing or shrinking economy with lies and propaganda. Is a recession like the pandemic, where events are seismic enough to overwhelm official lies? Or is Trump right to conclude that his big mistake in 2020 was not having enough control over what people hear; too many candid bureaucrats, too many people consuming credible news?

If fewer beltway reporters had memories that reset to zero over night, more of them might have recalled this recent history on Friday, when Trump fired Erika McEntarfer, the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, for the sin of issuing the government’s monthly employment report on schedule. They’d recognize the pattern, and report on it, rather than pass along the White House’s self-serving cover story.

Beutler makes an astute observation:

Trump’s rash decision to fire McEntarfer—like silencing Messonnier and manufacturing scarcity of COVID-19 tests—only makes sense if he fears her numbers are close to the mark. That more bad data awaits us in the months ahead.

As he says, Trump has always been given much more credit than he deserves because of his stupid reality TV game show “The Apprentice” and years of bs PR. But now?

[F]or the first time, he finds himself unable to convince majorities that he’s got a magic economic touch. As the situation deteriorates, he’ll have to either reverse course—changing pretty much everything about the way he’s governing—or else go to even greater lengths to control information and manipulate the public.

He will obviously choose door number two. It’s a bit like February 2020 all over again, except we’re in the early days of a recession rather than a pandemic, and instead of reluctantly acknowledging its existence, Trump intends to deny reality altogether. Because this time he has more control over what the government says and does.

The lesson Trump and his henchmen took from that was that they weren’t authoritarian enough:

This time around he seems intent on testing the proposition; engaging in more coverups, purging the government of more honest brokers, and flooding the zone with more shit. But that means he’ll make more mistakes, too.

Consider his ongoing coverup of the Epstein files.

I’m not sure I’ve ever seen Trump so unsettled. Not during Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation, not during his first impeachment, not during the first year of the pandemic.

The wobbling economy surely has something to do with this. But the brittleness of the Jeffrey Epstein coverup seems to have him most rattled.

I agree with this. I’ve never seen him quite this freaked out. There’s something there and he doesn’t know how to handle it. Beutler sees some turbulence ahead but also some possibilities. We don’t know what Trump is going to do when the recession hits. After all, that’s a real thing that fudging the statistics won’t fix.

[H]e’s managed to engineer a situation where GDP could decrease and prices could increase, depriving the Federal Reserve of its main tool for stimulating a weak economy. It’s a recipe for a continuous loop of deterioration and denial.

What would Trump do faced with a hard-to-kick recession or stagflation, if not change policy? My guess is immense scapegoating, accelerating smash-and-grab corruption, and farther-reaching efforts to rig the 2026 elections. By the same token, he will resist pressure to release the Epstein files unless and until he comes to fear impeachment and removal—which he likely never will.

He suggests this will result in Trump creating more baseless persecutions of Democrats and critics which unfortunately, I think is probably correct. What else can he do? But I’m not sure how much longer that’s going to work either. Buckle up.