Trudeau, the latest incumbent to be driven out amid rising voter dissatisfaction worldwide, said it had become clear to him that he cannot “be the leader during the next elections due to internal battles.” He planned to stay on as prime minister until a new leader of the Liberal Party is chosen.
“I don’t easily back down faced with a fight, especially a very important one for our party and the country. But I do this job because the interests of Canadians and the well being of democracy” are “something that I hold dear,” said Trudeau, who was initially teary-eyed at the announcement outside his official residence.
He said Parliament, which had been due to resume Jan. 27, would be suspended until March 24. The timing will allow for a Liberal Party leadership race.
All three main opposition parties have said they plan to topple the Liberal Party in a no-confidence vote when Parliament resumes, so a spring election after the Liberals pick a new leader was almost assured.
The crazy old man south of the border had this to say:
To hear President-elect Donald J. Trump tell it, he is about to take over a nation ravaged by crisis, a desolate hellscape of crime, chaos and economic hardship. “Our Country is a disaster, a laughing stock all over the World!” he declared on social media last week.
But by many traditional metrics, the America that Mr. Trump will inherit from President Biden when he takes the oath for a second time, two weeks from Monday, is actually in better shape than that bequeathed to any newly elected president since George W. Bush came into office in 2001.
For the first time since that transition 24 years ago, there will be no American troops at war overseas on Inauguration Day. New data reported in the past few days indicate that murders are way down, illegal immigration at the southern border has fallen even below where it was when Mr. Trump left office and roaring stock markets finished their best two years in a quarter-century.
The manufacturing sector has more jobs than under any president since Mr. Bush. Drug overdose deaths have fallen for the first time in years. Even inflation, the scourge of the Biden presidency, has returned closer to normal, although prices remain higher than they were four years ago.
“President Trump is inheriting an economy that is about as good as it ever gets,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics. “The U.S. economy is the envy of the rest of the world, as it is the only significant economy that is growing more quickly post-pandemic than prepandemic.”
I’m not blaming Baker specifically, but the media in general mocked and derided Joe Biden and others in the White House for pointing all this out over the past couple of years. Biden was old, he was wearing shoes with rubber tread, Harris had a cackle, voters have vibes. But rarely did we ever see a straightforward recitation of the fact by the media that looked like that.
I don’t know if it would have made a difference. I do wonder if the Democrats had said “fuck the vibes, we’re going to relentlessly parrot the truth over and over again” if it might have helped people see the reality. Instead we had endless hand wringing about how we need to be empathetic to people’s perceived needs because they have feelings and it’s wrong to deny them even if they’re not true. Well, that really worked out, didn’t it?
The propaganda machine of the right wing in America has been well-honed for 30 years now and it’s almost impermeable. But I don’t know that Democrats couldn’t penetrate it with simple, repetition of the truth over and over again. Yes, you and I would probably rebel. It gets boring. But the only way to break through the cacophony is by relentlessly pushing the same message.
If we’ve learned anything from Donald Trump it’s that.
“A shrine to democracy for our country, and the world, was overrun by violent extremists seeking to overturn an election. We must hold those responsible to account.” Senator John Thune in Jan. 2021
Today:
I don’t know how we can survive this level of delusion and mendacity.
I listened to James Carville Sunday morning on Jen Psaki’s show and read his Op-Ed in the NY Times. I got the impression from Psaki that his advice is being taken very seriously by Democrats. He believes that we need to stop caring about Donald Trump’s assault on reason and the Constitution and concentrate on kitchen table issues. He says that when people are suffering greatly nobody cares that he’s a corrupt criminal and an enemy of democracy so Democrats shouldn’t talk about it anymore. And he cautions that denouncing the other party and its voters is “no way to win an election.” (Donald Trump would like a word …) He says that Trump won on his economic message.
Carville advised Democrats to focus on opposing Republican party economic policies but they also need to offer “wildly popular” economic policies that will appeal to people. He suggests issues such as the codification of Roe v. Wade, a higher minimum wage and support for H1B visas to “expedite entry for high-performing talent and for those who will bring business into our nation.”
Obviously opposing the GOP economic message is vital. No one would argue otherwise. Minimum wage is a no-brainer. And sure, support for codification of Roe v. Wade as an “economic” issue is worth doing but it’s going to take a whole lot of explaining to make people understand why. The H1B visa support is a recipe for handing more political power to Elon Musk but sure, what could go wrong?
I have no idea what the proper political strategy going forward might be. I thought that most people would reject a lying, narcissistic, corrupt criminal who incited a riot to stop the peaceful transfer of power but they didn’t. According to the data we’re beginning to see from the election, most voters didn’t think he did anything disqualifying and don’t believe he’ll fulfill any of his extremist promises in the next four years. They just dislike the Democrats more than they dislike him. For the moment.
Carville believes that’s because so many people are in economic distress and if that’s true we have to assume that the ways we have traditionally used to measure that no longer work. So maybe he’s right that the suffering is intense and the Democrats erred in not fully acknowledging it and spending too much time discussing issues like their corrupt opponent’s rank unfitness for office.
But let’s just say I’m a bit skeptical that unless we’re mired in a major recession, which no one should want, this will inspire all those voters who stayed home to rush to the ballot box in two or four years. In fact, I suspect that Trump’s going to be seen as the triumphant leader who brought back the economy from the depths that people like James Carville and others are intent upon validating despite the fact that it isn’t true.
Trump is inheriting a powerful nation with full employment and a strong growing economy. Inflation has been tamed although people are still smarting from prices being higher than they were four years ago and the shortage of housing is a serious problem. No economy is ever perfect — there are always sectors that are under stress — and poverty remains an issue for far too many. But when you look objectively at this economy, it is good.
Nonetheless, we have all decided that it is to our benefit to cater to the vibes and so that’s going to be the strategy. But I wonder if it’s not fighting the last war. Unless Trump follows through on his tariffs and deportations and the economy collapses people are going to credit him with the good economy that already exists because he will be taking credit for it!
Frankly, I’m pinning my hopes on the fact that Trump and his people are imbeciles who will overreach in ways that nobody can ignore. It’s not a bad bet. Otherwise, Democrats may be burying themselves for a long time to come.
But as I said, I no longer have any faith in my ability to prescribe strategy. Maybe going back to the old “kitchen table issues” advice is the way to go. I had thought that we were living in a new world in which a threat of authoritarianism and oligarchy combined with a media landscape that’s completely changed the way people get and absorb information might require some fresh thinking but I don’t see much evidence that the elite strategists think that’s necessary.
So kitchen table issues it is. Prepare for the Trump victory tour.
Four years ago today I watched on television as Trump supporters stormed the Capitol during the joint session of Congress to stop the certification of the presidential election and I thought to myself, “it’s finally over. Trump can’t possibly come back after this.” Until then I had assumed that he would immediately start his comeback. It didn’t occur to me that he could survive inciting this violent assault, especially since he egged it on as it was happening:
As we later saw on video, the crowd soon began chanting “hang Mike Pence!”
Later in the evening Trump finally emerged and put out a video telling the rioters he understood why they were so upset about all the evil people who stole the election but they needed to go home now. He said he loved them and they were very special:
Over the course of many hours we watched on TV as bizarre Trump supporters occupied the Senate floor and took possession of the dais, the Capitol was vandalized and trashed and rioters beat police over the head with American flags. It was the most shockingly surreal event I’ve ever observed in American politics. The whole world was stunned by the live pictures we saw over the course of that momentous afternoon.
Yet later that night, once the police and National Guard restored order and the rioters dispersed, the Congress returned to the Capitol and they certified the election. For many people that signaled that the guardrails had held, that the Constitution was intact and that American democracy was preserved.
But when 147 Republicans still voted to overturn the election even after all that had happened, it was clear to me that was premature and that Trump wasn’t done with us yet. They were all politicians with a much better knowledge of how the system works than most Americans and they knew his insistence that he’d actually won the election was a lie. Yet they voted to steal the election anyway, despite the violent insurrection that had taken place just hours earlier.
Oh sure, many Republicans did make statements condemning the insurrection and criticizing Donald Trump for his incitement. But within days you could feel them starting to pull back, especially after they experienced moments like this when faced with rabid Trump supporters:
Over the course of many months, between law enforcement and the media investigations culminating in the incredible work of the January 6th Committee, the evidence showed over and over again exactly what had happened. Donald Trump was psychologically incapable of admitting that he lost and certain people around him were more than willing to push the envelope to see if they could get away with overturning the results of the election.
Through sheer chutzpah and mind-numbing repetition, they first managed to persuade many of Trump’s most loyal voters that the election had been stolen. They flooded the zone with accusations and lies and when Republican officials denied that there were irregularities and recounts showed no discrepancies they attacked the officials. When the courts failed to find evidence of fraud and dismissed all but one case they claimed the courts were biased. They even managed to excuse Trump trying to cajole election officials into “finding” thousands of votes to put him over the top on tape. And it worked. In January of 2021, 66% of Republicans believed the election was stolen.
January 6th was their last ditch effort to overturn the election. Had Mike Pence agreed to pretend that there was a legitimate controversy about the election results in the swing states where they’d recruited activists to pretend to be alternate electors they might have succeeded.
The whole thing was a corrupt set-up engineered by Trump henchmen. The idea was to reject those states in order to lower the threshold of required electoral votes allowing Trump to win. If the Democrats objected, as they certainly would, the idea was to throw the election to the House (as the Constitution provides if it was a tie) in which case Trump would also win. (The mastermind of that coup plot, John Eastman,was even later revealed to have been counting on his good friend Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas to step in to issue a stay of the Georgia electoral count to give them the hook they needed.)
It was a ridiculous idea made up out of whole cloth but Donald Trump 100% bought into it. On January 6th, when it became clear that Pence wasn’t going to play ball, Trump decided to shoot the moon and send his crazed, overwrought followers to the Capitol to intimidate the Congress and stop the count. There could be no other reason to tell them to march down there.
They didn’t succeed in keeping Donald Trump in office but they won something even more important. They proved that it was possible to beguile tens of millions of voters into not only believing a Big Lie when Donald Trump told it but even when they’d seen with their own eyes that it wasn’t true.
The whole country watched the riot unfold in real time, there were hours and hours more of video that emerged in subsequent days, witnesses from Trump’s own inner circle testified about his state of mind and how he behaved that day and there have been hundreds of court cases decided by juries finding that people who participated in the event were guilty of crimes.
The NY Times published a depressing article over the weekend examining how Trump and his minions have managed to completely turn January 6th upside down in his supporters minds. They’ve convinced them that the rioters not only did nothing wrong that day, they are now being held as political prisoners and hostages. They say there wasn’t much damage, Mike Pence wasn’t really in danger, the whole thing is overblown and it’s the January 6th Committee that should be jailed rather than those who beat cops nearly to death on the steps of the Capitol that day.
The article lays out the full trajectory of this new Big Lie that is so preposterous you’d think the people who believe it must be living in another dimension. But it’s had an effect on even the population that doesn’t believe the conspiracy theories that the Trump voters do. Many people understandably have come to accept that it really wasn’t a threat to democracy or the Constitution since Donald Trump was re-elected in what everyone agrees was a fair election and therefore, the system still works, no harm no foul.
But it didn’t work. Trump was never held accountable either because of partisan support in the Senate which voted 57-43 to impeach him after January 6th, just falling short of the 2/3rds which would have precluded him from running again. (Only seven Republicans voted to convict.) And the law was just too slow to hold him responsible even though both federal and state grand juries returned indictments of him and his co-conspirators for what they did. The Supreme Court weighed in in his favor on clearly partisan grounds.
We now know that if partisans are corrupt, deluded or just plain opportunistic enough and they have the will and the means to lie without shame or restraint, they can circumvent all the checks and balances that were built into the Constitution to prevent a president who plotted a coup against the United States from returning to power.
January 6th, 2025 should be a reminder of the assault on our democracy four years ago. Instead, I’m afraid it’s yet another reminder that far too few people in this country actually care about that.
It sounds almost Monty Python’s “inquisition” sketch. Among the ways the right attempts to rewrite the history of the attempted Jan. 6 coup….
We’ve already seen history repeat itself with the reemergence of white nationalist authoritarianism. A revival of the 1939 German American Bund rally in Madison Square Garden even.
Charlie Warzel and Mike Caulfield consider how insurrection denialism works. They suggest that misinformation is a sanitized description of how the internet warps reality. Conspiracy theories about 9/11 or Vince Foster were just warmup acts, either crude efforts at brainwashing or relatively harmless (The Atlanticgift link):
But there is another, more disturbing possibility, one that we have come to understand through our respective professional work over the past decade. One of us, Mike, has been studying the effects of our broken information environment as a research scientist and information literacy expert, while the other, Charlie, is a journalist who has extensively written and reported on the social web. Lately, our independent work has coalesced around a particular shared idea: that misinformation is powerful, not because it changes minds, but because it allows people to maintain their beliefs in light of growing evidence to the contrary. The internet may function not so much as a brainwashing engine but as a justification machine. A rationale is always just a scroll or a click away, and the incentives of the modern attention economy—people are rewarded with engagement and greater influence the more their audience responds to what they’re saying—means that there will always be a rush to provide one. This dynamic plays into a natural tendency that humans have to be evidence foragers, to seek information that supports one’s beliefs or undermines the arguments against them. Finding such information (or large groups of people who eagerly propagate it) has not always been so easy. Evidence foraging might historically have meant digging into a subject, testing arguments, or relying on genuine expertise. That was the foundation on which most of our politics, culture, and arguing was built.
There’s more on that and nothing on AI and deep fakes. But it’s worth a read. The fight to preserve a common reality is just warming up. Once again, our tech is running ahead of our ethics and undermining our cultural underpinnings.
I don’t have an answer for that. Except to remember.
You didn’t imagine it, the images and videos, the injuries and deaths. They were not “deep state” fakes. Those people weren’t tourists. They weren’t patriots. The violent Trump mob consisted of MAGA rioters and insurrectionists. After four years of a Democratic administration left with cleaning up, Americans inexplicably elected Donald Trump, now a convicted felon, to another term. It’s almost as if they mean to prove the Constitution a suicide pact.
Trump is preparing to pardon a large chunk of the Jan. 6 convicted as victims of political persecution, just as woe-is-ME is as innocent as a babe.
Trump said he would issue pardons to rioters on “Day 1” of his presidency, which begins Jan. 20. “Most likely, I’ll do it very quickly,” he said recently on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He added that “those people have suffered long and hard. And there may be some exceptions to it. I have to look. But, you know, if somebody was radical, crazy.”
His promise, made throughout his campaign for the White House, is shadowing events Monday as lawmakers gather to certify a presidential election for the first time since 2021, when Trump’s supporters breached the Capitol and temporarily halted the certification of an election he lost to Democrat Joe Biden.
And Trump did lose the 2020 election to Joe Biden. He’s spent much of his non-golf time since then trying to rewrite that history and will spend the next four doing so from the Oval Office.
More than 1,250 have pleaded guilty or been convicted after trials in connection with Jan. 6, with more than 650 receiving prison time ranging from a few days to 22 years .
President Joe Biden speaks out this morning in the Washington Post, noting that his vice president, Kamala Harris, will faithfully fulfill her duty as president of the Senate to oversee certification of the election she lost [to Trump; Biden will not name him]. Americans must never forget the coup [Trump] attempted on Jan. 6, 2021 lest we see a repeat. Yet Trump and his MAGA followers will try to eradicate the memory:
An unrelenting effort has been underway [by Trump] to rewrite — even erase — the history of that day. To tell us we didn’t see what we all saw with our own eyes. To dismiss concerns about it as some kind of partisan obsession. To explain it away as a protest that just got out of hand.
This is not what happened.
In time, there will be Americans who didn’t witness the Jan. 6 riot firsthand but will learn about it from footage and testimony of that day, from what is written in history books and from the truth we pass on to our children. We cannot allow the truth to be lost.
John Roberts’ year-end message was rightly taken to task for implying that criticism of the court’s corruption was inciting violence. If the Chief Justice can’t defend the right of the people to criticize the Supreme Court then they really have gone down the rabbit hole.
Every Administration suffers defeats in the court system—sometimes in cases with major ramifications for executive or legislative power or other consequential topics. Nevertheless, for the past several decades, the decisions of the court, popular or not, have been followed. Within the past few years, however, elected officials from across the political spectrum have raised the specter of open disregard for federal court rulings. These dangerous suggestions, however sporadic, must be soundly rejected.
I can’t think of any prominent Democrats making that argument but I suppose there might have been at one point. But as Bill Kristol notes in his Substack:
[T]his sounds an awful lot like a subtweet of incoming Vice President JD Vance, who has repeatedly argued that Trump should ignore court orders that he believes unconstitutionally constrain his executive authority. “If the elected president says, ‘I get to control the staff of my own government,’ and the Supreme Court steps in and says, ‘you’re not allowed to do that’—like, that is the constitutional crisis,” Vance told Politicolast March. “It’s not whatever Trump or whoever else does in response.”
Roberts better hope asking nicely will do the trick. After all, he was the one who reached into his bag of tricks last year to carve out a broad new definition of criminal immunity for a president’s “official acts.” Like much of the rest of the country, Roberts appears to be entering the new year with a bizarre optimism: Sure, the incoming administration has openly said it will do many alarming things. But wouldn’t it be nice if they just didn’t?
Vance has been backing Musk’s embrace of the neo-Nazis in Germany so I think he really means it. Whether Trump wants that fight is unknown but I doubt he’ll care if his people want to wage it. He can observe it from the golf course and he knows he’ll suffer no repercussions.
It brings to mind the apparently apocryphal comment by Andrew Jackson, who Steve Bannon convinced Trump he most resembles: “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.” It sounds like Vance is pretty much saying the same thing. But really, all he has to do is ask John Roberts and he’ll do whatever they want.
So Biden obviously did an excellent job as president but he is self-indulgent and lacking in accountability? Interesting.
It’s also interesting that Baker notes the last time a president inherited such a prosperous country. You may recall that the press also vilified the man who accomplished it as being self-indulgent and lacking in accountability.
Speaker Mike Johnson told Republicans on Saturday that President-elect Donald Trump wants one reconciliation package, instead of the planned two that Republican leadership has been pushing, three people in the room where discussions took place told POLITICO.
Johnson’s message came as Republicans are meeting behind closed doors at Fort McNair to map out their strategy for passing a sweeping border, tax and energy package that will be the heart of their legislative agenda. Trump told Johnson that he wants “one big beautiful bill,” the Louisiana Republican recounted at the retreat, per three lawmakers.
Trump’s decision is a break from Senate Majority Leader John Thune’s pitch for a two-bill strategy that would have seen Republicans pass a border and energy bill first followed by a tax bill. Johnson had also previously indicated there would be two bills — though that was viewed as more of a deference to Trump’s perceived preference and a way to notch quick wins for his agenda. Thune stopped by the House GOP retreat on Saturday, a person familiar confirmed to POLITICO.
[…]
Every step of the process will require near unity among congressional Republicans, who are currently working with only a one-vote margin in the House.
“We can’t lose anyone,” Smith said in a brief interview after the GOP retreat.
Easy Peasy. All they have to do is agree to take a wrecking ball to all government spending, including mandatory spending like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, to please the Chip Roy, Thomas Massie extremists and make sure that none of the others object and it will all work out just fine.
There are some naysayers who see the writing on the wall:
“[The tax bill] can’t be the first order of business. It took us months to do the first tax cuts bill nine years ago. The bottom line is that, if that’s what the president wants, he’s going to have to wait until the summer for it all to get ironed out,” Freedom Caucus Chair Andy Harris (R-Md.) told Fox News’ Fox News Live on Saturday.
It also throws a curveball into the House-leadership-struck agreement to raise the debt ceiling under reconciliation. House GOP leadership told members as part of last year’s government funding negotiations that they would raise the debt ceiling by $1.5 trillion as part of the first reconciliation package and cut $2.5 trillion in spending as part of the reconciliation process.
They’re all girding themselves for the battle. For the moment they’re saying they’ll defer to Dear Leader: “No one is fighting it. If that’s the Trump call, that’s the play we will execute.”
Well maybe. President Musk will have something to say about all this. And executing Trump’s plans is always easier said than done.