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@fwcollaborative

Freedom Writers Collaborative is a multi-state Indivisible chapter that is truly a grassroots operation providing messaging and social media content inspired by our progressive allies. https://freedomwriterscollaborative.org/

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Latest posts by Freedom Writers Collaborative @fwcollaborative

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Provide Know Your Rights information to local communities.

ICE/DHS detentions are being carried out under dangerous conditions, with violent treatment & actions understood as violations of Constitutional protections.
Talk with businesses about their rights to protect their employees/customers from DHS/ICE abuses.

15.03.2026 03:05 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremists

Wealth and power should not shield perpetrators from accountability for sexual exploitation and human trafficking.

Demand Congressional investigations and release of all remaining Epstein files.

15.03.2026 01:57 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Fund-raising Email Features Trump at Ritual for Soldiers Killed in Iran War The email from the group Never Surrender seeks donations for President Trump from those who want access to “private national security briefings” from him.

Fund-raising Email Features Trump at Ritual for Soldiers Killed in Iran War

15.03.2026 00:09 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 2 📌 0
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Contact Your MOC

BREAKING: The House GOP is going to try to ram through the SAVE Act 2.0!

This isn't about election security—it's about disenfranchising millions of eligible voters. They're lying to make it harder for you to vote. Call your Rep: #HandsOffHerVote

14.03.2026 21:48 👍 9 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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Join one or more Indivisible groups to maximize impact

Corrupt Trump passes $1 trillion of our tax dollars to the top 1%, paid by destroying our healthcare & social services.
Consumer prices keep going up, while wannabe king Trump builds a vulgar, gold ballroom. He's happy to exploit us & lie to us. Say NO.

14.03.2026 21:42 👍 6 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0
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Trump urges world to help open Strait of Hormuz; U.S. Embassy in Baghdad hit As the Iran war enters its third week and oil prices surge, President Donald Trump is attempting to restart shipping through a key choke point closed by Iran.

Trump urges world to help open Strait of Hormuz; U.S. Embassy in Baghdad hit

14.03.2026 21:22 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 2
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Trump official in charge of elections security wants to ban voting machines In his top post at the Department of Homeland Security, David Harvilicz sets policy on protecting the nation’s elections infrastructure, including voting machines. He’s also the co-founder of a company with James Penrose, who helped hatch debunked conspiracy theories blaming hacked voting machines for Donald Trump’s loss in the 2020 presidential election. Penrose assisted in a push to seize voting machines to overturn Trump’s defeat. On social media, Harvilicz has called for doing away with voting machines, saying they are “eminently vulnerable to exploitation.” In a March post, he wrote that “DHS needs to ban voting machines for all federal elections. The time is now.” He also has repeatedly questioned the validity of Democratic electoral victories and pushed for Republicans to overhaul electoral systems to their advantage. Election experts as well as current and former DHS officials say Harvilicz’s central role in overseeing the security of electoral systems and voting machines is especially concerning at a time when the administration is taking unprecedented steps to relitigate Trump’s baseless claims that the 2020 election was stolen. That includes the FBI’s seizure of 2020 voting records from Fulton County, Georgia, and having a team working for Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, take custody of voting machines used in Puerto Rico in 2020. “The security of our election infrastructure depends on leadership that is trusted, impartial and grounded in evidence — not individuals who have promoted conspiracy theories about the very systems they are now responsible for protecting,” said Danielle Lang, vice president for voting rights and the rule of law at the Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisan pro-democracy organization. “Placing someone with that background in charge of policies affecting election security can undermine public confidence in our elections at a time when trust is already fragile.” DHS didn’t answer detailed questions about Harvilicz or his team, providing a more general statement about the work done by the agency. “DHS and its employees are focused on keeping our elections safe, secure, and free,” it said. “Every single day appointees at the Department of Homeland Security work to implement the President’s policies and keep our Homeland safe.” Harvilicz didn’t respond to questions about his DHS role. Harvilicz’s X account notes his post as DHS’ assistant secretary for cyber, infrastructure, risk and resilience policy but says he’s been detailed to the Defense Department. (Such temporary assignments are typically done in 120-day increments.) Harvilicz was appointed to the DHS job around July, taking on a role that in the past has largely focused on shaping policy to protect the nation’s critical infrastructure, including its election systems. But current and former DHS officials say Harvilicz and his team have transformed their functions to become more hands-on. They’ve been deeply engaged with facilitating multiple administration data-gathering efforts aimed at scouring voter rolls for noncitizens, the officials said. ProPublica has reported on one such effort, which has led to hundreds of citizens being incorrectly flagged as potential noncitizens. Harvilicz’s team includes Heather Honey, the deputy assistant secretary of election integrity. ProPublica has reported that Honey was previously a leader in the Election Integrity Network, a conservative group that has challenged the legitimacy of American election systems. Honey worked closely with Cleta Mitchell, the network’s leader, who played a prominent role in helping Trump try to overturn his 2020 loss. Also reporting directly to Harvilicz is Samantha Anderson, a data specialist who previously worked to elect Trump through the advocacy arm of the America First Policy Institute, a think tank closely associated with the president. Multiple officials and elections experts said they were worried that Harvilicz and Honey would have prominent parts in assessing and describing the cybersecurity of the coming election, both to the public and to administration leaders. They also expressed concern that if Trump again wanted to get control of voting machines after the election, perhaps if Republicans lose seats in the midterms, that Harvilicz is ideally positioned to help them do so. “It would be super easy for them to get the voting machines,” a current DHS official said, adding they can “describe it as they want, if they don’t like the results.” Harvilicz co-founded Tranquility AI, which has developed an artificial intelligence tool for law enforcement, with Penrose, and they are listed on its 2025 patents as developing its systems together. Penrose, a former intelligence officer, played a leading role in the campaign to help Trump in his failed bid to overturn the 2020 election, ProPublica has reported. Penrose also participated in multiple attempts to clandestinely seize voting machines, including in Michigan, where prosecutors accused him of breaking into some of the machines. (Penrose wasn’t charged in the case.) He appeared to be an unindicted co-conspirator in the failed Georgia prosecution in which Trump was accused of conspiring to overturn the election results, according to The Washington Post. Penrose didn’t respond to a request for comment for this article. One of the purported uses of Tranquility AI’s product is for “election integrity,” according to the company’s website. It didn’t provide more details in response to a question from ProPublica. Tranquility AI’s tools, which help law enforcement agents process data and assemble cases, have been employed by New Orleans’ district attorney, and the company says it has partnered with dozens of law enforcement agencies nationwide. In July 2025, a large government IT contractor announced a partnership with Tranquility AI. Harvilicz started his career working at law firms on Wall Street and in tech. Then, in 2004, when he was 29, he launched a losing bid for a Maryland congressional seat. After that, he helped lead a crowdfunding company, a movie marketing business, a film production business that worked with former intelligence officers and several cyber security ventures (including one at which he worked with Penrose). He also did a stint in the first Trump administration, serving as cybersecurity official in the Department of Energy. In advance of Harvilicz getting the DHS position, Tranquility AI made a $100,000 donation to Trump’s inaugural fund through a newly created nonprofit based at Harvilicz’s home address, according to The Intercept. In response to questions from The Intercept, Harvilicz said the donation was designed to help them meet administration policymakers. The Intercept first reported his ties to Penrose in connection with the donation. Harvilicz has posted prolifically to social media, sharing hundreds of posts of conservative content. After Trump won a second presidential term, he wrote: “We will now dismantle the near communist takeover of America and return her to greatness.” In 2020, Harvilicz purchased a $3.3 million home outside of Los Angeles. After the Palisades Fire destroyed it around the beginning of Trump’s second term, Harvilicz stood on a roadside to greet the president’s tour of the disaster area with his young son on his shoulders. His son held aloft a picture of a bloodied Trump punching the air after surviving an assassin’s bullet. Even then, elections were not far from his mind. He told a reporter for the Los Angeles Times that he supported Trump making disaster aid conditional on the Democratic state implementing voter ID. “I hope he saw us,” Harvilicz told the Times reporter.

Trump official in charge of elections security wants to ban voting machines

14.03.2026 21:17 👍 5 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremism

How we all long to return to our America, where our federal government was available to help us.

Under Felon Trump's regime, our democratic freedoms are being stripped from us.

Support public policy that uses our tax dollars for the common good.

14.03.2026 21:16 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremists

Tax cuts for billionaires. Luxury remodels. ACA healthcare subsidies stolen away. Living expenses explode for families while the super-rich get richer. This isn’t America First—it’s America Last.

Vote for Democrats who are fighters not folders.

14.03.2026 21:04 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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A tangled maze of ties uncovers Trump's true masters — and his treachery Eight of our American service members are dead and more than 140 wounded because Iran’s military has suddenly gotten really good at targeting our soldiers, airmen, and marines. News reports say they’ve been able to hit us with such precision because Russia is using their extraordinary spy satellite, spy plane, and advanced radar capabilities to help Iran’s military. The Washington Post, which first reported on this, quoted a Russian military expert as saying that Iran is now “making very precise hits on early-warning radars or over-the-horizon radars,” seeming to validate the concern. The article added:“Iran possesses only a handful of military-grade satellites, and no satellite constellation of its own, which would make imagery provided by Russia’s much more advanced space capabilities highly valuable — particularly as the Kremlin has honed its own targeting after years of war in Ukraine…” When asked about the reports, Donald Trump — who’d just returned from the soldiers’ bodies’ dignified transfer — basically downplayed Russian efforts to hurt Americans, just like he did when he learned in 2020 that Putin was paying Afghan insurgents a bounty to kill our soldiers. He pointed out that the US had been sharing intelligence with Ukraine during the Biden administration, so apparently, according to him, Russia is justified in helping Iran kill American service members:“They’d say we do it against them. Wouldn’t they say that we do it against them?” His fellow real estate billionaire, Steve Witkoff (whose sons are making billions with Trump’s sons in the Middle East and who has been regularly traveling to Moscow for private meetings with Vladimir Putin) similarly shrugged off the report, telling CNBC:“I can tell you that yesterday, on the call with [President Trump], the Russians said they have not been sharing. That’s what they said. So, we can take them at their word, but they did say that.” Witkoff later added, “Let’s hope that they’re not sharing.” Putin himself, though, was nowhere near as circumspect, saying:“On my part, I want to confirm our unwavering support of Tehran and our solidarity with our Iranian friends. Russia has been and will remain the Islamic Republic’s reliable partner.” As if to confirm that Trump is Putin’s toady, just last week, in the wake of Iran shutting the Strait of Hormuz and cutting oil supplies to Asia and the Subcontinent, our president signed a waiver to our Russia sanctions so Putin can now sell unlimited amounts of Russian oil directly to India. Every time Putin says “Jump,” Trump asks, “How high?” Which raises the question: “Why? Why does Trump always give Putin whatever he wants and why is he so terrified of speaking out against him?” Is it possible that Trump is actively working for Putin? What if Putin somehow owns him? Or is blackmailing him? And has been running him as an Russian asset since at least 2017? That sort of treason would be more important than Russian agents Robert Hanssen (life without parole), Aldrich Ames (life without parole), or Ethel and Julius Rosenberg (death penalty). And let’s not forget that right after Trump won re-election in November 2024, Russian state TV published explicit nudie pictures of Melania Trump and their anchors were laughing about it and at Trump. Was this Putin’s first assertion this cycle that he still owns Donald? Jack Smith’s case in Florida was limited to Trump stealing sensitive documents and sharing them on two publicly known occasions (and didn’t even reference other known acts like Kid Rock’s allegation that Trump showed him Top Secret maps in the White House: this was apparently a regular thing for Trump). That said, you can bet your bottom dollar that the FBI and other agencies worked as hard as they could to contain the damage done by Trump’s leaving documents that could cause “grave damage” to America in public places where spies could simply waltz in and take cell-phone pictures of them by attending a wedding or paying $200,000 for essentially unlimited access Club membership. But what if it goes beyond that? What if Putin has owned him for years? From Russian oligarchs laundering money through Trump’s operations — real estate is the most common device used worldwide for money laundering — to keeping him alive in his most difficult times, like those multiple bankruptcies in the 1990s when he almost lost everything? Or perhaps blackmailing him? What if Putin got him the presidency, and he knows that if America found out for sure, it would destroy him? Or has Jeffrey Epstein’s videos of Trump with underage girls? Or his own pictures, taken when Trump was in Moscow for one of his beauty pageants? Which begs the question: exactly how much damage might Trump have already done to our nation, and what does he have planned for the next three years of this second term? And is he getting ongoing day-to-day instructions from Putin, which explains why he’s so reluctant to discuss their conversations, as Rachel Maddow recently documented? In 2019 the Washington Post revealed that throughout his last presidency, Trump was having regular secret phone conversations with Putin (more than 20 have been identified so far, including one just days before the 2020 election). The Moscow Project from the American Progress Action Fund documents more than 270 known contacts between Russia-linked operatives and members of the Trump campaign and transition team, as well as at least 38 known meetings just leading up to the 2016 election. The manager of his 2016 campaign, Paul Manafort — who was previously paid tens of millions by Vladimir Putin’s people to install a pro-Putin puppet as Ukraine’s president in 2010 — has admitted that he was regularly feeding secret inside-campaign strategy and polling information to Russian intelligence via the oligarch who typically paid him on their behalf. Throughout the campaign, Manafort let Russian intelligence know where Trump needed help, and when, and it appears Russia jumped in to social media to provide the needed help. Trump pardoned Manafort, which got him out of prison and ended any investigations. He’s still fabulously rich from his work for Russia. As the New York Times noted in 2020:“[I]nvestigators found enough there to declare that Mr. Manafort created ‘a grave counterintelligence threat’ by sharing inside information about the presidential race with Mr. [Konstantin] Kilimnik and the Russian and [pro-Russian] Ukrainian oligarchs whom he served.” There is no known parallel to this behavior by any president in American history — one could argue it easily exceeds Benedict Arnold’s audacity — and bringing documents to Mar-a-Lago was just the tip of the iceberg. The Washington Post reported in 2022 that Trump had a habit of carrying top-secret information that could severely damage our national security, leaving it in hotel rooms in hostile nations. Was he bringing these documents with him to sell? Or just to show to leaders or oligarchs in those countries to impress them? Or because Putin, who has agents in those countries, told him to? Trump doesn’t put all that effort into hauling things around unless it’s extraordinarily important to his ego or he thinks he can makes money off them. Or he’s scared.“Boxes of documents even came with Trump on foreign travel,” the Post noted, “following him to hotel rooms around the world — including countries considered foreign adversaries of the United States.” When Robert Mueller’s FBI team tried to investigate Trump’s ties to Russia and his possibly sharing sensitive military information with them, they were stonewalled. The Mueller Report identified ten specific instances of Trump himself trying to obstruct the investigation, including offering the bribe of a pardon to Manafort, asking FBI Director James Comey to “go easy” on Gen. Michael Flynn after his dinner with Putin, and directing Attorney General Jeff Sessions to limit Mueller’s ability to investigate Trump’s connections to Russia. As the Mueller Report noted:“The President launched public attacks on the investigation and individuals involved in it who could possess evidence adverse to the President, while in private the President engaged in a series of targeted efforts to control the investigation.“For instance, the President attempted to remove the Attorney General; he sought to have Attorney General Sessions un-recuse himself and limit the investigation; he sought to prevent public disclosure of information about the June 9, 2016 meeting between Russians and campaign officials; and he used public forums to attack potential witnesses who might offer adverse information and to praise witnesses who declined to cooperate with the government.” It adds, detailing Trump’s specific Obstruction of Justice crimes:“These actions ranged from efforts to remove the Special Counsel and to reverse the effect of the Attorney General’s recusal; to the attempted use of official power to limit the scope of the investigation; to direct and indirect contacts with witnesses with the potential to influence their testimony.” There are, after all, credible assertions from American intelligence that when Trump was elected, members of Russian intelligence and Putin’s inner circle were literally partying in Moscow, celebrating a victory they believed they made happen. And apparently Putin and his intelligence operatives had good reason to be popping the champagne in November 2016. They were quickly paid off in a big way. In his first months in office, Trump outed an Israeli spy to the Russian ambassador in what he thought was going to be a “secret Oval Office meeting” (the Russians released the photo to the press), resulting in MOSAD having to “burn” (relocate, change identity of) that spy. The undercover agent was apparently working in Syria that year against the Russians, who were embroiled in the midst of Assad’s Civil War and indiscriminately bombing Aleppo into rubble. That, in turn, prompted the CIA to worry that a longtime American spy buried deep in the Kremlin was similarly vulnerable to Trump handing him over to Putin. As CNN noted (when the story leaked two years later):“The source was considered the highest level source for the US inside the Kremlin, high up in the national security infrastructure, according to the source familiar with the matter and a former senior intelligence official.“According to CNN’s sources, the spy had access to Putin and could even provide images of documents on the Russian leader’s desk.” The CIA concluded that the risk Trump had burned or was about to burn our spy inside the Kremlin was so great that — at massive loss to US intelligence abilities that may even have otherwise helped forestall the invasion of Ukraine — they pulled our spy out of Russia in the first year of Trump’s presidency, 2017. Similarly, when they met in Helsinki on July 16, 2018, Trump and Putin talked in private for several hours and Trump ordered his translators’ notes destroyed; there is also concern that much of their conversation was done out of the hearing of the US’s translator (Putin is fluent in English) who may have been relegated to a distant part of the rather large empty ballroom in which they met. The Washington Post reported, after a leak six months later, that when Trump met privately for those two hours with Putin the CIA went into “panic mode.” A US intelligence official told the Post:“There was this gasp’ at the CIA’s Langley, Virginia headquarters. You literally had people in panic mode watching it at Langley. On all floors. Just shock.” Three weeks after Trump’s July 16, 2018 meeting with Putin in Helsinki, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) made a solo trip to Moscow to personally hand-deliver a document or package of documents from Trump to Putin. Its contents are still unknown, although Paul told the press it was a “personal” letter of some sort. Sen. Paul has also consistently taken Trump’s and Putin’s side with regard to the Ukraine war: he single-handedly blocked a $40 billion military aid package in the Senate. When the FBI searched Mar-a-Lago, he responded with a call for the repeal of the Espionage Act. He further suggested the FBI may have “planted” Secret documents at Mar-a-Lago. Ten days after Paul’s trip to Moscow, The New York Times reported that the CIA was freaked out because their sources inside Moscow had suddenly “gone silent”: “The full reasons the sources have gone silent are not known,” the Times reported, but Trump having intentionally given a man working for the FBI to Putin — a man whose job at that time was to find and reveal Russian agents involved in or close to the Trump campaign — may also have had something to do with it:“[C]urrent and former officials said the exposure of sources inside the United States has also complicated matters,” noted the Times. “This year, the identity of an F.B.I. informant, Stefan Halper, became public after [Trump-loyal MAGA Republican] House lawmakers sought information on him and the White House allowed the information to be shared. Mr. Halper, an American academic based in Britain, had been sent to talk to Trump campaign advisers who were under F.B.I. scrutiny for their ties to Russia.” Things were picking up the following year, in 2019, as Putin was planning his invasion of Ukraine while Trump was preparing for the 2020 election. In July 2019, Trump had conversations with five foreign leaders during and just before a presidential visit that month to Mar-a-Lago; they included Putin and the Emir of Qatar. In one of those conversations, according to a high-level US Intelligence source, Trump “made promises” to a “world leader” that were so alarming it provoked a national security scramble across multiple agencies. As the Washington Post noted in an article titled, “Trump’s communications with foreign leader are part of whistleblower complaint that spurred standoff between spy chief and Congress”:“Intelligence Community Inspector General Michael Atkinson determined that the complaint [against Trump] was credible and troubling enough to be considered a matter of ‘urgent concern,’ a legal threshold that requires notification of congressional oversight committees.” On the last day of that month, July 31, Trump had another private conversation with Putin. The White House spokespeople told Congress and the press that Trump said that he and Putin discussed “wildfires” and “trade between the nations.” No droids in this car… But the following week, on Aug. 2, the Daily Beast’s Betsy Swan reported that Trump had that week asked the Office of the Director of National Intelligence for a list of all its employees (including all our “spies”) who had worked there more than 90 days, and the request had intelligence officials experiencing “disquiet.” Perhaps just by coincidence, months after Trump left office with cases of classified documents, the New York Times ran a story with the headline Captured, Killed or Compromised: C.I.A. Admits to Losing Dozens of Informants:“Top American counterintelligence officials warned every C.I.A. station and base around the world last week,” the Times’ story’s lede began, “about troubling numbers of informants recruited from other countries to spy for the United States being captured or killed, people familiar with the matter said.“The message, in an unusual top secret cable, said that the C.I.A.’s counterintelligence mission center had looked at dozens of cases in the last several years involving foreign informants who had been killed, arrested or most likely compromised. Although brief, the cable laid out the specific number of agents executed by rival intelligence agencies — a closely held detail that counterintelligence officials typically do not share in such cables.” And now, to complicate matters, it appears Elon Musk took with him access to the payroll records of all of our nation’s spies and other foreign intelligence agents. The Elon Musk who, the Wall Street Journal reports, has also reportedly been having his own secret conversations with Putin. If it turns out the Trump has been acting as an agent for Russia, how long might this have been going on? Czechoslovakia’s Státní bezpečnost (StB) first started paying attention to Trump back in 1977, as documented by the German newspaper Bild when the StB’s files were declassified, because Trump married Czech model Ivana Zelnickova, his first wife, recently buried on his golf course in New Jersey. Czechoslovakia at that time was part of the Warsaw Pact with the Soviet Union, and Ivana and her family had been raised as good communists. Now that a Czech citizen was married into a wealthy and prominent American family, the StB saw an opportunity and started tracking Trump virtually from his engagement. As 2016 and 2018 investigations by the Guardian found:“Ivana’s father, Miloš Zelníček, gave regular information to the local StB office about his daughter’s visits from the US and on his celebrity son-in-law’s career in New York. Zelníček was classified as a ‘conspiratorial’ informer. His relationship with the StB lasted until the end of the communist regime.” An investigative reporting breakthrough by Craig Unger for his book American Kompromat led Unger to Uri Shvets, a former KGB spy who’d been posted to Washington, D.C. for years as a correspondent for the Soviet news agency TASS. Shvets told the story — from his own knowledge — of how Trump and Ivana visited Moscow in 1987 and were essentially recruited or seduced by the KGB, a trip corroborated by Luke Harding in his book Collusion: Secret Meetings, Dirty Money, and How Russia Helped Donald Trump Win. Their trip was coordinated by Intourist, the Soviet travel agency that was a front for the KGB, and the Trumps’ handlers regaled Donald and Ivana with Soviet talking points, presumably about things like the horrors of NATO. The KGB’s psychological profile of Trump had determined he was vulnerable to flattery and not much of a deep thinker, so they told him repeatedly how brilliant he was and that he should run for president in the US. Much to the astonishment and jubilation of the KGB, Trump returned from Moscow to the US to give a Republican presidential campaign speech that fall in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. He then purchased a large ad in the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Boston Globe on Sept. 1, 1987 that questioned America’s ongoing support of Japan and NATO, both thorns in the side of the USSR and their Chinese allies. Trump’s ad laid it on the line:“Why are these nations not paying the United States for the human lives and billions of dollars we are losing to protect their interests? ... The world is laughing at America’s politicians as we protect ships we don’t own, carrying oil we don’t need, destined for allies who won’t help.” As the Guardian reported in 2021:“The bizarre intervention was cause for astonishment and jubilation in Russia. A few days later Shvets, who had returned home by now, was at the headquarters of the KGB’s first chief directorate in Yasenevo when he received a cable celebrating the ad as a successful ‘active measure’ executed by a new KGB asset.“’It was unprecedented,’ [Shvets said.] … It was hard to believe that somebody would publish it under his name and that it will impress real serious people in the west but it did and, finally, this guy became the president.’” Meanwhile, Putin was making friends with powerful influence over American foreign policy. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who flipped his nation into a strongman neofascist state following an unsuccessful attempted coup in 2016 (he imprisoned and tortured numerous journalists and political opponents), has been deepening his relationship with Putin ever since that US election year. In 2017, Erdoğan apparently gained access to America’s deepest secrets by secretly paying off Gen. Michael Flynn even as Flynn became Trump’s National Security Advisor, who also had at least one secret phone conversation with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak after Flynn started working in the White House. Flynn pleaded guilty in December 2017 to “willfully and knowingly” making “false, fictitious and fraudulent statements” to the FBI about one of those conversations with Russian Ambassador Kislyak. Flynn was also an unregistered agent of a foreign government while working in the White House: he had taken about a half-million dollars from Erdoğan. Around the time he was leaving office, Trump pardoned Flynn, essentially burying the entire story. From campaigning to destroy NATO to selling out Ukraine to letting Russia help kill American soldiers in the Gulf region, Trump’s goal appears to be, to paraphrase Ron DeSantis, to “Make America Russia.” The big question is, “Why?”

A tangled maze of ties uncovers Trump's true masters — and his treachery

14.03.2026 20:21 👍 6 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0
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How a Marine Unit in the Middle East Could Open New Phase of Iran War The unit’s arrival in the coming days will give the Pentagon the ability to quickly launch raids.

How a Marine Unit in the Middle East Could Open New Phase of Iran War

14.03.2026 19:24 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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Trump FCC chief threatens broadcasters’ licenses over Iran war coverage Brendan Carr, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, on Saturday appeared to threaten the licenses of broadcasters reporting on President Donald Trump’s war in Iran after the president crafted a lengthy Truth Social post against the “Fake News Media.” Trump, in a post on Saturday, took exception to an “intentionally misleading headline by the Fake News Media about” five tanker planes that were hit in an Iranian strike on Saudi Arabia. The Wall Street Journal reported the story Saturday, citing two U.S. officials. “The tankers were hit during an Iranian missile strike on the Saudi base in recent days, the officials said,” the Journal reports. “U.S. Central Command declined to comment. The tankers were damaged but not fully destroyed and are being repaired, one of the officials said. No one was killed in the strikes.” Trump, in his post, argued “the planes were not ‘struck or ‘destroyed,’” and called out “The Wall Street Journal (in particular)” who he claims “actually want use to lose the war.” The Journal's report included Trump’s Saturday Truth Social post. In response to the president’s rant, Carr issued a lengthy post on X accusing broadcasters of “running hoaxes and news distortions — also known as the fake news.” “The law is clear. Broadcasters must operate in the public interest, and they will lose their licenses if they do not,” Carr wrote, arguing it was “in their own business interests” to “correct course” on their reporting. “The American people have subsidized broadcasters to the tune of billions of dollars by providing free access to the nation’s airwaves,” Carr claimed. “It is very important to bring trust back into media, which has earned itself the label of fake news.” Journalists and media observers noted Carr's post seemed to threaten news organizations that report stories the White House would rather not be reported. “The state doesn't like the war coverage, threatens the license of the broadcasters,” the Bulwark’s Sam Stein noted. “The Trump administration is now threatening the licenses of broadcasters whose news coverage — apparently about the war — it deems to be ‘fake,’” CNN’s Aaron Blake wrote. It wasn’t the only media criticism Trump engaged in on Saturday. In a separate Truth Social post, the president shared an image of how he’s “reshaping the media” including a section of media companies and individual people who are now “gone.” One of the people mentioned in that Trump post, former CNN host Jim Acosta, said he’s “honored to be included” in the graphic. “But seriously what’s wrong with this guy?” Acosta asked. “This is some goofy stuff.”

Trump FCC chief threatens broadcasters’ licenses over Iran war coverage

14.03.2026 18:27 👍 9 🔁 6 💬 0 📌 1
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Find An Event

One person can be ignored. One voice can be silenced.
But millions of us, marching together? That's a force no king can withstand.
March 28. Bring your people. #NoKings2026

14.03.2026 18:06 👍 12 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 0
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremists

Everyone is entitled to due process, but Trump and Miller are using ICE to illegally arrest & disappear people.

Demand justice and protections for all, regardless of status.

#MeltICE

14.03.2026 18:04 👍 17 🔁 6 💬 0 📌 1
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Trump telling on himself that his 'strategy is not under control': Marine Corps veteran President Donald Trump keeps calling the U.S. operation in Iran “a little excursion,” that will keep the United States out of war. But one Marine Corps veteran says it’s clear Trump has no strategy beyond his chaotic messaging as the war in Iran enters its third week. As the Guardian reported Saturday, the Iran war’s “timelines and goals are also continually shifting.” Trump Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth “has said it is up to the president ‘whether it’s the beginning, the middle or the end’ of the war,” the Guardian notes. “But Trump has been all over the map on this question.” Marine Corps veteran and Vet Voice Foundation leader Janessa Goldbeck told the Guardian Trump is directly contradicting his Pentagon with his shifting messaging on the war, and waned that “contradiction sends dangerous signals to adversaries about US resolve." “When the president says the war is basically over and his Pentagon says it’s just the beginning, that tells the world the strategy is not under control,” the Marine Corps veteran added. For Goldbeck, Trump seems motivated by “fear” as he tries “to find an exit strategy without comprehending the reality of what he has launched the United States into illegally and without congressional authorization.” “President Trump launched a war without defining the mission and the goals of this war have changed multiple times,” she explained. “He seems to have expected regime change on the cheap but we’re clearly seeing an escalation with no end in sight and his own Pentagon is contradicting him in real time. It is a real mess.” She’s far from the only military vet criticizing the president. Matthew Hot, an Iraq war combat veteran, told the Guardian Trump is leaving allies “confused by it but also likely frightened by it.” “We can be glib and we can say, well, maybe there’s a genius in that because if you don’t set any clear goals no one can hold you to them,” he noted. But allies are still scrambling to make sense of the president's moves. Jonathan Alter, a presidential historian, acknowledged Trump is “a chaos agent,” arguing, “that’s what he specializes in.” “[Trump] doesn’t think any further ahead than the next news cycle and so you get an on-again off-again zigzag foreign policy,” Alter said. “He lies as easily as he breathes so to believe anything out of his mouth like, ‘we demand unconditional surrender’ – well, two days later, he won’t be demanding it anymore and he’ll pretend he never said it,” Alter explained. “His words are at some level meaningless except, because they’re backed by so much weaponry, they take on enormous importance.”

Trump telling on himself that his 'strategy is not under control': Marine Corps veteran

14.03.2026 17:29 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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New White House Visitor Screening Center Proposed by Trump The facility would replace trailers and tents the Secret Service uses to screen visitors to the White House. It would be the latest presidential building project.

New White House Visitor Screening Center Proposed by Trump

14.03.2026 17:29 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 1
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'Anxious' Senate Republicans send Trump flashing-red warning about midterms Senate Republicans are “anxious about the midterms," and “the mood is shifting” among GOP leaders who once assumed they could coast to victory in November, Politico reports. Politico spoke with 10 Republican senators and aides, many of whom "are now openly predicting a tough battle to hold onto control,” thanks in large part to President Donald Trump’s policies. Their party is struggling “to keep the focus on affordability policies that lawmakers want to make the centerpiece of their midterm campaign,” Politico explains, as Trump wages an unpopular war in the Middle East that comes with rising oil prices and potential downstream impacts to the U.S. economy. “The Senate passed a major housing bill this week but it faces an uncertain future in the House. Trump himself told Republican lawmakers Monday that housing is not a top concern for voters,” the report adds. Trump ally Sen. Kevin Cramer (R-N.D.) told Politico he’s “glad he’s not on the ballot” as “Republican senators [warn] that the party writ large needs to hammer home cost-of-living measures.” Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), another Trump supporter, acknowledged “prices are high,” and told Politico he hopes Republicans will “take some votes to lower the costs.” Trump, meanwhile, has set his sights on passing the SAVE America Act, an effort to overhaul U.S. elections and "institute tough new citizenship and photo ID requirements in order to cast a ballot,” Politico reports. But Senate Majority Leader John Thune is locked in conversations with the White House, and Thune has warned the president his chamber does not have the votes to pass the bill. The president has even demanded Republicans nuke the filibuster to ensure passage of the SAVE America Act — but just last week, Thune had to deliver some “not so good news” to Trump on his demand. “The votes aren't there to nuke the filibuster,” Thune explained. “It's just a reality. … The math doesn't add up.” “Voting on the SAVE America Act is something we will do, but passage is not guaranteed,” he added. “I just wouldn't assume that that's going to happen.”

'Anxious' Senate Republicans send Trump flashing-red warning about midterms

14.03.2026 16:32 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Support our campaign to oppose MAGA extremism

Liar Trump claims there was “no inflation” during his first term.

Reality check: consumer prices rose about 8% from the first day of his term to the last day, with an inflation rate of 2.46%.

Truth matters. Spread it around.

14.03.2026 16:13 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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'Meathead' Pentagon chief blind to the fact he’s Trump’s next 'sacrificial lamb': analysis Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has no idea he’s President Donald Trump’s “future victim,” British-American journalist Sarah Baxter writes in i Paper. “We are beginning to see in real time what happens when a vain, looksmaxxing US secretary of war encounters death and destruction, and it isn’t pretty,” Baxter wrote Saturday. Looksmaxxing, as the New Yorker puts it, is “the practice of intensively optimizing one's appearance.” And for Baxter, who calls Hegseth a “cartoonish Johnny Bravo lookalike," the Pentagon chief is certainly a follower of the practice. “With his ability to do 100 push-ups and 50 pull-ups in just over five minutes, he regards himself as the epitome of masculinity and bravery,” Baxter writes. “Instead of steeling the US public for the grit and sacrifice military action entails, the Pentagon chief has proffered a wham-bam caricature of the invincibility of untrammeled power[.]” Listing numerous pitfalls that have emerged in the administration's ongoing war in Iran, Baxter argues “the war is playing out in an eerily similar way to events in Minneapolis, where masked agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Patrol killed two American citizens, Renée Good and Alex Pretti.” Kristi Noem, outgoing Department of Homeland Security secretary who oversees the agencies responsible for those deaths, has already been fired by the Trump administration, the reporter notes. And she believes Hegseth could be next. Noting that last September, Hegseth spoke with a number of top generals who were summoned to Quantico, VA, Baxter explains the defense chief promised no “endless nation building” under his leadership. Still, as Baxter writes, the United States’ wars in Afghanistan and Iraq revealed “the reason for nation-building”: “New threats would arise and gains would be lost unless enemy nations became allies.” But, she warns, “Hegseth is too foolish to realize this.” And the president, “seeking someone to blame, may have found his future victim.” Indeed, the Hill reports Saturday that Hegseth and Trump “face perilous options” in Iran as they face “a difficult set of options in attempting to reopen” the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping route currently slowed to a crawl as Iran carries out attacks on tankers in the strait. Hegseth on Friday “downplayed concerns of Iranian attacks,” the Hill reports. The defense secretary insists the Pentagon “has been dealing with it.” But as the Trump administration confronts a problem of its own creation, Baxter warns it could be knives out for Hegseth.

'Meathead' Pentagon chief blind to the fact he’s Trump’s next 'sacrificial lamb': analysis

14.03.2026 15:35 👍 6 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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TikTok Investors Set to Pay $10 Billion Fee to Trump Administration The large fee is the latest example of the White House’s inserting itself into corporate deal making in unusual and aggressive ways.

TikTok Investors Set to Pay $10 Billion Fee to Trump Administration

14.03.2026 15:35 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Push for GOP voting law has many switching sides on filibuster issue Some Republicans, just like Democrats in 2022, are eager to change the Senate’s rules in an effort to pass a national election law.

Push for GOP voting law has many switching sides on filibuster issue

14.03.2026 15:31 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Trump's "Big Ugly Bill" benefits the rich & powerful at the expense of working families.

The MAGA Republican budget takes away our healthcare & tariffs increase our costs for groceries, clothes & electronics – all to pay for tax cuts for the wealthy.

14.03.2026 15:16 👍 3 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Imagine an America where our tax dollars are used to provide services & care for us, not to enrich corrupt politicians & their wealthy donors through tariffs paid by us as higher retail prices. Support Democrats up & down the ballot who will fight for us.

14.03.2026 13:53 👍 7 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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'Hot commodity': White House officials say Trump’s personal phone number is for sale President Donald Trump’s personal phone number is “for sale to deep-pocket interests seeking influence, two administration officials” told the Atlantic. The stunning report reveals Trump’s personal number is a “hot commodity” as officials tell the Atlantic they’ve “heard of CEOs offering money for his number … [and] crypto bros offering cryptocurrency for it.” According to the Atlantic, “No one foresaw this at the start of Trump’s second term, when the number was closely held by the president’s friends and a handful of journalists who used it sparingly.” Now, Trump receives so many calls “on his private iPhone that his advisers have stopped trying to keep track. Sometimes in meetings, he will leave his phone face up, allowing staff to gawk at the flashing notifications of incoming or missed calls that pile up on his screen.” “It is literally call after reporter call,” one official told the Atlantic. “It is just boom, boom, boom.” Per the report, Trump’s phone particularly lights up — “like flashing a Bat-Signal” — “after a journalist successfully catches the president and then publishes a mini-scoop on what he says.” Those scoops signal to reporters “Trump may be idle and chatty,” though the conversations tend to be “brief,” the report notes. Trump, a second official told the Atlantic, “enjoys” the phone calls, and his team does little to stem the flow of incoming calls. “He knows how to handle the press,” that second official said. Access to the president has evolved over his second term, according to the report. As his number “began to more widely circulate” last year, “the White House team would privately tell reporters they were not happy with the direct line, and vaguely [warned] that if the phone number was used too often, there could be a cost.” But, as the Atlantic notes, “Trump made the rules, and Trump liked the calls.” For now, there’s little indication these brief "mini scoops" — which the Atlantic notes have the power to literally move markets —will cease. “Trump’s aides say there is no indication that the president is annoyed by the constant calls — and, therefore, there are no plans to change the number,” the Atlantic writes. It “also has no solution to the constant spread of the number, including through suspected horse-trading and black-market sales among influence brokers,” the report adds. “It’s just wild,” the first administration told the Atlantic. “It’s out of control,” the second said.

'Hot commodity': White House officials say Trump’s personal phone number is for sale

14.03.2026 13:41 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 3 📌 1
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White House scrambles to reassure Trump 'conservatives aren’t abandoning him': WSJ President Donald Trump’s team “is privately trying to reassure the president that conservatives aren’t abandoning him,” the Wall Street Journal reports, including providing him recent polling data “they say shows the [Iran] war is popular with his supporters.” Still, the Journal notes, “a majority of Americans in polls [oppose] the war” as Trump’s team tries “to make the case that the conflict won’t drag on like the so-called ‘forever wars’ in Iraq and Afghanistan.” The Journal notes such an extended conflict is “a red line for many lawmakers and the president’s MAGA base.” Meanwhile, “Trump allies who have grown skeptical of the operation have coordinated behind the scenes to schedule appearances on Fox News and other TV networks watched by the president to sound a note of caution and warn against a deeper U.S. commitment,” the Journal notes. The Journal’s details of private White House discussions come as part of a larger report about the president’s preparedness for the war in Iran, including his acknowledgement that Iran could close the critical Strait of Hormuz in retaliation for U.S.-Israeli attacks. Trump’s press secretary Karoline Leavitt on Friday railed against a CNN report that revealed “the Pentagon and National Security Council significantly underestimated Iran’s willingness to close the Strait of Hormuz … while planning the ongoing operation.” Leavitt called the story “garbage.” Now, the Journal is reporting Trump knew of the risks to the critical shipping lane — but decided to go to war anyway. “Before the U.S. went to war, Gen. Dan Caine, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told President Trump that an American attack could prompt Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz,” the Journal reports. Trump, according to the Journal, “acknowledged the risk … [and] told his team that Tehran would likely capitulate before closing the strait — and even if Iran tried, the U.S. military could handle it.” “The White House said Trump understood the risks of launching the war, but was determined to eliminate the national security threat posed by Iran,” the Journal notes. “Before the president approved the operation, he and his advisers discussed options to force the reopening of the strait and use the U.S. Navy to escort tankers through the waterway, [people familiar with the discussions] said.” Caine and other advisors outlined “the possible closure of the strait … for Trump in the run-up to the war,” according to the report. The general also told Trump he believed “the U.S. military could hobble Iran’s navy and missile arsenal, according to people with knowledge of the discussions, as well as further reduce its capability to build and deploy a nuclear weapon.” Joe Holstead, Caine’s spokesman, told the Journal the general provided Trump with “a full spectrum of military options, along with precise and thoughtful consideration of the secondary effects, implications and risks associated with each option.” Per the report, administration officials kept “only a small group … looped into the preparations for Iran — including Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and [Secretary of Defense Pete] Hegseth.” This was by design, administration officials told the Journal, because “it allowed Trump to respond quickly to shifting developments” and would “contain leaks." “Typically, war preparations include weeks or months of classified deliberations, written planning documents, the airing of dissenting views from diplomats and intelligence officials, and National Security Council meetings with Cabinet members to make the most informed decision,” the Journal reports

White House scrambles to reassure Trump 'conservatives aren’t abandoning him': WSJ

14.03.2026 12:44 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 2 📌 0
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'Mind boggling' corruption: Kushner seeks $5 billion from foreign governments for his firm President Donald Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner, is trying to raise more than $5 billion from foreign governments for his private equity firm while working as “one of the U.S. government’s chief negotiators in the Middle East,” the New York Times reports. According to the Times, who spoke with five people familiar with the discussions, Kushner is trying to raise money for his investment firm Affinity Partners. Representatives form the company “have already met with Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund,” which is led by Kushner pal Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. PIF had already invested $2 billion in the firm “soon after the first Trump administration ended.” The fundraising “[shows] the blurring of the lines between public service and private profit-seeking” in Trump’s administration, the Times reports. Kushner, who traveled as an official U.S. delegate to the the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, used the trip to “[discuss] his plans to raise billions in new investments for Affinity in private meetings with international business leaders, two people with knowledge of the conversations said,” according to the report. The fundraising is a change from Kushner’s previous claim that he would table his efforts to work for his father-in-law. In December 2024, Kushner told a posdcaster that Affinity “[doesn’t] have to raise capital for the next four years.” As the Times notes, Kushner, who founded Affinity in 2021, “leaned heavily on his government contacts” when he began the company after Trump’s first term. According to Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW), Kushner’s appointment as Special Envoy for Peace on Feb. 19 started the clock on a 30 day requirement for him to file a public financial disclosure report. “Kushner’s previous unofficial role raised substantial conflict of interest concerns given Kushner’s business and investments in the very countries and conflicts that he had been working on — and because Kushner had no defined position, he was not subject to any ethics laws, security clearance process or Senate confirmation,” CREW wrote on Wednesday. Indeed, the blatant “greed and corruption of the Trump family” has stunned political observers, including University of Virginia Center for Politics Director Larry Sabato, who wrote on X Saturday that Kushner’s fundraising “is almost beyond belief.” Political historian Brian Rosenwald agreed, calling the revelation “mind boggling.” “[A]ny of dozens of things they do would've been a presidency ending scandal for any other president,” Rosenwald said.

'Mind boggling' corruption: Kushner seeks $5 billion from foreign governments for his firm

14.03.2026 11:47 👍 9 🔁 3 💬 0 📌 0
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Outlook for young Americans 'really awful' as Trump’s 'SOL' economy takes hold: conservatives President Donald Trump insists that the American economy is booming under him, but a pair of conservative commentators discussed on Friday how unemployed people are “SOL” right now. “If you are among the unlucky people who don't have a job, you are basically SOL,” Catherine Rampell told Sam Stein for the conservative website The Bulwark. After explaining that she does not believe America is technically in a recession right now, Rampell argued that “we've lost jobs in, whatever it is, like six of the last twelve months at this point. And if you look at, for example, job gains among younger people, they look really awful. So there are certain pockets of the population that have been hurt worse than others.” Rampell also described how people with college degrees and blue collar workers are both being laid off and finding it hard to get new work in the current economy. Part of this is AI and “partly just that we're in a low-hiring, low-firing environment right now because there's so much uncertainty in the economy,” Rampell explained. “Lots of businesses are just holding off on all plans, many of them because there's a lot of uncertainty about specific things like tariffs.” Overall Rampell explained that “there's a lot of uncertainty in the economy. The overall numbers suggest very low hiring and also low firing — just not that much churn in the economy.” Rampell is not alone among conservatives in disagreeing with Trump’s rosy depiction of his second term economy. The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board argued earlier this month that “there’s no denying the February report was lousy. The U.S. shed 92,000 jobs and revised down gains for January and December by a combined 69,000. The question is what to make of the declines.” Placing at least part of the blame on Trump’s unilaterally-levied tariffs, the board added that “if Mr. Trump wants a tax-cut boost for the economy while the war continues, he could call off his new 15% universal tariff. Consider it our contribution to easing everyone’s economic anxiety.” Similar to Rampell and the Journal’s editorial board, The Bulwark’s Mona Charen also wrote in February that Trump’s tariffs are harming ordinary Americans — and that this could cost Republicans politically in the upcoming midterm elections. “Voters are rarely able to connect policy to outcomes, but they have done so in the case of tariffs,” Charen argued. “Back in 2024, Americans were about equally divided on the question of trade, with some favoring higher tariffs and roughly similar numbers opting for lower tariffs. Experience has changed their views.” Even elected Republicans are pushing back against Trump’s economic policies, at least in small part. Six Republicans joined the 213 out of 214 Democrats in voting to repeal Trump’s anti-Canada tariffs last month including Reps. Don Bacon (R-Neb.), Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.), Jeff Hurd (R-Colo.), Kevin Kiley (R-Calif.), Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) and Dan Newhouse (R-Wash.)

Outlook for young Americans 'really awful' as Trump’s 'SOL' economy takes hold: conservatives

14.03.2026 10:50 👍 7 🔁 1 💬 1 📌 0
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GOP, fearing tough fight for Texas Senate seat, paints Democrat as radical Talarico, who is looking to flip Texas blue in his quest for the U.S. Senate, says the attacks from Republicans are a distraction from real issues.

GOP, fearing tough fight for Texas Senate seat, paints Democrat as radical

14.03.2026 10:08 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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JB Pritzker Wants to Be Judged on His Heart, Not His Money The governor of Illinois and Trump antagonist has become a national figure for Democrats. Where will that lead?

JB Pritzker Wants to Be Judged on His Heart, Not His Money

14.03.2026 09:53 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Trump Issues Executive Orders to Tackle Housing Supply, Demand The orders could undermine bipartisan legislation the Senate passed earlier this week, the most significant housing package in decades.

Trump Issues Executive Orders to Tackle Housing Supply, Demand

14.03.2026 04:11 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 1