Thursday, January 16, 2025
Thursday, August 8, 2024
JD Vance’s selection as Trump’s running mate marks the end of Republican conservatism
Fascism and Christian Nationalism now define the GOP
Karyn Amira, College of Charleston
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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and vice presidential candidate JD Vance at a campaign rally in Michigan on July 20, 2024. AP Photo/Evan Vucci |
Given this dramatic change, what does Vance’s selection mean for the Republican Party and conservatism, the political philosophy that the GOP once claimed to embrace?
I am a political scientist whose research and political analysis focuses on the relationship between Trump, the Republican Party and conservatism. Everyday citizens define conservatism in different ways, but at its root it is a philosophy that supports smaller and less-centralized government because consolidated power could be used to silence political competition and deny citizens their liberties.
Since 2015, Trump has tightened his grip on the Republican Party, moving it further away from its professed conservative ideology. The choice of Vance as Trump’s running mate – and the competition that preceded it – are the latest steps in this process.
Vance came from a small pool of contenders that included other noteworthy politicians who likewise once vehemently opposed Trump. By examining their trajectories, we can see how the Republican Party has abandoned conservative values to serve a single man.
Saturday, June 29, 2024
Donald Trump ia a Profound Threat to Social Security, Medicare, and Seniors
How do we know? He's already told us—over and over and over again.
NANCY J. ALTMAN in Common Dreams
Donald Trump was the worst president for seniors in the history of the nation. That is not hyperbole. Alarmingly, if elected again, he will be even worse—and, worryingly, more effective.
When Trump ran for president in 2016, he claimed he would be the one
Republican not to cut our earned benefits but, when he actually became
president, every single one of
his budgets proposed deep cuts to Social Security and Medicare, as well as
Medicaid.
When Trump couldn’t get the cuts enacted, he employed the
old tactic of “starve the beast.” Figuring tax cuts are easier to enact than
benefit cuts, he cut income taxes which help to fund Medicare and Medicaid, and
sought to defund Social Security, which has its own dedicated revenue source.
To advance his goal of undermining Social Security,
Donald Trump grabbed the questionable power to go after its dedicated revenue
unilaterally—something without precedent. Because Trump was limited to
executive action, he was able to only defer the revenue, but he made clear that
he would not just defer the revenue, but eliminate it, if he were
re-elected. Insufficient dedicated revenue leads to automatic cuts.
Conveniently, automatic cuts means there is no one to clearly be held
accountable.
Trump’s goals to undermine these programs, so vital to seniors, have not changed. Trump continues to claim he won’t cut benefits despite his record to the contrary, but tells the truth from time to time. Moreover, he is reportedly considering, once again, defunding Social Security, if he has the chance. Trump also plans to continue to give his billionaire friends massive tax giveaways.
Monday, February 3, 2020
Trump now says he’ll save Social Security from his OWN plans to gut it

You may find real flaws in the armor of a Best-of-All-Time economy cloak that Trump tries to wear.
Friday, December 6, 2019
House Democrats have passed nearly 400 bills. Trump and Republicans are ignoring them.

But the House Democratic Policy and Communications Committee estimates 80 percent of those bill have hit a snag in the Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) is prioritizing confirming judges over passing bills.
Friday, July 12, 2019
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
The Koch Brothers’ New Look

Thursday, June 6, 2019
Yeah, Trump screwed us on taxes

But the study should also offer additional clarity: With hard numbers now available on the economy’s performance in the first full year of the legislation, it’s easier than ever to talk instead about who got what and how — and the answers, so far, aren’t pretty.
But the vanishingly insignificant comparative break Trump’s law gave workaday people lays the game bare. This tax bill is already reshaping the real-world economy in ways that limit the prospects of ordinary people, potentially reinforcing the structural inequities that adversely impact democratic society.
Tuesday, February 26, 2019
Case for obstruction looks rock solid

Whitaker apparently said no, but the disclosure drew wide perceptions from both sides of the aisle as a blatant attempted obstruction of justice—and coincidentally put Whitaker in the position of coming very close to having lied to Congress about any presidential request to interfere in the investigations.
Trump asked whether Geoffrey S. Berman, the former Rudy Giuliani partner named U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York and a Trump ally, could be put in charge of the widening investigation, according to several American officials with direct knowledge of the call.
The president soon soured on Whitaker, as he often does with his aides, and complained about his inability to pull levers at the Justice Department that could make the president’s many legal problems go away.”
"The story of Mr. Trump’s attempts to defang the investigations has been voluminously covered in the news media, to such a degree that many Americans have lost track of how unusual his behavior is. But fusing the strands reveals an extraordinary story of a president who has attacked the law enforcement apparatus of his own government like no other president in history, and who has turned the effort into an obsession. Mr. Trump has done it with the same tactics he once used in his business empire: demanding fierce loyalty from employees, applying pressure tactics to keep people in line and protecting the brand—himself—at all costs.”
Tuesday, February 12, 2019
How to make $845 million, pay no taxes AND get a $22 million refund

Saturday, January 26, 2019
Our counterfeit Social Security crisis

In 2092, at the end of the latest 75-year projection, the inflow from payroll taxes would still be covering roughly three-quarters of scheduled worker benefits—without increasing the tax rate or raising the retirement age or making any other change.
That’s the truth and nothing but the truth, according to the 2018 annual report of the Social Security board of trustees.
Tuesday, December 18, 2018
Tuesday, November 13, 2018
Off the rails
by Derek Willis, ProPublica, and Paul Kane, The Washington Post

Today, on the eve of a closely fought election that will determine who runs Capitol Hill, that model is effectively dead.
It has been replaced by a weakened legislative branch in which debate is strictly curtailed, party leaders dictate the agenda, most elected representatives rarely get a say and government shutdowns are a regular threat due to chronic failures to agree on budgets, according to a new analysis of congressional data and documents by The Washington Post and ProPublica.
The study found that the transformation has occurred relatively fast — sparked by the hyperpolarized climate that has enveloped politics since the 2008 election of President Barack Obama and the subsequent dawn of the tea party movement on the right.
Thursday, July 26, 2018
Let’s see how Trump reacts to this!

In other words, Macleans is calling for a boycott of American products currently on Canada’s tariffs list.
In others, you’ll be boosting Canadian-based operations whose supply networks span the border, reminding Americans which country imports more of their goods and services than any other.”
Thursday, June 21, 2018
‘Feckless Cowards’

Wednesday, June 20, 2018
Rep. Cicilline visits immigrant children prison
The facility Cicilline visited is a former Wal-Mart |
Sunday, June 3, 2018
The New York Times lists 51 of Trump’s ‘More Egregious’ Failures
Yes, Mr. Trump has now been compared to Joseph Stalin by one senior senator from his party, and, yes, he has been pre-emptively disinvited to the prospective funeral of another. But most Republican leaders, usually such vigilant guardians of Oval Office decorum, have remained strangely silent.
These items don’t represent disputes about policy, over which reasonable people may disagree. They simply serve to catalog what Paul Ryan, Mitch McConnell and all the other Trump-supporting Republicans in Congress and across America, through their silence, have now blessed as behavior befitting a president of the United States.
Sunday, April 29, 2018
Nothing is sacred with House Republicans
