Thursday, December 11, 2025

Slightly Edited Version of Today's Andy Borowitz



Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more
No photo description available.
Dan Mullan/Getty Images

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Donald J. Trump exploded with rage on Thursday after gold paint peeled off his FIFA Peace Prize, White House sources revealed.

The regrettable incident occurred in the Oval Office as Trump was celebrating his recent pardon of the former Honduras President and convicted drug kingpin Juan Orlando Hernández.

As Trump lifted the trophy to show it off to Hernández, flakes of gold paint cascaded to the ground, causing Trump to roar, "Peace Prize? More like piece of shit!"

Attempting to appease Trump, FIFA released a statement stressing that they had used "only the highest quality gold paint, like that used on the Oval Office, the new White House ballroom, and your hair."

this is the actual version of TBR this morning
Dan Mullan/Getty Images

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Donald J. Trump exploded with rage on Thursday after gold paint peeled off his FIFA Peace Prize, White House sources revealed.

The regrettable incident occurred in the Oval Office as Trump was celebrating his recent pardon of the former Honduras President and convicted drug kingpin Juan Orlando Hernández.

As Trump lifted the trophy to show it off to Hernández, flakes of gold paint cascaded to the ground, causing Trump to roar, "Peace Prize? More like piece of shit!"

Attempting to appease Trump, FIFA released a statement stressing that they had used "only the highest quality gold paint, like that used on the Oval Office, the new White House ballroom, and your hair."

this is the actual version this morning (for you purists)

Trump Enraged After Gold Paint Peels off FIFA Peace Prize

Dec 11
 
READ IN APP
 
Dan Mullan/Getty Images

WASHINGTON (The Borowitz Report)—Donald J. Trump exploded with rage on Thursday after gold paint peeled off his FIFA Peace Prize, White House sources revealed.

The regrettable incident occurred in the Oval Office as Trump was celebrating his recent pardon of the former Honduras President and convicted drug kingpin Juan Orlando Hernández.

As Trump lifted the trophy to show it off to Hernández, flakes of gold paint cascaded to the ground, causing Trump to roar, "Peace Prize? More like piece of shit!"

Attempting to appease Trump, FIFA released a statement stressing that they had used "only the highest quality gold paint, like that used on the Oval Office, the new White House ballroom, and your hair."


--
****
Juan Matute
CCRC


Something to Know - 11 December

So what is all of this hullabaloo about Netflix, Time Warner, Paramount, Discovery and talk of taking over?   To the average shmoo all this means who is going to give you the choices and movies and who is going to jack up the prices to pay for the costs of acquisition.   Yes indeed, there is a lot of money at stake here, and it means nothing to the conglomerate of wealthy individuals or corporations to spend obscene amounts of cash and stocks to win it all.   The intent is not to provide the consumers the best deal for watching their favorite entertainment.   Not by a long shot.   It is who is going to control the programming content that you will be watching.   Upon reading this newsletter from HCR, it is all about controlling the newsroom and social and political content that you see and hear.   Thought and mind control of the streaming airwave programming is Big Brother telling you what you have to know.    So, sign up for a library card, a discussion group, or take up an interesting hobby, or learn to play a musical instrument - anything other than sitting in front of the boob tube and being targeted as a consumer of politically inspired news.   However, I have a feeling that those who need to be warned are not the people who read this.
 

Heather Cox Richardson from Letters from an American heathercoxrichardson@substack.com 
  11:37 PM (10 hours ago)

to me
Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more

When G. Elliott Morris of Strength in Numbers asked ChatGPT to fact-check an article for him yesterday, the chatbot couldn't get its head around modern America. It told him there were "multiple factual impossibilities" in his article, including his statements that "[t]he current Secretary of Defense is a former talk show host for Fox News," "[t]he Deputy Director of the FBI used to guest-host Sean Hannity's show," and "Jeanine Pirro is the U.S. District Attorney for DC."

"Since none of these statements are true," it told Morris, "they undermine credibility unless signposted as hyperbolefiction, or satire."

But of course, Morris's statements were not "factual impossibilities." In the United States of America under President Donald J. Trump, they are true.

Trump has always been a salesman with an instinctive understanding of the power of media. That sense helped him to rise to power in 2016 by leveraging an image Republicans had embraced since the 1980s: that the reason certain white Americans were being left behind in the modern world was not that Republican policies had transferred more than $50 trillion from the bottom 90% of Americans to the top 1%, but that lazy and undeserving Black and Brown Americans and women were taking handouts from the government rather than working.

When he got his disheartening fact-check from ChatGPT, Morris was preparing an article, published today, exploring "how cable news fueled the culture war and broke U.S. politics." The article notes that most people care about and interact with the government through economic or affordability issues—prices, jobs, health care, social programs, and taxes—and that most laws are also about these issues. But, he points out, political rhetoric overwhelmingly focuses on issues like race, crime, immigration, LGBTQ+ rights, and guns: the so-called culture war.

Morris highlights a new academic paper by Shakked Noy of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Aakaash Rao of Harvard that links America's culture war to changes in the media in the 1980s. Their research shows that "a distinctive business strategy" in cable news led it to emphasize culture over economic issues. Noy and Rao found that cable emphasizes culture because it "attracts viewers who would otherwise not watch news," and attracts more viewers than an outlet can find by poaching viewers from other networks that emphasize economic issues. Cable channels have an incentive to produce culture war content, which in turn influences politics, as "constituencies more exposed to cable news assign greater importance to cultural issues, and politicians respond by supplying more cultural ads."

"In other words," Morris writes, "when cable news producers decide to cover an issue more, voters subsequently say it is more important to them, and that issue is more predictive of how they'll vote. TV news coverage, and cable in particular, has the power to choose which issues are most 'salient' for upcoming elections." He notes that "this effect is almost entirely, or maybe even entirely, driven by Fox News," and that right-wing politicians benefit most from it. Democrats get their highest marks from voters on issues not covered by cable news.

Morris concludes that "more than the Republicans or Democrats, left or right, it's the companies that abuse our attention for profit that are the real winners of American politics."

This conclusion echoes a 2006 conversation a reporter for Financial Times held with Fox News Channel founder Rupert Murdoch and chief executive officer Roger Ailes. In that conversation, when asked if running the Fox News Channel was "like running a political campaign," Ailes responded: "No more than running a Dairy Queen. You have a customer, you have to market it to help them get to your product, the product has to be good, you can't drop too many on the floor or in the sprinkles or you'll lose money. All business is basically about customers and marketing and making money and capitalism and winning and promoting it and having something someone really wants."

Ailes came to the Fox News Channel from his work packaging presidential candidate Richard Nixon in 1968. One Nixon media advisor explained how they could put their candidate over the top by transforming him into a media celebrity. "Voters are basically lazy," the advisor told reporter Joe McGinnis. "Reason requires a high degree of discipline, of concentration; impression is easier. Reason pushes the viewer back, it assaults him, it demands that he agree or disagree; impression can envelop him, invite him in, without making an intellectual demand…. When we argue with him, we…seek to engage his intellect…. The emotions are more easily roused, closer to the surface, more malleable."

Ailes presented Nixon in carefully curated televised "town halls" geared to different audiences, in which he arranged the set, Nixon's answers to carefully staged questions, Nixon's makeup, and the crowd's applause. "Let's face it," he said, "a lot of people think Nixon is dull. Think he's a bore, a pain in the ass." But, carefully managed, television could "make them forget all that."

Ailes found his stride working for right-wing candidates, selling the narrative that Democrats were socialists who wanted to transfer wealth from hardworking white Americans to undeserving minorities and women. He produced the racist "Willie Horton" ad for Republican candidate George H.W. Bush in 1988, and a short-lived television show hosted by right-wing shock jock Rush Limbaugh in 1992. It was from there that he went on to shape the Fox News Channel after its launch in 1996.

Ailes sold his narrative with what he called the "orchestra pit theory." He explained: "If you have two guys on a stage and one guy says, 'I have a solution to the Middle East problem,' and the other guy falls in the orchestra pit, who do you think is going to be on the evening news?"

This is a theory Trump has always embraced, and one that drives his second term in office. He has placed television personalities throughout his administration—to the apparent disbelief of ChatGPT—and has turned the White House into, as media ally Steve Bannon put it, a "major information content provider." What Trump does "is the action, and we just happen to be one of the distributors," Bannon told Drew Harwell and Sarah Ellison of the Washington Post. The administration has replaced traditional media outlets with right-wing loyalists and floods the social media space with a Trump narrative that is untethered from reality. Communications director Steven Cheung says their goal is to create "FULL SPECTRUM DOMINANCE."

Their attempt to convince Americans to accept their version of reality is showing now in Trump's repeated extreme version of the old Republican storyline that the economy under him is great and that the country's problems are due to Democrats, minorities, and women.

Since voters in November elections turned against the Republicans, citing their concerns about the economy, Trump has doubled down on the idea that the idea of "affordability" is a "Democrat con job." In an interview yesterday with Politico's Dasha Burns, Trump said he would grade his economy "A-plus-plus-plus-plus-plus." Any problems with it, he and his loyalists say, stem from former president Joe Biden's having left them an economy in shambles. But in fact, in October 2024, The Economist called the American economy "the envy of the world."

As news cycles have turned against his administration on the economy—as well as the Epstein files, immigration sweeps, strikes on small boats in the Caribbean, and his mental acuity—Trump has tried to regain control of the narrative by diving into the orchestra pit. He has turned to an extreme version of the racism, sexism, and attacks on Americans who use the social safety net that have been part of Republican rhetoric for decades. He has gone out of his way to attack Somali Americans as "garbage," to attack female reporters, and to use an ableist slur against Minnesota governor Tim Walz, whose son has a nonverbal learning disability, prompting imitators to drive by the Walz home shouting the slur.

The fight to control the media narrative is on display this week in a fight over a media merger. As Josh Marshall explained in Talking Points Memo yesterday, the media conglomerate Warner Bros. Discovery, which used to be called Time Warner and includes news division CNN, had agreed to be acquired by Netflix. But, as the deal was moving forward, Paramount Skydance launched a hostile takeover to get Warner Bros. Discovery for itself.

David Ellison, son of right-wing billionaire Larry Ellison, who co-founded software giant Oracle, bought Paramount over the summer and appears to be creating a right-wing media ecosystem dominated by the Trumps. Part of the financing for his purchase of Warner Bros. Discovery would come from the investment company of Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, as well as from Saudi and Qatari sovereign wealth funds. Paramount told Warner Bros. Discovery shareholders they should accept its offer because Trump would never allow the Netflix deal to happen, and as Marshall notes, Trump appeared yesterday to agree with that suggestion.

The Paramount merger gave Ellison control of CBS, which promptly turned rightward. At stake now is CNN, which Netflix doesn't particularly want but Paramount does, either to neuter it or turn it into another version of Fox News. Joe Flint, Brian Schwartz, and Natalie Andrews of the Wall Street Journal reported that Ellison told Trump he would make "sweeping changes" to CNN if Paramount acquires Warner Bros. Discovery. The Wall Street Journal reporters note that "Trump has told people close to him that he wants new ownership of CNN as well as changes to CNN programming."

During the Gilded Age, a similar moment of media consolidation around right-wing politics, a magazine that celebrated ordinary Americans launched a new form of journalism. S.S. McClure, a former coffee pot salesman in the Midwest, recognized that people in small towns and on farms were interested in the same questions of reform as people in the cities. He and a partner started McClure's Magazine in 1893 and in 1903 published a famous issue that contained Ida Tarbell's exposé of the Standard Oil Company, Lincoln Steffens's exposé of the corruption of the Minneapolis municipal government, and Ray Stannard Baker's exposé of workers' violence during a coal strike.

Their carefully detailed studies of the machinations of a single trust, a single city, and a single union personalized the larger struggles of people in the new industrial economy. Their stories electrified readers and galvanized a movement to reform the government that had bred such abuses. McClure wrote that all three articles might have been titled "The American Contempt of Law." It was the public that paid for such lawlessness, he wrote, and it was high time the public demanded that justice be enforced.

"Capitalists, workingmen, politicians, citizens—all breaking the law, or letting it be broken. Who is left to uphold it?" McClure asked. "The lawyers? Some of the best lawyers in the country are hired, not to go into court to defend cases, but to advise corporations and business firms how they can get around the law without too great a risk of punishment. The judges? Too many of them so respect the laws that for some 'error' or quibble they restore to office and liberty men convicted on evidence overwhelmingly convincing to common sense. The churches? We know of one, an ancient and wealthy establishment, which had to be compelled by a Tammany hold-over health officer to put its tenements in sanitary condition. The colleges? They do not understand."

"There is no one left," McClure wrote, "none but all of us."


--
****
Juan Matute
CCRC


Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Something to Know - 10 December

Christopher Armitage is not your average newsletter writer.   He ventures outside of the envelope of most opinion writers.  What makes him interesting is that he does not preach to the choir and present views that are fashionable to intelligent and progressive minds.   He challenges us.    to accept something that is way beyond our comfort zone.    As I read this column, I had to admit that he was probably speaking to folks like me, in that fighting Trumpism is more than just ranting about him.   I found it easy to pick anything about Trump, go wild with the English language and feel good about verbally stepping all over him.  Well, that really does not go very far except to make us feel that we have done our best to defeat him.   The truth is, day-by-day, the Republican Party machine is carving away at our democracy and Constitution from the federal level all the way down to state and local levels.   So, I guess we have to just suck it up and do the hard work to fight back.    However, I really do have fun fighting Trumpism with my keyboard.

Christopher Armitage from The Existentialist Republic cmarmitage@substack.com 
Unsubscribe

5:02 AM (5 hours ago)
to me
Forwarded this email? Subscribe here for more

Pictured, JD Vance (left) and American Oligarch Peter Thiel. Jeff Swensen/Getty Images; Marco Bello/Getty Images

Bottom Line Up Front for the Hardcore Activists (BLUF-HA): The GOP has spent 50 years building a machine to end democracy, funded by oligarchs who will outlive any single president. They want us to believe this ends with one man. It doesn't. We don't need false comfort right now, we need real clarity. That means acknowledging that as long as the seditious and openly criminal Republican Party exists, we are fighting the same machine that built him, protected him, and will replace him the moment he's gone. We have spent ten years personalizing a systemic crisis around a single figure. That personalization is itself a form of control. It lets us imagine that removing him solves the problem. It lets us fantasize about accountability and a soft landing. It lets us wait for rescue instead of doing the work.

Robert Reich recently argued that Trump's end is imminent. The MAGA base is falling apart, he wrote. Congressional Republicans are finding their backbones. The ground is finally shifting.

I respect Robert. He's been a consistent voice on the proper side of this fight for decades. So let's take his argument seriously. Let's look at the evidence he's citing and ask what it actually tells us.

The polling decline is real. Trump's approval has hit 36% in Gallup tracking, his second-term low.¹ A CNN poll found 61% of Americans say his policies have worsened economic conditions.² These numbers are bad.

But context matters. Trump's all-time low was 34%, right after January 6. His first-term average was 41%. He never once reached 50% approval in his entire first presidency.³ The mid-30s is not a collapse. It is his floor, and the floor is holding.

But context matters. The Republican Party's project is not to be popular or win elections. It is to make elections unnecessary for holding power. Gerrymandered maps, voter suppression, a captured judiciary, and the procedural stranglehold of the Senate filibuster all serve the same function: insulating Republican rule from democratic accountability. Trump's approval among the broader public matters only if that public can translate disapproval into political consequences. The party has spent decades building the infrastructure of preventing democratic functioning.

The November 2025 elections were a Democratic sweep. Spanberger won Virginia's governorship by 15 points.⁴ Sherrill carried New Jersey by 13.⁵ Mamdani became New York City's first Muslim mayor.⁶ Exit polls showed 55-69% disapproval of Trump across every major race.⁷ These results are significant.

But this is swing voters responding to chaos. This is the suburbs recoiling. This is not the MAGA base defecting. The coalition that carried Trump to victory in 2024 has not abandoned him. Voters at the margins have. That matters electorally. It does not mean the movement is collapsing.

Reich points to Republican fractures. Some are grumbling about the budget. Some reject the tariff dividend proposal. Some want to extend ACA subsidies. Hawks dislike the Putin courtship.

But grumbling is not governing. When it came time to vote on the Big Beautiful Bill, two Republicans out of 273 voted no. That is a 1% defection rate. The tariff dividend was never even brought to a vote. The ACA subsidy debate remains unresolved because leadership won't allow a floor vote. The fractures are nonexistent in practice. The grumbling itself is the performance, a way to maintain the fiction that Republicans aren't voting in lockstep while they vote in lockstep.

And then there is Marjorie Taylor Greene. After Romney. After Cheney. After Kinzinger. After the party systematically destroyed every Republican who broke ranks. After years of enforcing total loyalty, his most devoted defender finally walked away. One more name on a short list that keeps getting shorter as the party purges dissent.

She was his most loyal defender. She voted with him 98% of the time.⁹ She spent millions on his campaigns. She flew from her father's brain surgery to vote against his second impeachment.¹⁰ And when she broke with him over the Epstein files, he called her a traitor within days. She also announced her resignation timed to within a few days of her congressional pension beginning.¹¹

This is not a crack in the foundation. This is the foundation demonstrating how solid it is. The apparatus that destroyed Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger and Mitt Romney's political future did exactly what it was designed to do: enforce total loyalty and obliterate dissent.

So let's say Reich is right about all of it. Let's say the polling collapse accelerates. Let's say Republicans lose the House in 2026. Let's say Trump's health fails, his mind deteriorates further, or he simply dies. He is 79 years old. It could happen tomorrow.

Here is what does not change:

The 43 Republican senators who acquitted him after he incited an insurrection remain in office or have been replaced by others who would have done the same. The Supreme Court that ruled him above the law serves for life. The federal judiciary packed with Federalist Society judges will shape American law for decades. The 47% of Project 2025 already implemented does not reverse itself.¹² The 200,000 federal workers fired or forced out do not return to their jobs.¹³ The gutted agencies do not rebuild overnight. The dismantled regulations do not reassemble themselves.

The Varieties of Democracy Institute, the world's leading authority on measuring democratic health, identified the United States as undergoing the fastest episode of autocratization in modern American history.¹⁴ Director Staffan Lindberg stated in March that if the current trajectory continues, the United States will no longer qualify as a democracy when they assess 2025.¹⁵ That trajectory is not about one man. That trajectory is about captured institutions and a party apparatus committed to single-party rule.

We tried the institutional remedies. We impeached him twice. The Senate acquitted him twice. A jury convicted him of 34 felonies. No judge sentenced him. The Supreme Court granted him immunity. We voted him out in 2020. He came back and won by a wider margin.

Four years of Biden changed nothing structurally. The courts remained captured. The gerrymandered maps remained intact. He was able to make marginal progress that was obstructed at every turn, overturned by SCOTUS, or immediately undone by Trump. The filibuster remained in place, allowing Republicans to block voting rights legislation with unified opposition. We followed the rules. They ran out the clock. And at the end of it, we got a second Trump term that has done more damage in ten months than his entire first four years.

Trump did not build this. The Heritage Foundation wrote Project 2025. The Federalist Society built the judicial pipeline. The Republican National Committee enforces party discipline. The conservative media ecosystem manufactures consent. State legislatures draw maps that let them choose their voters. Dark money networks fund the whole operation.

Trump is their most effective instrument. He normalized what was previously unthinkable. He proved what was possible. He moved the ball further down the field than anyone before him. But he is still an instrument. When he is gone, everything he proved remains proven. Every precedent he set remains set. Every norm he shattered remains shattered.

The Republican Party has been building toward this for 50 years. The Powell Memo.¹⁶ The Heritage Foundation. The Federalist Society. Gingrich burning down congressional norms. The Southern Strategy. Gerrymandering. Voter suppression. McConnell holding a Supreme Court seat hostage for a year.¹⁷

Trump did not break the system. He is the product of a party that spent half a century crafting the tools to end American democracy.

As long as the Republican Party exists, our democracy remains under threat. That was true before Trump and will remain true after him. The party must be dismantled. Not defeated in one election. Not moderated. Dismantled and its leaders incarcerated for sedition and corruption.

So when the headlines tell you the ground is shifting, maybe something is happening. When pundits tell you the MAGA base is cracking, maybe the margins are eroding. When Trump eventually leaves the stage, it will feel like relief. We will want to exhale. We will want to believe the worst is over.

Do not exhale.

The day after Trump is gone, we have the exact same work to do. The same captured courts. The same gerrymandered maps. The same consolidated media. The same oligarch class. The same party apparatus that protected him through everything and will find another vehicle for their project before his body is cold.

And the next vehicle will be less repugnant. Someone who passes the same fascist laws and strips away the same freedoms but with less spectacle, someone who makes it all look more professional, and then people stop paying attention. Trump's repulsiveness keeps people in the streets. But the Republicans are the ones passing the policies anyway. They're the ones telling him what to support. A polished version pushing the exact same agenda without the daily outrages will be far more dangerous. The next one gets a grace period while the world celebrates, and the fascism continues while everyone exhales.

He covered a lot of ground for them. That doesn't all reverse with him gone. The project does not end with him, and if we act like it does, we hand Republicans a free pass for everything they built while we were staring at one man.

We have spent ten years personalizing a systemic crisis around a single figure. That personalization is itself a form of control. It lets us imagine that removing him solves something. It lets us fantasize about accountability that will never come through the institutions they have captured. It lets us wait for rescue instead of doing the work.

Stop waiting for Trump to die. The fight is the same either way.

So what actually works? Three things. First, states must investigate, prosecute, and criminally indict corrupt politicians at every level and refuse to hand those cases up to federal jurisdiction. If we don't hold these people accountable ourselves, no one will. This should be done through an interstate anti-corruption compact where states work together to rid our federal government of criminal actors. Second, states must build social safety nets at the state and multi-state level that actually improve residents' lives, because the federal government has been captured and isn't coming to help. Third, multi-state non-compliance with bullshit SCOTUS and federal decisions. That's it. That's what needs to happen. It takes political will, and it takes us demanding it from every state official we can reach.


For more information, I have a free book and two free booklets available right now: 'Conservatism: America's Personality Disorder,' 'Intro to Soft Secession,' and 'Tax Warfare.' All free. No paywall. The Existentialist Republic is also building an activist toolkit for the fight ahead, and gatekeeping it behind a subscription defeats the purpose. We are building a powerful movement, our strength as opposition grows and that's thanks to the folks who show up, make the calls, send the letters, and understand the assignment.

If you find this work valuable and want to help keep it free and moving forward, or if you just want to buy me a cup of coffee so I can keep researching and sharing, just click any of this text. If you can't, that's ok. Just use the resources and put them to use. That's the point!

If you want to check out physical items we sell to help us pay for the lawyers we will surely need at some point, just visit TheExistentialistRepublic.com or click anywhere on this text.


References

  1. Brenan, M. (2025, November 28). Trump's approval rating drops to 36%, new second-term low. Gallup. https://news.gallup.com/poll/699221/trump-approval-rating-drops-new-second-term-low.aspx

  2. CNN Politics. (2025, November 3). Democrats are more enthusiastic about the midterms as Trump's approval hits second-term low, CNN poll finds. CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/03/politics/cnn-poll-democrats-trump-midterms

  3. Jones, J. M. (2021, January 18). Last Trump job approval 34%; average is record-low 41%. Gallup. https://news.gallup.com/poll/328637/last-trump-job-approval-average-record-low.aspx

  4. NBC News. (2025, December 3). Virginia governor election 2025 results: Abigail Spanberger wins. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2025-elections/virginia-governor-results

  5. NBC News. (2025, December 3). New Jersey governor election 2025 results: Mikie Sherrill wins. https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2025-elections/new-jersey-governor-results

  6. Romo, V. (2025, November 5). Zohran Mamdani wins NYC mayoral race. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2025/11/04/nx-s1-5597788/election-results-zohran-mamdani-new-york-city-mayor

  7. CNN Politics. (2025, November 4). CNN exit polls find voters in key races dissatisfied with Trump, concerned with economy. CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2025/11/04/politics/exit-polls-nyc-nj-virginia-california-elections

  8. Office of the Clerk, U.S. House of Representatives. (2025, July 3). Roll Call 190, Bill Number: H.R. 1 – One Big Beautiful Bill Act. https://clerk.house.gov/Votes/2025190

  9. CBS News. (2025, December). Former MAGA loyalist Marjorie Taylor Greene says Trump policies are not America First. CBS News 60 Minutes. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/marjorie-taylor-greene-trump-relationship-change-60-minutes/

  10. Greene, M. T. (2025, November 21). Full resignation statement. Newsweek. https://www.newsweek.com/marjorie-taylor-greene-resigns-statement-in-full-11092645

  11. Brady, D. (2025, November 22). Marjorie Taylor Greene's resignation timing secures her congressional pension by three days. National Taxpayers Union Foundation. https://www.ntu.org/foundation/detail/marjorie-taylor-greenes-resignation-timing-secures-her-congressional-pension-by-three-days

  12. Center for Progressive Reform. (2025, October 15). Tracking Project 2025 update: 47% of domestic policy to-do list commenced ahead of government shutdown. https://progressivereform.org/publications/tracking-project-2025-update-oct2025/

  13. Partnership for Public Service. (2025, August 26). Federal harms tracker: Cost to your government. https://ourpublicservice.org/federal-harms-tracker/cost-to-your-government/

  14. Nord, M., Altman, D., Angiolillo, F., Fernandes, T., Good God, A., & Lindberg, S. I. (2025). Democracy Report 2025: 25 years of autocratization – democracy trumped? University of Gothenburg: V-Dem Institute. https://www.v-dem.net/documents/60/V-dem-dr__2025_lowres.pdf

  15. U.S. News & World Report. (2025, March 25). Democracy expert raises alarm about U.S. trends under Trump. https://www.usnews.com/news/best-countries/articles/2025-03-25/democracy-expert-raises-alarm-about-u-s-trends-under-trump

  16. Powell, L. F., Jr. (1971, August 23). Attack on American free enterprise system [Memorandum to Eugene B. Sydnor Jr.]. Lewis F. Powell Jr. Papers, Washington and Lee University School of Law Scholarly Commons. https://scholarlycommons.law.wlu.edu/powellmemo/1/

  17. Totenberg, N. (2018, June 29). What happened with Merrick Garland in 2016 and why it matters now. NPR. https://www.npr.org/2018/06/29/624467256/what-happened-with-merrick-garland-in-2016-and-why-it-matters-now




--
****
Juan Matute
CCRC