US US Politics General 2 - Discussion of President Trump and other politicians

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Should be a wild four years.

Helpful links for those who need them:

Current members of the House of Representatives
https://www.house.gov/representatives

Current members of the Senate
https://www.senate.gov/senators/

Current members of the US Supreme Court
https://www.supremecourt.gov/about/biographies.aspx

Members of the Trump Administration
https://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/
 
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Forgive me if this has been already answered, this thread moves fast and unlike the government employees, I actually have to work at work.

Is or has Trump stated or mention about pushing a Federal law that requires Voter ID to vote in elections yet, while we have full control? This would be another nail in the DNC coffin and prevent Jimmy Carter and the crypt game from voting Blue ever again.
I’ve been waiting for this but, no, it hasn’t happened yet. The only mention of voter ID so far is when he asked California to implement it in favor for federal aid.
If I were Trump, pushing for that to be a constitutional amendment would have been a day one initiative
 
Maybe the Japs will have the balls to do what westerners wont and actually dole out some punishment when the gazan rapefugees start having sexual emergencies directed at Japanese girls in broad fucking daylight.
They’ve done massive remigrations in the past. I don’t think the Yakuza can actually do the whole foreigner only whores anymore and then an orphanage for the mix race kids. In the 70’s they just kicked them out.
 
Why can't they migration to Jordan?
Maybe Jordan did take in some palestinians a while ago and no one had a very good time? Or that time Jordan's king was assasinated?

If Israel implemented a final solution to the Palestinian question, surrounding muslim countries would immediate call the Israeli ambassador for urgent meeting with their foreign department and ministers. At this meeting they would all drink very expensive wine and eat small artisian crafted sandwhiches and have a general good time. That is what the other muslim nations think of palestinians.
 
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Forgive me if this has been already answered, this thread moves fast and unlike the government employees, I actually have to work at work.

Is or has Trump stated or mention about pushing a Federal law that requires Voter ID to vote in elections yet, while we have full control? This would be another nail in the DNC coffin and prevent Jimmy Carter and the crypt game from voting Blue ever again.

Trump can't EO a voting law. Voting regulations are strictly a state matter.

It be nice, even up here in Canukistan we require ID to vote but in the US apparently you can just walk in and vote..dafuq?
 
If I were Trump, pushing for that to be a constitutional amendment would have been a day one initiative
I would normally say amending the constitution is functionally impossible, but after the past two weeks all bets are off. Amend the fucking constitution to require voter ID for all elections. Although it might come with a push for digital ID so that one could turn into a monkey's paw.
 
Maybe the Japs will have the balls to do what westerners wont and actually dole out some punishment when the gazan rapefugees start having sexual emergencies directed at Japanese girls in broad fucking daylight.
Hopefully the Japanese nationalists will remove kabab.
Because if Japan allows them to run wild their country is over. S Korea will be next
 
Angry USAID Backers Turn on Democrats for Failing to Fight Back
Bloomberg (archive.ph)
By Iain Marlow
2025-02-06 00:25:54GMT
Democratic lawmakers at a rally in Washington to defend USAID soon found themselves under attack for not mustering fierce-enough opposition to the Trump administration’s assault on the agency.

“Do your job! Do your job!” the crowd of hundreds chanted at the lawmakers addressing the gathering in a Capitol Hill park Wednesday.

Attendees expressed frustration that the lawmakers hadn’t done more to push back against the attempt by President Donald Trump and ally Elon Musk to shut down the United States Agency for International Development — with billionaire Musk calling it a “criminal organization” that deserved to “die.”

The outpouring of anger dovetails with broader resentment among Democratic voters over the failure of their party’s leadership to mount a meaningful resistance as Republican Trump’s White House has moved to shrink the government workforce, freeze federal funds, boost fossil fuels, vilify diversity initiatives and radically reorient US foreign policy.

Several people at the rally held up signs calling for more forceful opposition to Trump, with one placard simply reading “Democrats do something!”

Democrats have little leverage in the current Congress with Republicans in control, narrowly, of both chambers. Despite some private opposition within the GOP to some of Trump’s actions and cabinet picks, Republican lawmakers have largely been supportive.

Many at the protest on Wednesday were recently laid off as a result of Trump’s unprecedented attack on the world’s leading international development agency, which administered about $43 billion in assistance in fiscal year 2023 for projects ranging from providing emergency food aid, water and sanitation support across Africa to helping Ukrainian civilians after Russian attacks on their energy grid.

So far, more than 50 senior career civil servants leading the agency have been put on leave and hundreds of contractors have lost their jobs. The agency’s website currently says that on Friday all direct-hire staff will be put on leave globally, with a few exceptions, and all USAID personnel overseas are in the process of being recalled within 30 days — a chaotic and sudden process at odds with the orderly rotations of staff normally posted abroad.

It’s unclear how long the agency will still exist, although Democrats have called Trump’s effort illegal and unconstitutional, and have vowed to fight in Congress and the courts. Democratic Senators Brian Schatz and Chris Van Hollen vowed this week to put blanket holds on Trump’s nominees to senior State Department posts until the attack on USAID ends.

One recently laid-off USAID employee, who asked not to be named for fear of not finding another job, said she wanted Democratic lawmakers to do more to stand up for USAID in the House of Representatives and the Senate. Another said they’re still awaiting for the counterpunch from Democrats.

Amid harsh Republican criticism, Democratic lawmakers have tried to focus on how USAID advances US national security interests.

“It’s a gift for our adversaries around the world” to close USAID, Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland, told the crowd. “We can have no business as usual in the United States Congress.”

Still, the crowd pushed back.

“Better late than never — thank you!” one person yelled out, a reference to Democratic lawmakers appearing to be on the back foot as Trump’s White House issues a flurry of executive orders, some of which are already being contested in the courts.

“Why’d you vote for Rubio?” another woman yelled, a reference to the unanimous Senate approval for Trump’s pick to be the top US diplomat. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a former Republican senator himself, has accused employees of the agency of “insubordination” and said it may be abolished and subsumed into the State Department.

Democratic Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia tried to assure the crowd that he and his colleagues were fighting back.

“There’s a litigation strategy, a state court strategy, a legislative strategy in Congress and a political strategy,” he said, to some cheers. “You’ve seen us succeed in numerous court cases in the last few days, and we’re going to win a whole lot more.”

Reflecting widespread concern in the crowd about all the stalled USAID projects around the world, one person yelled to interrupt him: “How many people will die before those lawsuits get finished?”
Democrats' phones bombarded with calls to "fight harder"
Axios (archive.ph)
By Andrew Solender
2025-02-06 00:31:53GMT
Congressional Democrats' offices are being inundated by phone calls from angry constituents who feel the party should be doing more to combat President Trump and his administration.
Why it matters: Some lawmakers feel their grassroots base is setting expectations too high for what Democrats can actually accomplish as the minority party in both chambers of Congress.
  • Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) told Axios: "What I think we need to do more is: Put the onus on Republicans, so that the calls that we're getting are directed toward Republicans."
  • "There has definitely been some tension the last few days where people felt like: you are calling the wrong people. You are literally calling the wrong people," said one House Democrat.
What we're hearing: More than a dozen Democratic lawmakers and aides said in interviews with Axios that their offices have received historically high call volumes in recent days.
  • Some staffers said they hadn't seen this many calls since seminal events like the Oct. 7 attack, the Brett Kavanaugh hearings or even the Trump impeachment proceedings.
  • Aaron Fritschner, a spokesperson for Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.), said his office's phones have been "ringing off the hook without pause since we opened yesterday morning."
  • On social media sites such as X and Bluesky, another aide said, "Every Dem is getting lit up by the neo-resistance folks being like 'do more.'"
What they're saying: "We had the most calls we've ever had in one day on Monday in 12 years," said Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.).
  • Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.), who has served in Congress since 1997, told Axios: "I can't recall ever receiving this many calls. People disgusted with what's going on, and they want us to fight back."
  • Former House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said his office has received "hundreds, maybe thousands" of calls.
State of play: After a week of being caught flat-footed by President Trump's and Elon Musk's stunning moves to upend the federal bureaucracy, Democrats have spent the last few days flooding the zone with acts of resistance.
  • They've rallied outside of multiple federal agencies that Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has targeted, trying unsuccessfully to gain entry to the buildings and interview staffers.
  • House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) has vowed to use a March 14 federal funding deadline as leverage to try to "choke off" any efforts to defund programs like Medicaid.
  • Democratic committee leaders have also sent Trump and his administration a flurry of letters demanding information on DOGE's shock and awe tactics.

Yes, but: Democrats lack many of the crucial legislative and investigative tools afforded to the congressional majority that would give them the kind of power needed to thwart Trump.
  • Democrats' letters are little more than paper if Trump chooses to ignore them — only the majority has the power to issue subpoenas. Republicans can also keep their bills from being voted on.
  • "We are going to use every tool we have, but I think there is this sense that we have legislative power, and we don't," said the House Democrat who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
  • Said Hoyer: "We are in the minority, and that makes it difficult for us to respond."
The other side: Progressive groups that have been leading the charge to flood Democrats' phone lines with calls for resistance are not about to let up.
  • "Our member energy is high and this won't be the last any office hears from everyday Americans who want us to fight harder to push back," said Britt Jacovich, a spokesperson for MoveOn.
  • Indivisible spokesperson Mary Small said her group has led 31,400 calls to senators and just under 4,000 to House members in the last two weeks.
  • "I'm not surprised members are experiencing a high volume of calls, because I think people are scared and are looking for leadership from Democrats on how to fight back," Small told Axios.
 
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