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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Has Mitch voted yes for a single cabinet member yet or is he just noing them all?
i believe he has no'd them all.
Mitch only voted no on Pete Hegseth as DoD Secretary and Tulsi. Everyone else, he voted yes.

I guess the pattern is that he dislikes controversial appointments, so I'm expecting him to also vote no on RFK Jr.
 
UPDATE: Tulsi is 51-47. It's so fucking joever for these uniparty retards. I hope they're malding.
Messenger_creation_C1A454C8-D2F2-4630-AC7E-8CAE36C5E27F.jpeg

Firstly, THAT's an official portrait I could get behind. Just screams confidence, assertiveness WITH the glamour of her age putting it all together. Secondly, what does the Director of National Intelligence do exactly?
 
Surprisingly close, maybe 2 weeks.
I wouldn't be surprised if there is some judge who legit says Elon hacked the election with Starlink or some shit at this point. They have already found 3 of the judges have spouses or kids linked to USAID funded jobs and I'm sure more are coming out they will do anything to keep that money flowing.
 
Trump using the Obama and Biden precedents of proceeding until all appeals (up to the Supreme Court) is logical.

He still has appointments to get through, and doesnt want to spook the Rinos yet is my guess. Also to show that he tried to "do the right thing", if we are still here with court bullshit in 2 months then I will agree Trump is retarded for not taking plans for the most obvious counter steps the Dems would do ever.

Picking these fights seems purposeful, he is doing it at the apex of his political mandate and topics the public will side with him on. If the Dem's were smart they would be focusing on shit like Birthright citizen, (a topic that parts of of Trumps coalition may turn on him on about) but by making the initial battles about US fucking AID and tranny beauty pageant and clear bribery, the public will take his side.

Roberts is a RINO cuck, but he also knows the Supreme Court is hanging on by a thread politically and its only Republican support that is keeping it politically legitimate. If he confirms that "yes random Hawaii judges are equal to a president" then all that happens is the judicial branch loses all of its power. He knows this.
 
Black culture is a matriarchy. All the nigglets are raised by a single mom who blame daddy for their situation. Rap and sports are entirely a performance, a mating dancing showing off wealth and physical prowess to get "bitches".
Yes and no. It's definitely like this in the worst of places like Chicago where the family unit has been completely destroyed. In places with more stable family units (and there definitely are low- to middle-class black neighborhoods with stable nuclear families), I think it's a result of African American culture having so much activism embedded in it post-Civil Rights Movement.

A white guy can look at a shrill white feminist and call her a stupid bitch with minimal consequences given his standing and social circle. However, in the black community, there is a greater demand for racial solidarity and a belief that outspoken women do some good in the activist sphere.

That's all my opinion, anyway. Most of the relationships I had with black girls petered out because their friends and families heavily pressured them to stop dating a white guy. In contrast, my social circle did not care and treated those girls with respect, which made it very awkward for my girlfriends.

Obama's second term ruined interracial dating completely.
 
Aluminum is fine. It's not the 1970s any more. Furthermore, you don't want DOE regulating feeder line installation. It is best left to your local utility and/or public utility commission. The coupling losses when you put AC lines underground are non-trivial and the downtime loss savings with below ground retrofit installations do not justify their costs.
The impedance of aluminum powerlines is becoming a bigger and bigger headache for power companies. Aluminum is ‘fine’ but it’s not ideal and you can’t deny that the industry has been looking for a better solution for over a decade. HVDC, underground, and marine are use cases where we see a case for copper.
 
WITH the glamour of her age
You can always tell a Last Stand post, haha. But I agree it's a great photograph.
How do you guys think she'll do as DNI? I'm not familiar with the position much either or how Tulsi fits in there, tbh.

And on the subject of black families, for every matriarch Big Momma family, there's a shrinking violet mammy who works 3 jobs to support her chronically unemployed (self-employed! At some MLM, or just deals drugs) huuhben (or more usually boyfriend) who at best neglects they keeds and refuses to do chores because that's woman's work (but also regular work is also women's work) or at worst molests/rapes the kids, though that's usually unrelated boyfriends.
And then, you know, there's the somewhat normal families, which I would say are mostly on the patriarchal side and usually very religious. Imo the submissive yaas Kween black male is mostly a media invention (though there are MANY, many BM on the downlow)
 
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The judge ordering the old webpages to go back up is supreme bullshit, as it would basically mean the Trump administration would be unable to change any webpages on any Federal site from the Biden era, unless I suppose Biden appointees and Deep State Lifer bureaucrats want them changed.

Does this apply to them taking down Joe Biden and Kamala's Whitehouse.gov pages? Or the pages that state Biden cabinet members are heads of agencies?

How close are we to a Federal Judge ruling the election was illegal and injuncting Biden and his staff to return to work?
So this seems to be the avenue the left is taking to stymie Trump, and like always they are sticking their dick in a hornets' nest without considering the stingers.

A Constitutional crisis will most likely end up at a favorable Supreme Court on this topic, basically modifying presidential injunctions into a power reserved for the highest courts in the land, or you will get legislation saying something similar out of a tight but Republican Congress.

It's like when they passed legislation reducing the necessary majority to appoint a Supreme Court Justice under Obama. Mitch McConnell of all people warned them that they would live to regret that, and they did.

It's political flailing about, and it's undermining some important balances of power. It comes about from the left's complete inability to self regulate. They eventually lose as they hit critical mass of girlboss and slay queen that entire population hates up to the point of running Kamala fucking Harris after they collectively realize they can no longer hide the sitting president had mushbrain.

Can we really just take a minute to realize what a historically bad candidate she was? Jesus, I pray that after rooting out all this money they investigate how that woman still almost won half the country.
 
Here is an article on an interesting piece of legislation Democrats and judges (often the ones appointed by Democratic Presidents) use to fight against Trump in court.

This obscure law is one reason Trump's agenda keeps losing in court​

Lawyers challenging President Donald Trump's aggressive use of executive power in the courts are turning to a familiar weapon in their armory: an obscure but routinely invoked federal law called the Administrative Procedure Act.

While lawsuits challenging such provocative plans as ending birthright citizenship and dismantling federal agencies raise weighty constitutional issues, they also claim Trump failed to follow the correct procedures as required under the wonky 1946 statute.

Trump fell afoul of the law in some high-profile cases that reached the Supreme Court during his first term, raising the possibility he could suffer the same fate this time around.

Known in abbreviated form as the APA, the law allows judges to throw out federal agency actions that are "arbitrary and capricious" on various grounds, including failing to articulate why the agencies are changing policy.

Much to the anger of Trump and his officials, judges have been issuing a series of orders putting administration plans on hold, including freezes on federal funding and drastic reductions in staffing. The rulings are at a preliminary stage and often do not include detailed legal reasoning.

In fact, one of Trump's first losses in court in his second term — over an Office of Management and Budget memo ordering across-the-board funding freezes — was based in part on a claim brought under the APA. The administration quickly rescinded the memo, although litigation continues.

"What we're seeing from the Trump administration is they are moving so fast, and they're trying to do so much with so little reasoning, and they're trying to disrupt as much as possible, as fast as possible, that these actions are inherently arbitrary and capricious" under the APA, a lawyer involved in one of the lawsuits said.

One example of plaintiffs’ citing the law is a case about Trump’s effort to reduce biomedical research funding, which a coalition of states said "violates the Administrative Procedure Act in multiple ways." It fails to "articulate the bases" for the change and shows "disregard for the factual findings" that set the current rate, the lawsuit said.

A judge blocked the policy Monday.

On Tuesday, a judge cited the APA in finding that the administration most likely violated the law in removing webpages featuring medical data that health care professionals rely on.

A lawsuit workers at the U.S. Agency for International Development filed last week seeking to prevent hundreds of staff members’ being put on leave also raised APA claims.

“The dissolution of USAID is arbitrary and capricious in multiple respects,” the unions' lawyers argued.

A judge partially granted the unions' request Friday.

In another USAID-related lawsuit filed Tuesday, contractors whose funding has been cut made similar arguments.

The government did not "explain why a comprehensive, undifferentiated freeze was necessary" or explain why a "more orderly and targeted approach" could not have been taken, the lawsuit said.

The APA haunted Trump during his first term.

In 2019, the Supreme Court found that the administration had not revealed its true reason for wanting to add a citizenship question to the census.

"Reasoned decision-making under the Administrative Procedure Act calls for an explanation for agency action. What was provided here was more of a distraction," Chief Justice John Roberts wrote then.

A year later, the court ruled that the administration had failed to consider various factors when it sought to unwind the Obama administration policy that protects "Dreamers" from deportation. Its actions were "arbitrary and capricious" under the APA, Roberts wrote.

On both issues, Trump administration officials "were sloppy, and the court did not like that," said Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law.

He noted, however, that at this early stage, the administration could still fix at least some of its errors. In Trump's first term, for example, the Supreme Court ultimately upheld a revised version of a travel ban on people entering the country from mostly Muslim-majority countries after a more sweeping policy was pared back.

"The fact they're sloppy out of the gate, I don't think that tells us how the courts will ultimately resolve it," Adler said.
Trump is by no means the only president to have fallen afoul of the APA, which judges routinely cite in striking down federal agency actions on a wide variety of issues, including environmental and consumer regulations that agencies sometimes spend years reviewing.

In a high-profile case during the Biden administration, a federal judge in Texas threw out an immigration enforcement policy that would have prioritized deporting violent criminals.

Among other things, District Judge Drew Tipton found that the administration had failed to take into account evidence about the dangers of recidivism and abscondment among immigrants with criminal records that undermined its policy conclusions.
The government, he added, was required "to show its work. It either failed or refused to do so. This was arbitrary and capricious."

(The Supreme Court in 2023 ultimately ruled in favor of President Joe Biden, saying the states that sued did not have legal standing.)

Despite the long history of courts’ faulting presidents under the APA, various Trump allies, including billionaire Elon Musk, have harshly criticized judges for ruling against the administration, as Trump himself has in the past, raising concerns in some quarters that officials could defy court orders.

“These unlawful injunctions are a continuation of the weaponization of justice against President Trump," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement Tuesday.

But, she added, the White House "will continue to fight those battles in court, and we expect to be vindicated."

Article Link
 
The judge ordering the old webpages to go back up is supreme bullshit, as it would basically mean the Trump administration would be unable to change any webpages on any Federal site from the Biden era, unless I suppose Biden appointees and Deep State Lifer bureaucrats want them changed.

Does this apply to them taking down Joe Biden and Kamala's Whitehouse.gov pages? Or the pages that state Biden cabinet members are heads of agencies?

How close are we to a Federal Judge ruling the election was illegal and injuncting Biden and his staff to return to work?
Yes duh
That's part of game of chicken.
A. Ignore
B. Bring the heat or fire brimstone
C. Keeping going till congress or Supreme Court act.
 
Mitch only voted no on Pete Hegseth as DoD Secretary and Tulsi. Everyone else, he voted yes.

I guess the pattern is that he dislikes controversial appointments, so I'm expecting him to also vote no on RFK Jr.
appreciate it, i shouldn't spread misinfo. edited my post to fix that.

However, in the black community, there is a greater demand for racial solidarity and a belief that outspoken women do some good in the activist sphere.
that stops the moment the privacy turns up. black men are some of the most abusive on the planet when it comes to domestic violence stats. as bad or worse than lesbians, i think.
 
Trump using the Obama and Biden precedents of proceeding until all appeals (up to the Supreme Court) is logical.

He still has appointments to get through, and doesnt want to spook the Rinos yet is my guess. Also to show that he tried to "do the right thing", if we are still here with court bullshit in 2 months then I will agree Trump is retarded for not taking plans for the most obvious counter steps the Dems would do ever.

Picking these fights seems purposeful, he is doing it at the apex of his political mandate and topics the public will side with him on. If the Dem's were smart they would be focusing on shit like Birthright citizen, (a topic that parts of of Trumps coalition may turn on him on about) but by making the initial battles about US fucking AID and tranny beauty pageant and clear bribery, the public will take his side.

Roberts is a RINO cuck, but he also knows the Supreme Court is hanging on by a thread politically and its only Republican support that is keeping it politically legitimate. If he confirms that "yes random Hawaii judges are equal to a president" then all that happens is the judicial branch loses all of its power. He knows this.
It really is true that only Republicans support SCOTUS at this point you can find most dems at some time in the last 8 years on TV saying "ignore the courts!" in one way or another. Thomas talked about the issue with federal courts in 2018 and if SCOTUS is forced to take it up I think the hammer will come down just because they have no choice for their own self preservation.

If SCOTUS rules that Trump can't use the power of the executive in any way they would be instantly dead as an institution since they have no power to enforce and dems obviously aren't going to listen to them next time they have power.
 
Here’s how dejected the Democrats really are
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Aaron Blake
2025-02-11 21:01:04GMT
polls01.jpg
Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-New York) is accompanied by other members of Congress, including Reps. Al Green (D-Texas), left, and Maxine Waters (D-California), as he speaks during a rally against Elon Musk outside the Treasury Department last month. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)

It’s no secret that Democrats are adrift — dare we say “in disarray” — as a party right now. As President Donald Trump and his administration have launched a veritable bombardment of efforts to reshape the government and empower Trump in potentially long-lasting ways, the blue side has rather meekly responded with what more or less amounts to some news conferences and strongly worded tweets.

But really, the party is just reflecting its base right now. Democratic officials are dispirited just like their base is despondent. To the extent they don’t seem to have much fight in them, that shouldn’t be too surprising; their voters don’t, either.

And a growing volume of polls drives home just how much of a malaise has set in.

A CBS News-YouGov poll released this weekend asked voters which of six words described their feelings toward U.S. politics right now.

Just 7 percent of Democrats picked “excited,” and just 10 percent picked “motivated.” Only 20 percent said they were even “interested.” (And to be clear, respondents could pick more than one option.)

In each case, more than twice as many Republicans said they felt such feelings of animation.

By contrast, many more Democrats said they were “demoralized” (42 percent) and “exhausted” (47 percent).

A CNN poll asked a similar question. Shortly before the inauguration, it found that Kamala Harris’s supporters were only about half as likely as Trump’s to say they were “fired up” and “inspired.”

You might look at those numbers and think: Of course. They lost the 2024 election. And it’s somewhat normal for the losing side to take some time to grieve and try to pick up the pieces.

But a few points.

The first is that it might be understandable that Democrats aren’t enthusiastic or excited, but only 1 in 5 being even “interested” would seem to be telling.

The second is that this is taking place at a particularly inauspicious time for Democrats, given Trump’s onslaught, and that onslaught doesn’t seem to have awakened the left (at least yet). Congressional Democrats have begun training their fire on Elon Musk, and there is reason to believe that could be working to some extent. But we’ve yet to see it mobilizing people en masse.

And the third is that this is a far cry from where things stood the last time Trump won the presidency.

Shortly before Trump’s first inauguration, a Fox News poll asked people a similar question about their feelings toward politics. It asked them to choose between saying they were “energized and want to be more involved” and “tired of it and want it to go away.”

Back then, nearly as many Hillary Clinton supporters chose the “energized” option (39 percent) as did Trump supporters (43 percent).

That enthusiasm to fight back was manifested in large protests as Trump was taking power; this time, there has been no such thing — or even close.

Other data that point in this direction are a little more nuanced, but they also betray a rather listless Democratic Party.

An AP-NORC poll in December showed significantly more Democrats (72 percent) than Republicans (59 percent) said they felt the need to limit their political media consumption.

The same CNN poll showed large degrees of internal dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party, including 6 in 10 Democratic-leaning voters who said the party needs at least “major changes.”

And both the CNN and CBS-YouGov polls show that only about half of the Democratic base thinks the party will be even somewhat effective in combating the GOP. That number has actually dropped slightly since last month in the latter poll.

1889394617273229486.png
https://x.com/dellavolpe/status/1889394617273229486 (archive.ph)

Similarly, a Reuters-Ipsos poll last month showed remarkably few Democrats even thought their party’s policies were superior. Just 58 percent of Democrats said their party had a better economic approach. Just 56 percent said it had a better foreign policy and national security approach. And on both crime and immigration, just 53 percent said it had better approaches. (Few preferred the GOP’s approach, but many chose more neutral options.)

By contrast, in each case more than 8 in 10 Republicans said the GOP’s approach was better.

It’s surely true that some of these numbers owe to an electoral hangover that could soon subside. But with everything happening, it’s probably high time that Democrats sober up and figure out what to do.
 
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