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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Someone explain to be how little Marco got voted in 100-0 even though he's doing everything the dems hate?
See, little Marco was hiding his power level, they thought they were getting pussy pushover senator foam party rubio. Turns out Trump offered him a chance to rehab his image and he's really REALLY interested being vance's vp, or even maybe running himself.
 
More bad news for Harvard, the Big Beautiful Bill enacts an excise tax of 21% on their endowment's net investment income:
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God I pray the senate keeps this provision. Endowments are extremely large hedge funds that radicalize brownies on the side. Why should they be tax-privileged?
 
See, little Marco was hiding his power level, they thought they were getting pussy pushover senator foam party rubio. Turns out Trump offered him a chance to rehab his image and he's really REALLY interested being vance's vp, or even maybe running himself.
Plenty of people positioning themselves for the 2028 election already - nobody wants to be late to the dance. Shit, there's probably already a good number of people trying to position themselves for the 2032 election.
 
I'm also sure they can survive without agriculture or white farmers, they had before and Africa is a great place (biologically speaking) where you can eat almost everything.
The entire sub-Saharan region was about 20 million before Europeans moved in. Hunter-gatherers need enormous ranges to survive, and much of the jungle was completely impenetrable to savages with stone tools.
 
The popular speculation I see is that the DNC found out around the time of his disastrous debate which was what precipitated pushing Kamala to run.
Thinking about it, its possible the party found out right before Biden had that medical issue in Vegas. They told him, he could have had a stroke or used covid as an excuse to go back to delaware and decide what to do next. And then chose Kamala to spite the DNC. They were okay with it. Mainly for the funds Biden raised. And also because she was a BIPOC Woman. I assumed if she won, there would have be an internal civil war between her admin and the party. The party just wanted another warm seat to rubberstamp shit. Kamala, not being as brain addled as Biden, would have been pissy.

While biden wasn't in control of his admin, he didn't give a shit. He generally agreed to whatever they're were doing. He just wanted the prestige that comes with the title of President. Yeah, he mostly wasn't there, mentally. But in his more lucid moments, he probably thought what I said.

After dropping out of the race, he went into DGAF mode. He was pissed the party forced him out because they found out his secret. That's why he was at the beach for like two weeks afterwards.
 
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Can’t help but feel like this is the late 1800s Russia, and we’re just along for the ride.

May God bless the United States.
Tale as old as time. Song as old as Rhyme. Beauty and the beast Jews and their golems.

Jews create a monster. They use it to attack their enemies. It eventually turns on them.
 
I didn't see this posted.

Supreme Court grants Trump request to fire independent agency members but says Federal Reserve is different​

The court indicated its decision doesn’t necessarily apply to the central bank and Chairman Jerome Powell — a frequent target of Trump’s criticism on economic matters.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Thursday granted a Trump administration request that allows the president to fire members of independent federal agencies while suggesting that its legal reasoning would not apply to the Federal Reserve.

The move to pause a lower court ruling formalizes a temporary decision along similar lines on April 9 that allowed President Donald Trump to fire Gwynne Wilcox, a member of the National Labor Relations Board, and Cathy Harris, a member of the Merit Systems Protection Board.

"The stay reflects our judgment that the government is likely to show that both the NLRB and MSPB exercise considerable executive power," the court said in an unsigned order.

The government, it added, "faces greater risk of harm from an order allowing a removed officer to continue exercising the executive power than a wrongfully removed officer faces from being unable to perform her statutory duty."

The high court’s three liberal justices dissented.

In a notable passage, the court sought to distinguish the case from any attempt by Trump to fire members of the Federal Reserve, including its chairman, Jerome Powell. The court noted that the Federal Reserve is a "uniquely structured, quasi-private entity" that has its own distinct historical tradition.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell at a news conference in Washington on May 7.Andrew Harnik / Getty Images
The Supreme Court’s comments are likely to be well-received in global markets, which were rocked when Trump repeatedly ripped Powell in late March and early April, leading to speculation that he might try to fire him. Trump went so far as to say on Truth Social on April 17 that Powell’s “termination cannot come fast enough!”

Trump later appeared to back off, saying he had "no intention" of firing Powell.

Powell also came under fire repeatedly during Trump’s first term, even though Trump himself nominated him for the role in November 2017.

Justice Elena Kagan, writing for the dissenters, said the court had in essence summarily overruled a key 1935 precedent, Humphrey’s Executor v. United States, which upheld the concept of independent agencies that are not directly subject to presidential control.

In challenging that precedent, Trump decided "to take the law into his own hands" by firing Wilcox and Harris for no discernible reason, she added.

"Today, this court effectively blesses those deeds. I would not. Our Humphrey's decision remains good law, and it forecloses both the President’s firings and the Court’s decision to award emergency relief," Kagan wrote.

She expressed puzzlement at the court's effort to create an exception for the Federal Reserve, arguing there is no reason the same legal rationale would not apply to it.

"If the idea is to reassure the markets, a simpler — and more judicial — approach would have been to deny the president’s application for a stay," Kagan added.

The case tees up the significant legal question of whether Congress, when it sets up federal agencies, can include provisions to insulate them from political interference that prevent the president from firing members at will.

Although the Trump firings concern only two agencies, any ruling that allows such firings would apply to other agencies, too.

If that happens, it would raise the question of whether the president would have the power to fire members of the Federal Reserve, which traditionally operates independently of the White House.

In recent rulings, the Supreme Court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, has decided that provisions protecting single heads of independent agencies were unconstitutional. But the 1935 precedent that upheld the structure of multimember agencies remains on the books.

The Trump administration has adopted legal arguments long made by conservative lawyers who favor broad presidential power; those arguments hold that independent agencies are not sufficiently accountable to the democratically elected president under the Constitution’s separation-of-powers provision. The president should be able to fire agency heads at will, they argue.

Then-President Joe Biden appointed Wilcox to the labor board, which adjudicates workplace disputes, in 2021. Her five-year term would have expired in 2026. Federal law states that the president can fire members only “for neglect of duty or malfeasance in office.”

Biden appointed Harris in 2022 to a seven-year term that has similar protections against removal. The Merit Systems Protection Board handles disputes involving federal employees.

Trump sought to fire both soon after he took office.

Wilcox and Harris both sued and won in lower courts, prompting the administration to go to the Supreme Court.

SEC. 42301. REPEAL OF NHTSA RULE RELATING TO CAFE STANDARDS FOR
PASSENGER CARS AND LIGHT TRUCKS.

The final rule issued by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration relating to ``Corporate Average Fuel Economy Standards
for Passenger Cars and Light Trucks for Model Years 2027 and Beyond and
Fuel Efficiency Standards for Heavy-Duty Pickup Trucks and Vans for
Model Years 2030 and Beyond'' (89 Fed. Reg. 52540 (June 24, 2024))
shall have no force or effect.

There's a ray of light, car bros.

That's in the BBB. Page 6.

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I cant get over the username of the poster
31andnotdone

Are 1 of you over there doing top teir trolling or did reddit actually make the female gooner unironically
Go look at r/edgingtalk. Most of the posts there are from women.

and see this video:
 
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