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Month: April 2025

#96: Demanding Due Process

“It might be helpful for you to know that you are not alone. And that in the long, twilight struggle which lies ahead of us, there is the possibility of hope.”

“The Long Twilight Struggle.” Babylon 5, created and written by J. Michael Straczynski, Season 2, Episode 20, 1995.


Here’s what I’ve recently found interesting:

  • Why fighting to protect due process matters;
  • The surprisingly broad coalition joining the due process fight;
  • Why Democrats should start talking seriously about impeachment;
  • MAGA investors made a bad bet with Trump;
  • Robert E. Lee was a traitor;
  • The Nerd Reich wants Greenland;
  • No, Donald Trump did not write The Art of the Deal;
  • The millions whom Marco Rubio is sentencing to die;
  • Baseball’s leaders don’t deserve Jackie Robinson; and
  • Let’s not allow Trump to rewrite the history of the January 6, 2021, insurrection he instigated.

Here we go. I’m glad you’re here.


#1

I am relieved to learn that fighting for due process remains something a majority of the American people support.

We need to be clear that the Trump Regime’s decision to render Kilmar Abrego Garcia and over 270 other people to an El Salvador torture gulag without due process is a Constitutional emergency. No individual has the power to decide who is and who is not a criminal under our system of government if “innocent until proven guilty” has any meaning.

As attorney Asha Rangappa noted on the BlueSky:

Criminals deserve due process because due process is literally how we determine whether someone is, *in fact*, a criminal

Asha Rangappa (@asharangappa.bsky.social) 2025-04-14T23:51:55.435Z

Fighting for due process is in our national DNA. It dates back to the Declaration of Independence, where Thomas Jefferson and his co-writers included a list of grievances about King George III to justify the decision to rebel. The 16th-19th grievances are sadly all too relevant today:

The Declaration of Independence, grievances 16-19. Screenshot from National Archives transcript of the document.

Some enterprising Member of the House of Representatives may want to hit copy and paste while preparing their impeachment resolution.

The Trump Regime has embraced a Constitutional Crisis and has even mocked the Supreme Court because the real plan doesn’t end with undocumented immigrants. This is just the test case. The one that was supposed to work because of how awful the Regime wants us to believe those sent to El Salvador are. Who is going to defend terrorists?

But, as usual, the Trump Regime was sloppy. They sent someone to El Salvador who a Court had ordered could not be sent there. While they are claiming that Abrego Garcia is a terrorist, they have provided no proof of that claim.

It turns out, thankfully, that most Americans do not like to hear that a person was sent to a foreign torture gulag because of an “administrative error.” They also do not appreciate it when the president ignores a Supreme Court decision.

But the Trump Regime cannot stand down because their ultimate plan requires that Abrego Garcia stay in El Salvador. As Law Dork’s Chris Geidner writes:

Why do they not bring Abrego Garcia back?

That would, ultimately, destroy the plan.

The Trump administration wants to create a Schrodinger’s box — quite literally, the CECOT prison is that box — where anyone can be sent under an agreement between the U.S. government and El Savador’s government but at which point the U.S. government can claim to no longer have any authority because people within that box are in the custody of a foreign sovereign.

If they can get Abrego Garcia out of the box, the plan does not work.

The door that the George W. Bush Administration opened in the War on Terror has been blown off its hinges—as is typical when government officials are not held accountable for their illegal actions. The precedents created by black site renditions, CIA torture, and Guantanamo Bay existed for Stephen Miller and the Trump Regime to expand upon.

If the Trump Regime can keep Abrego Garcia and the other Venezuelans sent to El Salvador in that gulag, that precedent can be expanded upon to get troublesome U.S. citizens out of the way.

It’s a red line. It may be the red line because the right to due process is required for freedom. That’s why the founding generation included it in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.

I was initially worried that too many people would not understand this dynamic. Those fears appear to have been misplaced, as a new coalition has been created to fight back, and more Democrats have found their opposition spines in the process.

#2

  • Sen. Chris Van Hollen argues Trump administration’s actions in Abrego Garcia case ‘threaten everybody’s rights’ (Kaanita Iyer, CNN, Link to Article)
  • Welcome to the Resistance, Bret Stephens (Dave Karpf, The Future, Now and Then, Link to Article)
  • We Radicalized David Brooks (Melissa Ryan, Ctrl, Alt, Right, Delete, Link to Article)
  • How a Judge Tells a President to F**k Off (Allison Gill, Breakdown, Link to Article)

It was great to see Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-Maryland) take a risk and go to El Salvador and insist on meeting with Kilmar Abrego Garcia to ensure he was still alive.

Resisting an autocrat and defending Constitutional rights requires taking risks, and our political leaders should set an example by demonstrating such courage.

I am glad that Van Hollen has received so much credit for taking a stand on due process. He appeared on all five Sunday news programs today and did an excellent job with his messaging.

As Van Hollen told CNN today:

“I don’t think it’s ever wrong to fight for the constitutional rights of one person, because if we give up on one person’s rights, we threaten everybody’s rights,” Van Hollen said, adding, “Anyone who is not prepared to stand up and fight for the Constitution doesn’t deserve to lead.”

I hope other Democratic leaders see what can happen—support and media coverage—when they oppose the Trump Regime.

It turns out that the political coalition to defend this concept is broad. Really broad. Like, we are welcoming some unexpected people to the cause. As Dave Karpf explains:

There has been a marked shift within the Republic of Letters. David Brooks is calling for a “National Civic Uprising.” Bill Kristol is asking “where does the ‘Abolish ICE’ movement go to get its apology?” And now even Bret Stephens (Bret Stephens!) is saying that Trump is trying to turn the United States into “a nation of toadies.

Heck, even Joe Rogan is a member of the due process defenders. And the brazen defiance of the Trump Regime led a Reagan-appointed judge to use uncharacteristically blunt language in response.

Like Melissa Ryan, I’ve had to double-check some of these articles—like David Brooks’—because they seemed too good to be true.

Many of the people reading this newsletter have been working to protest the Trump Regime. So I wanted to close this section with what Ryan had to say about how important all of that work has been to what we witnessed this week. As she explains:

The Trump Regime’s continued escalation is terrifying. They’ve made it clear that they’re willing to do whatever it takes to destroy America from within and sell our nation for parts. And that they’re willing to harass, sue, and lock up anyone who tries to get in their way. But every week the defiance grows. More people and institutions join the fight, and defying the regime becomes a little less scary each time someone else stands up and says no more.

But the win doesn’t belong to the elites. It belongs to everyone who has put pressure on them, from calls to Congress and town meetings to protests, rallies, economic boycotts, and other forms of direct action. You created the space for all of this to happen. You’ve let them know that you are a force to be reckoned with. You’ve inspired people who previously thought they could probably ride out another four years of Trump to change course and fight. Keep going.

The work matters. Let’s continue fighting for our Constitution.


#3

  • Some Democrats in Congress are starting to talk about impeachment. They’re right. (Andy Craig, MSNBC, Link to Article)

One of the powers political leaders have is to influence public opinion. They can take actions that will eventually change minds.

So, while impeaching Trump and removing him from office isn’t going to happen tomorrow, Democrats should start the conversation and force Republicans to defend an increasingly unpopular—and tyrannical—Trump Regime. As Andy Craig explains:

It is a severe failure of imagination to think his public support is some static fact of nature, or that the present crisis will not continue to escalate. As America slides into open authoritarianism and economic ruin, we can’t afford an opposition that, as MSNBC’s Chris Hayes recently told Sen. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, is doing nothing more than “the kinds of things you’d be doing if Mitt Romney were president.”

As the government flings itself apart, we will keep coming back to the grim reality. Trump can’t be restrained, or reasoned with, or babysat for the next four years. The only way to bring power back under the rule of law is to remove a lawless man from power.

Members of Congress don’t swear an oath to defend the Constitution only if it tests well in a focus group, or with pundits and consultants. Nor does Republican opposition justify inaction. Refusing to do the right thing because you expect others won’t join is just another form of complying in advance.

Removing Trump from office is the Constitutional remedy. If this is a crisis—and it is—then Democrats must be willing to initiate this conversation.

It would signal to voters that they are willing to fight to defend our system of government. It would give people something around which to rally. It would force Republicans to defend the anti-Constitutional actions of the Trump-Musk Regime.

These are not normal times. Democrats must embrace every tool at their disposal, especially the ones included by the framers for this purpose in the Constitution.


#4

  • I Hope MAGA Investors Enjoy the Crisis They Caused (Ryan Cooper, The American Prospect, Link to Article)
  • Donald Trump’s Ghostwriter Tells All (Jane Mayer, The New Yorker, Link to Article)

One of the most famous tweets of all time describes conservative voters’ attempt to punish people they don’t like backfiring on themselves: “‘I never thought leopards would eat MY face,’ sobs woman who voted for the Leopards Eating People’s Faces Party.” It’s a cliché at this point to cite this, but the tweet is only becoming more relevant as Donald Trump has unleashed the biggest leopard of all on a core source of his support: the financial industry. His deranged trade war with the entire planet is cratering markets around the world and may unleash a global financial crisis.

I realize not everyone is as online as I am, so I am glad Ryan Cooper opened his story by explaining the dynamic of MAGA supporters being harmed by the president they supported.

Just a few months ago, Wall Street and tech leaders were giddy over the economic growth the United States was about to experience. Cooper recalls some of this misplaced optimism:

A great many Trump-supporting financiers and business leaders thought they were ushering in the usual Republican regime of low taxes and lax regulation. Markets soared on the news of his election, reaching a peak in January. “I am quite optimistic that this administration is going to run a very, very pro-growth agenda,” said David Solomon, CEO of Goldman Sachs. “I feel liberated,” a “top banker” told the Financial Times. “We can say ‘retard’ and ‘pussy’ without the fear of getting cancelled … it’s a new dawn.” JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon even supported Trump’s tariff ideas outright. “Get over it,” he said at Davos in January.

Since then, with Trump plainly mentally unbalanced and Elon Musk tearing up the government structures that underpin American capitalism, markets had fallen by about 15 percent as of early April. And now, Wall Street is getting perhaps the most wholly gratuitous market crash in history—touched off not by a business failure or bank run, but by the dumbest president in history dropping a neutron bomb on the global trading system for no reason.

Our economic elite are not as smart as they believe. And now the leopards are coming for their faces.

When asked about the Trump-Musk Regime’s economic insanity, many members of Congress, including House Speaker Mike Johnson, have pointed to Trump supposedly being a great deal maker and the author of The Art of the Deal.

Of course, Trump didn’t write that book. Tony Schwartz did. In this 2016 New Yorker profile by Jane Mayer, Schwartz explains his regret for his part in creating the myth of Donald Trump, the competent businessman.

“I put lipstick on a pig,” he said. “I feel a deep sense of remorse that I contributed to presenting Trump in a way that brought him wider attention and made him more appealing than he is.” He went on, “I genuinely believe that if Trump wins and gets the nuclear codes there is an excellent possibility it will lead to the end of civilization.”

If he were writing “The Art of the Deal” today, Schwartz said, it would be a very different book with a very different title.

Yeah, he tried to warn us in 2016. As did so many people.

So let’s not allow Republicans like the Speaker to use the Art of the Deal as justification for Trump harming the United States economy. They know the truth.

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#5

  • The Myth of the Kindly General Lee (Adam Serwer, The Atlantic, Link to Article)

Earlier this month, we celebrated the anniversary of General Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox Court House.

This traitor has been the beneficiary of a concerted effort to rehabilitate his image and justify his decision to betray his oath and kill United States soldiers.

Not holding Confederate leaders responsible for their treason has harmed our country. Allowing Robert E. Lee to be cleansed of his racism and support of slavery must not be allowed to continue. As Serwer writes in an all-too-relevant 2017 article:

To describe this man as an American hero requires ignoring the immense suffering for which he was personally responsible, both on and off the battlefield. It requires ignoring his participation in the industry of human bondage, his betrayal of his country in defense of that institution, the battlefields scattered with the lifeless bodies of men who followed his orders and those they killed, his hostility toward the rights of the freedmen and his indifference to his own students waging a campaign of terror against the newly emancipated. It requires reducing the sum of human virtue to a sense of decorum and the ability to convey gravitas in a gray uniform.

Robert E. Lee is one of the most significant traitors our nation has produced. We must not allow a propaganda campaign to rewrite that horrible history.


#6

  • Greenland ‘Freedom City’? Rich donors push Trump for a tech hub up north (Rachael Levy and Alexandra Ulmer, Reuters, Link to Article)
  • The Nerd Reich podcast, episode 1: The Network State (Gil Duran, The Nerd Reich, Link to Article)

I’ve written about Gil Duran’s coverage of our techbroligarch’s plans to replace democratic government with Network States based on cryptocurrencies, artificial intelligence, and their own authoritarian power.

Many analysts have wondered why the Trump-Musk Regime has been so focused on taking over Greenland, including threats to invade a NATO ally. Rachel Levy and Alexandra Ulmer may have uncovered a big part of the puzzle:

As the Trump administration intensifies efforts to acquire Greenland from Denmark — or take it by force — some Silicon Valley tech investors are promoting the frozen island as a site for a so-called freedom city, a libertarian utopia with minimal corporate regulation, three people familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The discussions are in early stages, but the idea has been taken seriously by Trump’s pick for Denmark ambassador, Ken Howery, who is expected to be confirmed by Congress in the coming months and lead Greenland-acquisition negotiations, the people said. Howery, whose involvement with the idea hasn’t been previously reported, once co-founded a venture-capital firm with tech billionaire Peter Thiel, a leading advocate for such low-regulation cities. Howery is also a longtime friend of Elon Musk, a top Trump advisor.

Freedom cities are just another name for a Network State. Better branding, even if the result is still dystopian.

I want to share Gil Duran’s new podcast for those of you who want to learn more about what Musk, Thiel, and other tech leaders are seeking to do. The first episode includes a deep dive into the Network State and why our techbroligarchs are so excited about getting rid of regulations and government oversight. After all, as Thiel once wrote, “democracy is no longer compatible with freedom.”

That’s what we are up against.


#7

  • Count the Dead by the Millions (Tim Dickinson, Rolling Stone, Link to Article)
  • Marco Rubio Lied (Daniel W. Drezner, Drezner’s World, Link to Article)

The United States Senate confirmed Secretary of State Marco Rubio by a 99-0 vote. That’s right: every Democrat supported their colleague in the hopes he’d be an adult in the room.

Instead, Rubio has been central to many of the Trump Regime’s most harmful actions. He lied about why Tufts graduate student Rümeysa Öztürk was seized from the streets of Medford, Massachusetts, last month. He sat silently while President Trump and Vice President Vance attacked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office. He has championed the end of U.S. foreign aid programs.

That last choice is going to have deadly consequences around the world. As Tim Dickinson writes:

A new study models the impact of the implosion of U.S.-funded disease treatment and prevention in the developing world — and suggests that Elon Musk and Marco Rubio will go down as among history’s greatest monsters if funding and effective administration are not restored.

In short: Tens of millions will die, millions of them children.

<snip>

The findings shock the conscience. Cessation of U.S. aid will lead to people in poor countries dying, in genocidal proportions, of preventable and treatable diseases. That includes more than 15 million additional deaths from HIV/AIDS, more than 2 million additional casualties from tuberculosis, and nearly 8 million additional children dead of other maladies.

The numbers are stunning. This is how many people around the world will remember the United States. There was no reason to make these cuts so chaotic, even if we decided as a nation that these programs were no longer worthy of our support.

Marco Rubio oversees the decisions leading to these death tolls while proclaiming to be a devout Christian. I hope Democrats learn the lesson that anyone willing to serve Donald Trump cannot be trusted in office.


#8

  • When Baseball Forgot Its Courage: MLB’s DEI Capitulation (Parker Molloy, The Present Age, Link to Article)

The past week has been difficult for this baseball fan. In many years, that difficulty can be traced to a poor start by the Chicago Cubs. But this year, the problem is more significant.

Parker Molloy is also a Cubs fan. But she shares my disappointment about how Major League Baseball has capitulated to the Trump Regime about diversity and inclusion initiatives while pretending to care about what Jackie Robinson meant to the game.

Yes, the sport that loves to pat itself on the back every April 15th for Robinson’s breaking of the league’s color barrier couldn’t even bring itself to mention the color barrier in its press release this year (they did mention it on some other pages on the MLB site, however). The same MLB that sells #42 jerseys, that produces emotional video packages about Robinson’s courage, that uses his legacy to bolster its image as a progressive force in American culture, now can’t find the courage to use the words “diversity” or “inclusion” in its official communications.

<snip>

The real irony is that Jackie Robinson himself was never one to stay silent in the face of injustice. He used his platform to speak out, despite the personal and professional risks. In 1972, just before his death, Robinson wrote in his autobiography: “I cannot stand and sing the anthem. I cannot salute the flag; I know that I am a black man in a white world.” That’s the kind of courage that made him not just a baseball pioneer, but an American hero.

Baseball should be better than this. It’s supposed to be where we gather together, across all our differences, to share something beautiful. The game deserves leaders who understand that acknowledging our painful past isn’t “DEI” — it’s just honesty. And honesty is supposed to be one of baseball’s core values, right alongside courage and integrity.

Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred and baseball’s owners are cowards. They want credit for Jackie Robinson’s courage without doing the work necessary to honor his legacy.


#9

The Reality of the January 6, 2021, Insurrection

On January 6, 2021, Donald Trump instigated a violent insurrection against the United States government. Here’s a video from the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol that one can review if their memory fades.

People were hurt and police officers died protecting the Capitol. Vice President Pence and other elected officials just barely escaped danger. Our national streak of peaceful transfers of power ended.

It was not, as Trump claims, a “day of love.” And we must resist his efforts to rewrite the history of that dark day.


The Possibility of Hope

We are not alone—and here’s what’s bringing me hope in the long, twilight struggle.

  • Senator Chris Van Hollen for going to El Salvador and defending due process in the media.
  • I believe the rallies we are seeing nationwide are making a huge difference and providing space for our elected officials to increase their opposition to the Trump Regime.
  • Harvard University for telling the Trump Regime that they will not assist in the destruction of our higher education institutions.
  • All of the fired federal employees who are preparing to run for office. Let’s help them as they take a stand in the fight to protect our democracy.

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

We’ve seen this movie before across different contexts and continents. The script is familiar, the plot mostly predictable. But we don’t yet know how it ends – especially in a country with America’s democratic traditions, constitutional safeguards, and decentralized power structures.

And so, when friends ask me “what do we do,” I tell them: Look to those who’ve been there before. Democracy isn’t saved through grand gestures, but through thousands of small acts of courage. Through showing up, speaking up, and refusing to turn away from what is happening before our eyes. Through recognizing that the authoritarian playbook works precisely because each small tactic seems too minor to resist.

We’ve seen this movie before. But we’re not just a passive audience—we’re also actors. And we still have the power to change the ending.”—Natalia Antelava, Coda Story, Sunday Read: How Democracies Die – The Script for a Three-Act Play


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Craig Cheslog (@craigcheslog.com)
GenXer against fascism. Talking politics, women’s soccer, WNBA, Manchester United men and women, USWNT, USMNT, Green Bay Packers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Cubs, and Taylor Swift. (he/him/his) My newsletter: https://thelongtwilightstruggle.com/.

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#95: Elected Leaders Need to Follow the People


“It might be helpful for you to know that you are not alone. And that in the long, twilight struggle which lies ahead of us, there is the possibility of hope.”

“The Long Twilight Struggle.” Babylon 5, created and written by J. Michael Straczynski, Season 2, Episode 20, 1995.


Here’s what I’ve found interesting:

  • Why I’ve moved this newsletter to a new platform;
  • A hopeful national day of protests;
  • Cory Booker’s magnificent speech;
  • Holding every Republican responsible for the Trump tariff fiasco;
  • Abortion bans kill women;
  • Kristi Noem’s harmful cosplaying;
  • An oral history of Bear Stearns’ 2008 collapse; and
  • Let’s not allow Trump to rewrite the history of the January 6, 2021, insurrection he instigated.

Here we go. I’m glad you’re here.

#1

Moving to Ghost

You may have noticed that I sent this newsletter using a different service. I migrated from Substack to Ghost for several reasons.

Hopefully, you won’t notice much difference in the delivery of this newsletter, whether you are a free or paying subscriber.

I appreciate those of you who voluntarily pay for this newsletter to help me buy coffee and subscribe to newsletters to share. Both companies use the same payment processor, so the details for those of you with annual or monthly subscriptions should still work the same. Please let me know if you have any problems by emailing craig@thelongtwilightstruggle.com.

I made the move because I’ve been increasingly uncomfortable with Substack’s decision to share profits with white supremacists, Nazis, and transphobes. Some of these authors have been able to use their Substacks to re-enter more mainstream conversations.

I still subscribe to Substack newsletters, both paid and free. I don’t blame people who haven’t moved. Risks are involved, especially if the newsletter is one’s primary income. I was not an early mover. But I have been increasingly uncomfortable with Substack’s policies. Ghost fits my comfort level better.

I also like that Ghost is a non-profit organization. While I am using Ghost’s hosting service, I could move this newsletter to my own server. I don’t have to worry about venture capitalists deciding they want the data. It is also easier to have a custom domain for the website archive (https://thelongtwilightstruggle.com/), and it could be easier for people to find it through search engines.

Let me know if you have any questions or comments. Now, let’s move on to clearing my tabs.

#2

  • ‘Not just anger and not just hope, but anger and hope’ (Jason Sattler, The Last Billionaires, Link to Article)
  • Millions Stood Up: April 5 Hands Off Day of Action (Rebecca Solnit, Meditations in an Emergency, Link to Article)
  • The ‘3.5% rule’: How a small minority can change the world (David Robson, BBC, Link to Article)

I was so pleased to see all of the photos from the April 5 Hands Off protests on BlueSky last night. The crowds. The signs. The message was angry and serious—but with a hearty inclusion of fun and hope.

Jason Sattler quotes an observation from Erica Chenoweth, who you may know as the researcher who developed the 3.5% rule about what level of public mobilization has led to government changes.

“I’ll also say there’s some research on the emotions of protest, and in it, there’s a kind of understanding that the emotions that mobilize people are anger and hope. Um, those two together, not just anger and not just hope, but anger and hope are what make people ready to engage in collective action.”

So, yes, despite some online tsk-tsking last night, it is important for people to have fun even while doing hard work. It is okay to sing, dance, and celebrate in other ways. Those dynamics help raise morale and keep the fight going. As Taylor Swift once said during a BBC Radio 1 interview:

“The worst kind of person is someone who makes someone feel bad, dumb, or stupid for being excited about something.”

Yes. Even during a protest.

Rebecca Solnit was the closing speaker at the San Francisco Hands Off rally, and I encourage you to read her comments. She also included an important observation from protest movement historian L.A. Kauffman about why the nationwide protests were so important:

The journalist L.A. Kauffman, who’s written excellent histories of protest movements and nonviolent activism, commented on BlueSky “A massive decentralized movement like this – everywhere all at once, with everybody pitching in – is extremely difficult for any regime, even the most autocratic, to derail. There are too many leaders, coordinating in too many different ways, for a movement like this to be easily neutralized. And while you usually can’t tell the true effect of a protest until long after it’s over, today’s actions have already made a major impact where we most needed it right now: on people’s morale. That in itself is a win.”

The first months of the second Trump regime have been emotionally difficult for people who aren’t members of MAGA. Democratic elected officials, with a few notable exceptions, have not met the urgency of this moment.

I hope Democrats looked at the rallies and saw that there are people who will have their backs if they are willing to robustly oppose the Trump-Musk Regime. May these protests become a virtuous cycle in defense of our democracy.


#3

  • Decency Will Win (Julie Roginsky, The Banter, Link to Article)
  • Five Things Cory Booker Taught Me This Week (Dahlia Lithwick, Slate, Link to Article)
  • Schiff Will Place Hold On Ed Martin Nom Citing ‘Demolished’ Firewalls Between WH And DOJ (Khaya Himmelman, Talking Points Memo, Link to Article)
  • A Democratic senator is putting holds on VA nominees to protest Trump’s plans to cut its workforce (Stephen Groves, Associated Press, Link to Article)

Oh, how I needed this.

Senator Cory Booker broke the record for the longest Senate speech when he spoke for 25 hours and 5 minutes against the Trump-Musk Regime. Booker surpassed racist Senator Strom Thurmond’s filibuster against the 1957 Civil Rights Act.

I’m quite pleased that Booker’s speech—and not Thurmond’s—will be the one mentioned going forward when there is a filibuster in the Senate.

However, Booker didn’t just demonstrate impressive stamina. He gave a tour de force presentation—and not just the typical time-wasting exercise. As Julie Roginsky explains:

Unlike Thurmond, Booker did not spend his time on the senate floor reading the election laws of each state or quoting from the speeches of George Washington and Alexis de Tocqueville. Instead, he focused on what Democrats should have been speaking about every single minute of every single day since January 20th: the horrors that this president is inflicting on every single American, irrespective of party affiliation. He spoke about the threat to our democracy, about the dangers to regular Americans who relied on Medicaid and Social Security to survive, about the failures of his own party to rise to the challenge of defending the country against Trumpism. “I confess that I’ve been inadequate. That the Democrats have been responsible for allowing the rise of this demagogue,” he added.

All of it needed to be said, and it will continue to need to be said—over and over again.

Plus, people like me who oppose what the Trump-Musk Regime is doing to federal government agencies, immigrants, trans people, and the economy needed to see our Democratic elected officials do something oppositional after they failed to stop the continuing budget resolution. As Dahlia Lithwick wrote:

What matters is that for anyone who has toggled between the “profoundly broken” and “exceedingly numb” poles of the emotional register in recent weeks, Booker blew the doors off and reminded us of a whole lot of things we knew already but which have been hard to retain top-of-mind amid the devastation that Donald Trump’s authoritarian forces have been wreaking on American democracy.

Yes, it may have been performative. But that is a big part of successful politics, a lesson far too many Democrats have refused to learn. Some Democrats who see a future president in the mirror each morning may notice the outpouring of support Booker received and decide they’d like to get their share of it.

Good! One of my rules of politics is that enlightened self-interest can be one of the most powerful forces in the universe. Politicians desire support. It is great if they can get it by doing the right things.

In the wake of Booker’s record-breaking speech, we witnessed the potential rise of Democratic opposition. Senator Adam Schiff (D-California) announced he was placing a hold on the nomination of Ed Martin as the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia. Martin has been acting like a personal attorney for President Trump and is manifestly unfit for the office.

Senator Ruben Gallego (D-Arizona) announced that he will block the confirmation of Department of Veterans Affairs nominees to force a restoration of the DOGE-backed cuts to veterans’ benefits.

That was awesome! But it wasn’t awesome to see the Democrats agree to a unanimous consent request to speed up a confirmation vote even before Booker could leave the floor to deal with “some of the biological urgencies” he was feeling. It was awful to see Democrats pull their punches by saying that tariffs can be a useful tool as they gently criticized Trump’s tariff announcement. As Jamison Foser noted on BlueSky:

man if the other party intentionally wrecks the economy so swiftly and thoroughly that markets drop 10 percent in 2 days and you can’t just say “this is bad” with your whole chest, it’s time to get out of the “opposition party” business.

Jamison Foser (@jamisonfoser.bsky.social) 2025-04-04T23:39:48.005Z

Indeed.

Democratic Senators have tools they can use to throw sand in the gears of the Trump-Musk Regime. Time is a non-renewable resource. Democrats can force Republicans to burn time by objecting to the unanimous consent requests that allow the Senate to function. They can demand the presence of a quorum when the Senate is conducting business.

Make life difficult for Republicans. Force them to get President Trump to back off his anti-Constitutional actions. Every wasted minute helps keep Trump from filling the judiciary with more Federalist Society members.

There are many benefits for the Democrats to act like a real opposition party while there is still time.


#4

  • The Trump Tariffs Are How Everything Works Now (Brian Barrett, Wired, Link to Article)
  • Launching the Economic Version of the Iraq War (James Fallows, Breaking the News, Link to Article)
  • Trump’s Tariff Madness Can Be Stopped. Here’s How. (Greg Sargent interview with Norman Ornstein, The Daily Blast from the New Republic, Link to Transcript)

He told us he was going to do this. One of the few talking points Donald Trump consistently makes in his public speeches is his love for tariffs. As Brian Barrett writes:

This is the takeaway of the manifold tariffs announced by President Donald Trump on Wednesday afternoon. In addition to the penguin-occupied Heard and McDonald Islands, the tariffs target the British Indian Ocean Territory, whose sole occupants live on a joint US-UK military base on Diego Garcia island. Yes, the United States is levying reciprocal tariffs against its own troops.

And then there are the tariffs against countries that have actual goods and services on which US consumers depend. China: 54 percent. Vietnam: 46 percent. Cambodia: 49 percent. South Korea: 25 percent. No corner of the US consumer economy will go untouched. Prices will rise. The stock market is spiraling. A recession looms. The tech industry will be turned upside down. Mark Cuban, noted billionaire, is encouraging people to stockpile consumables before it’s too late.

It’s reckless, it’s absurd, and it’s also everything Donald Trump said plainly he would do on the campaign trail. True, he didn’t telegraph how misguided the methodology would be—you can read about it more here, but suffice to say it’s thoroughly detached from the realities of international trade—but he loudly, repeatedly promised to tariff his way to glory.

Wall Street and corporate leaders thought he was joking. They thought they were buying more tax cuts and deregulation with their campaign contributions and other gratuities to the Trump Regime. It was a mistake to take Trump’s rantings literally. It was a performance.

Given the impact the present economic crash will have on ordinary people, one can take little comfort in the fact that these billionaires and millionaires have lost far more net worth since Trump’s tariff announcement than they hoped to gain with tax cuts.

I think James Fallows is correct to compare the Trump tariff announcement to another transformative Republican policy failure: the second Iraq War.

I think this is a historically reckless moment in US economic policy. And even by Trump-era standards it’s a historically shameful moment for the Republican Party. Its leaders know that their alpha-figure is launching a dollars-and-Euros version of the Iraq war. And they stand by, grinning and clapping.

<snip>

This all boils down to:

-Tariffs are weapons.
-Sane people use weapons with care.
-Now we have a deranged person with a weapon firing blindly. With no one in his own party to stop him.

Which leaves the Canadians, Mexicans, and Europeans to say, No.
And the Chinese and Russians to cackle at the smash-up.

And that is why Democrats must make all Republicans—and not just Trump—own the disaster that is underway.

Because Republicans can stop this tomorrow. They can join Democrats to pass legislation to rescind the national emergency power Trump is misusing to impose tariffs. They can also join Democrats to override the inevitable presidential veto.

As Greg Sargent and Norm Ornstein discuss, Republicans are not likely to join in those votes. But there is great value in Democrats acting like it is possible.

Sargent: I agree. And I’m going to say something really crazy. Given the cult-like qualities that you’re talking about in the Republican Party today, I think the chances of getting two-thirds of each chamber are not just slim to none; they are none to none. But I think Democrats should proceed as if it’s possible to get them. Push really hard, bludgeon the hell out of Republicans day in and day out in every conceivable forum, say over and over, Republicans are helping Trump cut taxes for the ultrawealthy and corporations because the “revenues” from tariffs will be paid by working-class and middle-class consumers, and that is what will be used to offset those tax cuts for the very rich. Say it over and over, Republicans and Trump are making your prices higher, much higher, to fund more tax cuts for the super rich. Act like Republicans can be pushed, and do it.

Ornstein: And I would go beyond that, Greg. I think we need to see even more town halls in Republican districts, with Democrats doing their own hearings in some of these areas, and field hearings outside plants that are being closed. We had the parent company of Dodge and Chrysler announced today they were laying off 900 workers and shuttering one of their plants. We’re going to see more of that. We’re going to see a lot of prices go up as a consequence of these tariffs, including domestic prices.

All of this, please, Democrats. Republicans must be held accountable for allowing Trump to enact plans to destroy the United States economy. Republicans think the highest political price they can face is by disagreeing with Trump. But we have already seen some Republicans and business leaders waver.

Democrats need to jump at the opportunity. It’s the right political move—and it may even prevent the worst of this coming trade war from happening.

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#5

  • US doctors describe three patient deaths that could have been prevented with abortion access in new study (Stephanie Kirchgaessner, The Guardian, Link to Article)

Doctors who practice medicine in states with abortion bans have described in a new study how three of their pregnant patients died, but probably could have been saved had they been able to receive abortion care.

The doctors, who treat lung, respiratory and other critical illnesses, never raised abortion, including the option of traveling out of state for the procedure, out of fear of legal repercussions, according to interviews with the doctors in the study, which was published in Chest, a medical journal. No other information about the patients who died was published.

The stories of these women are absolutely horrifying—but not surprising. Forced-birth Republicans have been repeatedly warned that their abortion bans will lead to mothers’ deaths.

Time is of the essence when there are medical complications. The exceptions in abortion bans, when they even exist, are so vague that physicians and hospital lawyers are unwilling to take on the potential legal liability created by providing reproductive health care to their patients.

Forced-birth advocates must own these, and other, deaths. These health care decisions should be made by pregnant people in consultation with their medical teams.

Not hypocritical religious zealot politicians.


#6

  • One Photo From Abu Ghraib Lost the Iraq War. Kristi Noem Continues the Tradition (Michael Embrich, Rolling Stone, Link to Article)

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem has been living out her cosplaying dreams. She’s conducted interviews in ICE uniforms, border patrol outfits, cowboy hats, and bulletproof vests.

But the photo op she did at the maximum security El Salvadorian prison to which the Trump Regime human trafficked Venezuelan immigrants without due process represented a rejection of ideals dating back to General George Washington. As Michael Embrich explains:

That photo — Private Lynndie England holding a leash attached to a naked, hooded Iraqi man nicknamed “Gus” by soldiers — became a defining image of the war. It shattered any illusion that we were there as liberators. It put every service member in greater danger and undermined the very values we claimed to defend. That single image embodied everything America is not supposed to be. And then came Kristi Noem.

Noem, Donald Trump’s Homeland Security Secretary, added her own flair to what might be the worst photo-op ever taken by a Cabinet secretary. Sporting a hat with a badge (thankfully not the Paw Patrol kind), she posed in front of shirtless, caged men held at El Salvador’s infamous gulag — and threatened to send more immigrants to America there. I felt that familiar gut-punch. Another photo. Another war lost — this time, for basic decency and American democratic ideals.

The Atlantic’s Adam Sewer observed during the first Trump Administration that cruelty is the point.” We have since watched MAGA supporters seek to one-up each other in terms of how much cruelty they can demonstrate.

The case of these Venezuelan immigrants crosses even more lines. As Embrich writes:

Every American should be asking: What happens when we normalize sending people — without hearings or trials — to cages in foreign countries known for torture? What happens when we rely on authoritarian regimes to do the dirty work we can’t legally carry out on U.S. soil?

These actions can have negative ramifications for generations. It is pretty clear that we have sent innocent people to a forced labor camp. But the Trump Regime’s spokespeople claim nothing can be done.

No, this is not normal. It is not acceptable. When we successfully overcome this democratic crisis, we need to hold those involved accountable, including the cosplaying cabinet members.


#7

  • The Weekend That Shook the World (Garrett M. Graff, The Washington Post, Link to Article)

I love oral histories—and this one covers a vital weekend in the 21st Century: the collapse of the investment bank Bear Stearns in March 2008. As Garrett Graff explains:

American politics — and our collective future — has rarely felt as unstable and uncertain as it does this spring. Yet the foundations of the unraveling and changes that led us to here can be found in the multiple destabilizing epochal events that have marked the first 25 years of the 21st century — including the 9/11 attacks and the coronavirus pandemic in 2020. Arguably no moment or crisis more shaped modern populism and the Republican Party, specifically, than the 2008 financial crisis, an economic catastrophe that upended the housing market, jobs, the broader economy and national politics. The crisis launched the tea party, began the rapid acceleration of the rising national debt and marked the beginning of the political ascendance of Donald Trump, who started in 2011 offering regular business and political punditry on Fox News.

The first major, public-headline-grabbing moment of that crisis came with the collapse over a single weekend of the venerable investment bank Bear Stearns — a firm founded in 1923 that had famously survived the Crash of ’29 without laying off any employees and grown by 2008 to be the country’s fifth-largest investment bank with some $400 billion in assets and 15,000 employees. That March weekend with Bear Stearns and the crisis as a whole would have been even worse but for enormous interventions and unprecedented actions by usually risk-averse government leaders at the Federal Reserve and the Treasury Department.

Graff interviews the Treasury, Federal Reserve, and business leaders who came together in an unprecedentedly short period of time to facilitate the firm’s sale to JPMorgan Chase.

These decisions did contain the damage in the short term. However, the political decisions that extended into the Obama Administration to bail out the banks and their investors damaged our democracy.

There is a universe where using the bailout money to help the mortgage holders (whose payments, in turn, would still help the banks) would have created a more stable economy and political situation.

People were angry that the banks and investors did not face major consequences for their fraudulent actions. People lost their homes while bankers kept their bonuses and didn’t face legal ramifications. That was not a great outcome.


#8

  • The Reality of the January 6, 2021, Insurrection

On January 6, 2021, Donald Trump instigated a violent insurrection against the United States government. Here’s a video from the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol that one can review if their memory fades.

People were hurt and police officers died protecting the Capitol. Vice President Pence and other elected officials just barely escaped danger. Our national streak of peaceful transfers of power ended.

It was not, as Trump claims, a “day of love.” And we must resist his efforts to rewrite the history of that dark day.


Quick Hits

  • A U.S. invasion of Greenland could actually happen (Michael Cohen, MSNBC, Link to Article)
    As I noted in the section about tariffs above, we need to take it seriously when Trump says something repeatedly.
  • Trump’s third term threats are not a distraction (Noah Berlatsky, Public Notice, Link to Article)
    Yeah, I need to repeat myself. We need to take literally what Trump says repeatedly. Yes, the interpretation of the 22nd Amendment that supposedly makes it possible for Trump to run for Vice President and then take office after a president’s resignation is ridiculous. But if Trump can get away with all he’s done with Musk so far, why should we assume he cares what words or laws mean?
  • International unease ahead of NWSL international break (Justin Horneker, Talkin’ Soccer, Link to Article)
    While not nearly as important as the ramifications created by the Trump Regime sending innocent people to El Salvadorian prison labor camps while defying court orders, Trump’s anti-Constitutional immigration actions are creating chaos for other people who need to enter and leave the country. For example, the Football Association of Zambia told its NWSL-based players not to join their national team in China for a tournament his week because of visa concerns. The United States is scheduled to host the Men’s World Cup in 2026 and the Summer Olympics in 2028. How is that supposed to work while Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller is implementing his white supremacist immigration agenda?
  • After Kennedy Center cancels LGBTQ+ musical, Guster brings cast on stage in protest (Marisa Kabas, The Handbasket, Link to Article)
    These are the kinds of moments that we must celebrate. I am glad the band Guster gave the cast of Finn an opportunity to perform at the Kennedy Center. Here’s your chance to watch this important moment.

Post-Game Comments

Today’s Thought from my Readwise collection:

“When you see important societal actors — be it university presidents, media outlets, C.E.O.s, mayors, governors — changing their behavior in order to avoid the wrath of the government, that’s a sign that we’ve crossed the line into some form of authoritarianism.”–Steven Levitsky, a professor of government at Harvard who co-authored 2018’s “How Democracies Die.

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Craig Cheslog (@craigcheslog.com)
GenXer against fascism. Talking politics, women’s soccer, WNBA, Manchester United men and women, USWNT, USMNT, Green Bay Packers, Boston Celtics, Chicago Cubs, and Taylor Swift. (he/him/his) My newsletter: https://thelongtwilightstruggle.com/.

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