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Trump / Musk (other than DOGE)

  • Thread starter Thread starter nycfan
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It is ironic that Mitch— once the ringleader of Republican obstructionism— is now the only Pub voting along with Dems to prevent insanely unqualified cabinet nominees from landing the positions for which they are nominated. To whatever extent he’s grown a conscience, it’s too late now Mitch. You fucked us. Over and over.
 
It is ironic that Mitch— once the ringleader of Republican obstructionism— is now the only Pub voting along with Dems to prevent insanely unqualified cabinet nominees from landing the positions for which they are nominated. To whatever extent he’s grown a conscience, it’s too late now Mitch. You fucked us. Over and over.
Leopards ate his face.
 
It is ironic that Mitch— once the ringleader of Republican obstructionism— is now the only Pub voting along with Dems to prevent insanely unqualified cabinet nominees from landing the positions for which they are nominated. To whatever extent he’s grown a conscience, it’s too late now Mitch. You fucked us. Over and over.
Wake me up when Mich casts an impactful vote that breaks with the Republicans.
 

Senate votes to confirm Tulsi Gabbard as director of national intelligence​



“… The vote was 52-48 mostly along party lines, though Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky joined Democrats in opposing the confirmation….

… McConnell appeared to reference some of Gabbard’s positions in a statement he released after voting against her, saying she has “a history of alarming lapses in judgement.”

“The nation should not have to worry that the intelligence assessments the President receives are tainted by a Director of National Intelligence with a history of alarming lapses in judgment,” McConnell said. …”

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Mitch is facing apparently significant health issues (he’s fallen twice recently and has to be moved around via wheelchair) so maybe in a rush to make his peace with some higher power ….
He doesn't have that much time. He has a lot to atone for
 

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

Lawsuits challenging Trump policies raise big constitutional questions, but they also rely on a law that requires the government to follow the correct procedures when changing course.

“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.

… 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.

… 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.

… 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. …”

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The APA is not “obscure” at all inside the beltway or among government litigators — it is a frequently used tool that gives the judiciary a good bit of leeway to review rules changes, so seems a weird way to frame it.
 
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The APA is not “obscure” at all inside the beltway or among government litigators — it is a frequently used tool that gives the judiciary a good bit of leeway to review rules changes, so seems a weird way to frame it.
I agree, but you're underselling the APA. It's not a "frequently used tool." It literally structures our executive agencies. Every time an agency does anything, the APA is implicated and until now, the agencies at least followed the procedures the APA lays out.

The Comstock Act is an obscure law. The APA is the backbone of our government. There's a reason why law schools have whole courses devoted to studying it, and those are lecture classes, often for 2Ls.
 
That kid's comment is one of the funniest things I've ever heard. Is that X alpha robot or whatever the fuck his name is?
It is and clearly he is just echoing things he's heard his dad say.

Also, I checked the longer press conference video and believe the kid did say what it appears he said.
 
He’s planning something with this Kennedy Center thing. I’m not sure what yet, but this has Stephen Miller written all over it.
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Message from Ben Folds earlier this afternoon.
 
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