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A weekly accounting of the rogues and scoundrels of America
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A weekly accounting of the rogues and scoundrels of America
 
 

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Power Mad:

A weekly accounting of the rogues and scoundrels of America

 
A picture of Donald Trump leering behind some foliage

Senator Bernie Sanders Scott Olson/Getty

 

Unless you live in the Detroit metro area, you’re probably not an avid consumer of that city’s CBS station, News Channel 3. So you likely missed some reporting last week from reporter Jack Springgate, in which one area resident spoke out about a matter near and dear to their heart: President Donald Trump’s decision to impose stringent spending caps at the National Institutes of Health, which will cut lifesaving medical research by billions of dollars. That didn’t sit well with Elliot Stephens, who was identified as a cancer survivor. "They’re cutting children’s cancer research and the NIH and also interfering with grant funding rules for medical research," he said. "I have a daughter with cancer, and that for me is unforgivable." 

 

Stephens’s testimony is an important on-the-record account of Trumpian corruption and misrule. But what’s equally important is how Stephens’s account ended up being covered by the news at all. As TNR contributor Aaron Regunberg reported this week, this chance meeting between a local resident and a local news reporter came about because Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has lately been barnstorming some of the Rust Belt’s red-district redoubts, campaigning against the oligarchic takeover of the U.S. government. Sanders has rightly been getting national attention for drawing huge crowds in these MAGA strongholds, amplifying a message that all Democrats should be sending. But there’s an added benefit to his lion’s den tour: It was at one such rally that this connection between Stephens and Springgate was made—putting a human face on the harms of Trumpism.

 

As I noted two weeks ago, Trumpism isn’t working. Democrats have essentially staked their future on proving this beyond a shadow of a doubt. At the same time, they are largely locked out of meaningful policymaking in Washington, so they’re stuck in the position of finding alternate means to use politics to construct a majority. What Sanders has been doing recently is highly instructive—and Democrats don’t need to be die-hard enthusiasts of his particular policy portfolio to extract the key lesson and act on it: Identify the victims of Trumpism, give them a voice, and get their stories told.

 

Next Week: Women to Watch

Join us for an exclusive livestream on Thursday, March 20, when TNR staff writer Grace Segers sits down with some of the women making waves in American politics today—U.S. Representative Sarah McBride, president and CEO of Democracy Forward Skye Perryman, and president of Reproductive Freedom for All Mini Timmaraju. The discussion will cover breaking barriers and ensuring all Americans’ voices are heard in the fight for our democratic and human rights. 

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One thing that Sanders seems to understand is that Democrats are, at least in part, fighting a content-creation war. Politics is being fought in a skewed information environment that favors people who can reliably feed the beast with conflict and controversy. There is probably no quicker path to good, cheap conflict than, "President Deals and his ketamine-addled freak sidekick are screwing you over." And Sanders is not the first liberal lawmaker to note that GOP lawmakers have been ordered to retreat from their own town halls after they got shouted down by their own voters. Expect to see more of this: As Democrat Maxwell Frost recently vowed, "We’re filling a void."

 

That void exists because Republicans don’t actually govern: They don’t pass laws, don’t earmark funds, and have given up the power of the purse to an executive branch that isn’t spending money on anything besides a single Tesla for a president who doesn’t drive. So when Republican electeds end up in a room full of people who can’t pay their bills with whatever notches their representatives have carved into their ideological bedposts, things turn south and Republicans turn tail. Democrats can fill this vacuum by taking over these spaces. As they say, when there’s blood on the street, buy property.

 

But once this unclaimed territory is seized, there’s one other obligation that Democrats have to fulfill: finding those Elliot Stephenses in the crowd, and giving them a spotlight. If you intend to build the case that Trumpism is doing harm to people, then you must find proof of that in the form of the harmed. 

 

Democrats have two advantages. First, in Trump and Musk, they’ve drawn some of the least subtle villains in human history; the damage they’re doing to the country is manifold and constantly escalating. And as I’ve noted before, Democrats may have a paucity of parliamentary options, but they’re resource-rich if they want to raise rhetorical hell: They have experts they can call on, a constellation of nonprofits and policy organizations, wealthy donors to direct funds. 

 

Beyond that, they have an intimate awareness of the potential damage being done by every dollar that DOGE strips from the government, and the flesh-and-blood humans who are on the receiving end of every bit of punishment that Trump doles out. Today it might be families with loved ones who desperately need the fruits of cancer research. Tomorrow it might be vulnerable families who depend on the government to provide affordable housing. Next week it could be communities impacted by foodborne illnesses that arise from a decimated FDA. This is an administration that’s pursuing criminal charges against Habitat for Humanity, while letting measles go untamed

 

And if Democrats need help finding the victims of Trumpian chaos, there’s an app for that: your news browser. At TNR, putting a human face on the policies imposed by Washington lawmakers is part of our bread and butter. In recent weeks, my colleague Grace Segers has tracked the impact of the Trump administration’s policies on public health, rural economies, and food prices, to name a few. The Washington Post recently featured a story about a park ranger who, having voted for Trump after hearing him promise to make her desperately needed IVF treatments free, was fired by his administration instead. 

 

As the Columbia Journalism Review’s Lauren Watson wrote last week, some of the stories about the damage of Trump's slash-and-burn policies are finding their way into local newspapers all across the country. While the DOGE story may have taken root in the public consciousness because of "the experiences of federal workers in and around Washington, D.C.," she writes, "over 80 percent of the federal workforce lives and works outside the greater DC area, doing jobs from monitoring nuclear facilities to researching plant diseases, which means that the fallout from DOGE has been a local story, too."

 

In other words, this is a good time for Democrats to get outside their Capitol Hill bubble and seek out the people and the communities who have been most affected by Washington’s Trump-minted chaos. Republicans are certainly doing a lot of damage close to home—and they’re planning to gut the District of Columbia’s budget at the same time that they’re putting the local economy under strain through mass government layoffs, but there are less resilient economies beyond the Beltway that are being hit just as hard, and too many stories that too often don’t get told by the national media.

 

There’s another reason this is a ripe time for Democrats to rediscover the rest of the country: The Democratic base is getting angrier by the day at their own party’s lawmakers. Polling numbers have led Split Ticket’s Lakshya Jain to surmise that voters are increasingly dissatisfied with how "relatively quiet Democrats have been in organizing public opposition" and sense a sort of "Tea Party moment" brewing, in which the base breaks against incumbents for their lack of combativeness. The New Yorker’s Jay Caspian Kang warned recently of "radical change coming down the line in the form of ‘new candidates’ pulled from the ranks of ‘ordinary citizens who are fed up with the feckless and do-nothing politics of the Democratic establishment.’" Some of my own sources have recently told me that the fired federal worker to pissed-off Democratic primary challenger pipeline is a very real thing.

 

If that kind of rage is building outside Washington, then Democrats had better make it right. And let’s face it: If the base is asking for a little more combativeness against a president whom Democrats have long characterized as an existential threat to democracy—and who has, since reassuming his reign, gone wildly out of his way to demonstrate that Democrats were right to brand him in this way—then these demands are not unreasonable. The quickest way to bring the fight to Trump is to force him to face the people he’s harmed. 

—Jason Linkins, deputy editor

 
 

Politics Must-Reads

The detention of Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil has sent a shock wave through the civil liberties community, but Jonathan Gray says it’s also a stress test for higher education. Felipe de la Hoz follows up with a vital explainer about how the detention, while facially unjust, is in fact all too legal. And Emily Tamkin critiques the Trump administration’s purported efforts to fight antisemitism as broadly harmful to the Jewish community. Meanwhile, Sarah Stankorb finds that Ohio Republicans’ anti-DEI animus is so great that they’re prepared to wreck their own state’s economy. Ellie Houghtaling reports on a new app that people are using to protect their fellow citizens from Trump’s deportation raids. The hardships that trans people now face in order to obtain passports is harrowingly chronicled by olive greenspan. And Tim Noah runs down the extensive list of words that Trump is barring the federal government from using.

 

Trump’s Crazed Midnight Tirade Over Musk’s Unpopularity Shows Weakness

Trump hates green energy—but he loves Teslas, which he’s now pathetically pleading with his followers to buy as a show of loyalty and devotion to Elon Musk.

By Greg Sargent

Read now
 

What Subscribers Are Reading

The 199 Things You Can’t Say in the Trump Administration

It’s no surprise that the president deleted "climate change" from government websites. But why forbid "advocate" and "institutional"?

by Timothy Noah

 

Ohio Republicans Are Ready to Wreck the Economy Over DEI

Conservative lawmakers in the Buckeye State are pushing a bill that could create a devastating statewide brain drain.

by Sarah Stankorb

 
 

Amy Coney Barrett Isn’t What the Conservative Legal Movement Expected

The Supreme Court’s second-newest justice is proving herself to be a non-hack—to the increasing consternation of MAGA.

By Matt Ford

Read now
 

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