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The Dictatorship

8 major political storylines from 2024 (in case you’d forgotten)

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8 major political storylines from 2024 (in case you’d forgotten)

Politically speaking, 2024 has been a long and exhausting year. A tumultuous presidential race exacerbated the country’s deep political divisions as threats of violence loomed over the election. Fears about the economy and the state of democracy intensified. Politicians promoted conspiracy theories about the weatherabout immigrantsabout the election’s being “rigged.”

Here are some of the biggest political headlines from the year that you might’ve already wished you’d forgotten.

Trump becomes first former president convicted of felony crimes

In May, Trump was convicted on 34 felony counts in his New York hush money trial and earned the title of first former president to be criminally convicted at trial.

Since then, his lawyers have repeatedly tried to overturn his conviction, including accusing a juror of misconduct and trying unsuccessfully to move the case to federal court.

Supreme Court ruling on presidential immunity

The Supreme Court’s conservative majority in July handed Trump a gift, ruling he has presidential immunity from criminal prosecution for some of his acts in office. President Joe Biden criticized the ruling at the time as “a terrible disservice to the people of this nation.”

Both of Trump’s federal criminal cases have been dismissed in the wake of his election win.

Biden’s disastrous debate

Biden’s stumbling performance at his first and only debate against Trump effectively halted his political career in its tracks. Calls for him to step down from the Democratic ticket began as soon as the debate ended. After a few agonizing weeks of defiance, the president, then 81 years old, announced he was withdrawing from the race and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for the top of the ticket.

After Trump’s election win, some Democrats blamed the stinging loss is Biden for withdrawing so late in the game, preventing the party from having a proper primary campaign. Biden nevertheless continued to maintain that he could have defeated Trump had he finished the campaign.

The attempts to assassinate Trump

Trump was the target of two attempted assassinations during the campaign. The first happened in July as he delivered a speech at a Pennsylvania rally. A shooter fired several rounds at Trump and into the crowd, grazing Trump’s ear and killing a rally-goer. Secret Service agents then surrounded the former president and rushed him from the podium. The sight of Trump bleeding from the ear, his fist raised in the air, was hailed as a defining image of his candidacy.

Donald Trump raises his arm with blood on his face
Trump on July 13 in Butler, Pa. Jabin Botsford / The Washington Post via Getty Images file

In September, there was a second attempt on Trump’s life at his golf course in Florida, but he was not injured. A suspect, Ryan Routh, was later arrested. Routh has pleaded not guilty to five federal chargesincluding attempting to assassinate a presidential candidate.

Kamala Harris memes

Harris’ presidential campaign took off in August by capitalizing on a wave of online content about the inherently meme-able vice president.

Driven by a surge of enthusiasm among young Democrats for her candidacy — and fueled by pop star Charli XCX’s declaring that “kamala IS brat” — the Harris campaign fully embraced the memes as it sought to win over younger voters. But that ultimately did not translate into real votes: NBC News’ exit polling showed that Trump picked up more voters under 30 than any other Republican presidential candidate since 2008.

Elon Musk spends his way into Trump’s orbit

The richest man in the world had one of the most significant ascents in U.S. politics this year, pouring his wealth into helping Trump get elected.

Musk spent more than a quarter-billion dollars to boost Trump’s chances in the election, and he has since used his platform X to assert his influence over Trump’s administration picks.

More recently, through his social media account, Musk pressured House Republicans to tank a spending bill that would have funded the federal government for three more months. His spending bill antics led to intense criticismand some Democrats have started calling him a “shadow president.”

Matt Gaetz’s attorney general debacle

Gaetz’s political fortunes suffered serious whiplash in the weeks following Trump’s win.

Gaetz easily won re-election to the House from Florida this year. Just days later, Trump announced Gaetz as his attorney general pick, and he immediately resigned from Congress. That move effectively ended a House Ethics Committee probe into sexual misconduct allegations, in which Gaetz has denied any wrongdoing. Democrats and some Senate Republicans were still intent on seeing the committee report, and amid the heightened scrutiny, Gaetz withdrew from consideration to be attorney general and said he would not join the next Congress. The report was nevertheless made public on Dec. 23 after the committee secretly voted earlier in the month to release it.

Gaetz has since joined the website Cameocharging hundreds of dollars to make personalized videos. He is also set to host a political talk show on the right-wing One America News Network next year.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Where to begin with Kennedy? During his failed presidential bid this year, reports emerged that he once claimed a worm ate part of his brainthat he was behind the mysterious dumping of a bear carcass in Central Park in New York City in 2014 and that he did not eat a barbecued dog. Kennedy was also accused of sexual assault by a woman he once hired to babysit his children; asked about her allegations, Kennedy declined to comment but added that he had a “very, very rambunctious youth.”

Kennedy dropped out of the race in August and immediately endorsed Trump, a decision that has paid off so far: Unless more details from his past emerge during his Senate confirmation hearings, the renowned anti-vaxxer — who has blamed mass shootings on anti-depressants and said chemicals in the water supplyhave led more minors to identify as transgender — is poised to take over as health and human services secretary.

Clarissa-Jan Lim

Clarissa-Jan Lim is a breaking/trending news blogger for BLN Digital. She was previously a senior reporter and editor at BuzzFeed News.

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The Dictatorship

Mullin pushes states to comply with election demands, echoing Trump’s claims about midterm risks

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Mullin pushes states to comply with election demands, echoing Trump’s claims about midterm risks

WASHINGTON (AP) — Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin on Friday warned that state officials could lose funding or face investigations if they fail to go along with President Donald Trump’s election security demands, part of the Republican president’s longstanding attempt to undermine Americans’ confidence in the vote.

Experts said the threats — issued just months before midterm elections that will determine control of Congress — were likely hollow because Trump’s voting initiatives have been stalled by judges and the Constitution gives states control over how elections are run.

Nevertheless, Mullin’s remarks, delivered from the White House complex one day after Trump’s primetime address on the topiccould further doubts about election processes and create headaches for states as they prepare for November.

“We absolutely can build confidence in the American people, but the states have to do their part,” Mullin said.

AP AUDIO: Mullin pushes states to comply with election demands, echoing Trump’s claims about midterm risks

AP correspondent Ed Donahue reports a member of President Trump’s cabinet says he is ready to go after voter fraud.

Trump continues to falsely claim that Democrat Joe Biden won only because of fraud in 2020, and he’s tried to marshal the powers of the federal government to rewrite that history since he returned to office last year — even though judges and his own attorney general in his first term concluded the election was legitimate.

Mullin insisted that the president was not relitigating the 2020 election, “although he definitely could at this point.”

“This is just about exposing what took place and making sure it never happens again,” he said.

Mullin’s claims of noncitizen voters rely on incomplete data

During his remarks, Mullin advanced an unsubstantiated claim Trump made Thursday that the federal government had found 250,000 noncitizen voters on the rolls in California, Nevada, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. He said the Department of Homeland Security’s investigation was conducted using public data, which election experts say is insufficiently detailed and updated to properly identify whether a registered voter is a noncitizen.

Election officials in California and Pennsylvania said they would review the Trump administration’s findings but noted that they conduct their own voter list maintenance and noncitizen voting is exceedingly rare. Research has supported that finding.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, responded to Mullin’s threats with a post on social media.

“California has free, fair, and secure elections and we will fight for them,” he wrote. “Try us.”

In Nevada, Secretary of State Cisco Aguilar, also a Democrat, said he was confident in the integrity of the state’s voter file.

“We are constantly looking at the information to figure out how many registered voters in Nevada don’t have a Social Security number on file,” he said. “We have done significant work to make sure our voter rolls are as clean as possible.”

Mullin also pledged to aggressively monitor public voter lists to pursue potential voter fraud cases before and after the 2026 election.

“If you are an illegal or you are voting illegally, we will hunt you down, we will find you and we will prosecute you,” he said.

He urged states to participate in DHS’ recently overhauled SAVE program, a federal tool central to the Trump administration’s efforts to nationalize elections. At least 25 states have used it to check their voter rolls since April 2025, after the Trump administration significantly expanded its search abilities, and the Trump administration has demanded that states submit their sensitive voter data to the program to fully audit their voter lists.

Mullin said if state officials don’t participate in SAVE, they could face fines, penalties or prison time.

But the overhauled program’s use was recently blocked by a federal judge over concerns about privacy and wrongful purges of eligible voters. The case included voters whose registrations were wrongly flagged by the program, temporarily threatening their place on the rolls.

David Becker, the executive director of the nonprofit Center for Election Innovation and Research, said Mullin was making empty threats.

“Every court to consider the DOJ’s demands — 15 of them to date, six of those judges appointed by President Trump — have confirmed that the federal government cannot legally demand access to states’ sensitive voter data,” he said. “What he’s suggesting is illegal.”

In addition, Trump’s efforts to pass the SAVE Act, federal legislation that would require proof of citizenship for voter registration, has stalled in the Senate. Republicans don’t have enough votes to change the filibuster rules and pass it without Democratic support.

Cybersecurity support for election officials has been diminished in Trump’s second term

Mullin also elevated Trump’s concerns about vulnerabilities in electronic voting machines — which voting experts have long acknowledged. While Trump suggested Thursday that these risks make it possible to “rig” the vote, election officials say there are numerous safeguards in place to prevent that, including physical security, voting machine tests, postelection reviews and paper ballot backups in most of the country.

To address the concerns, Mullin said the nation’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which sits under DHS, would release an updated election infrastructure plan within 30 days and provide cyber threat resources to election officials if they participate in SAVE.

However, Trump has broadly dismantled the agency’s election security operation.

CISA was largely absent from its long-held role assisting states in last year’s elections after the Trump administration conducted a review of its election work, placed more than a dozen election-focused staffers on administrative leave and slashed $10 million from two cybersecurity initiatives, including one dedicated to helping state and local election officials. The agency is also still without a Senate-confirmed director and has cycled through a series of acting leaders.

Aguilar said his state has stepped up and will protect its own elections in the absence of federal help.

“The fact that they think they’re going to come in prior to the general election in November and provide us infrastructure, that’s nuts,” he said. “Actions speak louder than words, and in their case, it’s all been talk.”

___

Swenson reported from New York.

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Trump joins Republicans calling to punish Canada for hazardous wildfire smoke in the U.S.

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Trump joins Republicans calling to punish Canada for hazardous wildfire smoke in the U.S.

President Donald Trump is threatening to increase tariffs on Canada over wildfire smoke that has blanketed large swaths of the Midwest and Mid-Atlanticjoining several Republicans who have called for the U.S. ally to be punished for the intense air pollution.

“We are holding Canada responsible for the fact that they are not properly maintaining their Forests, and Brush therein, and the United States is being unnecessarily invaded by filthy, polluted, and unhealthy air, the quality of which is dangerous, and totally unacceptable!” Trump wrote on Truth Socialon Friday, adding: “This is Willful Negligence, and becoming a yearly occurrence, costing the United States Billions of Dollars, which cost of this pollution must of necessity be added to the TARIFFS Canada is currently paying.”

Trump did not elaborate on his tariffs threat.

Smoke from hundreds of Canadian wildfires has caused air quality from Detroit to Washington, D.C., to plummet to unhealthy levels in recent days.

There are dozens of active wildfires in the U.S. as well. A Canadian helicopter pilot was was killed last week in a crash while fighting a fire in Colorado.

Trump is not the only Republican who has criticized Canada over the wildfire smoke. Earlier this week, four House Republicans from Michigan wrote a letter to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney with a warning that appeared to allude to Trump’s threat to annex Canada.

“Sovereignty comes with responsibility,” the lawmakers wrote.

“This is the third consecutive year we have had to write to Canadian officials about a crisis that Canada has the tools to prevent and has chosen not to,” they wrote, later adding: “If Canada will not manage its forests to prevent these fires, the United States will look elsewhere, and act on our own, to protect our people.”

Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, has also said he intends to introduce a bill “to sanction Canada and the responsible Canadian government officials for this atrocity.”

In a statementMoreno’s office said: “Canada’s government failed to invest in wildfire prevention methods including forest thinning, fuel reduction, prescribed burns, and stronger enforcement against arson.”

Hotter temperatures and drier conditions as a result of the climate crisis have been major drivers of recent wildfires in North America. The Trump administration has cut funding for climate science, withdrawn the U.S. from global bodies and agreements aimed at tackling climate change and promoted the fossil fuel industry while rolling back renewable energy initiatives.

In response to the GOP complaints, some Canadian officials have noted that their country has helped with firefighting support in the U.S. during recent wildfires.

“If there’s some politicians out there chirping away, well, maybe what you should do rather than complain is send support, send help,” Ontario Premier Doug Ford said on Friday, “because we have done the exact same thing for our American friends.”

Doug Ford on American complaints over wildfire smoke: “If there’s some politicians out there chirping away, well, maybe what you should do rather than complain is send support, send help. Because we have done the exact same thing for our American friends.” pic.twitter.com/9e2TCVbqxC

— Scott Robertson (@sarobertson_)”https://x.com/sarobertson_/status/2078166329811460324?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw”>July 17, 2026

Clarissa-Jan Lim is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW. She was previously a senior reporter and editor at BuzzFeed News.

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The ICE shooting in Maine upended Susan Collins’ re-election race

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Nothing has absorbed Maine politics like the candidacy of Graham Platner. Almost from the moment he announced his run for the U.S. Senate in mid-August 2025, he drew big crowds and lots of attention. His strongest backers stuck with him through controversy after controversy until Jenny Racicot publicly accused him of sexual assault. Platner denied the allegation, but his support collapsed.

Yet even after Platner officially withdrew as the nominee on July 10 and the Maine Democratic Party began the process of replacing himit seemed like Mainers were going to keep talking about him for a while. Many of his committed voters were deeply disappointed about what they learned; others were very angry that the news had been revealed. Some suggested they might write in Platner’s name or not vote at all in the fall.

Then came an awful event that starkly shifted Mainers’ attention, and moved the focus of the Maine Senate race from Platner to Sen. Susan Collins.

The killing of 26-year-old Johan Sebastián Durán Guerrero in Biddeford, Maine, on Monday was a real shock in the state. Maine often has the lowest rate of violent crime nationally and homicides are rare, with only 21 in 2025.

Maine, like Minnesota, is a highly participatory state, and both places responded similarly to ICE incursions this past winter.

Of course, it wasn’t just Guerrero’s death that was the story, but also who shot him — an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer — and the circumstances of his killing. For one, unlike other shootings by ICE officers, the Department of Homeland Security did not even claim that Guerrero posed any sort of imminent threat or that the shooter feared for their life. Rather, DHS said that Guerrero’s “vehicle attempted to flee the scene and, fearing for public safety, an officer discharged his weapon.”

Moreover, Guerrero was legally in the country, according to local immigrant rights groups. And Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said Guerrero wasn’t even the person ICE was seeking.

Witnesses were shaken by what they saw. One bystander, Daniel Boucher, “choked up” recounting his experience, reported The Associated Press. “His face was bloody. His head was bloody,” Boucher said of the victim. “I clearly heard the victim say, ‘I tried to stop.’” In Akerleyanother neighbor who heard the shots and looked out the window to see some of what happened, told a local news station, “You know, it shatters the illusion that Maine is safe … I don’t know what he did, but he didn’t deserve to be executed in the street.”

Mainers quickly mobilized, with demonstrations in BiddefordPortlandBangor and Scarborough. “This is a land for people who want to be here,” said one rallygoer. “It doesn’t matter who you are, where you came from, what color your skin is. That’s what America is about.”

Both Senate candidates and members of the public criticized Collins. Protesters in Biddeford crowded the doorway at the senator’s local officeshouting, “Vote her out!” Senate candidate Shenna Bellows argued that she had already acted when, as secretary of state, she blocked ICE from getting undercover license plates and proclaimed, “There should be no secret police in our state.” Another contender, Troy Jackson, referred to “ICE’s rogue actions” and blasted Collins for voting “to send $70 billion dollars to ICE with no reforms.” A third potential Democratic nominee, Nirav Shahcontended, “There is a straight line from Sen. Collins to the lawlessness we saw yesterday.”

While, as I’ve noted, some Platner supporters were deeply unhappy that he wasn’t going to be the Democratic nominee, his absence in the aftermath of the shooting didn’t seem to matter in the least.

And why should it have? Maine, like Minnesota, is a highly participatory state, and both places responded similarly to ICE incursions this past winter.

Collins tried to claim credit for ending the winter surge. But Democrats and immigrant rights leaders were skeptical and pointed to her support for increased ICE funding without any reforms.

In both places, ICE showed up with face masks and randomly detained people, including those in the country legally. Agents smashed in the car windows of a University of Maine-trained civil engineer, Juan Sebastián Carvajal-Muñozand took him away with the car still running. He had a valid permit to work, an engineering job and no criminal record. A man training to be a corrections officer in southern Maine suffered the same fate, and as did others, including asylum seekers.

Then, as now, Mainers came togethersometimes via social media and sometimes through various groups, to try to counteract ICE.

As in Minnesota, ICE was heavy-handed and showed disrespect for civil rights. Two Maine women observing ICE were told they would be put on a domestic terrorist watch list and sued. “Only 11 of the nearly 200 people detained in Maine during a massive January immigration enforcement surge were recorded as having a criminal record,” the Bangor Daily News reportedmaking ICE look even more abusive.

At the time, Collins tried to claim credit for ending the winter surge. But Democrats and immigrant rights leaders were skeptical and pointed to her support for increased ICE funding without any reforms.

Now, Collins is again responding in her classic both-sides way. On the one hand, the incumbent urged DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin “to cease all non-urgent vehicle stops” and tepidly acknowledged that the lack of a recording device on the shooter was “extremely unfortunate.” On the other hand, Collins blamed Democrats for a delay in body cameras and contended that eliminating ICE “would make our country less safe.”

Platner’s fall upended the state’s biggest race for a time. But there are plenty of ICE critics, both political leaders and not, who are taking charge of the response to Collins and the agency.

And, though the Democratic Senate nominee is unknown again, Mainers are rising up, speaking out and moving on.

Amy Fried is professor emerita of political science at the University of Maine. She also has a Substack, Political Sightlines.

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