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The Dictatorship

Republicans might not realize just how unpopular Elon Musk is

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Republicans might not realize just how unpopular Elon Musk is

Republican Rep. Tony Gonzales of Texas appeared on BLN earlier this week and had nothing but positive things to say about Elon Musk and the quasi-governmental Department of Government Efficiency. “I think it’s good for us to have this dialogue,” the GOP congressman said. “DOGE is very popular in my district.”

A day earlier, The Associated Press reported that Republican Rep. Richard Hudson, the chair of the National Republican Congressional Committee, expressed great optimism about the 2026 election cycle — because, the North Carolinian said, “The cuts pushed by the Department of Government Efficiency are resonating with voters.”

There’s a whole lot of evidence to the contrary. Consider the latest national poll from Quinnipiac Universitywhich included a summary of public attitudes about Donald Trump’s biggest campaign donor and his radical DOGE endeavor.

Sixty percent of voters disapprove of the way Elon Musk and the Department of Government Efficiency, known as DOGE, are dealing with workers employed by the federal government, while 36 percent approve. … Fifty-four percent of voters think Elon Musk and DOGE are hurting the country, while 40 percent think they are helping the country.

The day before the Quinnipiac data was released, a national CNN poll conducted by SSRS found that Americans’ attitudes toward Musk “are largely negative.”

Just 35% of Americans express a positive view of Musk, with 53% rating him negatively. … Roughly 6 in 10 Americans say that Musk has neither the right experience nor the right judgment to make changes to the way the government works. There is uneasiness about Musk even among some of the president’s supporters: 28% of those who see Trump’s changes to the government as necessary doubt the tech billionaire has the judgment to carry them out.

This comes on the heels of a Washington Post/Ipsos poll that found the billionaire Republican megadonor with a 34% approval rating. (For more information on the surveys’ methodologies and margins of error, click on any of the above links.)

The obvious response to results like these is that public attitudes toward Musk are of limited relevance. He is not an elected official; his name will probably never appear on a ballot; and he need not worry about re-election. Perhaps, the argument goes, he has the luxury of indifference when it comes to the prevailing political winds.

The closer one looks, however, the harder it is to believe this argument. Even putting aside the likelihood that Musk’s popularity (or lack thereof) will affect his business empire and its stockholders, the more politically salient point is that Republicans’ interests have suddenly become intertwined with the DOGE initiative — which necessarily means that as his public standing sinks, Musk is likely to drag his GOP allies down with him.

All of which brings us back to the NRCC chair, who apparently believes “the cuts pushed by the Department of Government Efficiency are resonating with voters.” My follow-up questions for Hudson are simple:

Are you sure? Are you willing to bet your party’s near-future on those assumptions?

Steve legs

Steve Benen is a producer for “The Rachel Maddow Show,” the editor of MaddowBlog and an BLN political contributor. He’s also the bestselling author of “Ministry of Truth: Democracy, Reality, and the Republicans’ War on the Recent Past.”

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The Dictatorship

In Justice Department speech, Trump plays the victim again

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In Justice Department speech, Trump plays the victim again

President Donald Trump rehashed a litany of long-held grievances before an unusual crowd on Friday, telling officials at the Department of Justice that he had been persecuted, abused and attacked by his perceived political opponents in a meandering speech that went on for more than an hour.

Speaking to an audience that included FBI Director Kash Patel and Attorney General Pam Bondi, Trump painted himself as a victim, as he called prosecutors who worked on his criminal cases “scum,” “evil” and “corrupt,” and railed against negative media coverage of him as “illegal.”

“They spied on my campaign, launched one hoax and disinformation operation after another, broke the law on a colossal scale, persecuted my family, staff and supporters, raided my home Mar-a-Lago, and did everything within their power to prevent me from becoming the president of the United States,” he said.

Although billed as an address on law and order, Trump’s remarks to the Justice Department more resembled one of his rambling campaign speeches. Calling himself the “chief law enforcement officer” (a title usually reserved for the U.S. attorney general), Trump careened across a range of topics, from Ukraine to the price of eggs, crowed about his “mandate” in the 2024 election and vowed to “bring back faith” in a justice system that he has dramatically politicized since returning to office.

“First, we must be honest about the lies and the abuses that have occurred within these walls,” Trump told the crowd. “Unfortunately in recent years, a corrupt group of hacks and radicals within the ranks of the American government obliterated the trust and goodwill built up over generations. They weaponized the vast powers of our intelligence and law enforcement agencies to try and thwart the will of the American people.”

Trump also mentioned by name attorneys who he claimed “did everything within their power to prevent me from becoming the president of the United States” and repeated his baseless claim that his political foes had weaponized federal law enforcement against him — even as he delivered a highly politicized speech to a department that has traditionally strived to preserve its independence from the executive branch.

Clarissa-je 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

Trump’s humiliation of Zelenskyy is plain as day in the rare minerals deal

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Trump’s humiliation of Zelenskyy is plain as day in the rare minerals deal

If Ukraine needs a wake-up call regarding how much agency it truly has, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s humiliating decision to sign the rare minerals dealwhich would see America and Ukraine jointly extract valuable raw materials such as lithium and titanium, will do the trick. It’s hard to get more symbolic than watching the head of a client state get lambasted in the Oval Officehaving the United States cut off sharing intelligence with his military, then shambling back over to his overseer to pay up.

There are, however, two underreported facets to this shameful episode that can help us understand the nature of both Washington and Ukraine. We can witness, in real time, the masks coming off of Washington’s foreign policy complex; we can also see why this particular betrayal is so traumatic and painful given Ukraine’s tragic history.

We can witness, in real time, the masks coming off of Washington’s foreign policy complex.

The refreshing thing about President Donald Trump is that he speaks the quiet part out loud. Politicians and think tankers who comprise Washington’s sprawling foreign policy establishment — “the Blob,” as it was called by Obama deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes — love warbling about Ukraine’s battling on the front lines of freedom and Kyiv’s being our cherished partner, brimming with agency and sovereignty.

Trump doesn’t warble. Trump, who loves harping on Europe’s needing to pay for its own security, has made it clear that freedom ain’t free: If Ukraine wants the weapons it needs to hold Russia at bay, it better cough up its minerals.

The thing is, when it comes to looting Ukraine, the Blob is little different from Trump. Foreign policy insiders’ lofty concerns about Kyiv’s agency evaporate in the face of economic “opportunities.”

“Putin had two goals in invading Ukraine: robbing its territory, and robbing its sovereignty by preventing them from joining NATO,” thundered Sen. Chris CoonsD-del., On Feb. 16.

But just one day prior, Sen. Coons was striking a markedly different tone about Ukraine’s minerals.

“If this is an investment opportunity where American companies and other companies from Europe would be involved in mining and processing, so that we can be independent of Chinese sources of these strategic minerals, and if his helps deepen and strengthen our partnership to help ensure the security of Ukraine going forward … that would be a positive thing,” he told CNBC.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s robbing Ukraine is a horrific violation of sovereignty; the United States’ doing so is a positive. Let freedom ring.

Or take Peter Dickinson — the editor of a Ukraine-centric blog for the Atlantic Councila Washington-based foreign policy think tank that receives funding from arms manufacturer Lockheed Martin, the kingdom of Bahrain, the Charles Koch Foundation and the U.S. Energy Department, among other luminaries. “We hear lots of talk about geopolitics and what Putin wants, but we should not underestimate the agency of the Ukrainian people or their desire for a democratic European future,” Dickinson told Bloomberg in 2022.

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s robbing Ukraine is a horrific violation of sovereignty; the United States’ doing so is a positive. Let freedom ring.

Later that year, the X handle of Business Ukraine Mag (a publication edited and published by Dickinson) took Elon Musk to the woodshed, posting, “Elon Musk seems unaware that Ukrainian sovereignty is not up for discussion.” Things appear to have changed last month, however, when Dickinson was quoted in a Blue Light News article with the amazing headline “Ukraine reels in Trump with mineral riches.” (It could have also read: “Bully’s victim reels in bully with lunch money.”)

Dickinson acknowledged that for Kyiv, it “would mean a lot less mineral wealth in future” before adding, “But I doubt anyone is very concerned about that.” He continued, “Compared to the alternative of the country being wiped off the map entirely, it looks like a very good deal indeed! Most Ukrainians certainly seem to view it as perhaps distasteful but ultimately a no-brainer.”

The hypocrisy of Ukraine’s purported Washington advocates only deepens given the role its territorial resources play in Ukraine’s identity — and the danger that could lurk for Zelenskyy, of all people, if he is strong-armed into conceding them.

It’s hard to overstate the role land plays in the Ukrainian psyche. One modern interpretation of the country’s blue-over-yellow flag is that it represents blue skies over the golden wheat fields of Ukraine. Even the months of the year are named after the agricultural cycle — August is Sickle-time, for the harvest; November is Leaf-fall, for autumn.

This love of their land — and fear of losing it — was watered with blood after Holodomor: the 1932-1933 manmade faminecourtesy of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, after he ordered the grain seized from Ukraine. The famine, which many (including me) consider a genocide, saw almost 4 million Ukrainians perish of hunger. Every morning, dead bodies littered the streets as people collapsed where they walked. Cannibalism was commonplace.

Stalin sold the stolen wheat to industrialize the Soviet Union, including its military, which was used to keep Kyiv under Moscow’s power for the next 50-plus years; Ukraine’s grain helped forge Ukraine’s chains.

Ultranationalist elements of Ukraine seized on Holodomor to create the antisemitic lie that the famine was orchestrated by Jews. Starting with World War II, that deadly trope was used to “justify” Ukrainian participation in the Holocausta “you killed us, we killed you” narrative that persists on the Ukrainian far right to this day.

You can see it in graffiti scrawled on a Jewish social services center in the western city of Uzhhorod in 2017: “We remember. 1932-1933. We’ll take revenge.” The years referred to the famine; the graffiti appeared on the day Ukraine commemorates Holodomor victims.

The image of Zelenskyy, Ukraine’s first Jewish president, signing away his country’s rare minerals couldn’t be more perfect for Ukraine’s far right. He might as well be maniacally rubbing his hands together while being handed a bag with dollar signs.

Considering Kyiv is teetering on losing the war, which could unleash various nightmare scenarios, that image is not just disgusting but dangerous. Jews haven’t done well when they have been blamed for wars.

The kicker to the rare minerals deal is that much of the resources are in Ukraine’s east, either in Russia-controlled territory or in a no-man’s-land covered with land mines. Realistically, Zelenskyy has as much ability to give them away as I do. The only bankable outcome of this sordid mess is just a further painful reminder of how screwed Ukraine is.

Lev Golinkin

Lev Golinkin writes about refugee and immigrant identity, as well as Ukraine, Russia and the far right. He is the author of the memoir “A Backpack, a Bear, and Eight Crates of Vodka.”

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The Dictatorship

The shutdown blunder that Chuck Schumer may never live down

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The shutdown blunder that Chuck Schumer may never live down

Democrats seem to have been outplayed by Republicans when it comes to managing the latest government shutdown battle. And perhaps their biggest mistake was underestimating House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La. By a 54-46 vote on Friday night, the Senate approved the funding bill to keep the government open that the Republican-controlled House had passed on Tuesday.

As bad as passing the continuing resolution would be, I believe a government shutdown is far worse.

Senate minority leader chuck schumer

This shutdown cycle was not without drama. On Thursday, the evening before the deadlineSenate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer reversed the position he’d taken earlier in the week and vowed to help pass the House’s short-term continuing resolution bill. This must have been a tough call for the New York Democrat. As Schumer wrote in an op-ed for The New York Times“As bad as passing the continuing resolution would be, I believe a government shutdown is far worse.”

And while Schumer did not ultimately vote yes on the bill itself, his advocacy and yes vote on the cloture motion likely secured Friday night’s outcome.

On Friday morning at least, the Democrats were torn into two camps: fight Trump tooth and nail, which would lead to a shutdown and the potential chaos and pain that would bring, or swallow a partisan CR and at least keep the lights on. There were also specific fears that a shutdown would allow President Donald Trump and Elon Musk to accelerate some of their most aggressive agenda items, including mass federal layoffs and governmental reorganizing. “Musk has already said he wants a shutdown, and public reporting has shown he is already making plans to expedite his destruction of key government programs and services,” said Schumer from the Senate floor on Thursday.

Schumer calculated ultimately the Democrats would be blamed for the impact on “the most vulnerable Americans, those who rely on federal programs to feed their families, get medical care and stay financially afloat. Communities that depend on government services to function will suffer.”

However, in many ways, the die had already been cast. On Tuesday night, Johnson passed the spending bill with nearly unanimous GOP support. And then promptly sent his members home.

The speaker certainly had some help from both the president and White House officials. Trump himself was working the phoneswhile Vice President JD Vance reportedly “assured Republican members that Trump would continue cutting federal funding with his Department of Government Efficiency initiative and pursue impoundment — that is, holding back money appropriated by Congress.”

Johnson is often thought of as the accidental speaker. And it’s true that he was pulled out of quasi-obscurity after the caucus took down his predecessor Kevin McCarthy just 17 months ago. At the time of his elevation, Johnson had no leadership experience, and the political class had very low expectations. But he had Trump in his corner.

(Trump did blow up a bill in December carefully negotiated by Johnson and House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries. But Johnson eventually prevailed, with Democratic votes, and a spending bill was passed.)

Last December’s funding bill was always a temporary stopgap measure that would only fund the federal government through March 13, 2025. More surprising was that Johnson was able to get the House to pass its budget outline last monthwith only losing a single vote. This should have served as a canary in the coal mine moment for Democrats.

The real blunder Schumer made was miscalculating just how good Johnson has become at playing political hardball. The thought of Johnson passing a six-month continuing resolution with just Republican votes seemed highly unlikely last year, and that was what both Jeffries and Schumer were counting on. They were operating on the premise that, just like with the last CR, Republicans were going to need Democratic votes to get the bill to the president’s desk, leaving room for negotiations.

Johnson defied the odds and passed the CR, losing just one Republican vote, and picking up an extra yes vote from Maine Democrat Jared Golden. That left Schumer floundering, and with only one option to keep the government open.

There is a lesson to be learned here, and now would be a good time for Democratic leadership — as well as Senate Majority Leader John Thune — to recognize Johnson’s skills. They don’t have to like him or agree with him, but going forward they should respect him, and maybe even fear him.

Susan Del Pure

Susan Del Percio is a Republican strategist and a political analyst for NBC News and BLN.

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