The former President should have known that his claims of election fraud were baseless.
Doing the right thing on 1/6/20 doesn’t absolve him of being a key Trump enabler.
Trump’s pardon offer is just another way to propagate the big lies about the election and 1/6.
While there is an investigation, it doesn’t appear ballots were sold for “$10 a piece”
It’s always a good idea to reread a text before referencing it, especially if you’re a history Ph.D. like Newt Gingrich
After more than a year and countless investigations into election fraud, the big lie continues to be a big lie
How the host’s off-camera views contradict what he was telling his audience
A number of GOP politicians criticized Trump over 1/6 and some resigned.
I think this underscores the problem with the 60-vote requirement.
An over-eager supporter or something more sinister?
Republicans who admit Joe Biden won the election fair and square are being driven from the party.
Weeks of claims of rigged elections may well have cost the GOP the Senate.
Kamala Harris will be very, very busy the next two years.
On the op/ed page of WaPo, the 10 living former U.S. secretaries of defense say things that shouldn’t have to be said.
The sitting president is asking GA officials to find votes despite the fact that the results have been confirmed thrice.
The absurd notion that the President of Senate is the arbiter and judge of the electoral vote.
It will be symbolic, but the symbol will be an anti-democratic one.
Trump brags about being the “most admired” and provides yet another example of poor understanding of data.
First whining about losing, now whining about legislation. (And creating chaos along the way).
Granted, there are more than two. But from a political science/political history POV, these two stick out in my mind.
The Georgia governor and his family are under attack because he did his job.
The junior Senator from Kentucky is drawing a lot of attention to himself on “fraud.”