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Trump's Decision to Send Troops to California Is His Do-Over of 2020
Trump's Decision to Send Troops to California Is His Do-Over of 2020

New York Times

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • New York Times

Trump's Decision to Send Troops to California Is His Do-Over of 2020

In 2020, as racial justice protests swept through the country over the murder of George Floyd, President Trump was itching to deploy the military to crush the unrest. He was talked out of it by his top national security advisers, who feared that such a decision would be viewed as moving toward martial law. Five years later, as protests against his immigration policies began to swell in Los Angeles, Mr. Trump said he had learned his lesson. 'I'll never do that again,' Mr. Trump said on Thursday, about waiting to send in the National Guard in 2020. 'If I see problems brewing,' he added, 'I'm not going to wait two weeks.' With the Los Angeles protests, Mr. Trump has seized the chance to make up for his first-term regret. His decision to send in federal troops right away, taking the extraordinary step of deploying active-duty military to deal with domestic unrest, fits into the larger pattern of Mr. Trump operating without any significant pushback from the people around him in his second term. 'He saw the military as his reactionary arm,' said Olivia Troye, a former homeland security official and aide to former Vice President Mike Pence. Ms. Troye said she witnessed multiple national security officials explain to Mr. Trump in 2020 that the military takes an oath to the Constitution — not Mr. Trump — and that it should not be turned against American citizens, even protesters. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

CNN reject humiliated over 'lamest party ever' with z-tier celebrity guest list and half empty seats
CNN reject humiliated over 'lamest party ever' with z-tier celebrity guest list and half empty seats

Daily Mail​

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

CNN reject humiliated over 'lamest party ever' with z-tier celebrity guest list and half empty seats

Former CNN anchor Jim Acosta is being roasted by critics after his much-hyped 'Fire Within Tour' event reportedly fell flat, failing to fill even half the seats at a Washington DC theater. The event, which was the first stop of the 'Fire Within Tour,' featured a lineup of guests including comedian Rosie O'Donnell, Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) and included discussions about current political developments. Just hours before the event, Acosta was still promoting available seats to his Substack followers, telling them: 'There are some tickets left' for his Lincoln Theater show in Washington, D.C. Acosta was joined by co-hosts including former DC police officer Michael Fanone, who became a political figure following the January 6 Capitol event, and former Republican official Olivia Troye, who spoke at the 2024 Democratic National Convention. The Free Beacon reported that the 1,200-seat venue appeared to struggle to reach its capacity - with hundreds of seats empty. The upper balcony section, which comprised of nearly half of the theater's seats, was reportedly closed to the public. The lower section was estimated to be about three-quarters full, with an audience of around 500 people. A majority of the guests were either members of a federal employee union invited to denounce Trump, or had personal or professional connections to one of the 'performers,' a source reportedly told the Free Beacon. But it was the cringeworthy finale that left many confused, as Acosta carried out what many social media users are calling a 'bizarre' closing ceremony. The former White House correspondent asked the remaining audience members to turn on their mobile phone flashlights. Video footage captured the moment glowing screens filling the half-empty theater in scenes that went viral on social media. 'This is not a country that is being plunged into darkness. This is a country that can find its way back to the light,' he told the crowd. 'Keep watching us, we're going to give you the truth.' The theatrical moment sparked a strong reaction, with some users mocking the performance and calling it embarrassing. 'We couldn't have created something anymore cringe than this with AI,' one wrote. 'This is the best comedy on the internet,' another chimed in. 'Jim you never ever gave us the truth. You are a propagandist nothing more. The truth always comes out. You have been proven a liar, time and time again,' one user accused. Journalist Megyn Kelly even slammed the event on her podcast calling it 'sad' and 'embarrassing.' Acosta, who left CNN in January after years as a White House correspondent, has transitioned to independent media through his Substack newsletter and podcast. The 'Fire Within Tour' was promoted with the tagline 'Fueling Courage. Defending Freedom. Igniting Truth.'

‘Donald Trump Needed to Send a Message'
‘Donald Trump Needed to Send a Message'

Yahoo

time08-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

‘Donald Trump Needed to Send a Message'

So many of the events and policies of the past three months of Donald Trump's second presidency can be understood as downstream from one simple, Republican Party-wide organizing principle. That is, Trump aims to severely punish and brutalize his enemies, big and small, even if they didn't do anything illegal or wrong — and he wants to wield the massive power of the state to do it, no matter how arbitrary or authoritarian his conduct. In the middle of last week, the president notched yet another significant escalation in his government's sprawling efforts to force this kind of American democratic backsliding. And due to the avalanche of other scandals, outrages, and international embarrassments perpetrated by his administration in recent days, that rather significant escalation was almost buried in the mainstream news cycle. It wasn't for Trump's lack of trying, however. On Wednesday, Olivia Troye was at her home working just like any other average weekday in Trump's (second) America. Troye, then a Republican aide, had worked on Trump's White House coronavirus task force during the hell days of the pandemic, but later went public during the 2020 presidential election to campaign against Trump and warn voters that his mismanagement of the Covid-19 crisis was utterly disqualifying. During the 2024 campaign, she endorsed Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris, and continued to harshly criticize the fully Trumpist GOP. She tells Rolling Stone that on Wednesday, 'I was sitting at home working and suddenly my phone started blowing up, including from some former Trump administration officials. And someone messaged: 'Turn on Fox News,' and I got a text from someone else saying, 'Oh, my God, Miles.'' When her husband walked in the room, Troye says he told her she looked 'pale as a ghost — and he looked at the TV and could see why.' She had reason to be worried. It's currently unknowable if the second Trump administration will retaliate in any meaningful way against Troye, but during his first presidency, his White House cared enough about her to make her a target of its Two Minutes Hate, during the 2020 election and height of Covid-19. Troye had been watching Wednesday's live broadcast that the White House had convened for the media, with the president sitting at the Resolute Desk in the Oval Office, during which Trump was handed new executive orders to sign. In two of these documents, Trump ordered senior government officials, including Attorney General Pam Bondi, to investigate Miles Taylor, a former Trump Homeland Security official who wrote the famous Trump-trashing 'Anonymous' op-ed and book, and Chris Krebs, who had been a top cybersecurity official who infuriated Trump and other Republicans by refusing to co-sign the then-president's democracy-subverting lies that he had won the 2020 race against Joe Biden. The Department of Justice is then required to report the results of these investigations to the Trump White House. In signing the orders on Wednesday, Trump told the cameras and the assembled press that 'I think he's guilty of treason,' referring to Taylor and — of course — citing zero evidence for such an egregious statement. Before signing the Krebs order, the president falsely insisted that it had been 'proven' that Krebs was wrong, thus wielding the powers of the executive branch to cement the lie (which got people killed on Jan. 6, 2021) that Trump had won the 2020 presidential contest into Republican Party ideology and current federal policy. The president also used the televised moment to endorse carrying out further crackdowns on expanded voting rights, and also claimed that the U.S. political press is not 'free,' presumably because it is too mean to him. It is woefully unclear — which may be the point — what conceivable crimes these two men could have committed that would warrant publicly announced federal probes of them, specifically. It appears their primary offense was each pissing off Trump in the media by, particularly in Krebs' case, stating demonstrably true things in the face of Trump's efforts to steal an election he had clearly lost. President Trump did not have to sign those executive orders on Wednesday. Trump — who was formerly criminally charged due to his attempted coup and other matters — and his White House staff could have privately directed the supposedly independent Justice Department to launch criminal investigations. That still would be scandalous and represent a larger breakdown of the alleged independence of federal law enforcement in the United States. (To be fair, it is a breakdown that Trump explicitly promised the voters he would initiate, in a planned onslaught of political 'retribution,' during his 2024 run.) But there is no reason that any executive order needed signing, much less a televised unveiling, for this to occur. Trump and his lieutenants saw things a little differently. 'Donald Trump needed to send a message,' a White House official explains to Rolling Stone, adding that the public, executive-order-branded nature of it was in large part because Trump had said he wanted to deliver warning to others on his enemies list. 'It's true. He technically didn't need to sign an EO.' Another Trump administration official adds that the president's 'showmanship qualities' practically necessitated, at least for this administration, a televised salvo of vengeance. In doing so, the president ordered the Justice Department — which in his second administration has become little more than an incredibly powerful arm of his personal and political desires — to crack down and invasively probe two of his far less powerful political foes. He and his White House didn't even bother with the patina of reasonable suspicion of any actual crime. They just blurt out terms like 'treason' against the United States, which to President Trump can mean something as simple as: You hurt my feelings, therefore you must pay. In other, recent, and more 'normal' times, such brazen actions by the White House — shamelessly targeting, using vast federal resources, a pair of guys because they made the 'king' mad — would be considered a massive scandal. These orders would be widely denounced, across mainstream partisan lines, as a blatant abuse of presidential power, and as the actions of an autocratic despot in some other nation, somewhere else, but not here in the land of the free. But this is the new Trump era — and he has the backing of an entire political party that holds trifecta control of the federal government in Washington, along with their super-majority on the U.S. Supreme Court. Krebs did not respond to Rolling Stone's messages seeking comment. Taylor declined to comment, beyond what he had already posted to social media following Trump's signing of the EO. 'Dissent isn't unlawful,' Taylor posted online. 'It certainly isn't treasonous. America is headed down a dark path. Never has a man so inelegantly proved another man's point.' The grim reality of Trump's two for-show executive orders is that even if criminal prosecutions and imprisonment don't ultimately transpire, the damage has already been inflicted. 'It works! Several people [I know] were saying they were worried about speaking out against Trump now even more so than they were before,' Troye says. 'This is the stuff of a banana republic, where the government is directing investigations of outspoken critics. It's about silencing people … It's really scary when you say you're going to use every lever of power of executive authority to target individuals. That is what happens in failed democracies. I wish more people would understand this, because I don't think they do. It's not about whether you agree with Miles Taylor or his politics, or if you disagree with what Chris Krebs did when he was doing his job. This is about everything we stand for as a democracy.' She concludes: 'If you don't think it can happen to you, I hope people now realize that it can.' More from Rolling Stone Judge Says There's 'Probable Cause' to Charge Trump Admin With Contempt Trump Admin 'Tried Every Trick' to Scuttle Neil Young's U.S. Citizenship, Daryl Hannah Says 'Democrats Lost Them': Here's Why 2020 Biden Voters Sat Out the 2024 Election Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence

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