I’m on an Amtrak train on my way to Washington, D.C., to see the new Democratic members of Congress sworn in. A friend, Donna Shalala of Miami, is one of that group. It’s a bright new day in America. The Constitution and its balance of powers is coming to life to rein in an unhinged, ignorant, vengeful President who arrived knowing nothing about government or policy and has learned nothing.
Ann Gearan of the Washington Post reported on Trumps bizarre Cabinet meeting, the first of the New Year, in which he found plenty of time to boast about himself. Bear in mind that Trump has never worked in an environment in which anyone had the power to say no to him. In his family business, he was King. For his first two years in office, no one dared challenge him, and in the rare instance where they tried, they were ousted (think Mark Sanford) or quit (think Flake and Corker).
Now the Emperor must face hostile majority in the Houseof Representatives. Democracy lives. The King is mad.
Here is a summary of yesterday’s Cabinet meeting:
President Trump, 12 days into a government shutdown and facing new scrutiny from emboldened Democrats, inaugurated the new year Wednesday with a Cabinet meeting. It quickly became a 95-minute stream-of-consciousness defense of his presidency and worldview, filled with falsehoods, revisionist history and self-aggrandizement.
Trump trashed his former secretary of defense, retired four-star Marine Gen. Jim Mattis, as a failure after once holding him out as a star of his administration.
“What’s he done for me?” Trump said.
He claimed to have “essentially” fired Mattis, who had surprised the White House by resigning in protest last month after the president’s abrupt decision to pull U.S. forces from Syria.
And Trump, who did not serve in the military and received draft deferments during the Vietnam War, suggested he would have made a good military leader himself.
“I think I would have been a good general, but who knows?” Trump said.
Trump on Mattis: ‘President Obama fired him and … so did I’
President Trump spoke about his former defense secretary at a Cabinet meeting Jan. 2, saying he was not “too happy” with how Jim Mattis handled Afghanistan. (The Washington Post)
He took credit for falling oil prices, arguing they were the result of phone calls he made to the leaders of oil-producing nations.
“I called up certain people, and I said let that damn oil and gasoline — you let it flow, the oil,” he said.
And Trump defended his push to fund his promised border wall, parrying complaints from Democrats who have called the wall immoral by remarking, “Then we have to do something about the Vatican, because the Vatican has the biggest wall of them all.”
Trump is entering his third year in the White House with his presidency at its most challenging point.
Democrats bent on investigating his administration and stymieing his agenda will take control of the House on Thursday. The thriving economy he once touted as evidence of his success is showing signs of strain, with financial markets tumbling in recent weeks due in part to worries over his policies and stewardship of the government. And his new year began with former GOP presidential nominee and incoming Utah Sen. Mitt Romney penning a harsh critique, cheered by the president’s Republican detractors, that argued Trump “has not risen to the mantle of the office.”
Trump seemed mindful of all this Wednesday as he attempted to seize the spotlight by staging an unusual Cabinet meeting that was geared more toward garnering public attention than serving as a venue for the internal deliberations of his administration.
After saying last month that he would proudly take responsibility for the government shutdown over wall funding, he sought to blame Democrats for not sticking around over the holidays to negotiate. He said he stayed in Washington because the border security debate was “too important a subject to walk away from.”
“I was here on Christmas evening. I was all by myself in the White House — it’s a big, big house — except for the guys on the lawn with machine guns,” he said.
But Trump added confusion to the debate by undercutting Vice President Pence, seated nearby, in dismissing the offer he and other administration officials made to Democrats late last month of accepting $2.5 billion for the wall.
He described the recent stock sell-off as a “glitch” and said markets would soar again on the strength of trade deals he plans this year. But House Democrats may stand in the way of the first of those, a renegotiation of the North American Free Trade Agreement, and markets have been rattled most by the tariffs Trump has imposed on China.
Trump dismissed Romney’s scathing criticism of how he’s conducted his presidency, saying Romney should be more of a “team player,” and played down the idea he could face a primary challenge in 2020.
“They say I am the most popular president in the history of the Republican Party,” Trump said.
Amid concerns within his own party about whether he will pull troops out of Afghanistan, Trump offered a discursive and somewhat inscrutable account of the fall of the Soviet Union, blaming it on the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
“Russia used to be the Soviet Union. Afghanistan made it Russia, because they went bankrupt fighting in Afghanistan,” Trump said.
His point was that the United States should pull out of hopeless and expensive wars, but he skipped over the many reasons for the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 as he held up the loss of empire as an example.
“The reason Russia was in Afghanistan was because terrorists were going into Russia. They were right to be there,” he said, breaking with the stance taken by past U.S. administrations that the invasion was an illegitimate power play against a neighboring nation. “The problem is, it was a tough fight. And literally they went bankrupt; they went into being called Russia again, as opposed to the Soviet Union. You know, a lot of these places you’re reading about now are no longer part of Russia, because of Afghanistan.”
The semblance of a traditional Cabinet meeting broke out from time to time, including when Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen, joining by video connection, briefed the group on the administration’s border security efforts and set the tone by claiming, “Mr. President, now more than ever we need the wall.”
Trump’s Cabinet is pocked by vacancies, as the roster of deputies and placeholders around the table illustrated.
Mattis’s formerly prominent place at the Cabinet table was occupied Wednesday by a little-known deputy, Patrick Shanahan, who mostly looked down at his notes as Trump called Syria, where more than 2,000 U.S. troops are deployed, a lost cause of “sand and death.”
Several officials in attendance interjected praise for the president at different points.
“I want to thank you for the strong stand you have taken on border security,” Pence told him.
Trump, a large poster of himself evoking “Game of Thrones” on the table before him, complained about allies and partners from Afghanistan and Pakistan to India and Germany. They don’t pay their way or expect too much from the United States, Trump said, claiming anew that he is insisting on a reboot of the old expectations about U.S. aid and military obligations.
He claimed that if he wanted to, he could have any government job in Europe and be popular there. He cast his unpopularity among European publics as a sign he is doing his job well.
He defended his controversial negotiations with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un by stating that if he had not reached out, there would have been a “big fat war in Asia.”
A second summit with Kim will happen soon, Trump predicted. He did not mention Kim’s veiled threat, in a New Year’s message, that the United States must not try his patience.
Trump’s critics and skeptics on North Korea say he lost leverage by agreeing to the first summit last year and would only lose more with another face-to-face meeting now.
The president, who frequently faces criticism for his light public schedule, also bemoaned the lack of credit he has received for what he views as the many accomplishments of his first two years.
“I have to tell you, it would be a lot easier if I didn’t do anything, if I just sat and enjoyed the presidency, like a lot of other people have done,” Trump said.

The president would get a 1 on the New York State global regents exam. Just when you think it cannot get more bizarre he prove us wrong. How embarrassing for him, his cabinet and our country.
LikeLike
“They say I am the most popular president in the history of the Republican Party,” Trump said…”I have to tell you, it would be a lot easier if I didn’t do anything, if I just sat and enjoyed the presidency, like a lot of other people have done.”
How does one penetrate this level of ignorance? Does he really think he has achieved a lot compared to other presidents? He signed a tax cut for the wealthy and corporations and has appointed a number of conservative judges. What else has he done to justify his irrational claim of being the most popular Republican president in the history of the US? [I’d actually think President Lincoln is a bit more popular. He also achieved much more.]
He definitely doesn’t work very hard. Golfing and watching Fox for ‘news’ briefings doesn’t count as work. Neither does going to campaign rallies to stir up hatred and fear in people count as work.
I question how much he enjoys this job. I read regularly that he is becoming more and more frustrated. The walls are closing in and I’m cheering. Poor Trump. He was alone on Christmas.
LikeLike
Here is the joke. If you ever notice his public calendar,he usually has lunch, and does nothing else. Lunch with Mike Pence, watch TV, tweet. That’s it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
When I worked in the Senate, my former boss used to have Library on his schedule. We knew that was shorthand for his tennis time, which he often played with George H.W. Bush on the court on top of the roof of one of the Senate office buildings. Unlike Individual-1, however, library time was usually squeezed into a very full schedule of constituent meetings, hearings he chaired, and extensive time on the floor or caucus meeting rooms on the Senate side of the Capitol. We didn’t begrudge him for his exercise time.
LikeLike
IN all of this considering this is primarily an education blog, where is Betsy Devos? While Trump sits in the white house waiting for a deal, Betsy skipped town and headed to Michigan for the holiday.
Devos has proven at least one thing and that is she knows how to fly under the radar. She has dodged the bullet while the rest of trumps cabinet has been done with good ole betsy remains tight and close while she does nothing for our kids.
LikeLike
Trump does not want to alienate billionaire Betsy. He does not care about education for other people’s children, and he agrees with her horrible agenda. He is counting on Betsy and Dick to help fund his 2020 war chest.
LikeLike
All I have to say is to vote D in 2020. Stop with the ideological purity tests as was done by the progressive puritans in 2016. Between now and the 2020 elections, I sincerely hope there is no big terrorist attack or huge international brouhaha, one can only speculate what inglorious leader would do. I have no problem with DT pulling the troops out of Afghanistan and Syria though he should have handled it more strategically. Otherwise, Trump is a disaster and is unqualified to be president.
LikeLike
Here’s another RUMP move. Rump is EVIL.
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2019/1/2/1822963/-Know-what-else-Trump-shut-down-The-tool-that-employers-use-to-check-an-employee-s-citizenship?detail=emaildkre
LikeLike
He has no moral compass!
LikeLike
it is good to see that you areheaded to DC.
I hope that Donna Shalala will find time to listen to your wisdom and enlist others to do the same.
The infection of TFA in the legislature is bad enough without having newbies believing they are experts.
I am certain that the Broad, Gates, Waltons, and others in the “Education Strategy Group” have ready-to-use legislation, just like ALEC (perhaps from ALEC), in addition to savvy hired hands who function as lobbyists.
At minimum these newbies need to know the difference between public schools and the farce of charter schools. They also need to know that choice means schools choose their students, and the connection of choice to resegregation… as if you needed guidance. Go get em while you are congratulating them.
LikeLike
And the beat goes on
LikeLike
Is Stephen Miller his Mini-Me?
LikeLike
I GOT 7 OUT OF 13 CORRECT [I like to take online quizzes.] I was a ‘genius’ on two of today’s quizzes but I’ve lost my glow. Dang.
…………………
Quiz: Jaw-Dropping Facts About the Climate Crisis
Are you a climate expert or a budding activist? See how your knowledge of the climate crisis stacks up. Then, let any friends or family who aren’t on the same page know why urgent action is needed by sharing our quiz on Facebook, Twitter, and more.
The Trump Administration’s recent “skinny budget” proposal cuts global climate change programs at the State Department, slashes programs working on new energy technologies at the Department of Energy, and takes a wrecking ball to the Environmental Protection Agency, trimming its budget by 31 percent.
Putting the administration’s feelings in sharp relief, Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney said in a news briefing: “As to climate change, I think the president was fairly straightforward: We’re not spending money on that anymore. We consider that to be a waste of your money to go out and do that.”
There are plenty of things the federal government wants to waste our tax money on – a $21.6 billion border wall, for example. Programs enacted to protect our planet aren’t one of them.
With the Trump budget and recent executive orders reversing course on key initiatives like the Clean Power Plan in mind, we thought the time was right to check in on the current climate situation. After all, the climate crisis isn’t some far-off concern. It’s happening right now…
https://www.climaterealityproject.org/blog/quiz-jaw-dropping-facts-about-climate-crisis
LikeLike
“TRUMP BOASTS ABOUT SELF”
“DOG BITES MAN”
Any other blockbuster headlines?
LikeLike
I remember every president sinceTruman. I don’t remember one who boasted about himself nonstop like this one.
Are you defending Trump?
LikeLike
Too easy. I’ll zip my lip.
LikeLike
“All of the achievements of “Trump”?, “desperately needed wall?” and “Presidential Harassment”? The Democrats obviously aren’t bowing low enough. He’s sick.
………………………………
The Shutdown is only because of the 2020 Presidential Election. The Democrats know they can’t win based on all of the achievements of “Trump,” so they are going all out on the desperately needed Wall and Border Security – and Presidential Harassment. For them, strictly politics!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) January 3, 2019
LikeLike
Until there are more Mitt Romneys (I can’t believe I just typed that) none of this matters. These Senators and cabinet lackeys are scared to death of the president.
It’s year #3 and they still tolerate and salivate over his tirades, demeaning righteous good people, blaming anyone and everyone for the sun coming up, lies, lies, and then lies some more. He makes every statement and decision in the moment or after Fox tells him what to say – and he doesn’t know what the words mean.
And, these white men just sit there, robo-smile, and refute nothing the man spews.
So it’s election season again – press the press to question every candidate – sitting and new – NOW starting with “Why haven’t you commented on..?” “When did you last meet with your constituents?” “How do you support a racist?”
LikeLike
“Until there are more Mitt Romneys…”???? Isn’t that the political equivalent of a premature [fill in the obvious answer]? Check back in a year and let us know how that statement ages.
LikeLike
I’m sure Wait, What? means that more people need to make comments about how lacking our Orange Creature is. How many CURRENT GOP members of Congress have the balls to make any type of negative comment? The only ones who recently had such courage were retiring.
I do not support Mitt Romney but I like anyone who openly criticizes Trump. If more did that, there would be the support to impeach him and kick him out.
LikeLike
We’ll agree to disagree on this one, Carol. Read Romney’s op-ed again. His disagreement is with style, not substance. He’s just another (lower case) flake.
LikeLike
I was disappointed in Romney’s article. He agrees with almost all of Trump’s policies but doesn’t like his crudeness.
LikeLike
Mitt Romney is not some kind of “savior” saving us from Trump. He has cozied up to Trump plenty when he needs Trump, and that will continue. He’s like Flake. The only difference is he got elected partially as a “Never Trump” person,when he’s not. He will be kowtowing to Trump in a matter of days.
LikeLike
“Not” at the end of the 4th sentence, not “now.”
LikeLike
Romney believes in Mormonism, how reality-based can he be?
LikeLike
Linda: Mormons have to be at least half a step better than the Evangelicals who worship Trump as their new god. I haven’t heard the Mormons loudly declaring that Trump is their savior. Maybe they have been doing this more silently.
LikeLike
Regardless of what one feels about the Church of LDS (or any religion, for that matter), if we believe in the legitimacy of the first amendment, then we must respect and defend the freedom of religion, regardless.
I will freely admit, however, that I am a hypocrite when it comes to Scientology.
LikeLike
THE WALL!! THE WALL!! THE WALL!! I feel sorry for the 800,000 federal workers who don’t get paychecks. How long will this continue? NO MONEY FOR TRUMP’S WORTHLESS WALL!!
………………………
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., urged the president to hold his ground during a Sunday show appearance.
“If I were the president, I would dig in and not give in on additional wall funding,” Graham said Sunday on Fox News. “I want the whole $5 billion because the caravan is a game-changer.”
But not only do most Americans oppose risking a government shutdown over a wall, but more than two-thirds (69 percent) do not believe building a wall should even be an immediate priority for Congress. That includes half who do not believe it should be a priority at all.
More than a quarter (28 percent) believe it should be an immediate priority, including 63 percent of Republicans.
Immigration is a cultural touchstone issue that Trump used to fuel his campaign. It’s an issue that has energized his supporters, highlighted a seemingly unbridgeable schism between the parties and helped move independents largely toward Democrats’ positions on the subject.
LikeLike
The point of being elected is to serve the people and help the government become more effective in serving the people.
Anyone who supports closing the government betrays the trust of the people and should be voted out of office.
LikeLike
The New York Times
Breaking News Alert
January 04, 2019
NYTimes.com »
BREAKING NEWS
President Trump threatened to keep the government shut down for “months or even years,” said Senator Chuck Schumer after a contentious meeting.
Friday, January 4, 2019 1:50 PM EST
President Trump and congressional leaders failed again on Friday to break a deadlock that has kept the government partially shut down for two weeks.
LikeLike
Trump will close down the government forever unless he gets his blanking Wall.
He is insane.
The Republicans standing for re-election in 2020 will all lose their seats.
No funding for TSA, environment, health, the military. No social security checks.
No government.
This man should either be in jail or a mental institution
LikeLike
How about this antic? The man is F**king crazy.
…………………
Trump Floats Declaring National Emergency To Build Border Wall
President Donald Trump said in a Friday afternoon press conference that he could declare a national emergency over immigration at the southern U.S. border to circumvent the need for congressional approval to build a border wall.
Asked specifically whether he has considered granting himself the authority to build his much-discussed wall, Trump replied, “Yes, I have.”
“And I can do it if I want,” he told reporters gathered in the White House Rose Garden.
“We can call a national emergency and build it very quickly.”..
Article: https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-national-emergency-border-wall_us_5c2fba6ee4b073352832b198
LikeLike
For the past 202 years, Republicans never appointed a woman to the Judiciary Committee. Last year, 4 of the 9 Democratic committee members were women. Zero out of 11 GOP members were women. To improve optics, the GOP has chosen two women for the committee, Joni Ernst and Marsha Blackburn, who will serve oligarchs, Charles and David Koch.
LikeLike
Now the US is committing human rights violations and Trump won’t let the UN inside to investigate. He doesn’t care about the UN and certainly wouldn’t accept that his ideas are violations against mankind.
……………………….
US halts cooperation with UN on potential human rights violations
Exclusive: State department has ceased to respond to complaints from special rapporteurs in move that sends ‘dangerous message’ to other countries
Ed Pilkington in New York
The Trump administration has stopped cooperating with UN investigators over potential human rights violations occurring inside America, in a move that delivers a major blow to vulnerable US communities and sends a dangerous signal to authoritarian regimes around the world…
Among the formal approaches that have failed to receive a response from the US over the past several months are queries about family separation of Central Americans at the US border with Mexico, death threats against a transgender activist in Seattle and allegations of anti-gay bias in the sentencing to death of a prisoner in South Dakota.
The new breach with international experts comes at a perilous moment for the US, both externally and within its own borders. Externally, Trump has forged an increasingly unilateral path on foreign policy: in June he shocked the world by pulling the US out of the UN human rights council, complaining it was a “cesspool of political bias”, and he has caused further consternation by siding with the Saudi crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, despite evidence linking Prince Mohammed to the murder of the Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi.
Domestically, Trump has run roughshod over the constitutional rights of asylum seekers at the US border, attempted to deny the legal existence of transgender people and introduced tax cuts that have greatly exacerbated income inequality in a country in which 40 million people live in poverty, among many other controversies…
https://www.theguardian.com/law/2019/jan/04/trump-administration-un-human-rights-violations?CMP=share_btn_link
LikeLike
Subject: Important new petition to sign
I think you should sign the petition, too: https://act.credoaction.com/sign/mcconnell_shutdown_2019?sp_ref=466390514.4.193150.e.623067.2&referring_akid=31087.1912996.Bf_0OL&source=mailto_sp
LikeLike
Liberty University President Jerry Falwell is now saying that it might be immoral for Christians to not support Trump. The poor are useless and the idea of ‘love your neighbor’ only refers to the heavenly kingdom, not for us on earth. This fellow has followers. I think he’s looney,
………………………..
Evangelicals’ infallible new faith in the gospel of US President Donald Trump
Christine Emba17:00, Jan 05 2019
On New Year’s Day, Liberty University President Jerry Falwell Jr defended his unwavering support of US President Donald Trump with a thoroughly confused reading of the Gospel.
Speaking to The Washington Post, the evangelical leader claimed that it was a distortion of Christ’s teachings to suggest that because he taught love and forgiveness, “the United States as a nation should be loving and forgiving.”
According to Falwell’s creative theology, Christ “went out of his way to say that’s the earthly kingdom, I’m about the heavenly kingdom,” and loving your neighbour as yourself only applies to the latter.
The man whose institutional mission includes being “a voice for the voiceless” then meditated on the uselessness of the poor – “A poor person never gave anyone a job. A poor person never gave anybody charity, not of any real volume. It’s just common sense to me.” He then suggested that it might be immoral for Christians not to support Trump…
https://www.stuff.co.nz/world/americas/109750421/evangelicals-infallible-new-faith-in-the-gospel-of-us-president-donald-trump
LikeLike
QUOTATION OF THE DAY…NYT
“You can’t impeach somebody who is doing a great job. I have probably done more in the first two years than any president, any administration in the history of this country.”
PRESIDENT TRUMP, after a meeting with congressional leaders in which he invoked House Democrats who want to impeach him.
LikeLike
Fareed Zakaria:
“Trump thrives in an atmosphere of chaos, where all attention is focused on him and nothing is ever normal or settled. As the pressure increases from the House Democrats, Robert Mueller and China, expect more impulsive, emotional decision-making, not less.”
LikeLike
Trump is really worthless. This is how he treats our allies while bowing to dictators.
…………………………………
Report: Trump Administration Downgraded EU Delegation’s Diplomatic Status
State Dept. reportedly told officials it “forgot” to notify them of the move last year.
The Trump administration downgraded the diplomatic status of the European Union mission to the U.S. and failed to give any notice of the move, Deutsche Welle reports. The downgrade reportedly happened in late October or early November, and the EU only found out about it after noticing its Washington ambassador was not being invited to certain events. Officials organizing the state funeral for President George H.W. Bush reportedly confirmed to the EU that it had been downgraded from a “member state to international organization.”
https://www.thedailybeast.com/report-trump-administration-downgraded-eus-diplomatic-status-without-notice?source=email&via=desktop
LikeLike