Heather Cox Richardson describes the bitter factionalism among Republicans. They are going ever more extreme; the Freedom Caucus expelled Marjorie Taylor Greene for not being extreme enough. They spend their time attacking the military, the FBI, and the CIA. In addition to the time they spend attacking the integrity of elections. The Republican Party has become a wrecking ball for democratic institutions.
For the first time since 1859, the Marine Corps does not have a confirmed commandant. For five months, Senator Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) has held up the confirmation of about 250 Pentagon officers in protest of the Defense Department’s policy of enabling military personnel to travel to obtain abortion care. So when Commandant General David Berger retired today, there was no confirmed commandant to replace him. Assistant Commandant General Eric Smith will serve as the acting commandant until the Senate once again takes up military confirmations.
That a Republican is undermining the military belies the party’s traditional claim to be stronger on military issues than the Democrats. So does the attack of House Republicans on our nation’s key law enforcement entities—the Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation—after traditionally insisting their party works to defend “law and order.”
David Smith of The Guardian this weekend noted that those attacks are linked to former president Trump’s increasing legal trouble.
MAGA Republicans are seeking to protect Trump by calling for impeaching President Biden, Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas, Attorney General Merrick Garland, FBI director Christopher Wray (a Trump appointee), and U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia Matthew Graves, who has prosecuted those who participated in the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol.
The House Judiciary Committee, chaired by Jim Jordan (R-OH), and a subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee, also chaired by Jordan, have been out in front in the attacks on the DOJ and the FBI. The Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government has been trying to dig up proof that Biden has “weaponized” the DOJ, the FBI, and the Department of Education against Republicans, especially those supporting former president Trump.
They have not turned up any official whistleblowers—the word “whistleblower” in government context means someone whose allegations have been found to be credible by an inspector general, but House Republicans seem to be using the word in a generic sense of someone with complaints—to support the idea that Biden has weaponized the government.
But Trump did. Last summer the New York Times reported that under Trump, the IRS launched a rare and invasive audit of former FBI director James Comey and Comey’s deputy Andrew McCabe, and Trump talked of using the IRS and the DOJ to harass Hillary Clinton, former CIA director John Brennan, and Jeff Bezos, owner of the Washington Post.
On Thursday, a sworn statement from Trump’s former White House chief of staff John F. Kelly confirmed that Trump asked about using the IRS and other agencies to investigate Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, two FBI agents looking into his 2016 campaign’s ties to Russia.
Another investigation has also backfired on the Trump Republicans. The House Ways and Means Committee has highlighted the testimony of Gary Shapley, a “whistleblower” from the Internal Revenue Service claiming that Attorney General Merrick Garland interfered with the investigation into Hunter Biden. Shapley said that Garland denied a request from U.S. attorney David Weiss, who was in charge of the case, to be appointed special counsel, which would officially have made him independent. On June 22 the committee released a transcript of Shapley’s testimony.
Garland promptly denied the allegation, but on June 28, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC), the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, sent a letter to David Weiss, U.S. attorney for Delaware, repeating the allegations. Weiss, a Trump appointee, replied today, saying he never requested special counsel status. Representative Jordan got around this direct contradiction of Shapley’s testimony by lumping Weiss in with those he’s attacking: “Do you trust Biden’s DOJ to tell the truth?” he asked.
And while the radical right has claimed that Biden is on the take for millions of dollars from foreign countries, today the key witness to that allegation was indicted for being a Chinese agent. Also today, LIV Golf, which is funded by Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, announced it is moving its $50 million team championship from Saudi Arabia to Trump National Doral in Miami this October.
In May, LIV Golf allied with the nonprofit PGA Tour to create a new for-profit company in May, but today a prominent member of the PGA board, Randall Stephenson, resigned, saying he and most of the rest of the board were not involved in the deal and that he cannot “in good conscience support” it, “particularly in light of the U.S. intelligence report concerning Jamal Khashoggi in 2018.” (The report concluded that Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman ordered the killing of Washington Post journalist Khashoggi.) Stephenson had delayed his resignation at the request of the board’s chair while the PGA Tour commissioner was on medical leave.
The Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations is scheduled to start hearings on that merger tomorrow, but they are having trouble lining up witnesses who were involved in making the deal, which was achieved in secret negotiations and has infuriated many of the PGA Tour players.
The MAGA attacks on the Biden administration are part of a larger story. Trump supporters are consolidating around the former president and so-called Christian democracy. They are enforcing loyalty so tightly that the far-right House Freedom Caucus recently expelled Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) either because she is too close to House speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) or because she called Representative Lauren Boebert (R-CO) a “little bitch” on the floor of Congress, or both. Like the far-right Southern Baptist Convention, which is hemorrhaging members but which nonetheless recently expelled one of its largest churches for permitting a female pastor, the MAGAs are purging their members for purity.
But their posturing worries Republicans from less safe districts who know such extremism is unpopular. Today, 21 members of the far right in the House wrote a letter to McCarthy saying they would oppose any appropriations bills that did not reject the June debt ceiling deal that kept the U.S. from defaulting on its debts, threatening to shut down the government. They also rejected any further support for Ukraine.
Larry Jacobs, who directs the Center for the Study of Politics and Governance at the University of Minnesota, told The Guardian’s Smith: “Independent voters, who tend to swing US elections that have become so close, don’t buy into the Trump line. You don’t see support for this unhinged view that the justice department and the FBI are somehow corrupt. There’s not support for that except in the fringe of the Republican party. The question, though, is does the fringe of the Republican party have enough leverage, particularly in the House of Representatives, to force impeachment votes and other measures?”
Alex Isenstadt of Politico wrote today that a new group called Win It Back, tied to the right-wing Club for Growth, which has ties to the Koch network, will run anti-Trump ads starting tomorrow. Americans for Prosperity, linked to billionaire Charles Koch, will also run ads opposing Trump.
Meanwhile, President Biden is on his way to Vilnius, Lithuania, for the 74th North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) summit. NATO was formed in 1949 to stand against the Soviet Union, and now it stands against an expanding Russia. Today, NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg announced that Turkey has dropped its opposition to Sweden’s NATO membership. Hungary, which had also been a holdout, said earlier this month it would back Sweden’s entry as soon as Turkey did.
This means that the key issues before NATO will be Ukraine’s defense, and climate change, a reality that U.S. politicians can no longer ignore (although MAGA Republicans later this month will start hearings to stop corporations from incorporating environmental, social, and governance (ESG) goals into their future plans). Currently, forty-two million people in the U.S. South are locked in a devastating heat dome, and Vermont and New York are facing catastrophic flash floods.
President Biden told CNN yesterday that he does not support NATO membership for Ukraine while it is at war, noting that since NATO’s security pact means that a war on one automatically includes all, admitting Ukraine would commit U.S. troops to a war with Russia. Instead, NATO members will likely consider continuing significant military support for Ukraine.

Diane, Minocqua County WI is trying to shutter Kirk Bangstad’s brewery business ostensibly because he is allowing customers to drink outdoors but in reality it’s because he’s a liberal and is anti-voucher. Facebook Minocqua Brewing Company could use some national attention.
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https://minocquabrewingcompany.com/blogs/news/you-can-catch-more-flies-with-honey
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Randy, I dropped out of Facebook long ago.
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Sorry don’t blame Tuberville for this, he is just playing by the rules. Without substantially altering MINORITY Rule ,Democrats could with a simple majority change this portion of the filibuster.
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Dems have 48 seats, but one of these is Manchin, who might as well be a Repugnican. Repugs have 49. There are 3 independents, one of which is Sinema, who also is a Repugnican in all but name. So, I count 49 reliable Dems. Where are they going to get a simple majority on this?
And Tommy Freaking Tuberville. What a comic book villain name that is, huh?
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Bob.
This is not a major change to the filibuster. The two Independents Sanders and King caucus with Democrats and are pretty reliable votes. Put it to a vote. I don’t even think this is a floor vote.
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That still just gives 49. 48 Dems minus Manchin = 47 + King + Sanders = 49. 49 Pugs + Manchin and Sinema = 51.
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Bob Shepherd
Unless Finestein has left in the last few hours, the Senate the Dems have 51 -Sinema, + King and Sanders =50
Manchin had expressed reservations about scrapping the Filibuster. This is not scrapping the Senate rule. It is changing it so that one Senator can not block nominations all on his own.
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Ah. Thanks, Joel, for that correction.
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250 top positions in the military have been left empty by Tuberville’s filibuster. Tuberville was a popular football coach before he was elected to the Senate.
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This is dangerous. And stupid. And given that we are in a proxy war right now, it verges on traitorous.
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It’s disgusting that one Senator, whom the vast majority of us can’t even vote against, is holding up this country ‘s national security
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Joel, I don’t understand. What is “minority rule” as distinct from the filibuster?
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Look, people of Texas, Indiana, Florida. DO YOU FREAKING GET IT NOW ABOUT CLIMATE CHANGE? And about all those Republican politicians who have been taking money from the fossil fuels industry and lying to you about this for decades?
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In other news:
MAGAs want to stop corporations from instituting environmental, social and governance goals into their future plans.
I thought Republicans were for small government and not interfering with private industry?
How do YOU spell hypocrisy?
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For an update on the bitter factionalism among Republicans, here’s a don’t-miss 5 mins with Maddow on 2 Michigan GOP meetings: April’s featured a shoving match; July’s featured balls-kicking
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https://www.politico.com/video/2022/03/18/fight-nearly-breaks-out-between-candidates-at-ohio-gop-senate-debate-519876
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If we are lucky the RNC looks like the OK Corral.
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Heather Cox Richardson has a formidable mind and deep knowledge of our history and politics. And she’s clearly a really good person. It’s always such a pleasure to read her. Thanks for sharing her with everyone, Diane!
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the Freedom Caucus expelled Marjorie Taylor Greene GPT not being extreme enough”
I thought it was because she was just too greene and they figured she would join up with AOC in calling for a Greene New Deal
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The fascist freedom caucus spends their time attacking the military, the FBI, and the CIA because everyone that’s in the military, the FBI and the CIA took the Constitutional Oath to defend the U.S. Constitution against enemies both foreign and domestic. The fascist freedom caucus is a domestic enemy.
Because of that Oath, the U.S. military refused to do what Traitor Trump wanted them to do to help him overthrow the US government and install him as President for the rest of his life, followed by his daughter and sons after he’s gone. Back when the traitor was president, he talked about launching a family dynasty to rule the US.
Unless the misnamed Freedom Caucus (real meaning: freedom to ignore the Constitutional oath every elected member of Congress takes when sworn in) controls the military, the FBI, the Secret Service and the CIA, they cannot take over the government and toss out the U.S. Constitution.
That means they want to control who is appointed to lead the military, the FBI and the CIA, et al.
Until they are voted out of all positions of power, they will not accept anyone to lead the military or federal law enforcement, who is not totally loyal to them, the fascist freedom caucus. Free to turn the US into a nationalist fascist state without the current U.S. Constitution getting in their way.
DeSantis, Abbott and a few other RED state governors are also domestic enemies’ of the US Constitution.
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Lloyd,
Yes to, “DeSantis, Abbott and a few other RED state governors are also domestic enemies’ of the US Constitution.” I end with AMEN.
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President Biden has nominated criminal neocon Elliott Abrams for a position on the United States Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy. The Pentagon has announced that cluster bombs will be sent to Ukraine for use against Russian invaders. The NATO/U.S. proxy war against Russia in Ukraine continues to escalate. Each day, nuclear war becomes more likely. If/After a nuclear exchange takes place, it won’t matter who was to blame, as nobody will be left to debate the issue.
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The world’s largest death and destruction machine will continue on whether or not those confirmations go through or not. Won’t make a bit of difference in that machine’s abilities to kill at will. When has the military been accountable to democratic forces since WW2? Hint: Never
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It has become absolutely clear that the Republican Party detests the rule of law and the Constitution. It abhors democratic values and principles. Republicans hate facts and they hate American history.
So, what’s all this say about Republican voters?
Not a trick question.
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whatever you said is the opposite, republicans are protecting the constituition. What are you talking about?Liberals taking away rights, speech, censoring . Liberals don’t know what a women is and support men playing sports with women.Liberals are taking away god and the family.
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Josh,
Please supply evidence for your claim that the mayor of Moscow gave the DeBlasios hundreds of millions of dollars.
Please supply evidence for anything you say. I find your off-the-wall statements mildly amusing but when you slander people, provide a source or I’ll have to throw you off the blog.
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Josh, obviously you haven’t been paying attention.
Take a peek at what newspapers across America reported on January 7, 2021, and then ask yourself if anyone with a tenth-of-an-ounce of sense would believe what you said about Republicans “protecting the Constitution.”
That is a flat-out lie.
https://www.usatoday.com/picture-gallery/news/nation/2021/01/07/front-pages-capture-chaos-riots-us-capitol/6577931002/
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I’m grooming Josh to pay attention to facts. So far, I’m a failure.
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“grooming josh” 😂🤣😅🤡😹🤠
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NATO is accountable to democratic forces. Should we sit together and sing kumbaya and let a poisoning fascist elf take over Europe? The sixties hippies had their chance and pupped out. By the eighties they were all working for Wall Street to exacerbate the wealth gap as they got theirs. “The world’s largest death and destruction machine” line seems naive and anachronistic in light of today’s global asymmetrical war(s) on democracy and democratic instititions. Yes we have a complicated, racist and at times destructive history. Does that mean that we are forever wedded to repeating it?
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Callisto Don’t bother the rich. They are all trying to figure out how they are going to (a) keep out of the way of wars, climate destruction, and chemical poisoning while, at the same time, (b) keeping the money flowing from the very activities that are causing wars, climate destruction, and environmental pollution. It’s hard work they’re doing and, for now at least, tomorrow is another day . . . and the pool awaits. CBK
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Here’s the epistemological deal:
We live in-between All and None.
If you wish, believe what you want,
but , philosophy itself has left us
to “make up” our own epistemology
as we go along.
Even so, not much really depends
on our recognizing the incremental
movements, except perhaps the entire
set of assumptions that already drive
the West.
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NoBrick Well, still . . . there are such things as evidence and collaboration where we actually develop and arrive at higher levels of integration, just to go forward again. Such is knowing and living in the in-between . . . CBK
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“‘The world’s largest death and destruction machine’ line seems naive and anachronistic”
No, it’s not naive and anachronistic. What is naive is that you don’t see the truth in that statement. Tell me which country comes even close in size, resource usage, and killing and maiming to the unaccountable US MIlitary. . . .
I’ll wait but not hold my breath.
What is anachronistic is believing that the world’s largest death and destruction machine is a force of good bringing democracy, justice and equality to the people of the world. Hard to have those three things when one is blown to smithereens by the American military.
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Wanted to see what the comments were for a day before adding my two cents. The outrage about Tuberville’s comment and tying it to “military readiness” is disingenuous on practical terms alone. Anyone who knows how the military functions knows that outside of times of war, short-term failure to fill any role in the military is easily covered. Long-term executive staff keeps things running.
To have liberals take up the VERY low-hanging fruit of Tuberville while not using even a fraction of outrage and time devoted to military spending, which is ACTUALLY endangering our “readiness” as a nation, helps explain why fascists remain central and relevant to at least half of the Americans today.
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The hard-right Republicans are now trying to insert abortion bans and anti-diversity bans into the defense budget. Crazy. They will use culture war issues wherever they can.
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Joel, of course, excepted.
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Not just threatening “military” readiness.
It threatens the continuation of the United States as a country.
As in the case of the former Soviet Union, military spending (nearly a trillion dollars a year, which doesn’t even include all the trillions already spent for wars in Afghanistan, Iraq , Libya and elsewhere — a bill which will eventually come due for our children and grandchildren) is on course for bankrupting the US.
With red and blue states already at the breaking point on issues like abortion, civil rights, book censorship and “culture war”, it’s the perfect storm. Add financial insolvency due to out of control military spending to that and the breakdown —and breakup— of the union is all the more likely.
As we saw with the dissolution of the Soviet Union, it can happen very quickly. It need not involve violence but I suspect it won’t be without hardship and suffering in the case of the US either, particularly for the states that are heavily reliant on handouts and can’t survive economically on their own.
“It won’t/can’t ever happen here” you say?
I wouldn’t be so sure.
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