The New York Times editorial board published its endorsement of Kamala Harris on September 30. Its editorial says plainly that Donald Trump is unfit for the presidency. Since the editorial appeared, The Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post announced that they would not endorse anyone in this crucial election. Thank you to The Times for speaking up against a showman who has promised to destroy our democracy and who has behaved like a carnival barker during the campaign. These are dangerous times. We need a thoughtful intelligent President. We need Kamala Harris.
The editorial is titled “The Only Patriotic Choice for President”: :
It is hard to imagine a candidate more unworthy to serve as president of the United States than Donald Trump. He has proved himself morally unfit for an office that asks its occupant to put the good of the nation above self-interest. He has proved himself temperamentally unfit for a role that requires the very qualities — wisdom, honesty, empathy, courage, restraint, humility, discipline — that he most lacks.
Those disqualifying characteristics are compounded by everything else that limits his ability to fulfill the duties of the president: his many criminal charges, his advancing age, his fundamental lack of interest in policy and his increasingly bizarre cast of associates.
This unequivocal, dispiriting truth — Donald Trump is not fit to be president — should be enough for any voter who cares about the health of our country and the stability of our democracy to deny him re-election.
For this reason, regardless of any political disagreements voters might have with her, Kamala Harris is the only patriotic choice for president.
Most presidential elections are, at their core, about two different visions of America that emerge from competing policies and principles. This one is about something more foundational. It is about whether we invite into the highest office in the land a man who has revealed, unmistakably, that he will degrade the values, defy the norms and dismantle the institutions that have made our country strong.
As a dedicated public servant who has demonstrated care, competence and an unwavering commitment to the Constitution, Ms. Harris stands alone in this race. She may not be the perfect candidate for every voter, especially those who are frustrated and angry about our government’s failures to fix what’s broken — from our immigration system to public schools to housing costs to gun violence. Yet we urge Americans to contrast Ms. Harris’s record with her opponent’s.
Ms. Harris is more than a necessary alternative. There is also an optimistic case for elevating her, one that is rooted in her policies and borne out by her experience as vice president, a senator and a state attorney general.
Over the past 10 weeks, Ms. Harris has offered a shared future for all citizens, beyond hate and division. She has begun to describe a set of thoughtful plans to help American families.
While character is enormously important — in this election, pre-eminently so — policies matter. Many Americans remain deeply concerned about their prospects and their children’s in an unstable and unforgiving world. For them, Ms. Harris is clearly the better choice. She has committed to using the power of her office to help Americans better afford the things they need, to make it easier to own a home, to support small businesses and to help workers. Mr. Trump’s economic priorities are more tax cuts, which would benefit mostly the wealthy, and more tariffs, which will make prices even more unmanageable for the poor and middle class.
Beyond the economy, Ms. Harris promises to continue working to expand access to health care and reduce its cost. She has a long record of fighting to protect women’s health and reproductive freedom. Mr. Trump spent years trying to dismantle the Affordable Care Act and boasts of picking the Supreme Court justices who ended the constitutional right to an abortion.
Globally, Ms. Harris would work to maintain and strengthen the alliances with like-minded nations that have long advanced American interests abroad and maintained the nation’s security. Mr. Trump — who has long praised autocrats like Vladimir Putin, Viktor Orban and Kim Jong-un — has threatened to blow those democratic alliances apart. Ms. Harris recognizes the need for global solutions to the global problem of climate change and would continue President Biden’s major investments in the industries and technologies necessary to achieve that goal. Mr. Trump rejects the accepted science, and his contempt for low-carbon energy solutions is matched only by his trollish fealty to fossil fuels.
As for immigration, a huge and largely unsolved issue, the former president continues to demonize and dehumanize immigrants, while Ms. Harris at least offers hope for a compromise, long denied by Congress, to secure the borders and return the nation to a sane immigration system.
Many voters have said they want more details about the vice president’s plans, as well as more unscripted encounters in which she explains her vision and policies. They are right to ask. Given the stakes of this election, Ms. Harris may think that she is running a campaign designed to minimize the risks of an unforced error — answering journalists’ questions and offering greater policy detail could court controversy, after all — under the belief that being the only viable alternative to Mr. Trump may be enough to bring her to victory. That strategy may ultimately prove winning, but it’s a disservice to the American people and to her own record. And leaving the public with a sense that she is being shielded from tough questions, as Mr. Biden has been, could backfire by undermining her core argument that a capable new generation stands ready to take the reins of power.
Ms. Harris is not wrong, however, on the clear dangers of returning Mr. Trump to office. He has promised to be a different kind of president this time, one who is unrestrained by checks on power built into the American political system. His pledge to be “a dictator” on “Day 1” might have indeed been a joke — but his undisguised fondness for dictatorships and the strongmen who run them is anything but.
Most notably, he systematically undermined public confidence in the result of the 2020 election and then attempted to overturn it — an effort that culminated in an insurrection at the Capitol to obstruct the peaceful transfer of power and resulted in him and some of his most prominent supporters being charged with crimes. He has not committed to honoring the result of this election and continues to insist, as he did at the debatewith Ms. Harris on Sept. 10, that he won in 2020. He has apparently made a willingness to support his lies a litmus test for those in his orbit, starting with JD Vance, who would be his vice president.
His disdain for the rule of law goes beyond his efforts to obtain power; it is also central to how he plans to use it. Mr. Trump and his supporters have described a 2025 agenda that would give him the power to carry out the most extreme of his promises and threats. He vows, for instance, to turn the federal bureaucracy and even the Justice Department into weapons of his will to hurt his political enemies. In at least 10 instancesduring his presidency, he did exactly that, pressuring federal agencies and prosecutors to punish people he felt had wronged him, with little or no legal basis for prosecution.
Some of the people Mr. Trump appointed in his last term saved America from his most dangerous impulses. They refused to break laws on his behalf and spoke up when he put his own interests above his country’s. As a result, the former president intends, if re-elected, to surround himself with people who are unwilling to defy his demands. Today’s version of Mr. Trump — the twice-impeached version that faces a barrage of criminal charges — may prove to be the restrained version.
Unless American voters stand up to him, Mr. Trump will have the power to do profound and lasting harm to our democracy.
That is not simply an opinion of Mr. Trump’s character by his critics; it is a judgment of his presidency from those who know it best — the very people he appointed to serve in the most important positions of his White House. It is telling that among those who fear a second Trump presidency are people who worked for him and saw him at close range.
Mike Pence, Mr. Trump’s vice president, has repudiated him. No other vice president in modern history has done this. “I believe that anyone who puts themselves over the Constitution should never be president of the United States,” Mr. Pence has said. “And anyone who asks someone else to put them over the Constitution should never be president of the United States again.”
Mr. Trump’s attorney general has raised similar concerns about his fundamental unfitness. And his chief of staff. And his defense secretary. And his national security advisers. And his education secretary. And on and on — a record of denunciation without precedent in the nation’s long history.
That’s not to say Mr. Trump did not add to the public conversation. In particular, he broke decades of Washington consensus and led both parties to wrestle with the downsides of globalization, unrestrained trade and China’s rise. His criminal-justice reform efforts were well placed, his focus on Covid vaccine development paid off, and his decision to use an emergency public health measure to turn away migrants at the border was the right call at the start of the pandemic. Yet even when the former president’s overall aim may have had merit, his operational incompetence, his mercurial temperament and his outright recklessness often led to bad outcomes. Mr. Trump’s tariffs cost Americans billions of dollars. His attacks on China have ratcheted up military tensions with America’s strongest rival and a nuclear superpower. His handling of the Covid crisis contributed to historic declines in confidence in public health, and to the loss of many lives. His overreach on immigration policies, such as his executive order on family separation, was widely denounced as inhumane and often ineffective.
And those were his wins. His tax plan added $2 trillion to the national debt; his promised extension of them would add $5.8 trillion over the next decade. His withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal destabilized the Middle East. His support for antidemocratic strongmen like Mr. Putin emboldened human rights abusers all over the world. He instigated the longest government shutdown ever. His sympathetic comments toward the Proud Boys expanded the influence of domestic right-wing extremist groups.
In the years since he left office, Mr. Trump was convicted on felony charges of falsifying business records, was found liable in civil court for sexual abuse and faces two, possibly three, other criminal cases. He has continued to stoke chaos and encourage violence and lawlessness whenever it suits his political aims, most recently promoting vicious lies against Haitian immigrants. He recognizes that ordinary people — voters, jurors, journalists, election officials, law enforcement officers and many others who are willing to do their duty as citizens and public servants — have the power to hold him to account, so he has spent the past three and a half years trying to undermine them and sow distrust in anyone or any institution that might stand in his way.
Most dangerous for American democracy, Mr. Trump has transformed the Republican Party — an institution that once prided itself on principle and honored its obligations to the law and the Constitution — into little more than an instrument of his quest to regain power. The Republicans who support Ms. Harris recognize that this election is about something more fundamental than narrow partisan interest. It is about principles that go beyond party.
In 2020 this board made the strongest case it could against the re-election of Mr. Trump. Four years later, many Americans have put his excesses out of their minds. We urge them and those who may look back at that period with nostalgia or feel that their lives are not much better now than they were three years ago to recognize that his first term was a warning and that a second Trump term would be much more damaging and divisive than the first.
Kamala Harris is the only choice.

Wait, I’m confused . I thought they were wildly biased in favor of Trump.
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Exactly. Well done, NYT!
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Long story short: “Kamala Harris is the only choice.” Yes, I agree with that sentiment. To vote for a third party or Jill Stein is utterly ridiculous and ignores the fact that a vote for a third party is a vote for Trump.
As bad as things are in Israel and the Middle East, they could get significantly worse. One wonders how this could affect the election and especially if we get even more involved in all the bloodshed and slaughters.
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As Diane says, lesser “educated” don’t read the New York Times and most conservatives and Trump (not a conservative) supporters believe The Times is a liberal/marxist newspaper, about the same as most people here think of Fox news. Recent blogs on the New York Time’s objectivity and Haque’s essay on why democrats lose on the econcomy with lower middle class and less “educated” people demonstrate why The New York Time’s endorsment will have little effect. The left says good job; the right says told you so.
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Perhaps all those protestors picketing at the steps of the New York Times have had an impact. One could hope.
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Yes, until the protest the Times was ready to endorse Trump. Congrats, we did it!!!
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Be careful, Oakland mom. Our resident “NYT is perfect” defender will call you deranged for daring to criticize what they describe as the NYT’s rabidly pro-Kamala coverage.
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We did it!!
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There’s got to be something in this editorial to upset the Times Derangement Syndrome crowd.
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lol
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It did concede that she “may not be the perfect candidate” and that voters might have “political disagreements” with her. This is so on brand for the NYTimes!!! Even when they endorse Harris they can’t resist taking these little potshots at her!! Someone needs to call this out!!
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Perhaps I will take this on, since I have nothing else to do with my remaining amount of life than to pretend to micromanage in an excruciating and weirdly cherry-picking way the editorial coverage by the New York Times.
Uh, no. On second thought, perhaps I would like a root canal. Much more gratifying.
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No need, someone already stepped up. 😂
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Whew. Glad to have that burden lifted from me, what with WW Freaking III starting in the Middle East because idiots.
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Bob,
Do you understand what flerp! is trying to do? Do you know where the phrase “Trump derangement syndrome” comes from? It was a way to belittle critics of Trump even though their criticism were valid.
Do you really not understand that using the phrase “Trump derangement syndrome” was the way that perfectly reasonable critics of Trump who were making arguments using evidence and facts were dismissed?
Defenders of Trump called his critics “deranged” because they could not actually defend Trump’s actions with argument and evidence.
Do you believe “they suffer from Trump derangement syndrome” – attacking critics as “deranged” – is a valid way to defend Trump? Do you think calling NYT critics “deranged” is a valid way to defend the NYT?
Don’t forget flerp! also defends the NYT’s education coverage, especially its coverage of public education.
So I always find it so amusing that you jump on the bandwagon of someone who probably believes that folks who criticize the NYT’s education coverage are as deranged as Trump critics. flerp! certainly has never acknowledged that critics of NYT’s anti-public school bias have a valid argument. (I hope my comment will encourage flerp! to do so for the first time, but I won’t hold my breath).
I notice that Diane Ravitch understands that sometimes the NYT should be criticized because their reporting on politics and education is sometimes quite terrible.
I have no idea why you want to undermine critics on the left who can see what is wrong with NYT reporting.
Even if you disagree with my criticisms of the NYT education and political reporting, Bob, as flerp! does, do you really think that characterizing critics of NYT reporting as “deranged” is appropriate? It’s purpose to shut criticism down.
Please stop giving credibility to those who believe that calling critics “deranged” substitutes for a rational argument. I hope you are better than that.
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lol I don’t “defend the NYT’s education coverage” or any other coverage. That’s just you projecting your inner demons as usual, seeing what you need to see. What I do is poke fun at the weird and perverse idea pushed by a lot of people, especially you here, that the NYT is an insidious force that is horribly biased against Democrats.
The NYT is not a perfect newspaper. No such news source exists, and we wouldn’t recognize one if it did exist. So of course its coverage should be subject to criticism. But there is a difference between reasonable criticism and pathologically doing close readings to tease out unfairness where none exists. I think this grievance-mining is silly, especially when it happens over and over and over and over again. So I make fun of it. Sue me!
There are certain types of people who simply cannot abide their arguments being held up to ridicule. It drives them apoplectic. That’s not my problem. The angrier it makes them, the more you know they deserved it!
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What Flerp is trying to do is doubtless the most significant issue facing the West . . . nay, the world in our time.
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The NYT’s reporting has been biased against public education. Critics have a point.
The NYT’s reporting has been biased against Biden. Critics have a point.
The NYT’s reporting has been guilty of sane-washing Trump. Critics have a point.
Why does my saying that make flerp! so angry?
Many critics of the NYT’s biased reporting cite specific evidence. It is Orwellian that citing evidence is what flerp! calls “grievance-mining”! Somehow, the evidence cited by critics of the NYT’s biased public education reporting has never been “reasonable” to flerp! And the criticism that the NYT’s reporting sane-washed Trump was never “reasonable” to flerp! Thus, we are supposed to believe, ridicule is an appropriate response.
I hope public education supporters here recognize that this person has never acknowledged any anti-public school bias in the NYT education reporting. Not once.
Why can’t flerp! ever acknowledge that the NYT has been guilty of sane-washing Trump? Instead flerp! ridicules media critics as if the very survival of the NYT is at stake if those critics had credibility. They must be ridiculed for the good of something or other.
What I do is point out the weird and perverse idea pushed by a lot of people, especially flerp!, that critics of the NYT’s political and education coverage are like critics of Trump — they are “deranged”. Flerp! characterizes critics of the NYT’s political and education coverage as “deranged” – an insidious force that are horribly biased against the NYT. Just like Trump defenders characterized critics of Trump as “deranged” – an insidious force that are horribly biased against Trump.
But there is a difference between reasonably defending the NYT education reporting and political reporting from criticism, and pathologically calling critics “deranged”, as flerp! often does.
I find flerp!’s grievance-mining because he abides no criticism of the NYT to be problematic, especially when it is done over and over again. So I point out the similarities between these folks who ridicule anyone who criticizes the NYT reporting and those who ridicule anyone who criticizes Trump. Sue me!
There are certain types of people who simply cannot abide their arguments defending Trump being held up to ridicule. It drives them apoplectic. There are certain types of people who simply cannot abide their arguments defending the NYT’s reporting of politics and public education being held up to ridicule. It drives them apoplectic. That’s not my problem. The angrier it makes them, the more you know they deserved it!
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I have asked repeatedly that you and FLERP make your comments without attacking or criticizing the other. No one wants to read about your disagreement. No one.
I take your point about the New York Times’ biased coverage of public schools. I have personally experienced the wrath of reporters who love charter schools.
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Know who else endorsed Harris? The Heritage Foundation. You know, the people who wrote Project 2025.
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Dienne, the head of Heritage is a friend of Trump. You really think the author of Project 2025 supports Harris?
That explains a lot.
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My bad, it was just the founding trustee of Heritage. https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/politics/elections/2024/09/16/heritage-foundation-trustee-mickey-edwards-oklahoma-gop-republican-endorses-kamala-harris/75249204007/
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This is the same tactic as “Putin endorsing Harris.” Really?
Now none of us will vote for Harris because Putin & Mickey Edwards endorsed her!
l can’t think of an appropriate adage for this, but l’m sure there is one. Bob?
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Simply bizarre!
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What’s bizarre is why you wouldn’t welcome this endorsement. After all, you welcomed the endorsements of a whole cabal of Bush era neocons who lied us into war, tortured people and shredded civil rights. So why not this one?
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Because Putin is lying. You believed him when he said he would not invade Ukraine.
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equivocation, as in
And be these juggling fiends no more believed,
that palter with us in a double sense;
that keep the word of promise to our ear,
and break it to our hope.
Macbeth, ACT VI, Scene viii.
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You might want to think more Cassandra than MacBeth.
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Uh, no
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I should have underscored “fiends.” My bad.
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Putin actually did endorse Harris.
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Of course he did. And you are one of the few people who believed him. Meanwhile Russia has paid American rightwing bloggers millions of dollars to promote Trump.
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I think when a major newspaper starts sounding like Trump to gratuitously undermine Kamala, it is worth noting.
“Many voters have said they want more details about the vice president’s plans, as well as more unscripted encounters in which she explains her vision and policies. They are right to ask.“
MANY VOTERS?? This is typical NYT turning a right wing talking point into “truth” that encourages voters to have “concerns” and “doubts” about Kamala.
How many of us are demanding “more details about Kamala’s plans”? (And why are the voters who are demanding more details about Trump’s plans missing from all news stories, as if Trump’s plans have details and Kamala’s lack any?)
How many of us are demanding “more unscripted encounters” where Kamala is expected to respond to “important questions” like “Why won’t you give us more details of your economic plans like the voters are demanding?” and “Why do voters like Trump’s economic plan so much better than yours?” and “Trump says you just became Black recently, please respond in detail about when you became Black and if you try to avoid this very important question by saying ‘next’, we at the NYT will be highly critical and inform readers that you are avoiding this important question”.
MANY voters believe that NYT reporting has sane-washed Trump while mischaracterizing Biden for months as a cognitive vegetable. But that will not stop the people here suffering from “Critics of the NYT derangement syndrome” from going nutty and attacking anyone who dares to express the view that the NYT is sane-washing Trump. All criticism of the NYT makes these folks deranged – EXCEPT criticism from the right wing that the NYT is anti-Trump. These defenders of the NYT get deranged at the words “sane-washing Trump”. In their view, NYT reporting on Trump is perfectly “fair and balanced”, or even extremely anti-Trump. If they can’t ban criticism of the NYT, they will belittle and attack anyone who criticizes the NYT (except those on the right who agree with their view that the NYT is extremely anti-Trump).
Bring it on, flerp! “MANY voters” agree with me about the NYT’s sane-washing Trump, so by the standards of the NYT, that makes it a very important issue worthy of being mentioned constantly.
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Yes!!!
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Gotta agree with this point, nycpsp. The editorial board should have left that paragraph out. I almost laughed when I saw they couldn’t resist throwing in a little bothsiderism– even in an endorsement for godsake. It was an example of taking a bs Trumpsider meme and giving it credulity. If they wanted to take that faux Republican claim up, they should have countered it with the fact she delivered cogent policy proposals within 3 wks of day#1, & proceeded to give interviews [including the hardly ‘softball questions as done for Biden’ Baier interview, which she crushed], town halls, et al numerous public appearances.
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Meanwhile, Israel just bombed Lebanon, and Iran just bombed Israel.
WW III, anyone?
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You think Netanyahu wants WW 3? You think Iran does? You think Putin does?
They all just want the threat of WW 3 to get what they want.
Iran and Israel don’t want a bombing war against one another.
I am not trying to play this down — this is serious. But the debate tonight is now going to focus on how Biden/Harris are unable to stop WW 3, while Trump can make it stop if he is elected. My prediction is that 90% of the debate is about this and the economy – because the media’s favorite narrative is to beat into the ground in every story that “voters trust” Trump on the economy and foreign policy (unlike Biden/Harris’ complete failure and fiasco in Afghanistan) and “Kamala is giving no details” about her supposedly unprecedented vague policies that would qualm all the doubts and concerns voters have.
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Iran and Israel don’t want a bombing war against one another.
Ah, how relieved I am that you know what is in the minds of Netanyahu and Raisi. Clairvoyance is such a great gift to have.
And yes about the consequences for the debate.
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Ruhani
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Oops.Wrong again. Pezeshkian
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Well, now, that might solve the Putin/Edwards endorsement problem.
(I am reminded of the scene in Dr. Strangelove in which Peter Sellers is riding a nuclear warhead like a rodeo set-up in a cowboy bar, whooping & flailing.)
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The above reply should have followed Bob Shepherd’s 10/1, 1:33 PM comment.
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Oops. Ruhani.
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It was all about “Because…..Trump”. That’s not an endorsement.
Yes and all that working tirelessly to solve the Israel problem is now riding us into a hot war .
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We do have a binary choice. An unhinged lunatic vs. an experienced public official who prioritizes strengthening the middle class.
That’s the choice.
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That is right. The endorsement did not point that out with any grace or focus. You should have written it for them!
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This isn’t really a reply, just a comment.
Everyone notice that Vance was lacking eyeliner tonight (making it so very apparent that he HAS been wearing it!)?
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