So much happened in the past 24 hours that I couldn’t imagine how to summarize it. Fortunately Heather Cox Richardson did it. Trump continues to expand the imperial presidency, to attack our allies, to cozy up to Putin, to ridicule Zelensky. Courts continue to enjoin his executive orders, most importantly, his banning of DEI as infringement of the First Amendment. No one could get every autocratic action into one article; Trump is intent on taking control of the U.S. Post Office, as well as other independent agencies. Republicans continue to be docile and supine. Anyone who is not alarmed is either onboard with the destruction of our Cobstitution or asleep.
In an appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) yesterday, billionaire Elon Musk seemed to be having difficulty speaking. Musk brandished a chainsaw like that Argentina’s president Javier Milei used to symbolize the drastic cuts he intended to make to his country’s government, then posted that image to X, labeling it “The DogeFather,” although the administration has recently told a court that Musk is neither an employee nor the leader of the so-called Department of Government Efficiency. Politico called Musk’s behavior “eccentric.”
While attendees cheered Musk on, outside CPAC there appears to be a storm brewing. While Trump and his team have claimed they have a mandate, in fact more people voted for someone other than Trump in 2024, and his early approval ratings were only 47%, the lowest of any president going back to 1953, when Gallup began checking them. His approval has not grown as he has called himself a “king” and openly mused about running for a third term.
A Washington Post/Ipsos poll released yesterday shows that even that “honeymoon” is over. Only 45% approve of the “the way Donald Trump is handling his job as president,” while 53% disapprove. Forty-three percent of Americans say they support what Trump has done since he took office; 48% oppose his actions. The number of people who strongly support his actions sits at 27%; the number who strongly oppose them is twelve points higher, at 39%. Fifty-seven percent of Americans think Trump has gone beyond his authority as president.
Americans especially dislike his attempts to end USAID, his tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada, and his firing of large numbers of government workers. Even Trump’s signature issue of deporting undocumented immigrants receives 51% approval only if respondents think those deported are “criminals.” Fifty-seven percent opposed deporting those who are not accused of crimes, 70% oppose deporting those brought to the U.S. as children, and 66% oppose deporting those who have children who are U.S. citizens. Eighty-three percent of Americans oppose Trump’s pardon of the violent offenders convicted for their behavior during the attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. Even those who identify as Republican-leaning oppose those pardons 70 to 27 percent.
As Aaron Blake points out in the Washington Post, a new CNN poll, also released yesterday, shows that Musk is a major factor in Trump’s declining ratings. By nearly two to one, Americans see Musk having a prominent role in the administration as a “bad thing.” The ratio was 54 to 28. The Washington Post/Ipsos poll showed that Americans disapprove of Musk “shutting down federal government programs that he decides are unnecessary” by the wide margin of 52 to 26. Sixty-three percent of Americans are worried about Musk’s team getting access to their data.
Meanwhile, Jessica Piper of Politico noted that 62% of Americans in the CNN poll said that Trump has not done enough to try to reduce prices, and today’s economic news bears out that concern: not only are egg prices at an all-time high, but also consumer sentiment dropped to a 15-month low as people worry that Trump’s tariffs will raise prices. White House deputy press secretary Harrison Fields said in a statement: “[T]he American people actually feel great about the direction of the country…. What’s to hate? We are undoing the widely unpopular agenda of the previous office holder, uprooting waste, fraud, and abuse, and chugging along on the great American Comeback.”
Phone calls swamping the congressional switchboards and constituents turning out for town halls with House members disprove Fields’s statement. In packed rooms with overflow spaces, constituents have shown up this week both to demand that their representatives take a stand against Musk’s slashing of the federal government and access to personal data, and to protest Trump’s claim to be a king. In an eastern Oregon district that Trump won by 68%, constituents shouted at Representative Cliff Bentz: “tax Elon,” “tax the wealthy,” “tax the rich,” and “tax the billionaires.” In a solid-red Atlanta suburb, the crowd was so angry at Representative Richard McCormick that he has apparently gone to ground, bailing on a CNN interview about the disastrous town hall at the last minute.
That Trump is feeling the pressure from voters showed this week when he appeared to offer two major distractions: a pledge to consider using money from savings found by the “Department of Government Efficiency” to provide rebates to taxpayers—although so far it hasn’t shown any savings and economists say the promise of checks is unrealistic—and a claim that he would release a list of late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s clients.
Trump is also under pressure from the law.
The Associated Press sued three officials in the Trump administration today for blocking AP journalists from presidential events because the AP continues to use the traditional name “Gulf of Mexico” for the gulf that Trump is trying to rename. The AP is suing over the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution.
Today, a federal court granted a preliminary injunction to stop Musk and the DOGE team from accessing Americans’ private information in the Treasury Department’s central payment system. Eighteen states had filed the lawsuit.
Tonight, a federal court granted a nationwide injunction against Trump’s executive orders attacking diversity, equity, and inclusion, finding that they violate the First and Fifth Amendments to the Constitution.
Trump is also under pressure from principled state governors.
In his State of the State Address on Wednesday, February 19, Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker noted that “it’s in fashion at the federal level right now to just indiscriminately slash school funding, healthcare coverage, support for farmers, and veterans’ services. They say they’re doing it to eliminate inefficiencies. But only an idiot would think we should eliminate emergency response in a natural disaster, education and healthcare for disabled children, gang crime investigations, clean air and water programs, monitoring of nursing home abuse, nuclear reactor regulation, and cancer research.”
He recalled: “Here in Illinois, ten years ago we saw the consequences of a rampant ideological gutting of government. It genuinely harmed people. Our citizens hated it. Trust me—I won an entire election based in part on just how much they hated it.”
Pritzker went on to address the dangers of the Trump administration directly. “We don’t have kings in America,” he said, “and I don’t intend to bend the knee to one…. If you think I’m overreacting and sounding the alarm too soon, consider this: It took the Nazis one month, three weeks, two days, eight hours and 40 minutes to dismantle a constitutional republic. All I’m saying is when the five-alarm fire starts to burn, every good person better be ready to man a post with a bucket of water if you want to stop it from raging out of control.”
He recalled how ordinary Illinoisans outnumbered Nazis who marched in Chicago in 1978 by about 2,000 to 20, and noted: “Tyranny requires your fear and your silence and your compliance. Democracy requires your courage. So gather your justice and humanity, Illinois, and do not let the ‘tragic spirit of despair’ overcome us when our country needs us the most.”
Today, Maine governor Janet Mills took the fight against Trump’s overreach directly to him. At a meeting of the nation’s governors, in a rambling speech in which he was wandering through his false campaign stories about transgender athletes, Trump turned to his notes and suddenly appeared to remember his executive order banning transgender student athletes from playing on girls sports teams.
The body that governs sports in Maine, the Maine Principals’ Association, ruled that it would continue to allow transgender students to compete despite Trump’s executive order because the Maine state Human Rights Law prohibits discrimination on the grounds of gender identity.
Trump asked if the governor of Maine was in the room.
“Yeah, I’m here,” replied Governor Mills.
“Are you not going to comply with it?” Trump asked.
“I’m complying with state and federal laws,” she said.
“We are the federal law,” Trump said. “You better do it because you’re not going to get any federal funding at all if you don’t….”
“We’re going to follow the law,” she said.
“You’d better comply because otherwise you’re not going to get any federal funding,” he said.
Mills answered: “We’ll see you in court.”
As Shawn McCreesh of the New York Times put it: “Something happened at the White House Friday afternoon that almost never happens these days. Somebody defied President Trump. Right to his face.”
Hours later, the Trump administration launched an investigation into Maine’s Department of Education, specifically its policy on transgender athletes. Maine attorney general Aaron Frey said that any attempt to cut federal funding for the states over the issue “would be illegal and in direct violation of federal court orders…. Fortunately,” he said in a statement, “the rule of law still applies in this country, and I will do everything in my power to defend Maine’s laws and block efforts by the president to bully and threaten us.”
“[W]hat is at stake here [is] the rule of law in our country,” Mills said in a statement. “No President…can withhold Federal funding authorized and appropriated by Congress and paid for by Maine taxpayers in an attempt to coerce someone into compliance with his will. It is a violation of our Constitution and of our laws.”
“Maine may be one of the first states to undergo an investigation by his Administration, but we won’t be the last. Today, the President of the United States has targeted one particular group on one particular issue which Maine law has addressed. But you must ask yourself: who and what will he target next, and what will he do? Will it be you? Will it be because of your race or your religion? Will it be because you look different or think differently? Where does it end? In America, the President is neither a King nor a dictator, as much as this one tries to act like it—and it is the rule of law that prevents him from being so.”
“[D]o not be misled: this is not just about who can compete on the athletic field, this is about whether a President can force compliance with his will, without regard for the rule of law that governs our nation. I believe he cannot.”
Americans’ sense that Musk has too much power is likely to be heightened by tonight’s report from Andrea Shalal and Joey Roulette of Reuters that the United States is trying to force Ukraine to sign away rights to its critical minerals by threatening to cut off access to Musk’s Starlink satellite system. Ukraine turned to that system after the Russians destroyed its communications services.
And Americans’ concerns about Trump acting like a dictator are unlikely to be calmed by tonight’s news that Trump has abruptly purged the leadership of the military in apparent unconcern over the message that such a sweeping purge sends to adversaries. He has fired the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Charles Q. Brown, who Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth suggested got the job only because he is Black, and Admiral Lisa Franchetti, the Chief of Naval Operations, who was the first woman to serve on the Joint Chiefs of Staff and whom Hegseth called a “DEI hire.”
The vice chief of the Air Force, General James Slife, has also been fired, and Hegseth indicated he intends to fire the judge advocates general, or JAGs—the military lawyers who administer the military code of justice—for the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Trump has indicated he intends to nominate Air Force Lieutenant General John Dan “Razin” Caine to be the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Oren Liebermann and Haley Britzky of CNN call this “an extraordinary move,” since Caine is retired and is not a four-star general, a legal requirement, and will need a presidential waiver to take the job. Trump has referred to Caine as right out of “central casting.”
Defense One, which covers U.S. defense and international security, called the firings a “bloodbath.”

Call Musk’s behavior what it is: bizarre, and possibly drug(ketamine) induced.
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Can we borrow Governor Mills to lead the resistance?
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Gov Mills is fabulous!
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THIS IS DISGUSTING: “Americans’ sense that Musk has too much power is likely to be heightened by tonight’s report from Andrea Shalal and Joey Roulette of Reuters that the United States is trying to force Ukraine to sign away rights to its critical minerals by threatening to cut off access to Musk’s Starlink satellite system. Ukraine turned to that system after the Russians destroyed its communications services.”
Trump is basting the turkey so that it will be ready for Putin’s dinner table. CBK
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And Congress and SCOTUS are despicable to let any of this happen. Since when is the United States a mob boss offering Zelinski a “deal” he cannot refuse? CBK
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CBK, our demands for Ukraine’s minerals diminishes the valor of our gift. Typical Trump: “Ya want help? Pay for it.”
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Diane: I could not BE more disgusted.
On the other hand, I was so glad to see the American Bar Association stepping up to the plate–the more powerful for their being bi-partisan and so quiet for so long. (He cannot threaten everyone’s children.) (But it’s coming to a head, so to speak.) CBK
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It’s not coming to a head until the 2026 elections. We must take away his Congressional majorities. Impeach him again.
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Diane: I hope we get there. I just saw Trump saying (again) that Zelinsky “has no cards to play.” Why? Because his shakedown of Zelinsky is working.
If the GOP Congress and SCOTUS are not turning red with embarrassment about this, . . . . CBK
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It’s not just pay to play. It’s extortion. Musk owns the communications network that Zelinsky needs.
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The implication is that Musk will cut Ukraine’s communications if they don’t do a deal with Trump for mineral rights–Trump is someone that Zelinsky KNOWS is a grifter and will lie at the drop of a hat.
I think there’s evidence enough that Zelinsky does not trust Trump–he’s no fool–and rightly so. That’s what moves the problem from merely pay-to-play, which is bad enough, to outright extortion.
Add to that this: my bet is that the mineral rights situation will change according to the heretofore hidden Trump-Putin relationship. If I am right in this, the door to the rest of Europe is beginning to swing open and will do so if/when Zelinsky does the mineral rights deal. CBK
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2026 elections? How do we know if we’ll even have them?
Though it’s commonly thought Nixon would have been removed if impeached, history suggests impeachments don’t work when it comes to removal from office.
Oh well… Don’t blame me. I voted for Kamala. Trump voters don’t get to act surprised when they get screwed by him. That’s what they voted for…
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I think it is time to start forming two types of armed militias.
The Home Guard made up of us older Never Trumpers who train and organize to stay home and defend our communities from our porches and wheelchairs, if needed, while the younger Never Trumpers fit enough to form combat units take the fight to the MAGA lunatics. We might call them the “Give me Liberty or Give me Death” battalions.
There will be no shortage of officers of all ages as the fascists fire them, since all the ones that will never surrender to the January 6, 2021, TRAITOR will be free to take command of both volunteer militia armies and start the training and organization. That’s about 70% of the active-duty military who will soon be free to defend the Constitution and our freedom outside of the active military, along with those seventy-percenters who are already retired.
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I know how many of us wonder how much Putin actually did help the narrow lead the spoiled brat had in gaining his office. But who wants to be associated with the thinking that only he has advocated, that a US presidential election can be stolen. He has cheated all his life in everything, Putin’s poodle.
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What Trump and his gang of felons are doing to Ukraine is vile, despicable and beyond depraved. There is Ukraine fighting for its very existence, being bombed, strafed with mass slaughters of civilians, men, women, children, and the disabled. Trump is demeaning, defaming and bullying Zelenskyy while Putin is cackling and continues his illegal war against Ukraine. It’s comparable to a man being squeezed to death by a python and a bystander will only help the victim if he hands over money to the mouthy bystander.
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What I continue to be stunned by, are the low percentages of disapproval and outrage coming from the American people . How can 48% of people approve of this traitor and his DOGE criminals? How is it, that not at least 80-90 percent of people are concerned about their information being accessed and possibly abused? This is unheard of! Why aren’t more people appalled by this administration and frightened by the lengths to which they are going to cheat the american people??? How is it that 43% of people actually APPROVE of this? I would think SCOTUS would step in when the lawsuits reach them, they are equally suseptible to being abused. tRump lawyers and DOJ may hold that over them when the time comes.
We need more Pritzkers and Mill’s, Walz, Hochals, and Whitmers. I know Newsome is with them, but has to tread lightly until he receives the funding for the wildfires. But then its game on. Holding disaster aid over the heads of Californians is outrageous, but is something I’ve come to expect from tRump.
I feel so badly for Zelensky, but hope the EU steps up and supports him more broadly so he isn’t beholden to tRump and his “quid pro quo”.
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I am afraid that there are a lot of ordinary people whose main source of news is still Fox “News”. As more people feel the effects of Trumpism, his approval will wane. The town halls of angry Republican constituents is an extremely positive sign, to my way of thinking.
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