SUBSCRIBE TO OUR FREE NEWSLETTER
Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
5
#000000
#FFFFFF
To donate by check, phone, or other method, see our More Ways to Give page.
Daily news & progressive opinion—funded by the people, not the corporations—delivered straight to your inbox.
Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, right, and Josh Hawley, R-Mo., attend the Senate Judiciary Committee markup on judicial nominations and the Online Content Policy Modernization Act, in Dirksen Building on Thursday, December 10, 2020. (Photo: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
Ever since it first was published in 1956, there has been a joke about John F. Kennedy's book Profiles in Courage (largely ghosted by speechwriter and advisor Ted Sorensen), historical portraits of eight US senators who demonstrated bravery in the face of enormous political opposition.
Kennedy himself and others kidded that the volume would have been longer but there just wasn't that much valor in the Senate for a writer to celebrate.
Tragically, that rings even truer today. The quality of leadership, particularly among the GOP Senate majority, has dipped to a level not witnessed since the first Gilded Age, when 19th century members of the Senate still were appointed by state legislatures and cuddled snugly in the deep pockets of the oil, coal, lumber and railroad barons who passed out bribes like cigars, buying loyalty with piles of cash to keep members at their beck and call.
Remember the immortal words attributed to the thoroughly corrupt US senator from Pennsylvania (and briefly, Lincoln's first secretary of war) Simon Cameron: "An honest politician is one who when he's bought stays bought."
So while the current temporary occupant of the Oval Office rightfully has been excoriated by my colleagues and me over and again, perhaps we haven't paid sufficient attention to the enablers who served in the mercifully ended 116th Congress.
Unfortunately, most of them are popping right back up in the new 117th, men and women devoid of scruples and eager only for the power to hold the country back from healthy reform--and all of this in the name of greed, self-aggrandizement, political domination and slavish devotion to a childish, petulant demagogue--a soon-to-be-ex-president whose malicious bungling of a crisis has helped lead to the death of more than 350,000 Americans. Donald John Trump has thwarted every effort to save lives but one, the successful hunt for a vaccine, and yet, it now seems that the distribution of that lifesaver has been mishandled, too.
First, just take a moment to consider Republican members of the House of Representatives. In large part, for the past two years they've been held at bay by the Democratic majority there, now narrowed by the 2020 election results. (Remember, too, that those Democrats managed to pass an agenda of legislative progress only to find it stymied at every turn by Mitch McConnell and the GOP majority Senate.) Nonetheless, the GOP House members' closed minds, refusal to recognize the effectiveness of good government and urge to wreak havoc have had an indelible effect on American democracy, one that will take years to fully assess and repair.
Particular disgust should be directed toward those 126 GOP House members who recently signed an amicus brief in support of that now rejected, dizzy attempt by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to overturn election results in four other states.
(The satirical news site The Onion deftly handled this, calling out each of the 126 with an individualized message. To Rep. Gus Bilirakis of Florida, "You have been absolutely fearless when stopping the American people from participating in elections;" to Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee, "Never again will we allow U.S. citizens to recklessly turn in their ballots;" to Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana, "Thank you for bravely standing up to the American voters;" and so on. Each was accompanied by an especially beguiling photo of a maggot.)
Many of those same members and more--some 140--are now lending their names to the smoke-and-mirrors effort in Congress to challenge the votes of the Electoral College, which already has given the election to Joe Biden. The votes of the electors officially are to be announced on Wednesday by Vice President Mike Pence in his capacity as President of the Senate.
In normal times, this would be a mere formality, but Trump and Republicans have decided to turn it into a clumsy attempt at a coup d'etat, ignoring the rule of law and numerous court rulings. They're putting on an act, trying to overturn the results of a free and fair election as a dumbshow of power, all out of fear of Tin Hat Trump's "base" of voters and to preserve a status quo that ignores the diversity of America, cossets the rich and fosters hate, poverty and inequality.
In the House, the leaders of this effort include the feckless Louie Gohmert of Texas, known as "America's craziest and dumbest congressman." Having just had an election lawsuit thrown out by a Federal appeals court on New Year's Day, he went on Newsmax suggesting that the alternative now is going to the streets and "being as violent as antifa and BLM."
He's joined in this mad pursuit--simultaneously dumbing down and radicalizing a significant portion of the party and American populace--by the usual suspects, led by Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama and including Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, Jody Hice of Georgia and Joe Wilson of South Carolina. New members of the House are piping up, too, including QAnon queen Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.
On the Senate side, opposition to finalizing the presidential result is being led by Josh Hawley of Missouri, a man of vaulting ambition who wants to be president so badly he's is willing to violate his sworn oath of office and destroy the Constitution and Bill of Rights to get there, using conspiracy theories and falsehoods to oil his way into the White House as early as 2024.
In a letter published Saturday, eleven other Republican senators and senators-elect demanded an "emergency 10-day audit" of results in "the disputed states,"--in other words, the states Trump is shocked--shocked!--that he lost to Joe Biden, states he assumed would be a cinch for him. They weren't.
Remember their names:
Sadly, this Dirty Dozen (including Hawley), a so-called "Sedition Caucus" in the Senate, probably won't be deterred by news of that phone call Trump made to Georgia's Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, trying to bully him into finding more votes to change the result in the state from Biden to Trump--a conversation much like the one with Ukraine President Zelensky that a year ago got Donald Trump impeached.
Trump's impeachment didn't lead to conviction by the Senate, thanks to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who would brook no new evidence or witnesses, turning the trial into a sham with a predetermined outcome. But McConnell now is opposed to his colleagues' efforts to subvert the Electoral College. Why? Because McConnell is all about the raw power he alone holds in the Senate. He cares for that and little else except, of course, tax cuts for the superrich, holding rules and regulations at bay and getting as many conservative Federal judges approved by the Senate as quickly as he can.
Look to his refusal in 2016 to allow Obama's Supreme Court pick Merrick Garland to even get a hearing, claiming that it was unfair to voters to decide a court seat in an election year--and then hypocritically turning around and ramming through Trump's choice of Amy Coney Barrett for the court just before the 2020 vote. Then remember all the legislation he has kept from coming to the Senate floor at all. That's all you need to know.
In the midst of all the phony post-election turbulence perpetrated by Trump and company, what matters most to McConnell is hanging onto his throne. He's worried that all of this current craziness will cost Republicans those two seats in Georgia on Tuesday and take away his majority. Right now, nothing else matters. Donald Trump and his coterie of congressional sycophants are standing in the way.
It is quite a crew up there on the Hill these days. You all know some of the other reprobates--Tom Cotton, Marco Rubio, Lindsey Graham, John Cornyn, Chuck Grassley, Rick Scott--etcetera and ad nauseum, emphasis on the nauseum. The Senate used to be described as the world's greatest deliberative body. Now the Republicans act as if it's sleepaway camp for wayward boys and girls of the right-wing persuasion. Behind closed doors they may mock and dislike Trump's infantile behavior but they admire his authoritarian style and next time around hope to make it permanent. Not as a bug in the system, as the saying goes, but a feature.
Over these last few Trump years--years that have felt like decades-- several have cited Leopold Amery, Conservative member of the British House of Commons who in the opening months of World War II told Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, "You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. In the name of God, go!"
What often goes unnoted is that Amery's words were inspired by the speech Oliver Cromwell gave in 1653 dismissing Parliament. His words could apply as appropriately to today's Senate as they do to our vain and irresponsible president and his cronies.
"Ye are a factious crew, and enemies to all good government," Cromwell declared. "Ye are a pack of mercenary wretches, and would like Esau sell your country for a mess of pottage, and like Judas betray your God for a few pieces of money. Is there a single virtue now remaining amongst you? Is there one vice you do not possess?"
Apparently not. These senators and their leader McConnell wish to quash our nation's legacy of democracy, albeit imperfect for sure, that until now has saved us from permanent mayhem. If this be treason, make the most of it, they seem to say, grossly twisting the rhetoric of founder Patrick Henry. It is wrong, morally reprehensible and carries the seeds of our destruction.
This one thing we can hope: the excesses of Congress during the Gilded Age and the robber barons who paid for it finally led to some real reform. After these next two weeks, when the fog of nonsense and chicanery has momentarily cleared, the fight must instantly begin to rebuild, renew and reform once again.
Donald Trump’s attacks on democracy, justice, and a free press are escalating — putting everything we stand for at risk. We believe a better world is possible, but we can’t get there without your support. Common Dreams stands apart. We answer only to you — our readers, activists, and changemakers — not to billionaires or corporations. Our independence allows us to cover the vital stories that others won’t, spotlighting movements for peace, equality, and human rights. Right now, our work faces unprecedented challenges. Misinformation is spreading, journalists are under attack, and financial pressures are mounting. As a reader-supported, nonprofit newsroom, your support is crucial to keep this journalism alive. Whatever you can give — $10, $25, or $100 — helps us stay strong and responsive when the world needs us most. Together, we’ll continue to build the independent, courageous journalism our movement relies on. Thank you for being part of this community. |
Ever since it first was published in 1956, there has been a joke about John F. Kennedy's book Profiles in Courage (largely ghosted by speechwriter and advisor Ted Sorensen), historical portraits of eight US senators who demonstrated bravery in the face of enormous political opposition.
Kennedy himself and others kidded that the volume would have been longer but there just wasn't that much valor in the Senate for a writer to celebrate.
Tragically, that rings even truer today. The quality of leadership, particularly among the GOP Senate majority, has dipped to a level not witnessed since the first Gilded Age, when 19th century members of the Senate still were appointed by state legislatures and cuddled snugly in the deep pockets of the oil, coal, lumber and railroad barons who passed out bribes like cigars, buying loyalty with piles of cash to keep members at their beck and call.
Remember the immortal words attributed to the thoroughly corrupt US senator from Pennsylvania (and briefly, Lincoln's first secretary of war) Simon Cameron: "An honest politician is one who when he's bought stays bought."
So while the current temporary occupant of the Oval Office rightfully has been excoriated by my colleagues and me over and again, perhaps we haven't paid sufficient attention to the enablers who served in the mercifully ended 116th Congress.
Unfortunately, most of them are popping right back up in the new 117th, men and women devoid of scruples and eager only for the power to hold the country back from healthy reform--and all of this in the name of greed, self-aggrandizement, political domination and slavish devotion to a childish, petulant demagogue--a soon-to-be-ex-president whose malicious bungling of a crisis has helped lead to the death of more than 350,000 Americans. Donald John Trump has thwarted every effort to save lives but one, the successful hunt for a vaccine, and yet, it now seems that the distribution of that lifesaver has been mishandled, too.
First, just take a moment to consider Republican members of the House of Representatives. In large part, for the past two years they've been held at bay by the Democratic majority there, now narrowed by the 2020 election results. (Remember, too, that those Democrats managed to pass an agenda of legislative progress only to find it stymied at every turn by Mitch McConnell and the GOP majority Senate.) Nonetheless, the GOP House members' closed minds, refusal to recognize the effectiveness of good government and urge to wreak havoc have had an indelible effect on American democracy, one that will take years to fully assess and repair.
Particular disgust should be directed toward those 126 GOP House members who recently signed an amicus brief in support of that now rejected, dizzy attempt by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to overturn election results in four other states.
(The satirical news site The Onion deftly handled this, calling out each of the 126 with an individualized message. To Rep. Gus Bilirakis of Florida, "You have been absolutely fearless when stopping the American people from participating in elections;" to Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee, "Never again will we allow U.S. citizens to recklessly turn in their ballots;" to Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana, "Thank you for bravely standing up to the American voters;" and so on. Each was accompanied by an especially beguiling photo of a maggot.)
Many of those same members and more--some 140--are now lending their names to the smoke-and-mirrors effort in Congress to challenge the votes of the Electoral College, which already has given the election to Joe Biden. The votes of the electors officially are to be announced on Wednesday by Vice President Mike Pence in his capacity as President of the Senate.
In normal times, this would be a mere formality, but Trump and Republicans have decided to turn it into a clumsy attempt at a coup d'etat, ignoring the rule of law and numerous court rulings. They're putting on an act, trying to overturn the results of a free and fair election as a dumbshow of power, all out of fear of Tin Hat Trump's "base" of voters and to preserve a status quo that ignores the diversity of America, cossets the rich and fosters hate, poverty and inequality.
In the House, the leaders of this effort include the feckless Louie Gohmert of Texas, known as "America's craziest and dumbest congressman." Having just had an election lawsuit thrown out by a Federal appeals court on New Year's Day, he went on Newsmax suggesting that the alternative now is going to the streets and "being as violent as antifa and BLM."
He's joined in this mad pursuit--simultaneously dumbing down and radicalizing a significant portion of the party and American populace--by the usual suspects, led by Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama and including Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, Jody Hice of Georgia and Joe Wilson of South Carolina. New members of the House are piping up, too, including QAnon queen Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.
On the Senate side, opposition to finalizing the presidential result is being led by Josh Hawley of Missouri, a man of vaulting ambition who wants to be president so badly he's is willing to violate his sworn oath of office and destroy the Constitution and Bill of Rights to get there, using conspiracy theories and falsehoods to oil his way into the White House as early as 2024.
In a letter published Saturday, eleven other Republican senators and senators-elect demanded an "emergency 10-day audit" of results in "the disputed states,"--in other words, the states Trump is shocked--shocked!--that he lost to Joe Biden, states he assumed would be a cinch for him. They weren't.
Remember their names:
Sadly, this Dirty Dozen (including Hawley), a so-called "Sedition Caucus" in the Senate, probably won't be deterred by news of that phone call Trump made to Georgia's Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, trying to bully him into finding more votes to change the result in the state from Biden to Trump--a conversation much like the one with Ukraine President Zelensky that a year ago got Donald Trump impeached.
Trump's impeachment didn't lead to conviction by the Senate, thanks to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who would brook no new evidence or witnesses, turning the trial into a sham with a predetermined outcome. But McConnell now is opposed to his colleagues' efforts to subvert the Electoral College. Why? Because McConnell is all about the raw power he alone holds in the Senate. He cares for that and little else except, of course, tax cuts for the superrich, holding rules and regulations at bay and getting as many conservative Federal judges approved by the Senate as quickly as he can.
Look to his refusal in 2016 to allow Obama's Supreme Court pick Merrick Garland to even get a hearing, claiming that it was unfair to voters to decide a court seat in an election year--and then hypocritically turning around and ramming through Trump's choice of Amy Coney Barrett for the court just before the 2020 vote. Then remember all the legislation he has kept from coming to the Senate floor at all. That's all you need to know.
In the midst of all the phony post-election turbulence perpetrated by Trump and company, what matters most to McConnell is hanging onto his throne. He's worried that all of this current craziness will cost Republicans those two seats in Georgia on Tuesday and take away his majority. Right now, nothing else matters. Donald Trump and his coterie of congressional sycophants are standing in the way.
It is quite a crew up there on the Hill these days. You all know some of the other reprobates--Tom Cotton, Marco Rubio, Lindsey Graham, John Cornyn, Chuck Grassley, Rick Scott--etcetera and ad nauseum, emphasis on the nauseum. The Senate used to be described as the world's greatest deliberative body. Now the Republicans act as if it's sleepaway camp for wayward boys and girls of the right-wing persuasion. Behind closed doors they may mock and dislike Trump's infantile behavior but they admire his authoritarian style and next time around hope to make it permanent. Not as a bug in the system, as the saying goes, but a feature.
Over these last few Trump years--years that have felt like decades-- several have cited Leopold Amery, Conservative member of the British House of Commons who in the opening months of World War II told Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, "You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. In the name of God, go!"
What often goes unnoted is that Amery's words were inspired by the speech Oliver Cromwell gave in 1653 dismissing Parliament. His words could apply as appropriately to today's Senate as they do to our vain and irresponsible president and his cronies.
"Ye are a factious crew, and enemies to all good government," Cromwell declared. "Ye are a pack of mercenary wretches, and would like Esau sell your country for a mess of pottage, and like Judas betray your God for a few pieces of money. Is there a single virtue now remaining amongst you? Is there one vice you do not possess?"
Apparently not. These senators and their leader McConnell wish to quash our nation's legacy of democracy, albeit imperfect for sure, that until now has saved us from permanent mayhem. If this be treason, make the most of it, they seem to say, grossly twisting the rhetoric of founder Patrick Henry. It is wrong, morally reprehensible and carries the seeds of our destruction.
This one thing we can hope: the excesses of Congress during the Gilded Age and the robber barons who paid for it finally led to some real reform. After these next two weeks, when the fog of nonsense and chicanery has momentarily cleared, the fight must instantly begin to rebuild, renew and reform once again.
Ever since it first was published in 1956, there has been a joke about John F. Kennedy's book Profiles in Courage (largely ghosted by speechwriter and advisor Ted Sorensen), historical portraits of eight US senators who demonstrated bravery in the face of enormous political opposition.
Kennedy himself and others kidded that the volume would have been longer but there just wasn't that much valor in the Senate for a writer to celebrate.
Tragically, that rings even truer today. The quality of leadership, particularly among the GOP Senate majority, has dipped to a level not witnessed since the first Gilded Age, when 19th century members of the Senate still were appointed by state legislatures and cuddled snugly in the deep pockets of the oil, coal, lumber and railroad barons who passed out bribes like cigars, buying loyalty with piles of cash to keep members at their beck and call.
Remember the immortal words attributed to the thoroughly corrupt US senator from Pennsylvania (and briefly, Lincoln's first secretary of war) Simon Cameron: "An honest politician is one who when he's bought stays bought."
So while the current temporary occupant of the Oval Office rightfully has been excoriated by my colleagues and me over and again, perhaps we haven't paid sufficient attention to the enablers who served in the mercifully ended 116th Congress.
Unfortunately, most of them are popping right back up in the new 117th, men and women devoid of scruples and eager only for the power to hold the country back from healthy reform--and all of this in the name of greed, self-aggrandizement, political domination and slavish devotion to a childish, petulant demagogue--a soon-to-be-ex-president whose malicious bungling of a crisis has helped lead to the death of more than 350,000 Americans. Donald John Trump has thwarted every effort to save lives but one, the successful hunt for a vaccine, and yet, it now seems that the distribution of that lifesaver has been mishandled, too.
First, just take a moment to consider Republican members of the House of Representatives. In large part, for the past two years they've been held at bay by the Democratic majority there, now narrowed by the 2020 election results. (Remember, too, that those Democrats managed to pass an agenda of legislative progress only to find it stymied at every turn by Mitch McConnell and the GOP majority Senate.) Nonetheless, the GOP House members' closed minds, refusal to recognize the effectiveness of good government and urge to wreak havoc have had an indelible effect on American democracy, one that will take years to fully assess and repair.
Particular disgust should be directed toward those 126 GOP House members who recently signed an amicus brief in support of that now rejected, dizzy attempt by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to overturn election results in four other states.
(The satirical news site The Onion deftly handled this, calling out each of the 126 with an individualized message. To Rep. Gus Bilirakis of Florida, "You have been absolutely fearless when stopping the American people from participating in elections;" to Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee, "Never again will we allow U.S. citizens to recklessly turn in their ballots;" to Rep. Mike Johnson of Louisiana, "Thank you for bravely standing up to the American voters;" and so on. Each was accompanied by an especially beguiling photo of a maggot.)
Many of those same members and more--some 140--are now lending their names to the smoke-and-mirrors effort in Congress to challenge the votes of the Electoral College, which already has given the election to Joe Biden. The votes of the electors officially are to be announced on Wednesday by Vice President Mike Pence in his capacity as President of the Senate.
In normal times, this would be a mere formality, but Trump and Republicans have decided to turn it into a clumsy attempt at a coup d'etat, ignoring the rule of law and numerous court rulings. They're putting on an act, trying to overturn the results of a free and fair election as a dumbshow of power, all out of fear of Tin Hat Trump's "base" of voters and to preserve a status quo that ignores the diversity of America, cossets the rich and fosters hate, poverty and inequality.
In the House, the leaders of this effort include the feckless Louie Gohmert of Texas, known as "America's craziest and dumbest congressman." Having just had an election lawsuit thrown out by a Federal appeals court on New Year's Day, he went on Newsmax suggesting that the alternative now is going to the streets and "being as violent as antifa and BLM."
He's joined in this mad pursuit--simultaneously dumbing down and radicalizing a significant portion of the party and American populace--by the usual suspects, led by Rep. Mo Brooks of Alabama and including Jeff Van Drew of New Jersey, Jody Hice of Georgia and Joe Wilson of South Carolina. New members of the House are piping up, too, including QAnon queen Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.
On the Senate side, opposition to finalizing the presidential result is being led by Josh Hawley of Missouri, a man of vaulting ambition who wants to be president so badly he's is willing to violate his sworn oath of office and destroy the Constitution and Bill of Rights to get there, using conspiracy theories and falsehoods to oil his way into the White House as early as 2024.
In a letter published Saturday, eleven other Republican senators and senators-elect demanded an "emergency 10-day audit" of results in "the disputed states,"--in other words, the states Trump is shocked--shocked!--that he lost to Joe Biden, states he assumed would be a cinch for him. They weren't.
Remember their names:
Sadly, this Dirty Dozen (including Hawley), a so-called "Sedition Caucus" in the Senate, probably won't be deterred by news of that phone call Trump made to Georgia's Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, trying to bully him into finding more votes to change the result in the state from Biden to Trump--a conversation much like the one with Ukraine President Zelensky that a year ago got Donald Trump impeached.
Trump's impeachment didn't lead to conviction by the Senate, thanks to Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who would brook no new evidence or witnesses, turning the trial into a sham with a predetermined outcome. But McConnell now is opposed to his colleagues' efforts to subvert the Electoral College. Why? Because McConnell is all about the raw power he alone holds in the Senate. He cares for that and little else except, of course, tax cuts for the superrich, holding rules and regulations at bay and getting as many conservative Federal judges approved by the Senate as quickly as he can.
Look to his refusal in 2016 to allow Obama's Supreme Court pick Merrick Garland to even get a hearing, claiming that it was unfair to voters to decide a court seat in an election year--and then hypocritically turning around and ramming through Trump's choice of Amy Coney Barrett for the court just before the 2020 vote. Then remember all the legislation he has kept from coming to the Senate floor at all. That's all you need to know.
In the midst of all the phony post-election turbulence perpetrated by Trump and company, what matters most to McConnell is hanging onto his throne. He's worried that all of this current craziness will cost Republicans those two seats in Georgia on Tuesday and take away his majority. Right now, nothing else matters. Donald Trump and his coterie of congressional sycophants are standing in the way.
It is quite a crew up there on the Hill these days. You all know some of the other reprobates--Tom Cotton, Marco Rubio, Lindsey Graham, John Cornyn, Chuck Grassley, Rick Scott--etcetera and ad nauseum, emphasis on the nauseum. The Senate used to be described as the world's greatest deliberative body. Now the Republicans act as if it's sleepaway camp for wayward boys and girls of the right-wing persuasion. Behind closed doors they may mock and dislike Trump's infantile behavior but they admire his authoritarian style and next time around hope to make it permanent. Not as a bug in the system, as the saying goes, but a feature.
Over these last few Trump years--years that have felt like decades-- several have cited Leopold Amery, Conservative member of the British House of Commons who in the opening months of World War II told Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain, "You have sat too long here for any good you have been doing. In the name of God, go!"
What often goes unnoted is that Amery's words were inspired by the speech Oliver Cromwell gave in 1653 dismissing Parliament. His words could apply as appropriately to today's Senate as they do to our vain and irresponsible president and his cronies.
"Ye are a factious crew, and enemies to all good government," Cromwell declared. "Ye are a pack of mercenary wretches, and would like Esau sell your country for a mess of pottage, and like Judas betray your God for a few pieces of money. Is there a single virtue now remaining amongst you? Is there one vice you do not possess?"
Apparently not. These senators and their leader McConnell wish to quash our nation's legacy of democracy, albeit imperfect for sure, that until now has saved us from permanent mayhem. If this be treason, make the most of it, they seem to say, grossly twisting the rhetoric of founder Patrick Henry. It is wrong, morally reprehensible and carries the seeds of our destruction.
This one thing we can hope: the excesses of Congress during the Gilded Age and the robber barons who paid for it finally led to some real reform. After these next two weeks, when the fog of nonsense and chicanery has momentarily cleared, the fight must instantly begin to rebuild, renew and reform once again.
"Underneath shiny motherhood medals and promises of baby bonuses is a movement intent on elevating white supremacist ideology and forcing women out of the workplace," said one advocate.
The Trump administration's push for Americans to have more children has been well documented, from Vice President JD Vance's insults aimed at "childless cat ladies" to officials' meetings with "pronatalist" advocates who want to boost U.S. birth rates, which have been declining since 2007.
But a report released by the National Women's Law Center (NWLC) on Wednesday details how the methods the White House have reportedly considered to convince Americans to procreate moremay be described by the far right as "pro-family," but are actually being pushed by a eugenicist, misogynist movement that has little interest in making it any easier to raise a family in the United States.
The proposals include bestowing a "National Medal of Motherhood" on women who have more than six children, giving a $5,000 "baby bonus" to new parents, and prioritizing federal projects in areas with high birth rates.
"Underneath shiny motherhood medals and promises of baby bonuses is a movement intent on elevating white supremacist ideology and forcing women out of the workplace," said Emily Martin, chief program officer of the National Women's Law Center.
The report describes how "Silicon Valley tech elites" and traditional conservatives who oppose abortion rights and even a woman's right to work outside the home have converged to push for "preserving the traditional family structure while encouraging women to have a lot of children."
With pronatalists often referring to "declining genetic quality" in the U.S. and promoting the idea that Americans must produce "good quality children," in the words of evolutionary psychologist Diana Fleischman, the pronatalist movement "is built on racist, sexist, and anti-immigrant ideologies."
If conservatives are concerned about population loss in the U.S., the report points out, they would "make it easier for immigrants to come to the United States to live and work. More immigrants mean more workers, which would address some of the economic concerns raised by declining birth rates."
But pronatalists "only want to see certain populations increase (i.e., white people), and there are many immigrants who don't fit into that narrow qualification."
The report, titled "Baby Bonuses and Motherhood Medals: Why We Shouldn't Trust the Pronatalist Movement," describes how President Donald Trump has enlisted a "pronatalist army" that's been instrumental both in pushing a virulently anti-immigrant, mass deportation agenda and in demanding that more straight couples should marry and have children, as the right-wing policy playbook Project 2025 demands.
Trump's former adviser and benefactor, billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk, has spoken frequently about the need to prevent a collapse of U.S. society and civilization by raising birth rates, and has pushed misinformation fearmongering about birth control.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy proposed rewarding areas with high birth rates by prioritizing infrastructure projects, and like Vance has lobbed insults at single women while also deriding the use of contraception.
The report was released days after CNN detailed the close ties the Trump administration has with self-described Christian nationalist pastor Doug Wilson, who heads the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, preaches that women should not vote, and suggested in an interview with correspondent Pamela Brown that women's primary function is birthing children, saying they are "the kind of people that people come out of."
Wilson has ties to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, whose children attend schools founded by the pastor and who shared the video online with the tagline of Wilson's church, "All of Christ for All of Life."
But the NWLC noted, no amount of haranguing women over their relationship status, plans for childbearing, or insistence that they are primarily meant to stay at home with "four or five children," as Wilson said, can reverse the impact the Trump administration's policies have had on families.
"While the Trump administration claims to be pursuing a pro-baby agenda, their actions tell a different story," the report notes. "Rather than advancing policies that would actually support families—like lowering costs, expanding access to housing and food, or investing in child care—they've prioritized dismantling basic need supports, rolling back longstanding civil rights protections, and ripping away people's bodily autonomy."
The report was published weeks after Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act into law—making pregnancy more expensive and more dangerous for millions of low-income women by slashing Medicaid funding and "endangering the 42 million women and children" who rely on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for their daily meals.
While demanding that women have more children, said the NWLC, Trump has pushed an "anti-women, anti-family agenda."
Martin said that unlike the pronatalist movement, "a real pro-family agenda would include protecting reproductive healthcare, investing in childcare as a public good, promoting workplace policies that enable parents to succeed, and ensuring that all children have the resources that they need to thrive not just at birth, but throughout their lives."
"The administration's deep hostility toward these pro-family policies," said Martin, "tells you all that you need to know about pronatalists' true motives.”
A Center for Constitutional Rights lawyer called on Kathy Jennings to "use her power to stop this dangerous entity that is masquerading as a charitable organization while furthering death and violence in Gaza."
A leading U.S. legal advocacy group on Wednesday urged Delaware Attorney General Kathy Jennings to pursue revoking the corporate charter of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, whose aid distribution points in the embattled Palestinian enclave have been the sites of near-daily massacres in which thousands of Palestinians have reportedly been killed or wounded.
Last week, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) urgently requested a meeting with Jennings, a Democrat, whom the group asserted has a legal obligation to file suit in the state's Chancery Court to seek revocation of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation's (GHF) charter because the purported charity "is complicit in war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide."
CCR said Wednesday that Jennings "has neither responded" to the group's request "nor publicly addressed the serious claims raised against the Delaware-registered entity."
"GHF woefully fails to adhere to fundamental humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality, and independence and has proven to be an opportunistic and obsequious entity masquerading as a humanitarian organization," CCR asserted. "Since the start of its operations in late May, at least 1,400 Palestinians have died seeking aid, with at least 859 killed at or near GHF sites, which it operates in close coordination with the Israeli government and U.S. private military contractors."
One of those contractors, former U.S. Army Green Beret Col. Anthony Aguilar, quit his job and blew the whistle on what he said he saw while working at GHF aid sites.
"What I saw on the sites, around the sites, to and from the sites, can be described as nothing but war crimes, crimes against humanity, violations of international law," Aguilar told Democracy Now! host Amy Goodman earlier this month. "This is not hyperbole. This is not platitudes or drama. This is the truth... The sites were designed to lure, bait aid, and kill."
Israel Defense Forces officers and soldiers have admitted to receiving orders to open fire on Palestinian aid-seekers with live bullets and artillery rounds, even when the civilians posed no security threat.
"It is against this backdrop that [President Donald] Trump's State Department approved a $30 million United States Agency for International Development grant for GHF," CCR noted. "In so doing, the State Department exempted it from the audit usually required for new USAID grantees."
"It also waived mandatory counterterrorism and anti-fraud safeguards and overrode vetting mechanisms, including 58 internal objections to GHF's application," the group added. "The Center for Constitutional Rights has submitted a [Freedom of Information Act] request seeking information on the administration's funding of GHF."
CCR continued:
The letter to Jennings opens a new front in the effort to hold GHF accountable. The Center for Constitutional Rights letter provides extensive evidence that, far from alleviating suffering in Gaza, GHF is contributing to the forced displacement, illegal killing, and genocide of Palestinians, while serving as a fig leaf for Israel's continued denial of access to food and water. Given this, Jennings has not only the authority, but the obligation to investigate GHF to determine if it abused its charter by engaging in unlawful activity. She may then file suit with the Court of Chancery, which has the authority to revoke GHF's charter.
CCR's August 5 letter notes that Jennings has previously exercised such authority. In 2019, she filed suit to dissolve shell companies affiliated with former Trump campaign officials Paul Manafort and Richard Gates after they pleaded guilty to money laundering and other crimes.
"Attorney General Jennings has the power to significantly change the course of history and save lives by taking action to dissolve GHF," said CCR attorney Adina Marx-Arpadi. "We call on her to use her power to stop this dangerous entity that is masquerading as a charitable organization while furthering death and violence in Gaza, and to do so without delay."
CCR's request follows a call earlier this month by a group of United Nations experts for the "immediate dismantling" of GHF, as well as "holding it and its executives accountable and allowing experienced and humanitarian actors from the U.N. and civil society alike to take back the reins of managing and distributing lifesaving aid."
"The process has been completely captured by swarms of fossil fuel lobbyists and shamefully weaponized by low-ambition countries," said the CEO of the Environmental Justice Foundation.
Multiple nations, as well as climate and environmental activists, are expressing dismay at the current state of a potential treaty to curb global plastics pollution.
As The Associated Press reported on Wednesday, negotiators of the treaty are discussing a new draft that would contain no restrictions on plastic production or on the chemicals used in plastics. This draft would adopt the approach favored by many big oil-producing nations who have argued against limits on plastic production and have instead pushed for measures such as better design, recycling, and reuse.
This new draft drew the ire of several nations in Europe, Africa, and Latin America, who all said that it was too weak in addressing the real harms being done by plastic pollution.
"Let me be clear—this is not acceptable for future generations," said Erin Silsbe, the representative for Canada.
According to a report from Health Policy Watch, Panama delegate Juan Carlos Monterrey got a round of applause from several other delegates in the room when he angrily denounced the new draft.
"Our red lines, and the red lines of the majority of countries represented in this room, were not only expunged, they were spat on, and they were burned," he fumed.
Several advocacy organizations were even more scathing in their assessments.
Eirik Lindebjerg, the global plastics policy adviser for WWF, bluntly said that "this is not a treaty" but rather "a devastating blow to everyone here and all those around the world suffering day in and day out as a result of plastic pollution."
"It lacks the bare minimum of measures and accountability to actually be effective, with no binding global bans on harmful products and chemicals and no way for it to be strengthened over time," Lindebjerg continued. "What's more it does nothing to reflect the ambition and demands of the majority of people both within and outside the room. This is not what people came to Geneva for. After three years of negotiations, this is deeply concerning."
Steve Trent, the CEO and founder of the Environmental Justice Foundation, declared the new draft "nothing short of a betrayal" and encouraged delegates from around the world to roundly reject it.
"The process has been completely captured by swarms of fossil fuel lobbyists and shamefully weaponized by low-ambition countries," he said. "The failure now risks being total, with the text actively backsliding rather than improving."
According to the Center for International Environmental Law, at least 234 fossil fuel and chemical industry lobbyists registered for the talks in Switzerland, meaning they "outnumber the combined diplomatic delegations of all 27 European Union nations and the E.U."
Nicholas Mallos, vice president of Ocean Conservancy's ocean plastics program, similarly called the new draft "unacceptable" and singled out that the latest text scrubbed references to abandoned or discarded plastic fishing gear, commonly referred to as "ghost gear," which he described as "the deadliest form of plastic pollution to marine life."
"The science is clear: To reduce plastic pollution, we must make and use less plastic to begin with, so a treaty without reduction is a failed treaty," Mallos emphasized.