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Traitor to U.S. Democracy Continues to Occupy White House
July 13—The Social Democrat will continue to remind readers that something extraordinary—and extraordinarily bad—is happening in the United States of America: a confirmed traitor to American democracy has lied his way into the Oval Office. After traducing our democracy by instigating, and then pardoning, the perpetrators of an attempted coup d'etat aimed at preventing the orderly transfer of the presidential office to a duly elected successor, Donald Trump has attempted with every resource at his disposal, aided and abetted by a coterie of co-conspirators in the executive branch and Congress, to turn the United States into an elective dictatorship. His latest outrage: threatening to "revoke" the citizenship of comedian Rosie O'Donnell. Of course the president of the United States has no authority to revoke anyone's citizenship: as the old legal adage goes, in this democratic republic, the people can choose the government, but the government can't choose the people.We must not fall into the trap of treating, or speaking about, Donald Trump as if he is an ordinary president of the United States. Nor will TSD give the scoundrel the honor of the presidential title, preferring to refer to this traitor and incipient dictator in our midst as the "Diktraitor." For a fuller treatment of the Diktraitor's attack on our democracy, see TDS's latest "Social Democracy Outlook."
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Congress Passes, Diktraitor Signs Big, Ugly Bill
July 13—Aside from a few populist items you'd never expect to see in Republican legislation (limited taxes on tip income, government-funded $1,000 investment accounts for every newborn), the massive tax and spending bill which has been the focus of Congress's efforts for months is straight out of the standard right-wing playbook, with massive tax breaks for the wealthy and brutal cuts to social programs, notably Medicaid and food stamps. In fact, as this New York Times article explains, the bill is the most regressive tax proposal to pass Congress in 40 years: that is, taking from the poor to give to the rich. The non-partison Congressional Budget Office estimates that the bill may increase by 14 million the number of Americans without health coverage, belying the "false promise" of Medicaid work mandates. TSD thinks it's fine to demand that able-bodied and minded citizens work, but believes that government, if it is to impose such conditions, must make sure suitable jobs are available for those concerned.
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Diktraitor's Tariffs: Will He or Won't He?
July 13—The Diktraitor has again extended his deadline—this time until August 1—for our trading partners to reach trade deals with the U.S. or face unilaterally—and whimsically—imposed import duties. The most salient of these are a 25 percent levy on all imports from Japan and South Korea, our most staunch allies in the Far East; 30 percent on Mexico and the European Union, among our largest trading partners; a 50 percent levy on Brazilian imports, largely because the current Brazilian govenment is prosecuting former president and Trump acolyte Jair Bolsonor for involvement in an attempted coup d'etat aimed at overturning his 2022 election loss to Lula da Silva (sound familiar?); and a 30 tariff on all imports from our erstwhile friendly northern neighbor, Canada. TSD cannot imagine that these regressive taxes levied on American consumers will not significatly reduce working Americans' buying power.
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In an Era of Reactionary Power, Blue States Carry the Social Democracy Baton
July 13—The extreme nationalization of news can sometimes blind us to the fact that in our federal system, many of the most significant elements of government authority—education, police protection, health and safety laws, transportation, and much more—occur at the state level. And amid the gloom and doom of a national government under the authority of a traitor to our democracy, in league with a band of determined reactionaries in Congress, we can be cheered by looking at the many state-level social democratic initiatives which have not come to a screeching halt just because the Diktraitor controls the federal government. These include several measures to deal with the national crisis in affordable housing, in a red state such as Montana as well as in blue bastions like Oregon or the city of Chicago. Or those dealing with another national crisis—that of affordable child care. TDS is also heartened by a growing attention to one of our most cherished social democratic priorities: preparing our non-college-bound youth (and also the college-bound) for the workplace with apprencticeships and work-school partnerships, as evidenced by programs in Indiana, Texas, and elsewhere. Meanwhile a new Democratic policy group, States Forum, has arisen to share, promote and replicate social democratic successes at the state level.
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Supreme Court Allows Mass Fed Layoffs to Move Forward: For Now
July 13—In a narrow legal decision with nonetheless wide-ranging effects, the Supreme Court on July 8 reversed lower court rulings that had halted mass layoffs at multiple federal agencies. The Court ruled that an executive order directing federal agencies to downsize their workforces was not, in itself, likely to be unconstitutional. The Court stipulated, however, that specific downsizing plans can still be challenged in the lower federal courts (on grounds, typically, that such mass firings represent a failure to execute the laws, as passed by Congress, which both established those agencies and provide for their ongoing funding). Pending the adjudication of such cases, however, the Court ruled that the mass firings may resume.
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California Addresses Housing Crisis with Relaxation of Environmental Reviews
July 13—One of the most significant book events of the season has been Abundance, by New York Times columnist Ezra Klein and economist Derek Thompson. Klein, firmly on the left, argues with Thompson what has traditionally been a Republican talking point: that a plethora of unnecessary regulations impede economic vitality and contribute to such woes as the nation's serious shortage of available dwellings. The authors assert, among other things, that Democrats lose voters' allegiance when important infrastructure projects passed into law—such as those under the Biden administration's signature Inflation Reduction Act—take years getting off the ground because of red tape and overlapping environmental reviews. Taking a page from the Abundance playbook, Califormia lawmakers, with the support of Governor Gavin Newsome, have relaxed requirements for environmental review under the State's CEQA statute, considered one of most restrictive in the nation.
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UK Labour Party After One Year: Promise and Peril
July 13—A major event for social democracy occurred aproximately one year ago (July 4, 2023), when Britain's voters put the Labour Party in charge after 14 years of Conservative rule. The landslide electoral victory gave Labour an absolute majority in Parliament, and thus theoretical free reign to implement its social democratic philosophy in British governance. Things, however, have not been quite that simple. To assure success in its electoral campaign, Labour ruled out most new taxes and borrowing, leaving it with limited margins for social spending. And in spite of major social democratic initiatives—including, most significantly, a tangible reversal of the country's National Health Service's declining performance, and a program to deliver 1.5 million affordable housing units over the next ten years—the government has faced multiple revolts from its own left wing over attempts to trim around the margins of social spending on disability benefits, child tax credits and winter fuel subsidies. The Kier Starmer government, facing a British public as impatient and fickle as those of other modern democracies, is suffering woeful approval ratings. This AP article sums up Labour's freshman year; and Polly Toynbee, the incredibly astute Guardian columnist, names Labour's missteps while also giving credit where it is due. She pleads that the only egress from Labour's dliemmas is to forget its electoral promises and raise the revenue needed to make their social democratic visions a reality. Toynbee waxes particularly enthusiastic about Labour's recently rebranded initiative, Best Start, aimed at making sure all British children get a good start in life: a "moral mission," says Bridget Phillipson, secretary of state for education and labor in the Starmer government.
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Traitor to American Democracy Continues to Occupy White House
Jun 28—The Social Democrat will continue to remind readers that something extraordinary—and extraordinarily bad—is happening in the United States of America: a confirmed traitor to American democracy has lied his way into the Oval Office. After traducing our democracy by instigating, and then pardoning, the perpetrators of an attempted coup d'etat aimed at preventing the orderly transfer of the presidential office to a duly elected successor, Donald Trump has attempted with every resource at his disposal, aided and abetted by a coterie of co-conspirators in the executive branch and Congress, to turn the United States into an elective dictatorship. We must not fall into the trap of treating, or speaking about, Donald Trump as if he is an ordinary president of the United States. Nor will TSD give the scoundrel the honor of the presidential title, preferring to refer to this traitor and incipient dictator in our midst as the "Diktraitor." For a fuller treatment of the Diktraitor's attack on our democracy, see TDS's latest "Social Democracy Outlook."
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Social Security & Medicare Finances in Dire Condition
Jun 28—There is a large and dangerous time bomb ticking away beneath the flurry of the daily news cycle, and that is the impending bankruptcy of Social Security and Medicare. The Treasury Department's latest report projects that, if nothing is done, Social Security, which supports 68 million retired Americans, will by 2034 only be able to pay 81 percent of promised benefits to retirees. The "Big, (Not) Beautiful" budget bill now working its way through the Republican-controlled Congress does nothing to address this imminent disaster. Fixes are not difficult, and the issue should be a top priority, and a top talking point, for Democrats heading into the 2028 election cycle.
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Supreme Court Strikes Down Nationwide Injunctions
Jun 28—Among of spate of emergency rulings, as the Supreme Court wraps up its spring term, the most consequential is no doubt that striking down the use of nationwide injunctions by lower federal courts. Such injunctions, typically issued by federal district court judges, prevent the federal government from carrying out orders throughout the nation, not merely against the specific plaintiff in a case before the court. With the new Supreme Court ruling in effect, district courts will lose a major tool against unconstitutional orders issued by the Diktraitor, though class-action lawsuits, or appeals up to the Supreme Court itself, can provide work-arounds: albeit on a much slower timeframe than the immediacy of a nationwide injunction. And for a progress report on all the many lawsuits engendered by the "man who would be king," see the handy AP Trump Lawsuit Tracker.
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Diktraitor Largely Victorious as Supreme Court Ends Term
Jun 28—The Supreme Court ends its spring term this week with a spate of rulings favorable to the Diktraitor's regime in areas as diverse as immigration, transgender soldiers and the authority of the president to cashier heads of independent agencies established by Congress. The New York Times offers a handy checklist of cases won, or lost, by an administration determined to govern, as much as the courts will allow, by executive orders.
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Republicans "Big, (Not) Beautiful Bill" Coming into Clearer Focus
Jun 28—As Senate Republicans struggle to meet a July 4 soft deadline for okaying their version of the Trump-inspired comprehensive budget plan, the basic lineaments are coming into sharper focus. This anti-social democracy bill pairs large tax breaks for the wealthy with major cuts to social programs that help working Americans. This New York Times article offers a comparison of the House and Senate versions. And this Times article gives a highly detailed description of every provision in the Senate bill. Once again, Republicans belie their self-description as the party that believes in balanced budgets, as recent Congressional Budget Office projections forecast the bill to add trillions in federal debt over the coming decade. Meanwhile a new AP/NORC poll finds large majorities of Americans opposed to any cutbacks in the key safety net programs of Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps or Social Security.
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Court Strikes Down 10 Commandments in Louisiana Classrooms
Jun 28—A three-member panel of the federal Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled as unconstitutional a recently passed Louisiana law requiring the Biblical Ten Commandments to be posted in all public school classrooms. The Court ruled, unsurprisingly, that the law violates the U.S. Constitution's prohibition against the establishment of a state religion. Next door in Texas, where Governor Greg Abbott and Republican legislators appear to be concerned about the possible outbreak of "worshipping graven images" or "coveting one's neighbor's maidservant," a similar prevision has been promulgated. TSD can only hope, along with all other sane Americans, that the federal court system, up to the Supreme Court, will stand firm against this madness.
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Newsome's Housing Push Sidetracked by Labor Complaints
Jun 28—One of the most important social democratic issues facing virtually every region of the country is a lack of affordable housing for average working individuals and families, and nowhere is the problem more acute than in California. A plan developed by Gavin Newsome to kickstart home construction by relaxing some government regulations has run afoul of powerful California labor interests. Although we social democrats strongly support union representation for workers, Josh Barro addresses the question: are there times when a committed social democratic government has to learn to say "no" when organized labor's red lines stand in the way of the general welfare?
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Traitor to U.S. Democracy Continues to Occupy White House
Jun 15—The Social Democrat will continue to remind readers that something extraordinary—and extraordinarily bad—is happening in the United States of America: a confirmed traitor to American democracy has lied his way into the Oval Office. After traducing our democracy by instigating, and then pardoning, the perpetrators of an attempted coup d'etat aimed at preventing the orderly transfer of the presidential office to a duly elected successor, Donald Trump has attempted with every resource at his disposal, aided and abetted by a coterie of co-conspirators in the executive branch and Congress, to turn the United States into an elective dictatorship. We must not fall into the trap of treating, or speaking about, Donald Trump as if he is an ordinary president of the United States. Nor will TSD give the scoundrel the honor of the presidential title, preferring to refer to this traitor and incipient dictator in our midst as the "Diktraitor." For a fuller treatment of the Diktraitor's attack on our democracy, see TDS's latest "Social Democracy Outlook."
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Diktraitor Fancies a Praetorian Guard
June 15—Ancient Roman emperors relied on the Praetorian Guard, a cadre of loyal troops, standing always at the ready to serve the interests of the emperor's august person. When the Diktraitor staged a rally at Fort Bragg this past week, with army soldiers arrayed behind him like the chorus at a Broadway show, egging him on while he vilfied his political opponents, all that was lacking was a raised arm salute, á la Elon Musk, and a shouting in unison of "Hail, Caesar!" The United States is suffering the unfortunate consequences of having elected, to its chief executive office, a megalomaniac with little understanding, much less appreciation, for those fundamental concepts and protocols that have made America among the greatest nations that have ever existed. One of the most fundamental of those concepts is that the military stays out of politics, and last week's display at Fort Bragg was one of the most disturbing spectacles TSD has yet witnessed in this regime's sordid maraud over American history and traditions. As stated in the NBC article, "such overt political activity on a base is . . . inconsistent with military good order and discipline and," according to one expert, "a violation of military regulations." Retired judge advocate general (the Army's senior-most lawyer) Geoffrey DeWeese is quoted in the article as saying, "I would be cringing if I was a senior officer and it happend under my watch." A non-political military is an absolute bedrock principle of democracy, and should not be allowed to be compromised even in the smallest degree. The entire American public must know that our armed forces are here to protect and serve all of us, and never to give the impression that they are armed and trained so that they might protect and serve only some of us. A Fort Bragg spokesperson has said they are looking into the tacky and also unconstitutional sale of Trump political paraphernalia on the base, but none of the implicated brass have taken responsibility for this egregious breach of Army tradition and "good order.'
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Third-World Political Violence Comes to the U.S. - Blood on Trump's Hands
June 15—The kind of political violence heretofore associated with undeveloped democracies and South American oligarchies has come to the United States, in the sickening murder of a Minnesota House member and her husband, and the serious wounding of a Minnesota senator and his wife. Though the Diktraitor has issued the pro forma assertions of horror and regret, it is not to be wondered at that, after the demagogue-in-chief has portrayed Democrats as "scum" and "communist radicals" determined to destroy America, some unbalanced individual in a gun-happy nation would take the next logical step and eliminate the perceived danger. Reports indicate that the shooter left behind a list of dozens of politicians marked for assassination, all of them Democrats. At the risk of stating the obvious, this nation is heading for a very dark place if we cannot, all of us, begin to treat one another as valued fellow citizens rather than as enemies to be vanquished, silenced and demeaned (I exempt the Diktraitor and his co-conspirators from this injuntion, as they are proven traitors to American democracy). TSD's heart goes out to the orphaned young children of Minnesota Representive Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark, their family and friends, and to the gravely wounded Senator John Hoffman and his, also gravely wounded, wife Yvette.
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Diktraitor Regime U-Turn on Immigration in the Offing?
June 15—Those with a passing awareness of America's essential workforce have been speculating about the day when the hard-line immigration policies of Trump-whisperer Stephen Miller run up against stone, cold reality: the American agricultural sector, its housing sector, its hospitality sector, its food services sector and many others rely heavily on immigrant labor, much of it undocumented. In the face of heavy lobbying from agriculture interests, the Diktraitor has paused recently stepped-up raids against agricultural worksites, restaurants, hotels and packing plants. Can it be long before constuction interests, healthcare and building maintenance services get their dibs in, and the Diktraitor, who once again is facing the results of policy-making by an ignoramus with the impulse control of a 7-year-old, does a TACO and backs off? It is probably too much to hope for, but the TSD believes it just faintly possible that this brush with reality might induce the Diktraitor to spur his Republican lapdogs in Congress to finally pass meaningful immigration reform, providing legality and a path to citizenship to workers who play an integral part in our nation's prosperity.
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"Big, Beautiful" Budget Bill Rated by CBO, New York Times
June 15—Amid the weekly chaos of deportation raids and protests, the outbreak of war in the Middle East and despicable political murder in the United States, the big underlying story in U.S. politics is the fate of the Diktraitor's so-called "big, beautiful" budget bill, cleared by the House and now under deliberation in the Senate. The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office has concluded that the bill will add $2.4 trillion to U.S.'s already staggering debt over the next 10 years, while increasing by 10.9 million the number of our fellow citizens with no health insurance. The CBO also concluded that the Diktraitor's tariffs, in the highly unlikely scenario that they remain in their current form, could bring in $2.5 trillion over that same 10-year period, thereby making up for the budget shortfall. If the tariffs do remain in their most extreme, currently envisioned form (a 50 percent levy on all nations with whom the U.S. has a trade deficit), the import duties will constitute a huge tax imposed upon American working people in order to finance the budget bill's massive tax cut for the wealthy. Indeed, an analysis by the New York Times concludes that the bill, if passed as proposed, will be the most regressive legislation passed in decades, skewing wealth and income away from working Americans and toward the rich.
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U.S. House Passes First Rescission Bill
June 15—Defenders of constitutional order have, since the beginning of the Diktraitor's assault on the separation of powers, insisted that if the regime wishes to defund agencies or programs established and funded by Congress, Congress must do the defunding through the procedure known as "rescission." In a win for democracy, if not for either good sense or social democracy, the House of Representatives has taken an initial step towards playing by the rules, voting on June 12 to retract $9.4 billion in funding for foreign aid, public broadcasting and anti-AIDS programs. The measure is now in the hands of the Senate.
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Orwellian Moment: EPA Declares Coal Pollution Perfectly Safe
June 15—Following the standard Diktraitor's playbook of lie, lie and lie, the regime's EPA ("Environment Polluting Agency") has proposed a new rule stating that "emissions from fossil fuel-fired power plants do not contribute significantly to dangerous air pollution." And pigs can fly, the moon is made of green cheese, and Santa Claus will be arriving at your chiminey on December 24. AP News spoke to thirty actual scientists to clarify the enormity of this latest administration whopper.
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AP News' Diktraitor Lawsuit Tracker: a Great Tool
June 15—If your head is spinning with the barrage of lawsuits and counter-suits, court rulings and stays arising out of the Diktraitor's attempts to turn the United States into an elective dictatorship, you're not alone. Fortunately, a couple of great news organizations have created tools to keep track of the federal court system's confrontation with an unprecedented and near-constant adventure in executive overreach. TSD has been posting links to the New York Times' lawsuit tracker for some time. This week we add a tool on the AP News site, which has the advantage of providing a handy one-glance graphic showing the status of all lawsuits on any given topic: immigration, workforce and budget cuts, attacks on law firms, and etc.
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Has the Great Democratic "Un-awokening" Arrived?
June 15—The Social Democrat has long argued that the Democratic Party's knee-jerk attachment to extremist culture-war stances has scuttled any chances of the Party's capturing the kind of super-majority required to effectuate real change. Since the Party's devastating losses in November, more and more Party operatives are coming around to the same view. As long-time Democratic operative Adam Jentleson launches a new think tank to liberate Democrat messaging from niche causes that alienate the broad middle swath of American voters, Politico writers Adam Wren and Elena Schneider note signs of a great "un-awokening" among Democrat pols seeking a path out of the wilderness and toward the average American voter.
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UK Government Sets Social-Democratic Agenda for Coming Years
June 15—A key moment in the British political cycle is the government's annual "spending review." The 2025 review, the first by the UK Labour government installed a year ago, establishes major social democratic milestones after 14 years of conservative control, most especially in affordable housing, improvements in the National Health Service and education, and public transportation. With an eye on Ukraine, and the wider threat the Putin regime poses to Europe, significant increases in UK defense spending are also in the works.