Feeling uneasy, even depressed about the new administration as President Trump deports immigrants to Colombia and calls on federal employees to “snitch” on colleagues promoting DEI? If so, you probably identify most with this, the left column, or with Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay, who comments from his never-MAGA point-of-view in the right column.

If you are a pro-MAGA conservative, you are welcome here as well. You should be reading comments and commentary in this left column. That’s what The Hustings is for: Free, open and civil discussion of political news/aggregate in the center column without echo chambers and we invite you to comment, whether as a therapeutic method of dealing with, or as a celebration of, the return of President Trump. Read the whole page and you will not be subject to “silo” news and commentary like the echo chambers forced by social media sites at X/Twitter, Bluesky, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok & etc. that show you facts and opinions only from those you follow. 

Please be sure to read today’s right column for a roundup of recent center-column news/aggregate/analysis and for left and right commentary on the same.

Add your civil COMMENTS with an email to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings in the subject line (whether you are left or right does not have to match your opinion on a particular issue).

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MONDAY 1/127/25

80 Years – World leaders including Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Polish President Andrzej Duda gathered Monday with survivors for the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the World War II concentration camp in Auschwitz/Burkenau, where Nazis killed 1 million Jews. Politicians have not been invited to speak, (per Newsweek) as organizers instead chose to focus on the observance and testimonies of the survivors, youngest of whom are in their 80s.

TUESDAY 1/28/25

Retribution On – Acting Attorney Gen. James McHenry has issued letters firing more than a dozen Justice Department officials who investigated Donald J. Trump during the Biden administration, Fox News reports. 

“Today, Acting Attorney Gen. James McHenry terminated the employment of a number of DOJ officials who played a significant role in prosecuting President Trump,” a Justice Department official told Fox News Digital. “In light of their actions, the Acting attorney general does not trust these officials to assist in faithfully implementing the president’s agenda.”

The sackings are “consistent with the mission of ending the weaponization of government,” the official told Fox News Digital.

NPR reports there is no known precedent for such action and that as longtime civil servants the sacked DOJ officials could sue the federal government.

--TL

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MONDAY 1/27/25

[Read our (free) Substack newsletter here.]

One Week Closer to Authoritarianism? --President Trump was not, despite what he had quipped he would be in a conversation with Sean Hannity more than a year ago, a “dictator” for Day One. But he spent the first week of his second term consolidating his power, perhaps most acutely with his late-Friday firing of up to 17 inspectors general who investigate waste, fraud and abuse, including for the Pentagon, State Department, Veterans Affairs and the Interior, USA Today reports.

So much for draining the swamp.

Friday night usually is when such news is made to be lost in a weekend of NFL games and movie premiers, but this time it was simply part of the Trump firehose-full of executive orders and presidential comments, including the comment in which he called into question the future of the Federal Emergency Management Administration. 

Lest firing inspectors general or killing off FEMA could become the lead issues for Sunday morning shows, Trump on Saturday floated a proposal that in light of the ceasefire just begun, Palestinians should vacate Gaza. The president suggested the move could be “temporary or long term,” according to The Wall Street Journal, though it’s a good bet that his close ally, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, would much prefer the long-term solution.

“It’s literally a demolition site right now,” Trump said of Gaza. “So, I’d rather get involved with some of the Arab nations, and build housing in a different location, where they can maybe live in peace for a change.”

Meanwhile in Colombia, left-wing President Gustavo Petro turned back two US military airplanes from Washington carrying deported immigrants, calling the action “degrading.” Trump immediately retaliated by threatening 25% “emergency” tariffs and a travel ban aimed at Colombian officials, Semafor reports. Such a tariff would have affected 11,000 Colombian imports, including coffee and flowers, but Petro has since capitulated to The Art of the Deal and now will allow US airplanes full of deported immigrants to land, NPR’s Morning Edition reported Monday.

In his analysis of Trump’s first week back behind the Resolute Desk, The New York Times’ Peter Baker suggests that Trump’s policy U-turns do not necessarily violate presidential standards. 

“Any time a president from one party takes over from one of the other,” Baker writes, “the shifts in policies can be head-snapping, and Mr. Trump has been particularly aggressive in reversing the country’s direction ideologically and politically.”

For populist-conservatives looking to make America great again, Trump in his second term has made quick work reaching toward the goal. For progressives, the “one step forward, one step back” of Obama-Trump-Biden-Trump amounts to the sort of zero-sum gain Democrats could find themselves making for decades to come.

Appointees are a go … In case you missed it, the Trump White House began its weekend late last Friday confident it would get the cabinet it wants. Most important was the Senate’s 51-50 confirmation of former Fox & Friends Weekend host Pete Hegseth as Defense secretary, with Vice President Vance casting the tiebreaker. In addition to Sens. Lisa Murkowski’s (R-AK) and Susan Collins’ (R-ME) “nay” votes, one other Republican senator indicated he won’t fall in line with every party line vote: Mitch McConnell, of Kentucky, who stepped down as minority leader last year and has not indicated whether he will run for re-election again in 2026. 

That’s probably what it takes for the former Senate majority leader who paved the way for Trump’s three Supreme Court appointments, then accused Trump of provoking the January 6th Capitol attack to deal with likely MAGA retribution in Kentucky’s 2026 midterm primary election.

Saturday the Senate confirmed South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem as secretary of Homeland Security by a 59-34 vote.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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MONDAY 1/27/25

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

During the Donald Trump Q&A with a suite of bankers at the World Economic Forum in Davos (he was in the U.S.; they weren’t), there were a number of comments made by the president that were they said by any other president would trigger warning sirens.

Know that these quotes are taken from the official White House transcript.

In response to a question regarding the EU regulatory regime, Trump talked about “a big project in Ireland” that he worked on during his “beautiful private life.” He said that when he learned that there would be a years-long delay to getting approval for his application from the EU:

“I realized right then, that’s a problem, and I didn’t even bother applying to do it, and — or if I did, I pulled it very quickly.  I don’t wa- — I have to be very accurate, because I don’t want to be criticized --  ‘He did apply, actually.’  No, I want to be very accurate.  

So, I don’t think I did, but if I did, I pulled it very quickly.”

He applied. No he didn’t apply. He might have applied. If he did apply, then he pulled it.

Now one might give him a pass because this happened when, he said, “I had a nice, simple life. You knew that.”

So he might not remember. (Who, incidentally, knew he had “a nice simple life”?)

But why use something he wasn’t clear about as an example?

And should a president, on a global stage, show his inability to, well, know what he’s talking about?

He then launched into a pout about the EU: “the EU treats us very, very unfairly, very badly. . .[E]ssentially, they don’t take our farm products and they don’t take our cars. Yet, they send cars to us by the millions.”

Let’s see. The EU buys some $10 billion in agricultural exports from the U.S.

Not nothing by any measure.

“They don’t take our cars.”

Let’s see. BMW builds its SUVs in South Carolina and ships them to Europe.

Ford has factories in Germany, Spain and Romania, so “They” are taking products from a US brand.

And, oh, his pal Elon’s Tesla Model Y was the eighth best-selling vehicle in the EU in 2024.

Then there’s this:

“They put tariffs on things that we want to do, like, for instance, I think they actually — in terms of these are noneconomic or nonmonetary tariffs, and — and those are very bad, and they make it very difficult to bring products into Europe, and yet they expect to be selling and they do sell their products in the United States.”

As the kids might put it: WTF?

During a discussion about energy, he got back to something that we haven’t heard about for a long time: “Good, clean coal.”

There is no such thing as “clean coal.”

At least not in the real world.

He criticized the “Green New Deal.” It is worth noting that the Green New Deal isn’t law, it was a resolution introduced by Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and Senator Edward Markey (D-MA).

Trump:

“I mean, the Green New Deal was such a total disgrace — what — what — how that was perpetrated.  And it was conceived of by people that were average students — less than average students, I might add — and never even took a course in energy or the environment.”

Again: the President of the United States demeaning people because of their educational attainment. That’s a serious rhetorical move?

Consider: he has a B.S. in Economics. Ocasio-Cortez has a B.A. in International Relations and Economics. Markey has B.A. in Political Science and a J.D.

The people he criticizes are above average.

And how many courses in “energy or the environment” has he taken.”?

Then he moved on to criticizing Canada:

“We have a tremendous deficit with Canada.  We’re not going to have that anymore.  We can’t do it.  It’s — it’s — I don’t know if it’s good for them.  As you probably know, I say, “You can always become a state, and if you’re a state, we won’t have a deficit.  We won’t have to tariff you, et cetera, et cetera.” 

“But Canada has been very tough to deal with over the years, and it’s not fair that we should have a $200 billion or $250 billion deficit.  We don’t need them to make our cars, and they make a lot of them.  We don’t need their lumber because we have our own forests, et cetera, et cetera.  We don’t need their oil and gas.  We have our — we have more than anybody.”

Actually, the trade deficit is about 25% of his lowest estimate. Some $45 billion. But it doesn’t matter. He can just make it up.

And why the deficit?

Mainly because the US buys lots of oil from Canada.

We do need their oil and gas.

And there’s something about the need that has nothing to do with what is happening north of the border but south of it: refineries in the US have been built to process the sour, heavy crude that comes from Canada. They just can’t presto-change-o switch to other types of oil.

We also need their electricity: 1.5 million US homes are supplied with electricity from Ontario.

Then after talking briefly about Mexico he swerved to “honestly, good things are going to happen for the world, and good things are going to happen for the people that are dealing with us — allies and beyond allies.”

“Beyond allies”?

After making that statement he said:

“One thing — very important — I really would like to be able to meet with President Putin soon and get that war end — ended, and — and that’s not from the standpoint of economy or anything else.  It’s from the standpoint of millions of lives are being wasted.  Beautiful, young people are being shot in the battlefield.  You know, the bullet — a very flat land, as I said, and the bullet goes — there’s no — there’s no hiding.  And a bullet — the only thing going to stop the bullet is a human body.  And you have to see — I’ve seen pictures of what’s taken place.  It’s a carnage.”

That defies analysis.

This is, again, the President of the United States speaking at one of the most consequential economic conferences on the planet. 

Macaulay is pundit-at-large for The Hustings.

_______________________________________________

What's Right -- Monday’s news/aggregate tackles the question of whether Donald J. Trump’s promise to Sean Hannity to be a dictator only on “Day One” is playing itself out as the 47th president races to wipe out any vestige of the Biden White House with stacks of executive orders signed with that fat Sharpie. 

Whether you object or you agree with Trump’s EOs and our center column news/analysis, we want to hear from you. Email your civil COMMENTS to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings – right, whether pro-MAGA or never-Trumper or anything in-between, or left, whether moderate liberal or Bernie Sanders/AOC-progressive or anything in-between – in the subject line.

Scroll down with the trackbar on the far right (not a political position in this case) to read other recent center-column news/aggregate/analysis and commentary from the right and left, including …

Strong reaction to Trump’s pardons of more than 1,500 January 6th insurrectionists, and general public opposition to release of the most violent of those convicted.

Right-column contributor Rich Corbett’s commentary above, “Pardons, Promises and Presidential Powers,” opposite Sharon Lintner’s left-column response, “Shocking FOP Support for Trump.”

In the center column: Was DOGE chief Elon Musk’s “salute” to Trump supporters a Nazi salute, or something more innocuous? 

Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay’s right column on the Trump inauguration; “Return of the Gilded Age?” opposite Hugh Hansen’s left column, “Inauguration to Avoid.”

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MONDAY 1/27/25

Commentary by Sharon Lintner

Looks like Trump's daily agenda will be nauseating me for some time to come. The latest gut wrenching move that has me terrified of what the future holds is the pardoning of people convicted in the US Capitol attack.

In September 2024, the Fraternal Order of Police announced that their members voted to endorse Donald J. Trump for president. 

I was shocked by their decision to endorse a man who is a convicted felon, a man who vowed to pardon those who engaged in assaults on fellow officers January 6, 2021. 

In an attempt to find out if our local police force participated in the decision or vote to endorse Trump, I contacted the FOP, but I received no answer. 

The police are public servants and should remain politically neutral. In our small town, taxpayers finance a $4-million per year police force that's paid for by people from all political parties, not just Republicans. 

It not only angers me, it scares me that my money is funding a force which could openly support a man who has repeatedly encouraged violence. 

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FRIDAY 1/24/25

Democrats are taking a hard line on President Trump’s near-blanket pardon of more than 1,500 rioters convicted for the January 6, 2021, attack on the United States Capitol, including Enrique Tarrio of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes. Republican reactions are mixed, with House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) asserting that it’s the president’s right to sign clemencies and deflecting toward former President Biden’s last-minute pardons of family members The Hill reports.

In this edition, contributors Sharon Lintner and Rich Corbett offer their opinions on this controversial issue, in the left and right columns, respectively. To submit your COMMENTS email editors@thehustings.news and please use the subject line to indicate whether you lean left or right, so we may post those comments in the proper column.

Polls on the pardons … Latest NPR/PBS News/Marist poll finds 62% disapprove of Trump’s pardons of January 6th rioters, though 64% of Republicans in the poll approve. A Fabrizio, Lee & Associates/GBAO poll for The Wall Street Journal reports that 57% are opposed to the pardons.

While Trump’s actions have a substantial list of Republican supporters in the House, it’s far from unanimous. Rep. Jay Obernolte (R-CA) said he does not agree “with the pardons of people that committed violence or even damage to property. If you climbed in through a window, I think probably you knew what you were doing was against the law. And I don’t think it was appropriate to pardon them.” (Per The Hill.)

NPR interviewed Pamela Hemphill, 71, who was an ardent Trump supporter in 2020 when she participated in the insurrection. But she has turned down clemency for her conviction in storming the halls of Congress that day. 

“I broke the law that day, period,” she told All Things Considered. “Black and white. I’m not a victim. I’m a volunteer.” Hemphill added that accepting Trump’s pardon “would be a slap in the face to Capitol police officers, to the rule of law and to our whole nation.”

•••

It’s the Constitution, Stupid – In other Week 1 Trump 47 news, Federal District Judge John C. Coughenour signed a restraining order to block for 14 days President Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship for babies born on US soil. Ruling by the judge, who was appointed to the bench by President Reagan, sides with a lawsuit by Washington, Arizona, Illinois and Oregon to block the EO (per The New York Times). 

“This is blatantly an unconstitutional order,” Coughenour said in his ruling. Directed to Trump administration attorneys, the judge continued; “Frankly I have difficulty understanding how a member of the bar would state unequivocally that this is a Constitutional order. It just boggles the mind.”

•••

Hegseth Rising – Former Fox & Friends Weekend host Pete Hegseth appears headed for confirmation as President Trump’s pick for defense secretary after the Senate voted 51-49 Thursday to end debate on his nomination, according to The Hill. Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski (AK) and Susan Collins (ME) joined all Democrats in voting against the procedural move, and Murkowski, at least, has vowed to oppose Hegseth in the full Senate vote.

Trump can afford to lose three Republicans in the vote, expected Friday.

The canary will live … Hegseth was considered the test-case among Trump’s most controversial cabinet member choices, meaning that if he can win Senate confirmation, pretty much anyone else can. But hold on -- both Republicans and Democrats appear skeptical about the president’s nomination of former Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., to be Health and Human Services secretary, The Hill reports. 

Some Republicans are concerned about RFK Jr.’s support of abortion rights, while Democrats do not want an anti-vax, anti-fluoride HHS secretary (per The Hill). Meanwhile, there is some bi-partisan opposition to Trump’s nomination of former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) to become director of national intelligence, Semafor reports.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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FRIDAY 1/24/25

Commentary by Rich Corbett

Presidential pardons serve as a profound exercise of executive clemency, often reflecting the incumbent’s values and political commitments. Both President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden have utilized this power in ways that caused most law-abiding citizens to question, “where does the power to pardon end?”

During his 2024 campaign, President Trump pledged openly that he would pardon individuals convicted in connection with the January 6, 2021, Capitol attack. Fulfilling this promise, on January 20, 2025, he issued pardons for approximately 1,500 individuals involved in the events of that day. Many were peaceful protestors who likely merely trespassed the Capitol grounds, while others were convicted of assaulting law enforcement officers. The latter receiving the pardons were met with significant criticism from both political parties. 

In contrast, President-elect Biden made a point when talking with CNN’s Jake Tapper about the possibility of then-President Trump making preemptive pardons for his adult children; “You’re not going to see our administration take that kind of approach to pardons.”

However, following the 2024 election, Biden issued a pardon for his son Hunter, after previously stating that he would not, and then in his final hours in office he issued preemptive pardons to several family members, including his siblings and their spouses, along with preemptive pardons for several high profile public figures who might be targets of prosecution. 

President Trump’s mass pardons of January 6 participants underscored his allegiance to his supporter base, but attracted criticism from law enforcement and judicial figures. President Biden’s preemptive pardons of family members raise ethical questions about the appropriate use of executive clemency. Both presidents have many Americans, and hopefully their representatives, wondering if the pardon power is abuse of power, if broad preemptive pardons are even legal, or just how far-reaching a president’s power to pardon extends.

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FRIDAY 1/24/25

Contributor Comment: Going Indy

In the aftermath of this election, I find myself questioning the integrity of my own party. Why did I align with the Democrats to begin with? 

Beliefs which are important to me, such as serving the people through transparency, ethical actions and equality led me to register as a Democrat. 

Also, since Pennsylvania holds a closed primary, I felt forced into selecting a political party in order to completely participate in the voting process. 

Because of my recent disappointments with the Democrats, I'm contemplating changing my party affiliation to "independent" which means giving up my ability to vote in primary elections. 

In a most sickening turn, some of the politicians I voted for have now bowed to Trump. Their loyalty no longer lies with those who put them in office. Instead, they seek to gain favor from a convicted felon who has undermined the justice system. 

This country is very sick, I just hope it doesn't die. 

--Sharon Lintner 

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WEDNESDAY 1/22/25

Whatever DOGE chief Elon Musk intended with his ‘salute’ at a speech Monday at the Capital One Arena, right-wing extremists are embracing it, The Associated Press reports. Musk gave the “straight-arm gesture” after telling the crowd, “I just want to say ‘thank you’ for making it happen,” referring to Donald J. Trump’s election as president.

‘Golden Age’ Without Musk? – DOGE chief/Tesla/SpaceX/Starlink CEO Elon Musk reacted Wednesday to his snub as not being part of the announcement of a “$500 billion” investment in “artificial superintelligence” in US factories that would create 100,000 jobs for Americans by posting on his $44-billion X/Twitter investment, “They don’t actually have the money.”

Fair enough: The announcement took place at the White House with President Trump along with Softbank CEO Masayoshi Son – he of the “artificial superintelligence” quip – with Oracle’s Larry Ellison and Open AI’s Sam Altman. Politico’s afternoon newsletter, Digital Future Daily sorted out this story of how the technoligopoly has decided AI (and not coincidentally, crypto currency) is so very good for our future. 

It’s that Altman appearance that must have Musk most vexed. 

Musk was an early investor in OpenAI and alleges in a suit filed last summer that he had secured an agreement with the company and founders Altman and Greg Brockman, also named in the suit, that the company would remain a non-profit with an open code. Musk pulled out of OpenAI in 2018 claiming potential conflict-of-interest with Tesla and its self-driving technology. OpenAI last month announced a new structure to become a for-profit company, according to The Verge.

Early in the last administration, Musk was said to break from the Democratic Party because then-President Biden held an electric vehicle “summit” with new EVs from General Motors, Ford Motor Company and Stellantis (ex-Fiat Chrysler), but not Tesla. 

But Musk’s skepticism about the $500-billion AI deal is not unfounded. Shortly after Trump 45 took office in 2017, he touted a Foxconn plan to build an LCD screen-making plant in Racine County, Wisconsin that would create 50,000 jobs. Accompanied by then-Gov. Scott Walker (R) and then-House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI), Trump called it “the eighth wonder of the world.” (Foxconn had promised a $10-billion investment and 10,000 jobs.) 

Five years on, Wisconsin incentives have been cut to $80 million from an initial $2.85 billion, and it produces no phone screens, according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

But tech/internet-business journalist Kara Swisher said on CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360 Wednesday that Musk lashed out against the half-trillion-dollar announcement (coincidentally, just a few billion bucks more than his personal wealth) because “he is not part of it” and said the technoligopolists who appeared at the White House without him could raise that cash “in about four seconds.”

•••

Forty-six House Democrats joined Republicans Wednesday to pass the Laken Riley Act, 263-156, to impose more severe penalties on undocumented immigrants who commit crimes in the US. It is the first bill to come up for President Trump’s signature, CQ Roll Call reports. The Senate passed the bill last week.

The bill is named for Laken Riley, who at 22 was murdered last year by an undocumented immigrant who had been released after an arrest. After it is signed by the president, the bill will require the secretary of Homeland Security to issue detention for undocumented immigrants arrested or convicted for burglary, theft or shoplifting. An amendment by Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) added assault of a police officer to that list of crimes.

--TL

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WEDNESDAY 1/22/25

Keeping Up With Trump 47 – President Trump issued 26 executive orders in the first 24 hours according to Marketplace, in launching his agenda and reversing Biden administration policies as quickly as possible. Yes, it is difficult to keep up, but we will try as we remind you that you are invited to comment, whether as a conservative for the right column, or a liberal for the left column, with an email to editors@thehustings.news.

First up … Trump’s EO ending birthright citizenship has drawn lawsuits from Democratic attorneys general in 18 states, plus San Francisco and Washington, D.C., according to NPR’s Morning Edition

The AGs site Section 1 of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, which reads: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

“We’re the only country in the world that does it, you know,” Trump has countered. “And it’s just absolutely ridiculous. We’ll see. We think we have very good grounds.”

Not on Trump’s assertion that we’re the only country that does it. World Population Review cites 33 countries including the US, plus two territories that have jus soli, or birthright citizenship. Another 32 nations have some form of restricted birthright citizenship, the website says.

Ending DEI … Trump issued a memo placing employees in federal diversity, equity and inclusion programs on paid leave until 5 pm Wednesday, per NPR’s Morning Edition. Agencies have to noon Thursday Eastern time to report on their compliance to the Office of Personnel Management. Agencies must develop a “reduction-in-force action” against the employees, according to Trump’s memo.

Wait for the tariffs … Not so fast, but quickly enough for the president’s favorite word.

“We’re talking about a tariff of 10% on China based on the fact that they’re sending fentanyl to Mexico and Canada. Probably February 1 is the date we’re looking at. For Mexico and China we’re talking about approximately, approximately, 25%,” Trump told a press conference Tuesday, Politico reports.

•••

WHO’s Out First – About eight hours after President Trump was sworn in, he issued an executive order to withdraw the US from the World Health Organization, which will make it harder to fight the pandemic and undermine US standing as a global health leader, critics of Trump’s move told The New York Times

Trump cited WHO’s “mishandling of the COVID-19 pandemic,” the “failure to adopt urgently needed reforms” and a expensive membership payments, higher than what China pays. 

The withdrawal will leave the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention without access to global data such as the genetic sequence of the novel coronavirus China handed over to WHO in 2020. 

The upshot … So, continue to blame Trump 45’s problems dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, which certainly helped him lose re-election that year, on the WHO, which Trump 47 will likely need if/when there is another pandemic in the next four years?

•••

Meanwhile, in the Boardrooms – Business leaders are “scrambling” to sort out sweeping changes to tax, immigration, trade and energy policies brought on by President Trump’s flurry of executive orders, The Wall Street Journal reports. Among the scramble, JPMorganChase has set up a war room, law firm Fisher Phillips has created an immigration hotline to help its clients deal with potential workplace immigration raids and manufacturers and retailers have teams working to mitigate potential new tariffs. 

•••

Meanwhile, on the Pulpit – The inaugural prayer service at the National Cathedral is not normally a political event. But on Tuesday morning, Bishop Mariann Edgar Budde, leader of the Episcopal Diocese in Washington said, “I ask you to have mercy upon the people in our country who are scared now.”

As President Trump, Vice President Vance and family members looked on, Budde said, “There are gay, lesbian and transgender children in Democratic, Republican and independent families, some of who fear for their lives.”

Per The New York Times Budde continued that “the vast majority of immigrants are not criminals. I ask you to have mercy, Mr. President, on those in our communities whose children fear that their parents will be taken away, and that you help those who are fleeing war zones and persecution in their own lands to find compassion and welcome here.”

Later, from the White House, Trump told reporters, “I didn’t think it was a good service, no.”

•••

Replacing Vance – Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine (R) has appointed Lt. Gov. Jon Husted to replace Sen. JD Vance now that he is vice president, The Columbus Dispatch reports. Elon Musk’s junior partner in the non-governmental Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was reportedly interested in the appointment, but dropped out of contention and will run for Ohio governor in 2026, instead. 

Husted is expected to run for the Senate seat in the November 2026 elections, winner of which would serve the rest of Vance’s term, to 2028.

--Compiled and edited by Todd Lassa

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WEDNESDAY 1/22/25

Is President Trump running roughshod over the Constitution while scaring the bejesus out of businesses and corporations with impending tariffs and threats of factory, warehouse and farm immigration raids, or is he simply keeping the promises he made that earned him the popular vote and Electoral College victory last November?

You may have heard this before, but at The Hustings we welcome civil discourse from readers of all political stripes. 

Pro-MAGA as well as never-Trumper conservatives’ comments go in the right column. Moderate-left to Bernie Sanders-style democratic socialists’ comments got in the left column.

You read it all in one place – no echo chambers where you’re exposed only to pundits and writers with whom you agree.

Email your COMMENTS to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings in the subject line.

And don’t forget to subscribe for free to Substack on The Hustings.

Meanwhile, scroll down with the trackbar on the far right to read …

Pundit-at-Large Stephen Macaulay’s comments on Trump’s inauguration, “The Return of the Gilded Age?”, with comments by Hugh Hansen in the left column, lauding Michelle Obama and former Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) for skipping the event.

Scroll down further to read Macaulay’s comments on the inauguration balls’ musical acts, “That’s Entertainment,” with a counterpoint by Kate McLeod in the left column.

Scroll down yet further to Rich Corbett’s right-column commentary from before the inauguration on how this is a chance for political animals to “start with a clean slate” with the second Trump term. Sharon Lintner’s counterpoint is in the left column.

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WEDNESDAY 1/22/25

Commentary by Hugh Hansen

I salute Ms Obama and Ms Pelosi for following my lead and not attending.

I was sorry to end my Washington Post subscription, as prior to owner Jeff Bezos's capitulation I kind of preferred it to The New York Times.

Donald John’s verbal pronouncements seem so, so, so randomly connected to his next-day pronouncements that I haven’t the heart for tea leaf reading them anymore.

Wait until it’s on some sort of document necessarily shared with Congress, or particular federal bureaus/departments, then vomit, then fight or ameliorate it.

Email your COMMENTS to editors@thehustings.news and please indicate your political leanings in the subject line, so that we may place your comments in the proper column.

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TUESDAY 1/21/25

President Trump after his inauguration Monday pardoned 1,500 defendants of the January 6th attack of the US capitol, including rioters who attacked police. This included members of Oath Keepers and of Proud Boys, among them former national chair Enrique Tarrio, who was sentenced to 22 years for helping plot the insurrection, the AP reports.

By Todd Lassa

Donald J. Trump’s second official inauguration speech seemed a slight bit less-dark than it was eight years earlier, perhaps because it was held inside the Capitol Rotunda and thus no outdoor crowd for the new president to point to and declare the biggest ever in the history of inaugurations. Perhaps like the youngest of voters who have known little more than of Trump as the central political figure in their lives, we’re becoming accustomed to his style. Perhaps it was because Hilary Clinton laughed visibly when Trump declared he is renaming the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.” 

No mention so far of Greenland.

“The Golden Age of America begins right now,” Trump said, adding that the United States will “flourish and be respected all over the world. … I will, simply put, put America first.”

The US, he said, “will be far more exceptional than ever before.”

The new president said he would immediately remove the US from the Paris Agreement on climate change and end the “EV mandate” and allow you to buy whatever car you want to buy – including the internal combustion-powered ones that accounted for about 92% of the US market last year.

Like former Secretary of State Clinton, President Joe Biden stood behind Trump during the inauguration. He appeared alternately tired and bemused as Trump took the opportunity to paint the last four years under Biden’s leadership as having fallen so far it can’t get up – if not for its new, resurgent savior. 

“From this moment on, America’s decline is over,” Trump said. 

And there was the airing of grievances, as Trump claimed that “Over the past eight years, I’ve been tested and challenged more than any other president in history.” 

Adding “They tried to take my freedom and my life,” Trump concluded that the assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania,* pretty much assured his victory last November.

“I was saved by God to make America great again.”

In the closest Trump could come to JFK’s promise to put a man on the moon by the end of the 1960s, he said the nation would strive to “plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars …” a nod to his biggest benefactor, SpaceX/Tesla/Starlink CEO and X/Twitter owner Elon Musk’s favorite cause. 

After Joe and Jill Biden copter’d out, Trump visited the Capitol Visitor Center where he addressed the citizens who could not watch his inauguration from outside – this included Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R), on whom the president spent an inordinate amount of his 36 minutes there talking about plans for completing The Wall. 

The border is Trump’s number one issue, he said, not inflation.

“How many times can you say the price of an apple has doubled?” 

Though in later appearances Trump reiterated his promise to bring down prices, this seemed like another admission that slowing the rise of inflation, let alone reversing it, despite arguably being the major reason for his November victory, is a very difficult task best left to the Federal Reserve. 

The border will not be quite so problematic. Minutes after his inauguration, Trump’s officials shut down the mobile app CPB One that had allowed migrants to make appointments in order to enter the US through legal points of entry, The Hill reports.

*CORRECTION: This article initially misidentified the Pennsylvania town where there was an assassination attempt on Trump at one of his campaign rallies.

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TUESDAY 1/21/25

Commentary by Stephen Macaulay

Management consultant Tom Peters, co-author of In Search of Excellence, is credited with a phrase that is important in all walks of life:

“Under promise and over deliver.”

The book was published in 1989. It was, and is, one of the most influential business books of all time.

Consequently, it is a bit surprising that legendary business maven, and now president, Donald Trump seems to have missed it.

Or maybe he doesn’t believe it.

He opened his inaugural address:

“The Golden Age of America begins right now.”

Now maybe he is simply stating that he is going to bring back the Gilded Age, a period in the late 19th century that generated great wealth — for industrialists and entrepreneurs, like many of the tech bros that surrounded him on inauguration day.

There was, it should go without saying, rife corruption during the Gilded Age.

The poster boy was Boss Tweed, a political operative (and a Democrat) who was convicted to stealing millions of dollars from the people of New York City, who could ill afford it.

And there were abuses in terms of patronage. This means that government jobs 

weren’t given to those most qualified to hold them (i.e., people who could actually do the work), but to political supporters and friends. Sound familiar?

But there was another characteristic of the Gilded Age: Regular people didn’t prosper.

It is largely thought that there were two key issues that led to Trump’s election:

  1. The economy
  2. The southern border

The latter is being addressed — at least visually — pronto.

But the former is the tricky bit.

People voted because they think he can bring down prices of everyday items like eggs.

People as in the “regular people.”

The MAGA base.

I recently went to a local diner for breakfast. There was a sticker on the front of the menu stating that the price for all egg dishes are increased by $1 due to the hike of the price of eggs. And that wasn’t a trivial hike because that place had offered a $3 breakfast special.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the price of eggs has increased by 38% over the last 12 months.

And here is a bit of irony: a major cause was a pandemic. Bird flu.

Can we have much in the way of confidence that there will be a concerted effort to wipe out bird flu, or will it “just go away”?

One thing that Trump said that may come back to bite him was his description of the fires in California:

“Los Angeles, where we are watching fires still tragically burn from weeks ago without even a token of defense.

“They’re raging through the houses and communities, even affecting some of the wealthiest and most powerful individuals in our country, some of whom are sitting here right now. They don’t have a home any longer. That’s interesting, but we can’t let this happen. Everyone is unable to do anything about it. That’s going to change.”

Anybody who has watched the fires on a newscast has seen nothing but women and men busting their asses, spraying and digging and doing all possible activities to put out the horrendous fires.

“Without even a token of defense”? “Everyone is unable to do anything about it”? What about those brave first responders? Are they doing nothing?

People know that’s not the case. They probably have friends or relatives who put their lives on the line every day just like the fire service personnel in California.

And the comment about “some of the wealthiest and most powerful individuals in our country. . . .don’t have a home any longer.”

What about the regular people who have had their insurance canceled? 

Why doesn’t he care about them? Because they didn’t donate millions to him?

If the price of eggs doesn’t go down, if there are tariffs applied across the board that raise prices at everywhere from the Home Depot to Kroger, if mom starts having trouble getting heath care coverage, if. . . .

Well, those regular folks helped put him on that podium, and he’s not going to leave.

But unless he does something to address their day-to-day existence, he’s going to find the love he basks in gone.

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TUESDAY 1/21/25

Contributor Comment

He really lined them up this time. In wheelchairs, maybe? Bleah!

--Kate McLeod

(McLeod is a contributor to The Hustings’s left column. Her reaction to Stephen Macaulay’s right-column commentary first appeared in Substack on The Hustings.)

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Scroll down with the trackbar on the far right to read more Comments on Monday’s inauguration of Donald J. Trump as 47thpresident of the US. 

Let this inspire you to voice your opinions on Trump’s inauguration and/or other current news and issues. Whether you are moderate left, hard-progressive, MAGA populist-conservative or never-Trump conservative, we want to hear from you. Email your civilly stated comments to editors@thehustings.news and please indicated your political leanings in the subject line.

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MLK DAY 2025

By Todd Lassa

Welcome to a new America, something like the old America of 2017-21, itself a Make-America-the-‘50s again. Whether this makes you think of the1950s or the 1850s maybe depends on whether you’re celebrating this Monday as inauguration day or as Martin Luther King Jr. Day. 

The 45th president, Donald J. Trump, will be sworn in as the 47th president inside the Capitol Rotunda rather than outside on the Capitol steps, because of dangerously low temperatures expected for Monday. The move is a sort of make-America 1985 again. The last time the inauguration had to move indoors for weather was for President Ronald Reagan’s second one.

The new administration will begin quickly, as promised. 

Incoming border czar (a non-cabinet level title the Trump campaign successfully tied to Vice President Kamala Harris) Tom Homan told Fox News’ Jesse Watters Friday that arrests and deportation of undocumented-/illegal (there’s that anti- vs. pro-MAGA yin/yang again) immigrants begin Tuesday. 

Citing “four people familiar with the plan,” The Wall Street Journal reports that US Immigrations and Customs enforcement under the Trump administration will stage a large-scale immigration raid with 100 to 200 of its officers in Chicago after the new president begins his first full day. Trump has had a high-profile feud with Democratic Mayor Brandon Johnson, according to the report. 

Meanwhile, the Trump administration will quickly start slashing regulations across government “in a bonfire of red tape,” according to the WSJ, in a separate story. Congressional Republicans and DOGE want to cut 10 extant regulations for every new one. 

--Monday 1/20/25

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MLK DAY 2025

Who cares who performs at or adjacent to the swearing in?

By Stephen Macaulay

What is curious about the forthcoming Trump inauguration is that people are, preemptively, talking about the forthcoming Trump inauguration.

A big concern — someone might call it “HUGE — everyone says so” — is the donations, personal and corporate out of Silicon Valley. 

According to The Hill, Elon Musk contributed some $250 million to get Trump elected, so those $1-million inauguration donations from Cook, Zuckerberg, etc. seem like the kind of money found in a couch in the lounge at Mar-a-Lago on a slow night.

Even Peter Thiel’s reported $35 million seems somewhat small.

But let’s face it: Musk, Thiel and other tech bros contributed to Trump for ideological and/or economic (i.e., “good for business”) reasons.

It is important to them so they did, whether others agree with it or not.

But this donating to the inauguration seems odd, although it is probably more along the lines of “donating to one of the multitudinous parties that will be held in relation to the inauguration.” It’s not like the US government isn’t shelling out enough for the ceremony itself.

And let’s face it: the swearing in isn’t all that interesting unless something goes wrong (e.g., a strong gust of wind musses his elaborate coif) or if he uses a copy of his God Bless the USA Bible: Inauguration Day Edition, which you, too, can buy).

A more recent concern is with some of the entertainers who are going to perform.

No, not with Lee Greenwood of God Bless the U.S.A. fame. After all, Greenwood, 82, released that song in the spring of 1984, so the man isn’t likely to be having a whole lot more hits, and that single only reached number-seven on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in ’84. He probably needs all of the visibility he can get. (Like the inclusion of the lyrics of God Bless the U.S.A. in the aforementioned God Bless the U.S.A. Bible, $69.99.)

Similarly, Y.M.C.A. by the Village People was released in 1978, and disco anthem or not, there isn’t a whole lot in the way of revenue being generated. It is probably just as well that there is only one original member of the band remaining, Victor Willis, who is the policeman. Willis is 73. So he can probably dance more lithely to the song than 

Trump, but still. . . .

But then there’s Carrie Underwood. This one seems highly controversial.

Underwood became known after she won the fourth season of American Idol in 2005.

Who won American Idol in the third and fifth seasons?

Fantasia Barrino and Taylor Hicks.

Underwood probably knows that many of you didn’t know the answer to that question and so if she’s going to get some attention for playing at the Trump inauguration, as long as the reporting spells her name right that’s useful.

If we go back four years to the last inauguration, there were Lady Gaga, Jennifer Lopez and Garth Brooks, among other performers for Biden.

All of these performers’ careers survived, as did Biden survive his 2020 debate answer that included the recommendation that parents, for their children, should “play the radio, make sure the television — excuse me, make sure you have the record player on at night.” And that was just one “excuse me” away from “Victrola.”

But who knows? Maybe after the swearing in, people who aren’t at the events may open their Bibles — God Bless the U.S.A. Bible — either edition — read some of the Book of Exodus (the one that contains that list of 10 things) and realize that things like lying, slandering other people, and committing adultery are really quite bad, not things to be accepted or otherwise overlooked.

Macaulay is pundit-at-large. This commentary first appeared at Substack on The Hustings.

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MLK DAY 2025