From the Left
/Politics
Trump Serves Revenge, Dares Senate to Defy
"Julius Caesar did not seize power; the Roman Senate ceded power to Caesar." -- Sen. Robert C. Byrd
Let that be a lesson to us from the West Virginian's grave.
Donald Trump promised to be a dictator on day one. Yet we missed his meaning: the first day after the election. Right away, we felt the president-elect's revenge, blowing in on the ...Read more
Four Horsemen Rode in on Election Day
The biblical Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse thundered in on Election Day.
Almost as if they conspired to make now-President-elect Donald Trump win, two are Democrats and two are Republicans. The four played distinct roles in a tragedy of Shakespearean proportions.
The first Horseman is, of course, President Joe Biden, like aged King Lear ...Read more
A Long Time Comin': On History's Clock
Keep the faith, my friends and fellow Americans. The election shall deliver a verdict soon on the national soul-searching that could change our lives -- and the laws we live by.
All know it. Everything is on the line. History's clock falls back if we fail.
Women and children would be first overboard, to have their freedom and future darkened...Read more
Keeping the Faith in America
WASHINGTON -- Greetings from riding shockwaves in the nerve center of the free world.
Bleak fury is passed around like the plague here since The Washington Post's owner, billionaire Jeff Bezos, nixed its endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris.
This column before Election Day is filled with foreboding.
Then came former President Donald ...Read more
The Best Day of Trump's Life
The simple truth about Jan. 6: The mob attack on the Capitol was the best day of Donald Trump's life.
Before you cast your ballot for president, you need to know that. And it's my fate to tell the tale again.
Trump loved every moment of the deadly riot, which is why he refused to call off the rampage for three hours and counting.
Look, what...Read more
Waves and Walls Higher for Harris' Catwalk
Since crossing the Golden Gate Bridge running away from a wrecked home, I've taken to life on my own. I come and go as I please. I pursue plans and projects to my heart's content and can hear myself think.
Then when Girlfriend -- my cat -- came into my life, it seemed complete. The gray tabby seemed the perfect amount of company. She's gone ...Read more
A Political Day in Court
Election 2024 is certainly as classic an American courtroom drama as sure as "Twelve Angry Men."
The contrast, nay contradiction, between the two leading witnesses could not be clearer.
Speaking of angry men, one star witness in the witness box seems to swim in the spittle of his own outbursts of outrage. He is a 78-year-old man, but nobody ...Read more
Election Roundup: Painting the House Blue, Harris in White
On Election Day on Nov. 5, I can say with some certainty: The House of Representatives will go from a Republican to a Democratic majority.
A blue House matters, because the speaker's gavel will belong to Rep. Hakeem Jeffries of New York on the early January day the electoral count is certified by the House and Senate.
Last time, as you ...Read more
A Place That Feels Like Family
WASHINGTON -- When you sit down at Ben's Chili Bowl, cofounder Virginia R. Ali is apt to greet you and tell you she is glad you're here.
If you're lucky, she'll tell stories of her life that intersect with every chapter of the city since 1958, the year she and her late husband opened the restaurant's doors in a segregated section in the old ...Read more
The Fall of Donald Trump
It's over for you, Donald Trump.
America can't go on like this -- don't you feel it too? The breaking point came during the debate with Kamala Harris. After nine years, your dangerous duel with democracy is done.
Something to do with Haitian immigrants in Ohio eating cats and dogs was a bridge too far even for your ugly dark vision. The ...Read more
A Scorching Political Summer -- Not Over Yet
WASHINGTON -- "Summer's lease hath all too short a date," wrote Shakespeare, but the Bard didn't know what the summer of '24 had in store.
The cicadas are still singing, but they won't be for long. The days are getting shorter, the nights fall faster. And the garden knows it; the last batch of zinnias displayed its colors, and the gold black-...Read more
Arlington: No Place for Traitors to Feel at Home
History repeats itself: first as tragedy, second as farce. That's what the German philosopher said.
Lawless former President Donald Trump is breaking this rule in two, as he does for every other. For him, it's history as farce first, tragedy second. His illegal campaign stunt at Arlington National Cemetery is high tragedy playing out on the ...Read more
Harris Breaking History: Women Take Center Stage
CHICAGO -- The poet Carl Sandburg's "City of the Broad Shoulders" lifted Kamala Harris up, making the vice president the frontrunner in the race for president.
Harris hit all her notes, personal and political, in a near-perfect speech to introduce herself to the American public. She met the moment at the Democratic convention.
Who says joy ...Read more