Top Items:
Adam Jentleson / New York Times:
When Will Democrats Learn to Say No? — When Donald Trump held a rally in the Bronx in May, critics scoffed that there was no way he could win New York State. Yet as a strategic matter, asking the question “What would it take for a Republican to win New York?” leads to the answer …
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New York Times:
Democrats Draw Up an Entirely New Anti-Trump Battle Plan — The party's early preparations to oppose the next Trump administration are heavily focused on legal fights and consolidating state power, rather than marching in the streets. — Locked out of power next year …
Discussion:
RedState
Politico:
Elon Musk pushes Lutnick for Treasury — The billionaire Trump confidant posted an endorsement on his social media network on Saturday. — Elon Musk is backing Donald Trump's transition co-chair Howard Lutnick to lead the Treasury Department, touting the billionaire CEO of Cantor Fitzgerald …
Discussion:
CNBC, Bloomberg, Business Insider, Los Angeles Times, Reuters, Wall Street Journal and Washington Post
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Rachael Bade / Politico:
The ‘team of vipers’ is back — Cliff Sims wrote the definitive tale of Trump administration infighting. He's back, and fangs are out. — The last time Cliff Sims was this close to presidential power, he coined an indelible phrase for the cut-throat coterie around Donald Trump …
Discussion:
Raw Story
Dan Diamond / Washington Post:
Jay Bhattacharya, an NIH critic, emerges as a top candidate to lead the agency — The Stanford physician was excoriated by NIH's director in 2020 for his “fringe” ideas on covid. Four years later, he's poised for power in Trump's Washington.
New York Times:
Under the Chandelier at Mar-a-Lago, Trump Makes Picks at Breakneck Speed — President-elect Donald J. Trump is more contemptuous than ever of Washington expertise and determined to hire people based on loyalty. — President-elect Donald J. Trump chose his attorney general almost on a whim …
Discussion:
Raw Story and Wide World of News
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NBC News:
Democratic jockeying for the 2028 presidential election is already underway — Nearly two dozen Democrats are seen as possible contenders ahead of an invisible primary that will be shaped partly by Trump and his second term. — As the dust settles from Vice President Kamala Harris' defeat …
Discussion:
UnHerd
Rolling Stone:
Trump Allies Were Told to Stop Saying They'll Put Migrants in ‘Camps’ — “Apparently some people think it makes us look like Nazis,” says a close Trump ally … To be sure, Trump's migrant expulsion program, if he were to follow through with his plans to deport millions …
Discussion:
Digby's Hullabaloo
Brian Darling / The Hill:
Trump's recess appointment power is constitutional and vital to his agenda — President-elect Trump's victory is an end to business as usual in Washington. — His desire to use recess appointment authority is a clear expression of how serious he is about making the federal government responsive to the will of the American people.
Discussion:
Baltimore Sun, Bloomberg and The Guardian
Dominic Hauschild / The Times:
Trump's victory means war will end sooner, says Zelensky — Ukrainian president said he had had a ‘constructive’ conversation with the US president-elect and he had heard nothing ‘that goes against our position’ — President Zelensky has said the war in Ukraine will “end sooner” …
Discussion:
Reuters, Forbes, The Hill, The Guardian, The Sun, The Gateway Pundit, Al Jazeera, UPI, WSVN-TV, CBS News, News18, Bloomberg, Daily Mail, Power Line and Foreign Affairs
Ben Lefebvre / Politico:
Trump taps Chris Wright as Energy secretary — The oil executive and GOP fundraiser disputes the need to fight against climate change. — President-elect Donald Trump on Saturday named Chris Wright, head of a Denver-based oilfield service company who has disputed the role of climate change …
Beppe Severgnini / The Atlantic:
American Kakistocracy — Italy knows a thing or two about what the United States faces—but there are key differences between the two countries' experiences. — Why is a regular guy attracted to a billionaire candidate? It's simple: Because the candidate can play to people's fantasies.
Anna Gifty / Public Notice:
Kamala Harris's hidden barrier — Her rise and fall illustrates the Glass Cliff. … 🛣️ — Black women have long had to navigate being twice as good to get half the amount of credit. Kamala Harris's presidential run was evidence of this.
Discussion:
Teen Vogue
Julia Manchester / The Hill:
Lara Trump emerges as an early favorite to fill Rubio's Senate seat — Calls from Republicans are intensifying for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) to pick President-elect Trump's daughter-in-law Lara Trump to replace his secretary of State pick, Marco Rubio, in the Senate.
Discussion:
Florida Politics, Breitbart and Bloomberg