“The power’s going out of Trump by the minute. You can just feel it oozing out.”
— James Carville, on The Daily Beast Podcast.
“The power’s going out of Trump by the minute. You can just feel it oozing out.”
— James Carville, on The Daily Beast Podcast.
Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-MA) will run for re-election to the House next year, forgoing a run for Senate and a challenge to incumbent Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA), the Boston Globe reports.
During a long phone call on Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked President Trump for more support in his push for a pardon from Israel’s president, Axios reports.
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Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth struck a defiant tone Tuesday, telling reporters during a Cabinet meeting that the military has “only just begun” sinking “narco-terrorists” to “the bottom of the ocean,” Axios reports.
Associated Press: Hegseth cites “fog of war” in defending follow-on strike in scrutinized attack on alleged drug boat.

“Speaker Mike Johnson said that Republicans will soon release a health care bill, but he doesn’t know what it will include,” Punchbowl News reports.
“Enhanced Obamacare premium subsidies expire at the end of this year. The House Republican leadership has been very frustrated that they are being blamed for the pending expiration, believing that it should be laid at Democrats’ feet — a quizzical position, to be clear.”
Said Johnson: “I can’t project in advance what that will be, because I don’t know what the consensus is in that room. I told everybody, we are going to respond.”
Rose Horowitch: “Accommodations in higher education were supposed to help disabled Americans enjoy the same opportunities as everyone else. No one should be kept from taking a class, for example, because they are physically unable to enter the building where it’s taught. Over the past decade and a half, however, the share of students at selective universities who qualify for accommodations—often, extra time on tests—has grown at a breathtaking pace…”
“The change has occurred disproportionately at the most prestigious and expensive institutions. At Brown and Harvard, more than 20 percent of undergraduates are registered as disabled. At Amherst, that figure is 34 percent.”
Said a professor at a selective university: “You hear ‘students with disabilities’ and it’s not kids in wheelchairs. It’s just not. It’s rich kids getting extra time on tests.”
Aaron Blake: “Amid growing signs that even some Republicans are starting to view Donald Trump as something of a lame duck, the president and his allies have apparently chosen Indiana to reassert his dominance of the party.”
“They’ve picked a fight over redistricting in the Hoosier State as the battleground to prove that Trump can still bend GOP politicians to his will. They want to force those lawmakers to pass a map that they’ve previously opposed that would give Republicans more winnable US House seats.”
“It’s a risky bet for Trump and a hugely symbolic clash.”
Pope Leo has said he believes the United States needs to find “another way” in handling the situation in Venezuela, warning against any military incursion and saying it would be better to pursue dialogue or apply economic pressure, CNN reports.
“The U.S. military would have committed a crime if it killed the survivors of an attack on an alleged drug boat,” the Associated Press reports.
“It doesn’t matter whether the U.S. is in ‘armed conflict’ with drug cartels as the Trump administration asserts. Such a fatal second strike would have violated peacetime laws and those governing armed conflict.”
Todd Huntley: “Basically, this is the one strike that we know about where even if you accept the Administration’s position that the United States is in an armed conflict with these drug cartels, this would still be unlawful under the laws of armed conflict, because the individuals were out of the fight and shipwrecked, and thus owed protection.”
Mark Nevitt: “The United States, which has military forces deployed around the globe, cannot build a safer world for its own service members by discarding basic laws of war. History shows that when America blatantly abandons humane norms and the law of war, it ultimately endangers its own people.”
Jack Goldsmith: “Surely the warrior ethos, whatever else it means, doesn’t require killing helpless men clinging to the burning wreckage of a blown-up boat.”
“The world economy has proven surprisingly durable in the face of President Trump’s trade wars, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said, upgrading its outlook for global and U.S. economic growth this year,” the AP reports.
“The 38-country OECD now forecasts that the world economy will grow 3.2% this year, down a tick from 3.3% in 2024 but an improvement on the 2.9% it had predicted for 2025 back in June.”
“The Trump administration has agreed to inject up to $150 million into a startup trying to develop more advanced semiconductor manufacturing techniques in the U.S., its latest bid to support strategically important domestic industries with government incentives,” the Wall Street Journal reports.
We’ve been watching Ken Burns’ latest, The American Revolution, and it’s extraordinary — maybe his best documentary yet.
Highly recommended.
The New York Times reviews American Canto by Olivia Nuzzi, which is being published amid a scandal over the author’s alleged romantic entanglements with politicians she covered.
“To paraphrase Britney Spears, a pop-culture touchstone for the author and fellow blond millennial: It’s not a tell-all, not yet a memoir. Chapterless and scattershot, it’s an attempted letter from Trump’s America in the style of a would-be Joan Didion…”
“Wafting and unfocused in a manner that makes you long for the sweet relief of a detailed policy paper, American Canto offers many scenes — a flag factory staffed by immigrants, an open highway, the Oval Office — but little sense.”
Rep. Tim Burchett (R-TN) said today’s special election in Tennessee’ 7th congressional district — which was redistricted after the 2020 census — should serve as a cautionary tale on how redrawing political maps can backfire, the Washington Post reports.
“I don’t think anything will pass without the president’s approval. There’s lots of ideas out there. Let’s see if we can’t put something together and take it to him.”
— Sen. Mike Rounds (R-SD), quoted by Punchbowl News, on extending expiring health care subsidies.
“President Trump’s advisers Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin to try to convince him to support the updated U.S. peace plan for Ukraine,” Axios reports.
“The meeting in Moscow comes after two weeks of intense diplomacy around Trump’s plan, including two rounds of negotiations between the U.S. and Ukraine. Putin has said Trump’s plan could be the basis for negotiations, but has suggested he’s unwilling to shift his hardline positions.”
President Trump formally pardoned former President Juan Orlando Hernández of Honduras on Monday evening, fulfilling a vow he had made days before to free an ex-president who was at the center of what the authorities had characterized as “one of the largest and most violent drug-trafficking conspiracies in the world,” the New York Times reports.
Taegan Goddard is the founder of Political Wire, one of the earliest and most influential political web sites. He also runs Political Job Hunt, Electoral Vote Map and the Political Dictionary.
Goddard spent more than a decade as managing director and chief operating officer of a prominent investment firm in New York City. Previously, he was a policy adviser to a U.S. Senator and Governor.
Goddard is also co-author of You Won - Now What? (Scribner, 1998), a political management book hailed by prominent journalists and politicians from both parties. In addition, Goddard's essays on politics and public policy have appeared in dozens of newspapers across the country.
Goddard earned degrees from Vassar College and Harvard University. He lives in New York with his wife and three sons.
Goddard is the owner of Goddard Media LLC.
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