Nov. 20, 2024
Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.
Biden attempts to lock in Ukraine war ahead of Trump inauguration, approving missile strikes into Russia as Moscow sends nuclear warning
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President Joe Biden is attempting to lock in U.S. support for Ukraine in its ongoing war against Russia following Russia’s Feb. 2022 invasion of Ukraine and more recently, the U.S. reelection of former President Donald Trump, who is set to take office Jan. 20, 2025, with Biden approving the use of U.S. missiles against targets directly in Russia on Nov. 17, as well as greenlighting what remains of the current tranche of military funding for Kyiv. In response, Moscow has changed its nuclear weapons doctrine on Nov. 19, alerting the West that any country used as a proxy to launch direct attacks into Russia will be considered an attack by that proxy’s supporting nuclear states. Undeterred, Ukraine launched the U.S. missiles, Army Tactical Missile System (Atacms), into Russia on Nov. 19 anyway, presumably with President Biden and NATO’s blessing. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky justified the missile strikes saying that actions speak louder than words, and that “Missiles speak for themselves.” In the meantime, President-elect Donald Trump, who openly campaigned against the war in Ukraine, has called for a negotiated, diplomatic settlement. In sum, in the middle of the presidential transition to Trump, who wants to negotiate an end to the war in Ukraine, Biden escalated the war. At the debate Trump predicted he could get it settled as President-elect, stating, “I will get it settled before I even become president. If I win, when I'm President-Elect, and what I'll do is I'll speak to one, I'll speak to the other, I'll get them together.” Now, with Ukraine actively shooting missiles the U.S. provided directly into Russia, it looks like Trump’s post-election peace plan might already be up in smoke. Was that the point?
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Democrats May No Longer Control Suburbs or Cities – Huge Regional Political Realignment After Election
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In 2020, the urban rural divide became increasingly apparent in national politics, with President Donald Trump and conservatives sweeping rural regions while Democrats largely dominated in cities and suburbs. This election year however, Trump’s strong inroads with traditionally Democratic groups, including Hispanics, Black voters, and young people, translated to an increase in support in the suburbs, and no loss among urban voters compared to 2020. In fact, Trump significantly improved on his margins in certain metro areas, like New York City and Detroit. Trump also won a plurality of white suburban men and women this year. Nationwide, Trump upped his share of the suburban vote by three points compared to 2020, enough to flip the suburbs into his win column. Trump earned 51 percent of suburban voters this year to Harris’ 47 percent, but lost suburbanites to Biden 50 percent to 48 percent four years ago. While Trump’s share of the urban vote remained the same this year as it did in 2020, a string of gains in metro areas hint at future opportunities for conservatives in cities that have faced economic hardship and rising crime.
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Urge Congress To Recess On Jan. 4 For Trump Nominees!
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Dozens of Senate Republicans voted to confirm the nominees who enacted the worst policies — the very policies Trump and Congressional Republicans campaigned against in 2024, and who after winning, Trump is now designating his nominees to undo and reform the broken federal leviathan that operates of its own accord in the administrative state when a Democratic President is not in the White House. These entrenched federal bureaucrats must now be removed from their positions insofar as they are nested in the federal workforce and who promise once again to obstruct the popular mandate of Trump, who literally dodged bullets and just won the popular vote and the Electoral College and who Congressional Republicans singularly owe their majorities to. As the saying goes, no good deed goes unpunished, and so it is with Senate Republicans, who are now refusing to confirm Trump’s nominees, including Trump’s choice of former U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz to Attorney General, and are threatening to torpedo the nominees, with no deference whatsoever to the executive to staff his Cabinet and inner circle so that he can actually enact the policies that he openly campaigned on. If these so-called moderate Senate Republicans have already made up their mind to obstruct President-elect Trump, then Congress can just save the pretense and go into recess on Jan. 4 so that when Trump is sworn in on Jan. 20, he can recess appoint his nominees and hit the ground running.
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Biden attempts to lock in Ukraine war ahead of Trump inauguration, approving missile strikes into Russia as Moscow sends nuclear warning
By Robert Romano
President Joe Biden is attempting to lock in U.S. support for Ukraine in its ongoing war against Russia following Russia’s Feb. 2022 invasion of Ukraine and more recently, the U.S. reelection of former President Donald Trump, who is set to take office Jan. 20, 2025, with Biden approving the use of U.S. missiles against targets directly in Russia on Nov. 17, as well as greenlighting what remains of the current tranche of military funding for Kyiv.
In response, Moscow has changed its nuclear weapons doctrine on Nov. 19, alerting the West that any country used as a proxy to launch direct attacks into Russia will be considered an attack by that proxy’s supporting nuclear states. Specifically, the executive order, archived by Web Archive and signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin, translated by Google, states, “Aggression by any state from the military coalition (bloc, alliance) against the Russian Federation and (or) its allies is considered as aggression of this coalition (bloc, alliance) as a whole…” and “Aggression against the Russian Federation and (or) its allies by any non-nuclear state with the participation or with the support of a nuclear state is considered as their joint attack.”
Additionally, the doctrine warns that “The conditions determining the possibility of using nuclear weapons by the Russian Federation” include “receipt of reliable information about the launch of ballistic missiles attacking the territories of the Russian Federation and (or) its allies” and “aggression against the Russian Federation and (or) the Republic of Belarus as participants in the Union State with the use of conventional weapons, creating a critical threat to their sovereignty and (or) territorial integrity…”
The doctrine also warns, “Nuclear deterrence is aimed at ensuring that a potential adversary understands the inevitability of retaliation in the event of aggression against the Russian Federation and (or) its allies.”
Those are “possible” triggers for the use of nuclear weapons by the Kremlin, and although it warns of the “inevitability of retaliation,” the document also states, “The decision to use nuclear weapons is made by the President of the Russian Federation.” So, the potential triggers are not mandatory and Putin alone might be the one to decide when an attack leads to “inevitable” retaliation.
Undeterred, with that predicate, Ukraine launched the U.S. missiles, Army Tactical Missile System (Atacms), into Russia on Nov. 19 anyway, presumably with President Biden and NATO’s blessing.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky justified the missile strikes saying that actions speak louder than words, and that “Missiles speak for themselves.”
In the meantime, President-elect Donald Trump, who openly campaigned against the war in Ukraine, has called for a negotiated, diplomatic settlement. In the Sept. 10 debate with now-defeated Vice President Kamala Harris, Trump blasted Biden’s no-contact-with-Putin strategy: “He hasn't even made a phone call in two years to Putin. Hasn't spoken to anybody. They don't even try and get it. That is a war that's dying to be settled.”
Trump predicted he could get it settled as President-elect, stating, “I will get it settled before I even become president. If I win, when I'm President-Elect, and what I'll do is I'll speak to one, I'll speak to the other, I'll get them together.”
Now, with Ukraine actively shooting missiles the U.S. provided directly into Russia, it looks like Trump’s post-election peace plan might already be up in smoke. Was that the point?
At the debate, Trump had also warned that the war could lead to nuclear holocaust: “That war would have never happened… And now you have millions of people dead and it's only getting worse and it could lead to World War 3. Don't kid yourself, David. We're playing with World War 3. And we have a president that we don't even know if he's -- where is our president? We don't even know if he's a president.”
To summarize, in the middle of the presidential transition to Trump, who wants to negotiate an end to the war in Ukraine, Biden escalated the war. Whether that strengthens Trump’s hand in the negotiation, or locks in the U.S. position as Congress will seek to require U.S. intervention as it did during Trump’s first term, particularly on the issue arming Ukraine, remains to be seen.
Last time, the issue of arming Ukraine was made infamous by the 2016 Russiagate scandal — the Democratic National Committee and the Hillary Clinton campaign paid former British spy Christopher Steele to fabricate sources to say Trump was Russian agent who helped Moscow hack the DNC and John Podesta emails and put them on Wikileaks, and that part of the supposed deal was for Trump to withhold arms from Ukraine.
Naturally, that gave Congress leverage against Trump to say, if you don’t approve arms to Ukraine, you must be a Russian agent. And so, despite campaigning in 2016 against escalating the war in Ukraine — by then, former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych had been overthrown in a U.S. backed action and Russia had annexed Crimea in response in 2014 — Trump after taking office signed into law the appropriations providing the arms to Ukraine, escalating the U.S. role.
But, in 2019, when Trump considered putting conditions on the weapons that were being sent to Ukraine, the then-Democratic House immediately impeached Trump, who was later acquitted by the U.S. Senate.
Still, as Trump noted on the campaign trail in 2024, Putin did not launch the full-scale invasion of Ukraine until 2022, after Trump had left office. Whether that was due to deterrence or just timing is a good question, but Trump has stated he had threatened to attack Russia to protect Ukraine, claiming in a 2022 phone call with golfer John Daly, “he was a friend of mine… I got along great with him. I say, 'Vladimir, if you do it, we're hitting Moscow. I said, 'We're gonna hit Moscow.'”
Trump added, “I said, 'We're gonna hit Moscow… And he sort of believed me, like five percent, 10 percent. That's all you need.”
Now, the U.S. via Ukraine is actively hitting Russian targets inside Russia. The same questions emerge: Is Russia deterred? No, the invasion continues. So, if hitting the Russian targets does not carry a deterrence value, then on the other hand it could carry the risk of escalation, provocation and retaliation.
It reminds of the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, which was ultimately resolved by John Kennedy and Nikita Khruschev by agreeing to withdraw nuclear missiles from Cuba and Turkey, the first ever nuclear arms reductions. That paved the way for further arms limitations in the 1970s, 1980s and 2010s, including the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaties, the Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty and the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaties (START). Of those, only the START treaties, which superseded SALT, remain, with both the ABM and INF treaties gone.
So, sometimes a potential nuclear standoff being averted can set the stage for new diplomacy. A similar situation played out during the Trump administration vis a vis North Korea, a nuclear threat that ended up with face-to-face meetings between Trump and Kim Jong Un.
The options being talk, or fire, Trump seems apt to choose to talk as a first resort.
Trump is a potential wild card in terms of being a diplomatic negotiator — this time he is not hampered by a Special Counsel as Jack Smith is preparing to leave office — does that cause Russia to wait for the new administration to settle the Ukraine question? With the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists saying there are just 90 seconds left until midnight for thermonuclear war, the closest it has ever been since the clock was adopted in 1947, time is running out.
Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy of Americans for Limited Government Foundation.
To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2024/11/biden-attempts-to-lock-in-ukraine-war-ahead-of-trump-inauguration-approving-missile-strikes-into-russia-as-moscow-sends-nuclear-warning/
Democrats May No Longer Control Suburbs or Cities – Huge Regional Political Realignment After Election
By Manzanita Miller
In 2020, the urban rural divide became increasingly apparent in national politics, with President Donald Trump and conservatives sweeping rural regions while Democrats largely dominated in cities and suburbs.
This election year however, Trump’s strong inroads with traditionally Democratic groups, including Hispanics, Black voters, and young people, translated to an increase in support in the suburbs, and no loss among urban voters compared to 2020. In fact, Trump significantly improved on his margins in certain metro areas, like New York City and Detroit. Trump also won a plurality of white suburban men and women this year.
Nationwide, Trump upped his share of the suburban vote by three points compared to 2020, enough to flip the suburbs into his win column. Trump earned 51 percent of suburban voters this year to Harris’ 47 percent, but lost suburbanites to Biden 50 percent to 48 percent four years ago.
While Trump’s share of the urban vote remained the same this year as it did in 2020, a string of gains in metro areas hint at future opportunities for conservatives in cities that have faced economic hardship and rising crime.
In states with sprawling suburban populations, Trump’s share of the suburban vote rose substantially. In Florida for example, Trump won suburbanites by 28 points this year, 61 percent to 38 percent, after winning them by eleven points in 2020.
In Miami-Dade County, Trump won the county by 12 points this year and became the first Republican to win the densely populated region for the first time in 36 years. Miami-Dade is a sprawling county that includes vast Cuban and Venezuelan populations, groups Trump upped his margins with substantially.
Nationwide Trump gained fourteen points with Latinos, going from 32 percent in 2020 to 46 percent on November 5th, but in Florida he outright flipped the Latino vote into the Republican column. Trump won Latinos by 16 points this year in Florida, 58 percent to 42 percent, after losing them to Biden by seven points in 2020, 53 percent to 46 percent. Trump’s twelve-point shift among Latinos in Florida moved them into the Republican column and gave him a comfortable lead.
In Virginia, movement toward conservatives in populous suburban regions helped shave off around five points from Harris’ win in the state compared to Biden’s win four years ago, inviting speculation that Virginia may be back in the swing state column within a few election cycles. Virginia’s Loudoun County, a well-populated suburban county that includes a significant Asian American presence, shifted nine points toward Trump this year compared to four years ago.
The same county began showing signs of shifting toward the right in the 2021 Governor’s race, when Gov. Glenn Youngkin won the Governor’s mansion for Republicans with the help of suburban voters.
Elsewhere, Republicans made inroads even in the most unlikely places, including a 3.4 percentage point gain in Wayne County, Michigan, which includes the sprawling and diverse city of Detroit.
One reason for Trump’s increase in Detroit can be attributed to Black men. Trump gained three points with Black men in Michigan this year, going from eleven percent of their vote in 2020 to thirteen percent this year.
Trump even gained in New York City, eating into Democrat gains substantially compared to four years ago. Harris still won deep-blue New York City by a 38-point margin, 68 percent to 30 percent, but that was significantly down from Biden’s 53-point margin four years ago. In pure numbers Harris secured 600,000 less votes than Biden did four years ago in New York City, while Trump earned close to 100,000 more votes this year.
One of Trump’s largest gains in the city was in The Bronx. The Bronx saw an eleven-point shift toward Trump, from 16 percent in 2020 to 27 percent this year, according to data from CBS news.
Trump’s gains in urban and suburban areas appear to be tied to his gains with minority populations, but there is evidence that he performed well with suburban whites as well. Trump won suburban white men by 27 points, and he won suburban white women by seven points.
Try as they might, Democrats were unable to successfully vilify Trump and his America First message, and that message appealed broadly to metro and suburban voters, although it was even more warmly embraced in rural areas and small towns. The rural-urban divide remains strong, but it is less strong than it was four years ago. Instead, class remains an important dividing variable, with lower income Americans continuing to align with Trump’s America First message regardless of where they live.
Manzanita Miller is the senior political analyst at Americans for Limited Government Foundation.
To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2024/11/democrats-may-no-longer-control-suburbs-or-cities-huge-regional-political-realignment-after-election/
Urge Congress To Recess On Jan. 4 For Trump Nominees!
ACT NOW! https://recesscongressnow.org