Richardson lays out what a shitty week Don Trumpeone just had. The Senators whose jobs he took away are pissed, the Courts are removing the presumption of good faith by government lawyers, and his efforts to aggrandize himself are falling flat.
Perhaps nothing so perfectly captures this moment as his quagmire in Iran. He can't surrender even though he's been beaten strategically, because Trump's whole schtick is that he's a "winner." He could no more admit defeat in Iran than in the 2020 election. He has exactly zero good options here and the clock is ticking on enough Congressional Republicans to spit the bit and invoke the War Powers Act.
Meanwhile, gas prices aren't budging, and with gas reserves being drawn down, we are potentially about to hit another spike in prices. Regardless, ending the war tomorrow would not restore either the reserves nor the pre-war prices. It will take months to get prices down to pre-war levels, a timeline that likely extends beyond the midterms.
His floundering abroad and his sabotage of Senate Republicans may finally have enough members start to push back against his monarchical pretensions. People are legitimately pissed about the ballroom, the arch, the reflecting pool, the gilded tackiness, the plans for a $250 bill with his ugly mug on it, his indifference to people's economic distress, his tariffs, the rising cost of fertilizers, high interest rates from deficit spending and inflation...you get the idea.
These craven lickspittles in the GOP thought that if they embraced Trump just enough that would save them. Instead, insufficient fealty leads to the fates of Tom Tillis, Bill Cassidy and John Cornyn. Too much fealty could drag down unpopular faux Trumpists like Lindsay Graham.
I'm fascinated by what will happen around July 4th. It should be a moment of national celebration. Even the Bicentennial, laden as it was with inflation and the stench of Watergate, felt like a reprieve from our malaise. I have to wonder if this 250th anniversary will feel more like an expression of revolutionary rage than the nostalgia that Trump craves.