Showing posts with label worst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label worst. Show all posts

Saturday, November 02, 2024

A Reminder Of How Bad Trump Was As President


The following is by former Labor Secretary Robert Reich: 

Some people seem to have forgotten how bad a president Trump was, so I made a list of the worst things about the Trump presidency, in no particular order.

  1. 1. Trump fueled division and sparked a record uptick in hate crimes.

  2. 2. Murder went way up under Trump. He presided over the largest ever single-year increase in homicides in 2020. A number of factors might have contributed to that, but a big one is …

  3. 3. Gun sales broke records under Trump, who has bragged about how he “did nothing” to restrict guns as president in spite of how …

  4. 4. Under Trump, America suffered more than 1,700 mass shootings.

  5. 5. When Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico, Trump delayed $20 billion of aid and allowed Puerto Rico to be without power for 181 days.

  6. 6. According to Trump’s former acting Homeland Security secretary, Trump proposed selling the entire island of Puerto Rico.

  7. 7. Trump said there were “very fine people” among the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville.

  8. 8. Trump allied himself with the Proud Boys, a violent hate group who helped orchestrate the January 6 Capitol attack.

  9. 9. Trump has been convicted of committing 34 felonies while in office. All of the criminally false business filings he was convicted of were committed while he was president.

  10. 10. Trump appointed three Supreme Court justices who he knew would overturn Roe v. Wade. As a result, 1 in 3 American women of childbearing age now lives under an abortion ban.

  11. 11. One of Trump’s Supreme Court justices was Brett Kavanaugh, a man accused of sexual assault by multiple women.

  12. 12. Trump’s White House reportedly interfered in the FBI’s investigation of Kavanaugh’s alleged sexual assaults.

  13. 13. Trump’s failed pandemic response led to hundreds of thousands of needless deaths. By the time Trump left office, roughly 3,000 Americans were dying of Covid every day. That’s a 9/11-scale mass casualty event every single day.

  14. 14. Trump’s White House discarded the pandemic response playbook that had been assembled by the Obama administration.

  15. 15. Trump disbanded the National Security Council’s pandemic response team.

  16. 16. Trump repeatedly lied about the danger of Covid, saying it was “no worse” than the flu and that it would go away on its own.

  17. 17. Trump promoted fake Covid cures like hydroxychloroquine and even injecting people with disinfectants

  18. 18. After Trump’s “disinfectant” remarks, poison control centers received a spike in emergency calls.

    19. Trump presided over a net loss of 2.9 million American jobs — the worst recorded jobs numbers of any U.S. president in history.

    20. Trump profited off the presidency, pocketing an estimated $160 million from foreign countries while he was president.

    21. Trump also billed the Secret Service over $1 million for the privilege of staying at his golf clubs and other properties while they protected him. 

    22. Trump caused the longest government shutdown in U.S. history when he didn’t get funding for his border wall, which he said Mexico was going to pay for (it never did). 23. Trump also shut the government down two other times.

    23. Trump diverted nearly $14 billion from other federal agencies — including $9.9 billion from the military — to pay for his border wall, which he never finished. 

    24. Under Trump, the national debt increased by about 40 percent — more than in any other four-year presidential term — largely because of his tax cuts for the rich and big corporations.

    25. Trump separated more than 5,000 children from their parents at the U.S.-Mexico border, with no plan to ever reunite them — putting babies in cages.

    26. The Muslim Ban. Yes, Trump really did try to ban Muslims from entering the country.

    27. Trump broke the law by trying to withhold nearly $400 million of U.S. aid for Ukraine in an effort to extort a personal political favor from Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky. Trump wanted Zelensky to interfere in the 2020 election by announcing an investigation into the Bidens. Delaying this aid to Ukraine weakened Ukraine and strengthened Russia.

    28.Trump personally attacked and ruined the careers of every American official who stood in the way of his illegal Ukraine scheme, including Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch and Lt. Colonel Alexander Vindman.

    29. To cover up the scheme, Trump ordered the White House and State Department to defy congressional subpoenas.

    30. For these reasons, on December 18, 2019, Trump became the third U.S. president to be impeached. He was charged with abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.

    31. Even while he was being investigated for trying to get Ukraine to interfere in the U.S. election, Trump publicly called for China to interfere in the election.

    32. Trump undermined faith in our democracy. Long before Election Day in 2020, Trump started making false claims that the 2020 election would be rigged.

    33. After the election, Trump falsely claimed the election was stolen, even though his own inner circle, including his campaign manager, White House lawyers, and his own Justice Department, said it wasn’t. As his handpicked attorney general said: “The claims of fraud were bullsh*t.”

    34. Trump kept telling his Big Lie even after more than 60 legal challenges to the election were struck down in court, many by Trump-appointed judges.

    35. Trump ordered the Justice Department to falsely claim that the election “was corrupt.” Only when all the top officials of the department threatened to resign did he back down. 

    36. Trump and his allies used threats to pressure state officials in Arizona and Georgia to falsify the election results. He was even caught on tape doing it.

    37. When none of the previous schemes worked, Trump and his allies produced fake electoral certificates for multiple swing states. His former White House chief of staff and Rudy Giuliani are among his associates who have been criminally indicted for this.

    38 Trump tried to bully Vice President Mike Pence into obstructing the certification of the election. Pence refused. 

    39. Trump invited a mob to the Capitol on January 6 with his “be there, will be wild” tweet.

    40. Sworn testimony alleges that when Trump was warned that members of the crowd were carrying deadly weapons, he ordered security metal detectors to be taken down.

    41. Knowing the crowd had deadly weapons, he ordered them to go to the Capitol and “fight like hell.”

    42. Trump did nothing to stop the January 6 violence, which included threats on the life of Vice President Pence. Instead, according to witness testimony, he sat and watched TV for hours.

    43. On January 13, 2021, Trump became the only president ever to be impeached twice. This time he was charged with incitement of insurrection. It was a bipartisan vote.

    44. The majority of senators — 57 out of 100 — voted to convict Trump, including seven Republican senators.

    45. In a likely obstruction of justice, Trump pressured then FBI Director James Comey to stop the FBI’s investigation into Trump’s national security adviser, Michael Flynn, and Flynn’s contacts with Russian agents. This was documented in the Mueller report.

    46. When Comey didn’t bend to Trump’s will, Trump fired him.

    47. Trump tried to shut down the Mueller investigation by ordering White House Counsel Don McGahn to fire Mueller. McGahn refused because that would be criminal obstruction of justice.

    48. When news got out that Trump tried to fire Mueller, Trump repeatedly told McGahn to lie — to Mueller, to press, to public — and even create a false document to conceal Trump’s attempt to fire Mueller.

    49. Trump ordered his staff not to turn over emails showing Don Jr. had set up a meeting at Trump Tower before the 2016 election with representatives of the Russian government.

    50. Trump convinced Michael Cohen to lie to Congress about Trump’s plans to build a Trump Tower in Moscow, and Cohen served prison time for lying to Congress.

    51. Trump wasn’t charged for criminal obstruction because it’s the Justice Department’s policy not to indict a sitting president, but more than 1,000 former federal prosecutors signed a letter declaring there was more than enough evidence to prosecute Trump.

    52. Trump publicly sided with Putin over the U.S. intelligence community — rejecting well-documented evidence that Russia interfered in the 2016 election to help elect him.

    53. Trump said he’d hire only the best people, but his campaign chair was convicted of multiple crimes. One of his closest associates was also convicted. His deputy campaign chair pleaded guilty to crimes. His national security adviser pleaded guilty to crimes. So did his personal lawyer. So did the chief financial officer of his business. As did his campaign foreign policy adviser. And one of his campaign fundraisers. 

    54. They all committed crimes. Then what did Trump do? He pardoned most of them.

    55. Trump said he’d “drain the Washington swamp.” But he appointed more billionaires, CEOs, and Wall Street moguls to his administration than any administration in history.

    56. Trump intervened to get his son-in-law, Jared Kushner, top-secret clearance after he was denied over concerns about foreign influence.

    57. Trump then tasked Kushner with drafting a potential Middle East “peace plan” with zero Palestinian input.

    58. Trump sparked international outrage by moving the American Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem while closing the Palestinian diplomatic office in Washington, D.C.

    59. Trump recognized Israel’s occupation of the Golan Heights, which is considered illegal under international law.

    60. Trump hosted a Russian foreign minister to the Oval Office, where Trump revealed top-secret intelligence.

    61. Trump promised that the average American family would get a $4,000 pay raise because of his tax cuts that mostly benefited the wealthy and big corporations. Average American families did not get a $4,000 raise. America’s billionaires, however, doubled their wealth.

    62. Trump vowed to protect American jobs, but offshoring increased and manufacturing fell.

    63. Trump said he would fix America’s infrastructure, but it never happened. He announced so many failed “infrastructure weeks” they became a running joke.

    64. Trump said he would be “the voice” of American workers, but he filled the National Labor Relations Board with anti-union flaks who made it harder for workers to unionize.

    65. Trump’s Labor Department made it easier for bosses to avoid paying workers overtime, which cheated 8 million workers of extra pay.

    66. Trump repeatedly said he might serve more than two terms, in violation of the U.S. Constitution.

    67. When he started to realize he would lose, Trump suggested delaying the 2020 election.

    68. Trump called Haiti and African nations “sh*thole” countries.

    69. Trump tried to terminate DACA, which protects immigrants brought to the U.S. as children. This was struck down by the courts.

    70. Trump called climate change a “hoax.”

    71. Trump pulled out of the Paris climate agreement.

    72. Trump rolled back more than 100 environmental protections.

    73. Every budget Trump proposed included cuts to Social Security and Medicare.

    74. Trump tried (and failed) to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which would have resulted in 20 million Americans losing insurance. He’s still saying he’ll repeal the ACA and still has only “concepts of a plan” to replace it.

    75. Trump made it easier for employers to remove birth control coverage from insurance plans.

    76. By the end of Trump’s term, the number of people lacking health insurance had risen by 3 million.

    77. Trump allegedly took hundreds of classified documents from the White House, reportedly including nuclear secrets, which he then left unsecured in various parts of Mar-a-Lago, including a bathroom. He was even caught on tape showing them off to people.

    78. Trump seriously discussed the idea of nuking a hurricane.

    79. Trump seemed to think he could redirect the path of a hurricane with a Sharpie.

    80. Trump suggested withholding federal aid for California wildfire recovery and said the solution was to “clean” the “floors” of the forest. 

    81. Trump tried to buy Greenland.

    82. Trump canceled a diplomatic trip to Denmark, reportedly because he wrongly thought Denmark was blocking his plan to buy Greenland.

    83. Trump repeatedly denigrated German Chancellor Angela Merkel, seemingly because he resented her for beating him out as Time’s Person of the Year in 2015. He’s that petty.

    84. Trump vetoed a bipartisan congressional resolution to end U.S. military support for Saudi Arabia’s war in Yemen, which has killed tens of thousands of civilians.

    85. Trump referred to fallen U.S. service members as “losers” and “suckers.” This has been confirmed by multiple sources, including Trump’s former chief of staff, retired Gen. John Kelly.

    86. According to Kelly, Trump praised Hitler, saying he “did some good things.”

    87. Trump complained that the military wouldn’t place personal loyalty to him over their oath to the Constitution, saying, “I need the kind of generals that Hitler had.”

    88. Trump proposed having the military shoot Black Lives Matters demonstrators.

    89. Trump tried to cut $460 million for unhoused veterans.

    90. Trump has repeatedly turned his ire on Gold Star families. Army widow Myeshia Johnson said Trump reduced her to tears when he dismissed her fallen husband, Sgt. La David Johnson, saying, “He knew what he signed up for.”

    91. Instead of apologizing to Myeshia Johnson, Trump went on to publicly attack her.

    92. In 2020 Trump risked the lives of Gold Star families by visiting them when he reportedly knew he had tested positive for Covid. Trump later tried to blame the families for his infection.

    93. Trump demonized the free press, calling any coverage he didn’t like “fake news” and smearing journalists as “the enemy of the people.”

    94. Trump constantly lied. He made 30,573 false or misleading claims while president — an average of 21 a day, according to Washington Post fact-checkers.

    95. Trump’s administration was in constant chaos. He went through four chiefs of staff, four press secretaries, and seven communications directors in just four years.

    96. He even contested the only election he won, falsely claiming that “millions” had voted illegally in 2016 and that that was the only reason he lost the popular vote.

    97. Trump’s haphazard use of tariffs is estimated to have cost the average family $1,277 extra per year.

    98. He was literally the laughingstock of the world, prompting guffaws from the UN General Assembly and mockery from world leaders.

    99. He banned transgender service members from the military.

    100. He spent $5.4 million of taxpayer money on a dictator-style military parade in D.C.

    101. He attempted to remove protections from nearly 35 million acres of public lands — roughly the size of the entire state of Florida.

Friday, January 05, 2024

The "Do Nothing Congress" Of 2023


Dan Rather remarks on the 2023 version of Congress -- perhaps the worst Congress this country has ever had:

Is this Congress the least productive ever? I know it has been said before, but this 118th Congress may actually be the worst one yet.

Let’s look at the hard, head-shaking facts:


  • * Congress passed just 27 laws. In. One. Year. Only one congressional session has had a worse record: The 1931-32 Congress in the middle of the Great Depression passed 21 laws, but it met for only three months. 

     

  • * By comparison, in 2022, Congress passed 308 laws with similarly slim majorities in both chambers.


  • * Of the 27 laws passed by the 118th Congress, one approved a new commemorative coin and two renamed buildings. 


  • * This works out to $3,453,304 of taxpayer money per bill. And that’s a conservative number. We considered only the salaries of the elected representatives in our calculation.

     

  • * Besides failing to pass just about any bill, there are several doozies that this Congress actively shelved: a budget, a five-year farm bill (usually a bipartisan effort), and the reauthorization of the FAA bill, a measure designed to modernize air travel and make it safer.


  • * It took 15 rounds for the House to choose a speaker, and then said speaker was ousted from the job less than 10 months later. In 234 years, neither had ever happened in the House of Representatives.


  • * Then it took three weeks to elect another speaker, and the House was once again paralyzed.


  • * Three House members were censured and one ousted, also a record for any Congress.


  • * A Republican House member, thinking he was a 7th grader at recess, accused Kevin McCarthy, the former Speaker of the House (a fellow Republican, mind you) of elbowing him in the kidney.


  • * A senator almost goaded a committee witness into a fistfight.

Is it any wonder a recent Gallup poll put Congress’s approval rating at 13%? The only surprise is that it hit double digits.

Saturday, September 09, 2023

Monday, May 09, 2022

The Best And Worst States For Working Mothers




 Each year, Wallethub rates the states. This is their ranking for best and worst states for working mothers. Here is their methodology:







Thursday, January 27, 2022

The Best And Worst Of The 50 States


 From the YouGov Poll



Methodology: 1,211 US adults were asked to choose the better of two states from a list of the 50 US states and Washington, D.C. in a series of head to head match-ups. The poll's introductory text stated, "On each of the next few pages, you will see the names of two states in the US. On each page, we would like you to select the state that you think is the better state. You will see 7 different match-ups between states.” On each page, they saw two states with the prompt: “Which of the following states is better?” Each respondent saw seven match-ups, and no respondent saw a state twice. Data was weighted to be nationally representative of all US Adults, 18+. The survey was conducted between March 12 - 15, 2021. 

Sunday, February 14, 2021

Nearly Half Of Americans Say Trump Was Worst President


 The chart above reflects the results of the newest Economist / YouGov Poll -- done between February 6th and 9th of a national sample of 1,500 adults, with a 3 point margin of error.

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

Most Say History Will Not Be Kind To Donald Trump


 The chart above is from the NPR / PBS NewsHour / Marist Poll -- done between January 11th and 13th of a national sample of 1,173 adults, with a 3.5 point margin of error.


The chart above is from the Gallup Poll -- done between January 4th and 15th of a national sample of 1,023 adults, with a 4 point margin of error.

Tuesday, April 07, 2020

Donald Trump Is The Worst President In U.S. History

The United States has had some great presidents and some good presidents (of both political parties). Sadly, it has also had some poor presidents and some bad presidents.

But Donald Trump is in a class by himself. He is undoubtably the absolutely WORST president in the history of the United States. His handling of the Coronavirus pandemic puts that beyond any question.

I am not alone in that assessment. Consider these words from Max Boot in The Washington Post:

Until now, I have generally been reluctant to label Donald Trump the worst president in U.S. history. As a historian, I know how important it is to allow the passage of time to gain a sense of perspective. Some presidents who seemed awful to contemporaries (Harry S. Truman) or simply lackluster (Dwight D. Eisenhower, George H.W. Bush) look much better in retrospect. Others, such as Thomas Jefferson and Woodrow Wilson, don’t look as good as they once did.

So I have written, as I did on March 12, that Trump is the worst president in modern times — not of all time. That left open the possibility that James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Franklin Pierce, Warren Harding or some other nonentity would be judged more harshly. But in the past month, we have seen enough to take away the qualifier “in modern times.” With his catastrophic mishandling of the coronavirus, Trump has established himself as the worst president in U.S. history.

His one major competitor for that dubious distinction remains Buchanan, whose dithering helped lead us into the Civil War — the deadliest conflictin U.S. history. Buchanan may still be the biggest loser. But there is good reason to think that the Civil War would have broken out no matter what. By contrast, there is nothing inevitable about the scale of the disaster we now confront.

The situation is so dire, it is hard to wrap your mind around it. The Atlantic notes: “During the Great Recession of 2007–2009, the economy suffered a net loss of approximately 9 million jobs. The pandemic recession has seen nearly 10 million unemployment claims in just two weeks.” The New York Times estimates that the unemployment rate is now about 13 percent, the highest since the Great Depression ended 80 years ago.

Far worse is the human carnage. We already have more confirmed coronavirus cases than any other country. Trump claimed on Feb. 26 that the outbreak would soon be “down to close to zero.” Now he argues that if the death toll is 100,000 to 200,000 — higher than the U.S. fatalities in all of our wars combined since 1945 — it will be proof that he’s done “a very good job.”

No, it will be a sign that he’s a miserable failure, because the coronavirus is the most foreseeable catastrophe in U.S. history. The warnings about the Pearl Harbor and 9/11 attacks were obvious only in retrospect. This time, it didn’t require any top-secret intelligence to see what was coming. The alarm was sounded in January by experts in the media and by leading Democrats including presumptive presidential nominee Joe Biden.

Government officials were delivering similar warnings directly to Trump. A team of Post reporters wrote on Saturday: “The Trump administration received its first formal notification of the outbreak of the coronavirus in China on Jan. 3. Within days, U.S. spy agencies were signaling the seriousness of the threat to Trump by including a warning about the coronavirus —the first of many—in the President’s Daily Brief.” But Trump wasn’t listening.

The Post article is the most thorough dissection of Trump’s failure to prepare for the gathering storm. Trump was first briefed on the coronavirus by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Jan. 18. But, The Post writes, “Azar told several associates that the president believed he was ‘alarmist’ and Azar struggled to get Trump’s attention to focus on the issue.” When Trump was first asked publicly about the virus, on Jan. 22, he said, “We have it totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China.”

In the days and weeks after Azar alerted him about the virus, Trump spoke at eight rallies and golfed six times as if he didn’t have a care in the world.

Trump’s failure to focus, The Post notes, “sowed significant public confusion and contradicted the urgent messages of public health experts.” It also allowed bureaucratic snafus to go unaddressed — including critical failures to roll out enough tests or to stockpile enough protective equipment and ventilators. . . .

This fiasco is so monumental that it makes our recent failed presidents — George W. Bush and Jimmy Carter — Mount Rushmore material by comparison. Trump’s Friday night announcement that he’s firing the intelligence community inspector general who exposed his attempted extortion of Ukraine shows that he combines the ineptitude of a George W. Bush or a Carter with the corruption of Richard Nixon.

Trump is characteristically working hardest at blaming others — China, the media, governors, President Barack Obama, the Democratic impeachment managers, everyone but his golf caddie — for his blunders. His mantra is: “I don’t take responsibility at all.” It remains to be seen whether voters will buy his excuses. But whatever happens in November, Trump cannot escape the pitiless judgment of history.

Somewhere, a relieved James Buchanan must be smiling.