Tag: donald trump
'Block The Merger!' Attorneys General Sue To Stop Paramount Deal

'Block The Merger!' Attorneys General Sue To Stop Paramount Deal

A coalition of Democratic state attorneys general announced Monday that they filed a lawsuit in an attempt to stop the looming merger between Paramount Skydance and Warner Discovery.

The suit alleges that the merger would violate federal antitrust law due to the control that the combined companies—led by the pro-Trump Ellison family—would have over the entertainment and media industry.

The states involved in the suit are California, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, and Washington.

“California and our sister states are fighting for free and fair markets, not rigged markets. America has no kings in government or our economy,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement.

Paramount Skydance is currently led by David Ellison, son of Oracle billionaire and GOP donor Larry Ellison.

Under Ellison’s leadership, conservative activist Bari Weiss was installed as the editor-in-chief of CBS News. In the ensuing months, stories critical of President Donald Trump have been suppressed, while longtime journalists like Scott Pelley have been purged.

In a June interview, Pelley revealed that CBS bosses attempted to promote false narratives surrounding the killing of Renee Good by immigration agents. He also said that CBS leadership tried to pressure reporters to falsely depict protesters against Immigration and Customs Enforcement as violent.

Trump’s Justice Department has already given its blessing to the merger, perhaps anticipating more CBS-style journalistic interference. If it proceeds, CBS would be joined by BET, TNT, and CNN in the pro-MAGA media makeover.

The lawsuit alleges that the merger violates Section 7 of the Clayton Act, which states that mergers that substantially reduce competition are illegal.

The attorneys general say that the combined companies would lead to reduced competition in theatrical film distribution, licensing of content for basic cable TV, and release of top-grossing films—as it would control 30 percent of “blockbuster” releases and 90 percent of the market, along with Disney, Universal, and Sony.

The merger already has opposition in the creative community. Unions, actors, writers, and other production creatives have protested against the union of Paramount and Warner.

There are also ongoing concerns about the content of the combined companies being subverted to serve the interests of Trump and the GOP.

In May, veteran CNN journalist Christiane Amanpour expressed that she is “concerned” about what the Ellisons would change at CNN, citing the interference at CBS.

The Trump administration has already made clear its plans to influence news content. In a March press conference, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth—flustered with trying to defend Trump’s failing strategy in Iran and CNN’s coverage of the mess—told reporters that “the sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better.”

Throughout Trump’s second term, the mainstream media has bent itself to Trump’s will. A MAGA media merger would turbocharge the already deteriorating press.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos


Roger Stone Touted 'Longtime Friend' Pulte For DNI To Probe 2020 Election

Roger Stone Touted 'Longtime Friend' Pulte For DNI To Probe 2020 Election

On his radio show, notorious political operative and Trump confidant Roger Stone has touted his friendship with acting Director of National Intelligence Bill Pulte, celebrating that he thinks Pulte will use his position to investigate voter fraud and “finally reveal what really happened in the 2020 election.”

In their new book, Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump, Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan reported that Stone — once kept at a distance from the White House — has taken a greater role in Trump’s second term in office, including helping connect the president with Pulte.

Most of Trump’s first-term aides despised him [Stone], and he was held at an even greater distance in term one amid the Russia conspiracy investigation. Trump would give Stone—who used the phrase “Stop the Steal” in 2016 and maintained that 2020 was “rigged”—a last-minute pardon in January 2021. But Stone never visited the White House in that term.
Stone’s access changed during the 2024 campaign. Susie Wiles and other top Trump campaign advisors had their own long-standing relationships with Stone. They believed he was smart and saw him as a victim of the same DOJ “weaponization” that Trump had complained about. … The fights and rapprochements between Trump and Stone over forty years were almost impossible to track. But at the end of the day, Trump always came back to Roger Stone. In his second term, he stopped pretending otherwise.

Stone’s counsel was taken up by Trump on a number of occasions — the book reports that he pushed the president to select Tulsi Gabbard as director of national intelligence and “advocated relentlessly” for a pardon of former Honduran president and convicted drug trafficker Juan Orlando Hernández. According to Haberman and Swan, Stone also “squired Pulte around Mar-a-Lago during the 2024 transition.”

Enter Bill Pulte. An heir to a homebuilding fortune, Pulte had come to Trump’s notice in 2019 with some favorable tweets; he was also a Trump donor, and he had later connected with Roger Stone, who squired Pulte around Mar-a-Lago during the 2024 transition. Pulte had his eye on the position of secretary of housing and urban development, but he would ultimately accept the directorship of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), a low-profile office he would turn into a howitzer for Trump’s retribution agenda.

Building on this in-person effort to connect Pulte with the president, Stone has repeatedly used his radio show to promote Pulte after Trump named him to replace Gabbard as acting DNI.

On June 3, Stone called Pulte “extraordinarily capable” and “extraordinarily loyal to President Donald J. Trump” while slamming his critics in Congress as “unqualified to be in public office, in my opinion.” On June 5, Stone described Pulte as a “longtime friend of mine, someone I originally recommended for the job of Federal Housing Finance Administrator.” Stone further attacked Sens. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), Susan Collins (R-ME), and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) as “RINOs” for their support of a Democratic amendment which would have barred Pulte from serving as DNI while he also remains head of FHFA.

Stone was also clear about Pulte’s ultimate goal as DNI: Relitigating Trump’s 2020 election defeat with debunked claims of fraud.

“The big enchilada, that 2020 election,” Stone argued on June 3. “How is it that 81 million people voted for Joe Biden? How is it that more people voted in the state of Pennsylvania than are registered to vote? … How is it that 300,000 printed ballots that were supposedly mailed in, but had never been folded in half and thus were never mailed, popped in out of nowhere in Georgia, Detroit, and elsewhere, all at the same time?” He further gloated on June 5 that “the intelligence community is particularly hysterical” that Trump said Pulte may “get to the bottom of the truth regarding the 2020 elections,” adding, “If what the president says is true, that Pulte is going to finally reveal what really happened in the 2020 election, you can see why the Democrats are so scared.”

Pulte’s appointment to DNI was widely embraced by prominent election conspiracy theorists, including some who have pushed in recent months for Trump to declare a national emergency and seize “king-like powers” over the midterm elections. On June 10, War Room host and former Trump strategist Steve Bannon called Pulte the “perfect choice to run DNI right now,” suggesting he is there to “get to the bottom of the 2020 stolen election.” Conspiracy theorist Jack Posobiec likewise hypothesized on June 17 that Pulte’s opponents are afraid he will expose “some kind of foreign interference or some kind of penetration of those election systems down there in Fulton County,” Georgia, which led to “a massive, massive problem with that 2020 count.”

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters

Can Sherrod Brown (And Donald Trump) Flip Red Ohio Back To Blue?

Can Sherrod Brown (And Donald Trump) Flip Red Ohio Back To Blue?

As Ohio goes, so goes the nation. If that old political adage bears out this year, it would be a hell of a problem for the Republican Party. Recent polling shows the state’s Senate and gubernatorial races locked in a dead heat—a shocking development for this reddening state.

The Buckeye State, once a bellwether, has been drifting rapidly toward Republicans. Between 2002 and 2012, the state saw 10 total elections for president, Senate, or governor. Democrats won exactly half of them.

However, in the 10 elections since, Democrats won just once. It came during 2018’s blue wave.


Ohio has become reliably red -- will 2026 change that?

DBut now that red drift may be drifting back.

Democrat Sherrod Brown leads Republican Sen. Jon Husted by three percentage points in an average of the four polls fielded since the state’s May 5 primaries. That said, those polls show a wide range of results, with one from The New York Times/Siena University showing Husted up three points, while another, commissioned by Fox News, shows Brown up by a gobsmacking eight points.


A populist progressive, Brown is Democrats’ dream candidate, having thrice won a Senate seat in the state. While he came up short in his 2024 reelection bid, his performance remains impressive. Losing by less than four points, he fared far better than Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, who lost by over 11 points.

Husted, who was appointed to fill the remainder of Vice President JD Vance’s term, is a rather anonymous rank-and-file Republican. Twelve percent of Ohio’s likely voters hadn’t heard of him, compared with just three percent who hadn’t heard of Brown, per a recent poll conducted for AARP. This relative obscurity gives Brown the upside of having more room to define Husted for voters ahead of November.

The Cook Political Report rates the race as a toss-up. And now, as of Friday, Cook has shifted its rating of the state’s governor’s race toward Democrats, considering it too a toss-up.

In the gubernatorial race, Democrat Amy Acton leads Republican Vivek Ramaswamy by two points in an average of four polls fielded since May 5. These polls have had less variation than those in the Senate race, with neither candidate leading by more than three points.

Though Acton volunteered for Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign (and hey, he won the state), she cuts something of a nonpartisan image. In 2019, Republican Gov. Mike DeWine tapped her to lead the Ohio Department of Health shortly before the COVID-19 pandemic, which made her a regular fixture of local news updates and earned her a fan club.

As far as inspiring life stories goes, it’s hard to beat Acton’s. She spent part of her childhood homeless and living in a tent with her family in the quintessential Rust Belt city of Youngstown. But she made it out of those hardscrabble circumstances to go to medical school, become a professor at the Ohio State University, and now run for governor.

Meanwhile, Ramaswamy faces unique hurdles. Born in America to Indian immigrants, he is facing hideous racism from the MAGA movement he considers himself part of. In May’s Republican primary, his no-name opponent picked up 18 percent of the vote after directly attacking Ramaswamy’s Indian heritage and espousing “blood and soil” rhetoric popular with neo-Nazis.

Ramaswamy is also a conspiracy theorist. As is unfortunately common among Republicans, he has falsely declared the Jauary. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol to be “an inside job” and that Trump won the 2020 presidential election. But his tinfoil-hat thinking goes a step further. He has promoted 9/11 trutherism as well as the racist “great replacement theory,” which falsely posits there is a secret plot to bring immigrants of color into the U.S. to diminish the power of white people.

A Big Pharma billionaire, Ramaswamy is also a poor fit for an election year in which high prices and healthcare are Americans’ top-two issues. Not to mention that he teamed up with Elon Musk, the world’s richest man, to conceptualize President Donald Trump’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency—only to bail, or get kicked out, just before the agency started firing thousands of civil servants and hobbling critical agencies.


And that brings us to the reason Ohio has suddenly become competitive: one Donald J. Trump.

Among adult citizens in Ohio, Trump’s approval rating is 20 points underwater, according to data from The Economist. That’s in line with his dismal national approval rating (-23 points)—but that is very bad news for Republicans in a state as red as Ohio, which Trump won by just over 11 points in 2024.

That 31-point difference between Trump’s approval and his 2024 result means Ohio has been harsher on his job performance than in most states Trump won.


Trump’s policies have hit Ohio especially hard. Due to higher prices for gas, electricity, and consumer goods, the average household in the state has had to pay $2,175 more since he took office, according to a new study from the left-leaning Center for American Progress. Across all 50 states, Ohio has seen the 13th-highest added costs, and across states Trump won in 2024, it’s seen the seventh-highest.

Worse, for a family of four on an Affordable Care Act healthcare plan, that added cost rises by about $1,500, to $3,688 since Trump retook the White House.

This fall, if Brown and/or Acton prevail in their races, it will no doubt be a result of the hard work they’ve put in and the voters they’ve excited. But they will have also gotten a key, if inadvertent, boost from a certain man in Washington.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos

North Carolina Senate Nominee Stands By January 6 Pardons Despite Sex Crimes

North Carolina Senate Nominee Stands By January 6 Pardons Despite Sex Crimes

Republican Michael Whatley continued to defend President Donald Trump’s pardons of January 6 insurrectionists, even after it was discovered that some of those individuals had been charged with sex crimes.

Trump issued a blanket pardon to everyone who participated in the 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol, despite initially promising to pardon only nonviolent offenders. NPR later reported that dozens of those rioters had prior convictions or pending charges, including for rape and the sexual abuse of minors.

Whatley, who is a candidate for the U.S. Senate in North Carolina, was asked during a February meet-and-greet whether he still supported Trump’s pardons. Whatley said, “Yeah,” and described the prosecutions as “malicious.”

NPR identified one of the pardoned rioters as David Daniel of Mint Hill, N.C., who was previously charged with producing sexually explicit material featuring a minor under the age of 12. Daniel argued that Trump’s pardon applied to this offense as well. A judge disagreed and he ultimately pleaded guilty to the offense.

Others were charged with sex crimes after the pardons were issued.

Andrew Paul Johnson of Florida received a life sentence in March for molesting a child under 12 and another under 16. He told one of his victims that he expected a settlement from the federal government related to the pardon and offered to share it with the victim if they stayed quiet.

Johnson may have gotten this idea from Trump himself, who tried to create a slush fund to pay victims of so-called “government weaponization,” which would presumably include the pardoned rioters.

Whatley said he supported the fund, which is currently being blocked by a federal judge.

Whatley’s tolerance of this behavior risks drawing attention to another scandal. From 2019 to 2024, he served as chairman of the North Carolina Republican Party. During that time, he appointed Harvey West to two party committees, according to a March report by the Asheville Watchdog, despite West having pleaded guilty in 2000 to taking indecent liberties with a minor.

Trump has endorsed Whatley’s campaign. Whatley will face former Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper in the general election.

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