Tag: donald trump
Senate Republicans Enraged Over Trump Endorsement Of Lone Star Sleazebag Paxton

Senate Republicans Enraged Over Trump Endorsement Of Lone Star Sleazebag Paxton

President Donald Trump’s 11th-hour endorsement in the Texas GOP primary went to far-right Attorney General Ken Paxton over establishment Republican Sen. John Cornyn, dealing a severe blow to the lawmaker’s chances, angering some prominent GOP lawmakers, and likely boosting the chances of underdog Democrat James Talarico winning the seat in the red Lone Star State.

“Ton of concern among GOP [senators] about Trump’s endorsement of Paxton,” CNN’s Manu Raju reported. “Fear it will cost them a lot more money to save a seat in a red state.”

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) said that Trump’s Paxton endorsement “puts that seat in jeopardy” and asked, “how does that help strengthen the president’s hand when we lose a state like Texas?”

“Supremely disappointed,” is how she characterized her reaction.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) declared Paxton is “an ethically challenged individual,” reports Semafor congressional bureau chief Burgess Everett.

“John Cornyn is an outstanding senator and deserved, in my judgment, the president’s support,” she said. “Obviously, it’s the president’s call, but I’m disappointed that he did it.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), a top Trump ally, said, “I think Paxton can win. I think it’d be three times more expensive.”

Sen. Ron Johnson said he was “speechless” and added, “I really have no comment.”

Described as “not happy looking,” Republican Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD), who has supported Sen. Cornyn, acknowledged it was President Trump’s decision to make.

Punchbowl News’ Andrew Desiderio reported that Thune was “stone-faced” after the endorsement, and appeared “pretty deep” in anger.

“Most GOP senators really want him to endorse Cornyn,” Everett had reported about 90 minutes before the Trump-Paxton endorsement dropped.

Sen. Steve Daines (R-MT) had said, “I would like to see him support John Cornyn in Texas. I’ve made that clear.”

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) had said, “I am hopeful that he backs Sen. Cornyn. John has been a steadfast ally of the president and I hope the president sees that.”

Congressional reporter Jamie Dupree described U.S. Senator Roger Wicker’s (R-MS) response as “stone cold silent.”

Professor Larry Sabato, director of the University of Virginia’s Center for Politics, called Trump’s endorsement of Paxton “Great News for Talarico,” “Bad News for GOP money reserves,” and declared, “If ever there’s a year when a D can win statewide in TX, it’s 2026.”

Talarico responded to the Trump endorsement: “As I said on primary night, it doesn’t matter who wins this runoff. We already know who we’re running against: the billionaire mega-donors and their corrupt political system.”

Reprinted with permission from Alternet


As Midterm Polls Signal Blue Tsunami, GOP Is Frantically Waving The Flag

As Midterm Polls Signal Blue Tsunami, GOP Is Frantically Waving The Flag

The latest New York Times/Siena University poll has devastating news for the GOP ahead of this year’s midterm elections.

In addition to a record-low approval rating of 37 percent for President Donald Trump, the generic congressional ballot had Democrats up by 10 percentage points, which jumped to a staggering 14 points among voters most likely to cast ballots.

Republicans can’t quit Trump. He won’t let them, even if they wanted to—and most don’t want to anyway. Trump has remade the GOP in his image, and they’re fine with it, no matter what the polls say.

But Republicans aren’t resigned to November losses. They have a dastardly new plan ready to go, one they think will dramatically reshape the political playing field this summer.

“A couple more states redistricting in a way that’s helpful for us, move into the summer with America 250, and a midterm convention at some point,” a “very senior Republican strategist” (Stephen Miller?) told NOTUS. “I think we’ve got some good touch points to kind of keep that momentum rolling.”

[Record scratch.]

Wait, the plan is what?

“We will make sure that people are aware of the fact that we are the party of patriotism and love of country, and the Democrats are just—I mean, there’s polling to support me on this,” a “second Republican strategist” (Dan Scavino?) said. “They are not proud to be Americans. It’s very obvious, and they can’t help themselves.”

Ah, yes. People can’t afford groceries or gas, but “patriotism and love of country” will definitely drive waves of Republicans and independents to the polls to punish Democrats for not, uh, celebrating hard enough?

Top it off with a “midterm convention”—Trump’s seemingly forgotten pre-midterm rally—and sure, Democrats are quaking in their boots.

“Loving America harder” isn’t the closing argument Republicans think it is.

Markos Moulitsas is founder and editor of the blogging website Daily Kos and author of three books.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos


Who Will Benefit From The Latest Version Of Trump RX? Not Most Consumers

Who Will Benefit From The Latest Version Of Trump RX? Not Most Consumers

I’m a relatively healthy 75-year-old man who takes one prescription drug, a generic statin to keep my cholesterol count below the level recommended for preventing heart attacks and strokes. Those levels were recently lowered by the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association, which will likely lead many more Americans to be eligible for taking the pills.

Both those facts piqued my curiosity about the announcement made Monday by Donald Trump with Mark Cuban, who runs Cost Plus Drugs, at his side. They were touting adding 602 generic drugs, including statins and blood pressure control meds, to TrumpRx, the government website that directs consumers looking for lower cost drugs to Cuban’s company GoodRx and Amazon Pharmacy.

Who will actually benefit from TrumpRx, I wondered, which is touting mostly generic drugs? And how much will they actually save?

First, I looked up what I could save by buying my generic statin from Cost Plus. Under my Medicare supplemental plan, which comes through my retired wife’s former employer (a public school system), CVS Caremark manages the pharmacy benefit. The PBM requires I pay a $20 co-pay at the pharmacy counter to obtain a 90-day supply of 20-milligram rosuvastatin, the generic name for Crestor.

Cuban’s Cost Plus mail-order website says it would charge me $7.85 for a 90-day supply plus a $5 shipping fee, thus saving me $7.15 for each refill or $28.60 a year. However, Cost Plus also tacks on a $5 pharmacy handling fee. It was unclear from the website if that was part of the $7.85. If not, adding that $20-a-year into the total cost would wipe out most of any savings for me.

I then called CVS Caremark to inquire about their savings should I decide to jump off their plan for those meager savings. I use the phrase “their savings” cautiously. I have no idea if my wife’s former employer or its plan’s medical insurer hires the nation’s second largest PBM, or how much either pays to CVS Caremark. Moreover, how much the PBM profits from the ultimate payer — the taxpayers behind the public employee retirement system — is unknown. So is the price it pays the generic manufacturer and any other middlemen that may have stuck their hands into the honey pot.

In any case, the call center operator told me the total cost to the PBM was $60.86 every 90 days. But that was before I paid $20 every three months at the pharmacy, so the cost reduction for everyone else would be about $164 a year, at least six times more than me. As noted above, how those savings would be divvied up between the PBM, the medical insurer and the employer-payer is safely contained in someone’s black box.

Will it benefit the uninsured?

How about the alleged major beneficiaries of TrumpRx — the uninsured who have to pay for any health care out of their own pockets? Their ranks are growing daily due to this year’s massive increase in rates for Affordable Care Act plans triggered by the regime’s handmaidens in the Republican-run Congress, who allowed the Biden-era increase in plan subsidies to expire.

When ACA-insured, the people dropping plans paid nothing for their cholesterol and blood pressure control medications, even if their plan had deductibles. All preventive services rated “A” or “B” by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force must be offered free of charge under the ACA. Statins are rated “B.”

But under TrumpRx, those dropping coverage (or those that never had a plan in the first place) will have to pay the full cost. If they turn to Cost Plus Drugs, that would be at least $52 a year with maybe an additional $20 for the pharmacy fee.

Of course, both groups could run into trouble when renewing their prescriptions if they no longer have or never had a primary care physician. When signing up for Cost Plus Drugs, which I did today, I had to provide the name and contact information for my prescribing physician.

Even if they can get past that hurdle, people who are uninsured are usually pinching pennies. They no longer have a primary care physician. They don’t go in for routine checkups, which might identify when they have high blood pressure or dangerously elevated cholesterol. They are less likely to adhere to diets with less salt and less processed foods, which promote better heart health.

The ACA had it right. Drugs that have been proven to prevent serious diseases should be entirely free of charge to the consumer/patient. They are a wise investment that pays off in reduced hospitalizations and reduced complications from chronic diseases, which in turn reduces long-term health care costs. Plans like my supplemental should eliminate their co-pays entirely for such drugs, especially when they are generics like most statins and blood pressure meds.

TrumpRx sets up a financial barrier to access. It will decrease the population taking these important interventions. It is a public relations stunt designed to look like the regime is doing something about the high cost of drugs, which is entirely driven by the cost of new drugs coming to market and the high prices on those that remain on patent, not the extra fees PBMs tack onto prices.

Paying for value

One final thought: The regime is stepping up its pressure on European countries to raise their drug prices, which are substantially less than what is paid in the U.S. Why? Other advanced industrial countries are effective drug price negotiators. They refuse to pay more than the carefully calculated medical value of a prescription.

The U.S., on the other hand, insists that foreigners pay their “fair share” for innovation instead of using the same negotiating and value measurement tactics. Big Pharma’s argument — that the high cost of drugs is driven by the high cost of research and development — never held much water and has grown increasingly shallow given how much innovation has moved to China in the wake of the regime’s immigration policies and gutting of National Institutes of Health funding.

This Trump regime’s attempt to impose so-called reference pricing is, in essence, a strategy to maintain as much revenue as possible flowing to Big Pharma. It provides no long-term brake on rising costs. The U.S. would pay slightly less; other industrialized countries would pay slightly more; less developed countries would continue to go without the latest therapeutics; and the drug industry would maintain the status quo on profitability.

Merrill Goozner, the former editor of Modern Healthcare, writes about health care and politics at GoozNews.substack.com, where this column first appeared. Please consider subscribing to support his work.

Reprinted with permission from Gooz News


Fun Times Ahead! What Kevin Warsh Can Expect At His First Fed Meeting

Fun Times Ahead! What Kevin Warsh Can Expect At His First Fed Meeting

Newly appointed Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh will lead his first Fed meeting in less than a month. Ordinarily, I would feel sorry for a person in his situation. But since the guy is a rich, power-hungry jerk, I am looking forward to some great entertainment.

To set the table here, in his vast ignorance, Donald Trump has decided that interest rates should be much lower than they are now. He has muttered something along the lines of the Fed having a 1.0 percent interest rate instead of the current 3.5 percent rate.

Trump repeatedly threatened the outgoing Fed chair, Jerome Powell, who he had initially appointed. Trump started with insults on his Truth Social platform, moved on to threats of firing, and then told his Justice Department to cook up a criminal investigation.

While they at least temporarily suspended any prosecution, to get the votes needed in the Senate for Warsh, Trump has explicitly left the option on the table. And Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche has made it clear that he will indict people for getting Trump angry. Powell may still end up facing criminal charges for not going along with Trump’s demands to lower rates.

Trump also has said that he expects Warsh to lower rates or he wouldn’t have appointed him. For this reason, we might expect that Warsh will be looking to lower rates next month.

The problem for Warsh is that he can’t lower rates by himself. He would have to convince a majority of the 12-person Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) to go along with lower rates. He is not likely to get much help here.

At the last meeting, there was only one person arguing for lower rates, Stephan Miran, another Trump appointee. Warsh replaced Miran in his seat on the FOMC when he became Fed chair. This means that Warsh will step into the meeting with 11 other FOMC members who wanted to keep rates unchanged at the last meeting. Several of them actually leaned toward raising rates.

The new data since that meeting all point to higher inflation and also a somewhat improved labor market. That is not a mix that makes a good case for lowering interest rates.

The overall Consumer Price Index increased 0.6 percent in April, after rising 0.9 percent in March. This brought the year-over-year rate to 3.8 percent, the highest since early 2023. The core wasn’t too much better, rising 0.4 percent in April, bringing the year-over-year rate to 2.7 percent.

The Producer Price Indexes (PPI) and the Import Price Indexes were arguably even worse. The final demand index in the PPI rose 1.4 percent in April, bringing the year-over-year increase to 6.0 percent. The core index rose 0.6 percent, bringing its year-over-year increase to 4.4 percent..

The non-fuel import price index rose 0.8 percent in April, bringing the increase over the last year to 2.9 percent. These prices, on items like imported clothes and cars, had been falling in 2024. (The import price index does not include tariffs.)

These data all indicate a rate of inflation that is well above the Fed’s 2.0 percent target, and considerable pressure from input prices pushing inflation still higher in the future. It is hard to see how Warsh would be able to convince the other 11 FOMC members that the new data since the last meeting justify a rate cut.

This puts Warsh in the interesting spot where he either votes to keep rates constant (there will likely be members pushing for a rate hike) and incurs Trump’s wrath, or he casts a pointless vote for a cut. If Warsh does the latter, it will be the first time ever that a Fed chair has been in the minority on a vote on monetary policy.

If Warsh ends up being the only vote for a cut, like his predecessor, Stephan Miran, it would be truly unprecedented for a Fed chair to be completely out of line with the rest of the FOMC. Most often, the FOMC has no dissents, as the committee works to reach a consensus. The Fed chair being the lone dissenter would be extraordinary.

This dissent may make Trump happy, but it likely takes Warsh further from the goal of lower rates. Unless Trump tries to jail the rest of the FOMC, it will be necessary to convince the other members that there is a good argument for lower rates. A vote for a cut with the data we have recently seen does not look serious. It is not going to carry weight with the people Warsh needs to convince.

As I said, if he weren’t a pathetic, power-hungry jerk, I would feel sorry for him. However, given the situation, I look forward to the entertainment.

Dean Baker is a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research and the author of the 2016 book Rigged: How Globalization and the Rules of the Modern Economy Were Structured to Make the Rich Richer. Please consider subscribing to his Substack.


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