ChrisWeigant.com

Responding To Trump's Speech

[ Posted Wednesday, March 5th, 2025 – 16:35 UTC ]

I have to begin this review with the mandatory bit of pedantry which is required every four years. Last night, President Donald Trump gave a speech to a joint session of Congress. However, it was not technically a "State Of The Union" speech, since tradition dictates you have to have been in office for a whole year before giving one of those.

Nitpickery aside, let's do a quick review of how things went last night, shall we?

Continue Reading »

Democrats Prepare To Respond To Trump's Speech

[ Posted Tuesday, March 4th, 2025 – 16:21 UTC ]

It is time for Democrats to step up to the plate. President Donald Trump will address Congress and the nation tonight, and will doubtlessly boast about all the wonderful things he thinks he has been doing. In doing so, he will also doubtlessly lie about many of them in shameless fashion, since that's what he always does. But Democrats need to not get distracted and remain focused on one thing above all else. Call it a return to: "It's the economy, stupid."

From all indications, it looks like this is exactly what they are going to do, which is heartening news. Here's a good start, from an article today on the expected Democratic response:

Continue Reading »

Get Ready For Prices To Go Up

[ Posted Monday, March 3rd, 2025 – 16:43 UTC ]

So is everyone ready to pay more for stuff? Because that certainly seems like what is next on the agenda for the American consumer. We'll be paying more for food in the grocery store, more for electronic goods, and a whole bunch more for cars, starting tomorrow.

Or maybe not. You never know what's going to happen, since American trade policy will now be decided on a whim. By a man who simply does not understand how world trade works. Isn't that a comforting thought?

Continue Reading »

Friday Talking Points -- Ronald Reagan Would Be Ashamed

[ Posted Friday, February 28th, 2025 – 19:10 UTC ]

Remember when the Republican Party, as a whole, absolutely revered the memory of Ronald Reagan? It really wasn't that long ago. Their devotion was so pronounced that we even took to using the term "Saint Ronald of Reagan" whenever we wrote about Republicans lauding him to the skies, just to poke fun at their deification (or at the least, canonization or beatification) of a politician that, in our humble opinion, really didn't deserve such devotion.

Jumping forward to the present, each incoming president gets to choose how to decorate the White House, which includes the art on the walls of the Oval Office. We have to say it was somewhat of a surprise to learn that Donald Trump in his second presidency chose to hang a painting of Reagan on the wall overlooking the same desk Ronnie used to sit behind. We learned this fact from the following article, which (please note) was written before what just happened in the Oval Office today:

Continue Reading »

The Other Budget Battle

[ Posted Thursday, February 27th, 2025 – 17:30 UTC ]

I have to begin today with two apologies. The first is for writing about essentially the same subject for three days in a row. I do realize there are plenty of other things going on right now (European leaders visiting the White House, for one), so to focus solely on the budget process in Congress is a bit limiting. My second apology is for misunderstanding something in my last two columns, which is why I'm writing this one (for clarification).

What I got wrong (through a mistaken assumption on my part) is that there are actually two tracks to the budget battles in Congress right now. I have been conflating them into one, but this is not the case. What the House passed this week is a budget framework for the upcoming fiscal year, which won't start until October. It has nothing to do with this fiscal year at all -- that's the second track (that I missed).

Continue Reading »

House Republicans Cast Momentous Vote

[ Posted Wednesday, February 26th, 2025 – 16:56 UTC ]

The House Republicans just -- stunningly and amazingly -- actually did something. I know! You could've knocked me over with a feather....

I start with such snark because it seems entirely appropriate. But this is rather big news, as what it truly means is that the Republican House cats have now (for once) been successfully herded. This really is a big deal, since it hasn't happened much at all in the past decade or so.

The way things usually go in the GOP House is that they attempt to pass a bill (usually a budget, since that's about all they're capable of paying attention to) but their slim majority in the chamber means that their speaker cannot convince enough of them to vote for it, and so it dies. This usually leads to negotiations with Democrats and kicking the can down the road once again (it can also lead to a new Republican speaker, as we've seen before).

Continue Reading »

The Budget Battles Begin

[ Posted Tuesday, February 25th, 2025 – 16:41 UTC ]

Republicans in Congress are running out of time. The federal government's budget turns into a pumpkin in mid-March, so if a new budget bill isn't passed by then, the government will shut down. And while President Elon Musk's chainsaw approach to slashing spending and personnel is getting most of the attention, what Congress does is likely to have a much deeper impact. This budget battle will also provide an opportunity for Democrats to make the case that Republican "populism" was never more than a mirage (or a lie) to begin with.

Continue Reading »

Rare Truth

[ Posted Monday, February 24th, 2025 – 16:55 UTC ]

I start today with a bit of mineralogical history. The Washington Monument on the National Mall was built both before and after the Civil War, and was finally finished in 1884. At the top of America's obelisk sits a pyramid, with observation windows visitors can look out of. The very tippy-top of this stone pyramid (roughly 555 feet above ground -- at the time, the tallest building in the world) was capped with a small pyramid made out of metal (which doubles as the contact point for the monument's lightning rod). The metal used was one of the rarest available at the time -- so rare that it was as expensive as silver. This small pyramid weighs 100 ounces, and at the time was the largest cast piece of this metal in the world. So what was this extremely rare metal?

Continue Reading »

Friday Talking Points -- King Trump? Um... No.

[ Posted Friday, February 21st, 2025 – 18:54 UTC ]

The first month of the second presidency of Donald Trump is now over. Only forty-seven more to go!

That, of course, is a daunting prospect, but we can at least open with some good news this week: Trump is already wearing out his welcome with the public. The presidential "honeymoon" period is apparently over (almost before it began). Trump started off his second term with historically dismal ratings, although they did best one previous president -- himself, in his first term. His job approval numbers were actually at 50 percent or just above when he was sworn in this time around (which, as mentioned, every other modern president has beaten), so he could at least claim a majority of the public was behind him. Not any more.

Continue Reading »

Honeymoon Over?

[ Posted Thursday, February 20th, 2025 – 16:52 UTC ]

Donald Trump is now officially one month into his second term as president. And already, his "honeymoon" period seems to be ending. Most incoming presidents get at least a few months where the public essentially gives them the benefit of the doubt and approves of the job they're doing. But then at some point, this wears off and their job approval polling noticeably falls back. And some of the polls released recently show that this may already be happening with Trump.

Trump started his second term with one of the weakest honeymoon showings of the modern political era. Even so, it was better than his first term, where he never did get above 50 percent (he briefly touched this milestone in his first month, but then fell back, never to fully recover). This time around, he barely got his polling average above 50 percent, but at least mostly he was "above water" in the polling. His job approval was higher than his job disapproval, in other words. This is no longer the case in some polling.

Continue Reading »