While it's fine to call for civility in our politics, it's not helping when the primary source of that incivility, Trump, gets a pass for childishly calling our governor Gavin New-scum while denying federal aid for one of the worst natural disasters in state history based on petty politics. There have never been such lopsided expectations in our political reporting. There needs to be one set of standards that our leaders are held to.
Imagine a little boy at odds with himself, awkward, shy, painfully self-conscious, the passage began. Imagine that little boy dreading the lunchroom at school, the hierarchical order of jocks over here, freaks over there, and nerds in a self-protective circle, and that little boy fleeing into the cocoon of the library where no one would notice him, where he could read his USA Today. I'm curious if that animates your posture in the political scene, because you are someone who refuses to hate, McEnany said.
The event was much anticipated as blood sport, a showdown between a young communist and an old despot, to use their favored insults for each other. Instead, the two men put on such a show of good manners that at times I had to laugh out loud at the stagecraft. After a closed-door meeting, Trump and Mamdani summoned the press, and there was Uncle Donnie seated behind his desk in the Oval Office, beaming as his favorite nephew, Zohran, stood by his right shoulder
In recent months, the conservative Trump devotee, from whom Americans have come to expect off-the-cuff and often crude commentary, has been undeniably good natured, coming across as astoundingly reasonable during a number of appearances on CNN, Tucker Carlson Tonight, and elsewhere. But if that weren't enough to cast aside doubts about a major pivot with the congresswoman (who once harassed a school shooting survivor and chased a fellow member of Congress down a hallway), then a November 4 appearance on The View definitely did the trick.