During his extremely divisive "blood-red" speech last week, in which he identified half the country as our country s enemies, President Joe Biden made many references to the alleged danger of former President Donald Trump and “MAGA Republicans.” He focused largely on the Jan. 6 Capitol riot and categorized "MAGA Republicans as a threat, a danger, and a phenomenon that jeopardizes our country’s democracy like no other."
EXCLUSIVE With Russia s invasion of Ukraine, energy politics are now paramount. The European Union has sought other means by which to pry Russia s metaphorical petroleum-stained hands off of its energy supply.
In my third year at the University of Pennsylvania, I took a course called "Who gets elected and why." It was taught by Ed Rendell, former mayor of Philadelphia, governor of Pennsylvania, and chairman of the Democratic National Committee. As such, Rendell addressed the class as if every student was a registered Democrat. In one class, he taught a particularly interesting lesson no matter the shortcomings of a nominee, voters should still vote for them because of the greater good of passing a political party s agenda. It s a lecture Republicans could ve used during the 2020 election, especially regarding student loan forgiveness.