From: fedora@fea.st   
      
   On Fri, 13 Feb 2026 12:10:43 -0800, Dude wrote:   
      
   >On 2/13/2026 11:55 AM, Noah Sombrero wrote:   
   >> On Fri, 13 Feb 2026 19:37:27 +0000, Julian    
   >> wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> We gotta win the midterms,” President Donald Trump told the crowd in   
   >>> Iowa at the end of last month. “I’m here because we’re starting the   
   >>> campaign to win the midterms. That means Senate and it means House.”   
   >>>   
   >>> Trump is, by all accounts, obsessed with the upcoming elections in   
   >>> November. Having been distracted by various foreign dramas, and seeing   
   >>> his approval ratings dip, the President aims to pivot back to a domestic   
   >>> mission in 2026.   
   >>>   
   >>> Trump understands the stakes, hence choosing Iowa, the traditional   
   >>> starting place for presidential primaries, to launch this campaign. The   
   >>> final two years of his presidency hinge on the outcome of these   
   >>> elections. He sees that, without a congressional majority in both   
   >>> houses, his political revolution will stall or even be reversed. If the   
   >>> Democrats capture the House, Trump would almost certainly face another   
   >>> round of noisy congressional battles and, quite likely, impeachment.   
   >>> That would drown out the revolutionary tempo of his second   
   >>> administration – a repeat of the relentless Democrat-led scuppering of   
   >>> his first term, only with added venom.   
   >>>   
   >>> Trump’s plan is to focus on what voters care about most: the economy. At   
   >>> the Iowa rally, a large banner above the President read: “LOWER PRICES,   
   >>> BIGGER PAYCHECKS.” He brags relentlessly about having lowered the cost   
   >>> of gas and is busy hyping a series of policies designed to make   
   >>> Americans feel good about their finances. There’s the $1,000 “Trump   
   >>> Account” for every child born in the US between January 1, 2025 and   
   >>> December 2028 and, perhaps soon, a $2,000 “tariff dividend” for every   
   >>> American taxpayer. Moreover, if Trump’s new nominee Kevin Warsh is   
   >>> installed as chairman of the Federal Reserve in May, he may well get   
   >>> those feel-good interest rate cuts he so badly wants.   
   >>>   
   >>> At the same time, the Democrats are increasingly confident that, for all   
   >>> Trump’s salesmanship skills, lingering cost-of-living pain and anxieties   
   >>> about the impacts of his erratic tariff system will ensure victory for   
   >>> their party. They believe a giant blue wave could soon drown out Trump’s   
   >>> legacy once and for all. The latest Fox poll supports such a view: only   
   >>> 20 percent of respondents felt Trump’s economic policies had “helped”;   
   >>> 43 percent said they had “hurt.”   
   >>>   
   >>> Unfazed by her failure in 2024, Kamala Harris has launched a shiny new   
   >>> youth mobilization organization, “Headquarters,” to build enthusiasm   
   >>> ahead of the midterms.   
   >>>   
   >>> Democrats are also thrilled at growing concerns about the uglier side of   
   >>> Trump’s immigration policies. Immigration is supposed to be a winning   
   >>> issue for Trump. His success in stopping illegal migration across the   
   >>> southern border is popular. Mass deportations, however, are becoming   
   >>> trickier to sell to the electorate. This is why, in the wake of last   
   >>> month’s shooting of the anti-ICE protester Alex Pretti, Trump moved   
   >>> quickly to put Tom Homan in charge of operations in Minnesota, while   
   >>> defenestrating Border Patrol commander-at-large Gregory Bovino.   
   >>>   
   >>> As November draws closer, Team Trump will emphasize how his strong   
   >>> crackdown on migrants, and his broader assertion of law and order in   
   >>> many American cities, has led to dramatic decreases in homicides and   
   >>> violent crimes. Yet history and logic suggest that the odds must   
   >>> strongly favor the Democrats. No one is certain about the Senate, where   
   >>> the Republican majority is stronger but still vulnerable. In the House   
   >>> of Representatives, however, where Republicans hold a vanishingly thin   
   >>> majority, Trump’s mission looks almost impossible: since the 1930s, only   
   >>> three presidents have seen their party gain House seats at midterm:   
   >>> Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1934, Bill Clinton in 1998 and George W.   
   >>> Bush in 2002.   
   >>>   
   >>> Yet Trump is blessed – if not yet with a golden economy, then with a   
   >>> weakened and unpopular opposition. Today’s Democratic party is in hock   
   >>> to an increasingly strident leftist ideology. For the first time since   
   >>> its founding, Democrats now resemble a European socialist party, one   
   >>> that stresses centralized control, heavy regulation, identity politics,   
   >>> high taxes and income redistribution.   
   >>>   
   >>> That orientation is a novel development for any major American party and   
   >>> does not command majority support among the public. The Democrats lack a   
   >>> positive agenda and the closest figure they have to a national leader is   
   >>> not Harris but the arguably more detested Governor of California, Gavin   
   >>> Newsom. His state was once a symbol of American growth and optimism; now   
   >>> it is suffering outward migration for the first time since the Gold Rush   
   >>> of 1849.   
   >>>   
   >>> But the Democrats’ weakness is also their strength. Although the party   
   >>> is muddled on core issues, the real glue that binds them these days is   
   >>> their white-hot hatred of Donald Trump. Hatred is not too strong a word.   
   >>> It motivates party activists, donors and especially core voters, who are   
   >>> disproportionately important in midterm elections, when turnout is   
   >>> typically low. It is this hatred of Trump that keeps true believers   
   >>> marching through the bone-chilling cold of a Minneapolis winter. It   
   >>> inspires them to vote for a socialist (some say communist) mayor of New   
   >>> York who cannot pay for his airy promises and has never managed so much   
   >>> as a two-car funeral.   
   >>>   
   >>> While Democrats fear a reign of right-wing populism, Republicans fear an   
   >>> irreversible slide into socialism, managed by a sclerotic Washington   
   >>> bureaucracy. Notions of a “loyal opposition” are long forgotten. For the   
   >>> party of Trump, the Democrats are accursed enemies. Truly evil. In such   
   >>> a climate, even midterm elections can take on a kind of end-times   
   >>> importance. Both sides are convinced that, if results don’t go their   
   >>> way, the country could be finished.   
   >>>   
   >>> If Democrats manage to retake the House, you can say goodbye to any new   
   >>> legislation. It may pass the House but it won’t make it through the   
   >>> Senate, which effectively requires super-majorities for all motions   
   >>> except budget bills and nominations. If Democrat-led legislation does   
   >>> somehow slither past that barrier, President Trump will veto it unless   
   >>> he has signaled his approval before the votes. It’s a formula for   
      
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