The Herald reports the ultra-Trumpies who took over the West Roxbury Republican Ward Committee a couple years back had a very special guest speaker via video yesterday: Renfield, um, Steve Bannon, who reported his fascist former boss will run for Congress in 2022, win, depose Nancy Pelosi and then single-handedly impeach Joe Biden.
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Comments
Jurisdiction is interesting
By anon
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 4:10pm
Is the argument here that Trump will move to San Franscico, or that he'll run for Congress from New York, or Florida..er.. where ever he's legally allowed to live, and that he thinks he'll be able to get a majority of Congresspeople to actually vote for him to be Speaker of the House?
I wonder how Kevin McCarthy feels about that?
You think Kevin McCarthy would stand his ground?
By berkleealum
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 7:57pm
lol
He was already facing replacement for being insufficiently loyal to Trump like 2 weeks ago.
And Bannon is assuming that the Rs take back the House in 2022. Given the state of House politics, I think giving Trump the Speaker gavel would be pretty easy.
He was arrested for
By anon
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 4:30pm
He was arrested for defrauding donors to the ‘We Build the Wall’ campaign... He would be on trail except he was pardoned so not reveal what happened to the money under oath. Why would you listen to a scam artist?
https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/the-narciss...
Who or what is Renfrew?
By anon
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 4:31pm
I do not get the reference.
If I'm going to make a stupid reference ...
By adamg
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 7:40pm
The least I can do is get it right. Renfield.
Oh Really
By SwirlyGrrl
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 4:50pm
Bannon should be getting what Benedict Arnold got, not an audience.
Trump will be in a 24 hour assisted living facility for his multiple obvious declining medical conditions .
Benedict Arnold got a brigadier general's commission
By necturus
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 1:09pm
That's what the British gave him as a reward for his defection. Since he had been an American Major General, it represented a demotion, even if it came with a nice red uniform.
Media outlets to Trump: We REALLY miss you
By Gary C
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 5:03pm
Biden is pretty boring. Quietly governing doesn't generate the anger (and clicks) that Trump always did. I've noticed that many media outlets are scraping the bottom of the barrel for ANY Trump-related news, just to keep people engaged. (Did you see the Twitter "outrage" when Melania didn't mention her husband in Valentines tweets?)
Stop laughing at these people.
By J.R. Dobbs
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 5:47pm
And start taking them at their word.
These are violent extremists who have justified the murder of a Capitol police officer during an attempted coup all in the name of a failed Steak Salesman.
These people are angry, unhinged, and emboldened.
Know who the ones are in your area and avoid them at all costs.
Confused
By PeyoteEatingWat...
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 5:52pm
I couldn't access the Herald article that is linked to this post without getting bombarded with pop up ads, so I gave up. Is it saying that Steve Bannon is running for Congress from West Roxbury??? Good luck with that one. Doesn't West Roxbury sit in Ayanna Pressley's district? Whatever, but might be funny to watch from afar for about a day or so.
worse(?)
By berkleealum
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 6:17pm
he’s saying Trump will run for someone’s House seat in 2022 and quickly become Speaker – in this fantasy we take for granted that the Democrats have lost 8+ seats – and his first order of business would be to impeach Biden for stealing the 2020 election.
A conviction could have prevented this scenario, too
By Ron Newman
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 8:55pm
by disqualifying Trump from any office, not just the Presidency.
Remember that John Quincy Adams was elected to the House of Representatives two years after losing his re-election bid for President.
I like to imagine
By berkleealum
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 12:02am
Trump campaigning and winning, just to putter around for two years should the Dems retain their majority. The whole thing is farcical.
That makes one of us
By perruptor
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 5:17am
The only thing I like as his future is conviction for some of his many crimes, resulting in long prison sentences. It's what he deserves.
agreed
By berkleealum
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 4:33pm
but he’s rich, powerful, and white in America so my expectations are to see him live another 20 or so fruitful years
More likely...
By lbb
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 4:46pm
...he will stroke out.
Trump can still be indicted on any number of charges
By necturus
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 1:10pm
If he's convicted of a felony, he won't be running for anything next year.
lol
By berkleealum
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 2:55pm
i hope you won’t be holding your breath
I think the probability of the Dems losing the House
By MC Slim JB
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 7:18pm
majority in 2022 is pretty high, if history is any indicator, regardless of how popular and effective anything they get done in the meantime is with the electorate.
FDR in his first term (in the depths of the Depression), Clinton in his second (after an unpopular impeachment trial) and W in his first (post-9/11) were the only instances of an incumbent picking up mid-term seats in the last 90 years. That's just the way the House swings.
i think you’re probably right
By berkleealum
Wed, 02/17/2021 - 12:18am
but i wonder if the precedent will hold should the Ds manage to send the
$2000$1400 and then get covid generally figured out this summer.Probability depends on performance
By perruptor
Wed, 02/17/2021 - 8:02am
I believe that the 2010 midterm election repudiation of the Democrats was due to their failure to deliver on their and Obama's promises, and continued devotion to corporate interests, combined with the rabid Tea Party movement. So far, Biden is performing far better than Obama did, on several fronts. If congress backs him up, or even exceeds him in progressive actions*, the Democrats could do even better in the 2022 election than this year. Numerous polls have shown that progressive policies are very popular, unless they are labeled liberal, or socialist, or the like.
* My possibly idiosyncratic use of progressive here means policies that benefit ordinary citizens, rather than corporations or elites.
Steve Bannon, a perfectly
By brianjdamico
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 6:14pm
Steve Bannon, a perfectly reasonable individual worth associating yourself with who definitely does not call for the beheading of public health officials or anything...
Not at all like Kathy Griffin
By Don't Panic
Mon, 02/15/2021 - 11:34pm
Not at all like Kathy Griffin. Senator Trump? Get out of here!
Did they have her join the
By brianjdamico
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 7:46am
Did they have her join the meeting too?
Why sure
By lbb
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 9:20am
Right next to the equally qualified Senator Tuberville.
Kathy Griffin
By Scratchie
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 10:40am
I know this is all very complicated, and probably hard to keep straight, but Kathy Griffin is an entertainer. She is neither a politician nor a political advisor.
Try as I might, I can't remember a time when Kathy Griffin was shaping national policy as a member of a Democratic administration.
Entertainers sometimes become politicians
By Ron Newman
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 2:01pm
Ronald Reagan, Sonny Bono, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Al Franken come to mind.
Sure, but
By fungwah
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 1:53pm
I assume no one thought Arnold was making an argument for police shooting when he dressed up as a robot and fired a machine gun at cops.
There's a pretty clear distinction between entertainers acting as entertainers vs people like Bannon who are actively and openly looking to shape and direct public policy.
Good point. If Kathy Griffin
By Scratchie
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 5:03pm
Good point. If Kathy Griffin ever decides to run for office, or takes a governmental position, then we should certainly apply the same level of scrutiny to any statements she makes that *aren't* part of her comedy act.
Tell you what
By fungwah
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 1:41pm
We'll all agree not to vote for Kathy Griffin for anything and not to let her advise on any political campaigns.
Steve Bannon is no Truman Capote
By Daan
Tue, 02/16/2021 - 11:56am
While both share(d) a propensity, and both could use words to good or bad impressive effect, Truman's extremes never went into the looneytunes nightmares that Bannon mind conjures.