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Stephen Colbert on DHS pick Markwayne Mullin: ‘Has a history of being real dumb and real angry about it’

1 day ago
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Late-night hosts recapped Markwayne Mullin’s risible confirmation hearing for homeland security secretary and Maga’s struggles to sell the war in Iran to sticker-shocked Americans.On Wednesday’s Late Show, Stephen Colbert looked into the resignation this week of Joe Kent, Donald Trump’s director of the national counterterrorism center, in protest of the administration’s war in Iran and the fact that “Iran posed no imminent threat to our nation”.“So the US is going to war in the Middle East without an imminent threat to our nation … AGAIN?” Colbert joked, sitcom-style.“Now, before anybody sends this guy an Edible Arrangement in the shape of the word ‘hero’, keep in mind: he sucks,” he continued, before reminding viewers that during his failed 2022 congressional bid, Kent paid Graham Jorgensen, a member of the Proud Boys, for consulting work, and worked closely with Joey Gibson, founder of the rightwing group Patriot Prayer.Kent has also blamed Israel for the 2003 US invasion of Iraq.

“Now, I’m not saying he’s an antisemite … because a lot of people beat me to it,” said Colbert,He quoted Representative Don Bacon, who said: “Good riddance,Antisemitism is an evil I detest, and we surely don’t want it in our government,”Colbert added: “Bacon is standing up for the Jewish people, and he’s not even kosher!”The host also touched on Mullin, Trump’s pick to replace ousted homeland security chief Kristi Noem, who himself said at his confirmation hearing on Wednesday: “I’m not going to be the smartest guy in any room I walk into,”Mullin, Colbert noted, “has a history of being real dumb and real angry about it”.

At the hearing, he was pressed by Rand Paul, the Kentucky senator who a few years ago was assaulted and hospitalized by a disgruntled neighbor,At the time, Mullin said he “understood” why Paul was attacked,Paul asked Mullin to explain why Americans “should trust a man with anger issues to set the proper example for ICE and border patrol agents”,“Now, while that is a valid question – and it is a valid question – Senator Paul knows that ‘anger issues’ are the top requirement for ICE and border patrol agents,” Colbert responded,“Right above not being the smartest person in any room you walk into.

”On Late Night, Seth Meyers also recapped Mullin’s confirmation hearing, during which he claimed, in response to Paul, that he was “simply pointing out … some of the rules that still apply to this body, for instance dueling with two consenting adults is still there”.Paul responded tersely: “It’s been illegal for 170 years.There’s no precedent for legal dueling.”“I don’t know which part of that is weirder, that Markwayne thought dueling was still legal, or that Rand immediately knew it hasn’t been legal for 170 years,” Meyers said.“If you challenge Rand to a duel and said, ‘Name the time and the place,’ he’d say: ‘Uh, I’m not sure about the place, but let’s make the time the year 1856.

’”“Also very funny to describe a duel as being between two consenting adults,” he added.“You know, because if only one person consents, that’s murder.“But that’s the philosophy of Maga: violence and brute force rule the world.They can do whatever they want,” he continued.“Which is why even the voices within the administration who were the loudest against war with Iran are now changing their tune,” such as Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s national intelligence director.

When she was running for president as a Democrat in 2019, Gabbard criticized Trump and his “chickenhawk” cabinet for bringing the US “to the brink of war with Iran”, which would be “far more devastating, far more costly than anything that we saw in Iraq”.Yet at her own congressional hearing on Wednesday, Gabbard defended Trump’s attacks on Iran as a “strategic success”.The about-face represented “the new Maga”, said Meyers.“They lied about ending foreign wars, all they care about is power, they can invade any country they want.”In Los Angeles, Jimmy Kimmel ridiculed Trump for “strong-arming the Senate right now to try to save himself from getting his ass handed to him in the midterm elections” with his proposed Save America Act that would require passports for voting, among other onerous restrictions.

“Trump is now in full bully mode,” Kimmel noted.“He’s forcing Republican senators to debate this bill he dreamed up to fight back against these completely fabricated claims of voter fraud.It’s like if he made them build another wall at the Mexican border, to keep the chupacabra out.That’s how crucial this bill is.”The bill currently does not have the 60 votes required to pass thanks to a few Republican holdouts, “which is encouraging”, said Kimmel.

Trump has said that he will not endorse any Republican who refuses to support the bill and will do what he can to ruin them.“He’s either going to ruin them, or the country, it’s their choice.”“But make no mistake: imaginary voter fraud aside, our president is laser-focused on the issues that matter most to us, like windmills,” said Kimmel, as the Trump administration is now reportedly exploring the idea of paying $1bn to stop a French energy company from building wind farm projects off the coasts of New York and North Carolina.“A billion dollars of our money to cancel projects that harness an endless resource, wind,” he lamented.“And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the kind of math that bankrupts casinos.

”And on The Daily Show, Jordan Klepper examined a tough bind for Trump’s supporters, as his war in Iran sends gas prices soaring.“High gas prices have Maga world in a tricky position now, because there’s no way to spin it as a good thing to the American people,” he explained.“Unless, you know what? Unless, what if we’re the problem.”Klepper then played a series of Maga-rationalizing clips.“People are talking like this is the end of the world.

No, it’s not,” said Larry Kudlow on Fox News.Said a Newsmax host: “I can handle the gas prices, people can handle the gas prices.We’re hardly ever called on to sacrifice anything any more.”“Think of how much worse it was in world war two than what we’re facing now,” said another Fox News commentator.“Is that the bar now?” Klepper exclaimed.

“It’s not as bad as the worst war in human history, so stop bitching? I mean, you can dismiss any concerns that way,‘Oh, you’re upset because home ownership is out of reach? You know who else doesn’t have a home? Saving Private Ryan,’“But you heard them: this is just temporary pain that will all be worth it in the long term,” he added,“I’m sure every day Americans will understand and will take this in stride … ”Klepper then played a clip of a three-time Trump voter in Pennsylvania who, when asked by a reporter if she had a message for the president, was very succinct: “You are a worthless pile of shit,”“Well, someone’s not getting an invite to the new ballroom,” Klepper quipped.

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Reform UK suspends Scottish candidate less than a day after announcing him

Reform UK has suspended one of its Scottish candidates after it emerged he had been struck off as a company director, and the party faces growing attacks for fielding candidates making Islamophobic remarks.Reform confirmed on Friday morning it had suspended Stuart Niven, its candidate for Dundee City West, after the Herald revealed he had been struck off after diverting tens of thousands of pounds of Covid grants into his personal account.Several hours after that admission, claims within Reform’s Scottish manifesto that it could save billions of pounds in Holyrood spending were dismissed by the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinktank, which described many of its pledges as “not fiscally credible” and “unserious at best”.Reform had faced a succession of attacks from across the political spectrum about the conduct of several candidates only hours after Nigel Farage unveiled the 73 Reform UK hopefuls standing for May’s Scottish parliament election.Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, said the disclosures in several newspapers about their “divisive tweets” raised challenging questions about the party’s screening process, which Farage earlier this year claimed was now far more rigorous than before

about 7 hours ago
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Starmer’s ministers look at new economic blueprint to quell voter anger

Cabinet ministers have been studying a blueprint for Labour to radically overhaul its economic offer and messaging, including devolving tax powers, abolishing national insurance, and major property tax changes.Passed around dozens of MPs, the paper argues that without a major rethink, the failure to tackle the discontent on the cost of living will hand the next election to a hard-right government. There is also increasing concern that the war with Iran – pushing up prices of fuel, energy, food and mortgages – will fuel further mass public anger.The report, which has the draft title of the Beveridge Report for the Economy, will say the British economy rewards grifters and exploitation rather than hard work, and that voter anger is fuelled by the belief that hard work and “doing the right thing” leaves many feeling cheated.Several potential Labour leadership candidates are understood to have requested to see the report, which was prepared as part of a partnership between the Labour Growth Group of MPs once considered loyal to Keir Starmer and the Good Growth Foundation thinktank

about 8 hours ago
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Attorney general asks if Kemi Badenoch would object to Jewish public prayer

Richard Hermer, the attorney general, has challenged Kemi Badenoch to say whether she would object to Jewish prayer in public, after the Conservative leader backed one of her shadow ministers who said an Islamic prayer event was intimidating and un-British.Hermer, one of the UK’s most prominent Jewish politicians, said Badenoch’s decision to support the views of Nick Timothy, the shadow justice secretary, put her on a par with Reform UK and Tommy Robinson, the far-right activist.After an event to mark Ramadan took place on Monday evening in London’s Trafalgar Square, Timothy posted images of mass prayers taking place, saying such an action in a public space was “an act of domination” and “straight from the Islamist playbook”.Asked about her support for Timothy on Thursday, Badenoch said any public expressions of religion should “fit within the norms of a British culture”, and criticised the way men and women were separated for the Ramadan prayers, with men nearer the stage and women farther behind.Hermer told the Guardian Badenoch needed to clarify her view

about 15 hours ago
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Nigel Farage condemned over call to ban public prayer for Muslims in the UK

Muslim leaders have condemned Nigel Farage’s call to ban public prayer by Muslims in the UK as bigoted and warned of a “growing tide of hate” after the Conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch, questioned whether the events fitted “within the norms of British culture”.Farage was speaking at the launch of Reform UK’s manifesto for the forthcoming Scottish parliament elections when he made the remarks.He described as “a wake up call and a warning to everybody” an event in Trafalgar Square earlier this week where hundreds of Muslims and people of other faiths prayed together, before the celebration of Eid.He said the event, organised by the Ramadan Tent Project and attended by Sadiq Khan, London’s mayor, was “an open, deliberate, wilful attempt, not at the private observance of a different religion, but the attempt to overtake, intimidate and dominate our way of life”.The event has happened in the historic square in central London five times before without incident or previous controversy

1 day ago
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Here’s what a reformed House of Lords could look like | Letters

A reformed Lords could give us the best of all worlds: a chamber that connects and legitimises the disparate parts of our higgledy-piggledy devolved constitution without challenging the primacy of the directly elected Commons (So long, hereditary peers – but the Lords is still full of absurd anachronisms, 13 March).Three-quarters of its members could be indirectly elected by local councillors, with temporary seats reserved for the heads of the national governments and regional mayors. Party leaders not yet in the Commons – such as Zack Polanski – could also sit there. The remaining seats could be time‑limited appointments for experts such as retired civil servants and former ministers, perhaps with different voting rights. An independent commission could oversee appointments, vet eligibility and weed out dodgy donors

1 day ago
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Harry Barnes obituary

It was probably inevitable that the former Labour MP Harry Barnes, who has died aged 89 of cancer, would have very well delineated political views when he arrived in the House of Commons. He was already middle-aged, and had spent much of the previous three decades studying politics, first as a mature student and then working as an extramural lecturer on the subject, teaching others who were likewise seeking a second chance at education later in life.Barnes, who represented North East Derbyshire from 1987 until 2005, was a serious politician, a man of principle and conviction, but also someone who recognised the need for political flexibility in evolving circumstances.He was never constrained by ideology and was constantly in pursuit of what could be a possible new route to resolve existing problems, notably in Ireland. Always on the left of the Labour party, he was a serial rebel against his own frontbench, while simultaneously writing polite notes to the chief whip to explain his latest defiance

1 day ago
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Stephen Colbert on DHS pick Markwayne Mullin: ‘Has a history of being real dumb and real angry about it’

1 day ago
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Seth Meyers on Trump’s Nato about-face: ‘This is just how Donald Trump does friendship’

2 days ago
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Banksy has been unmasked (again). But does this major Reuters investigation actually tell us something new?

3 days ago
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Arts Council England must change or face ‘disaster’, culture department is told

3 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘He uses his bones to feel things instead of his brain’

3 days ago
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Carnivàle revisited: is this HBO’s strangest show?

3 days ago