Letters from an American - Trump's Politics as Dominance Sport
Episode Date: May 28, 2026May 27, 2026Backed by Trump, scandal-ridden Ken Paxton wins Texas primary against John Cornyn, UFC arena is being built on the White House lawn as Trump dominates the People’s House just as he is do...minating the Republican Party, In the 1850s, enslavers similarly dominated the Democratic Party and forced through the Kansas Nebraska Act, Those opposed to the spread of slavery created a new alignment, Trump and his supporters are using culture war issues to try to cement their power, James Talarico may have an advantage in his campaign for Senate, given the corruption of the Trump administration, Administration is trying to keep its actions secret, In 1854, voters put anti-Nebraska candidates in office and would create a new political party. By 1859 the Republican party found a champion in Abraham Lincoln. Watch today's recording here: https://www.youtube.com/live/g9TUa1Rwd6U?si=T8_KKcHQZElhpnZ-Get full, free access to Letters from an American here: https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribeYou can also find me:Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/hcrichardson.bsky.socialInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/heathercoxrichardson/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/heathercoxrichardson/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heathercoxrichardson Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe
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May 27, 26.
In Texas yesterday, Republican primary voters chose Trump-backed State Attorney General Ken Paxton
over incumbent Senator John Cornyn by more than 27 points to be the Republican candidate for Senator.
President Donald J. Trump endorsed the scandal-ridden Paxton last week
after Senate Republicans had dumped $90 million into the race to defend Cornyn
Democrats will now use their announcements calling attention to Paxton's many scandals against them.
As Philip Elliott of Time magazine noted, Republicans can look forward to dumping another $250 million into trying to get Paxton elected,
money that they needed to flip Democratic seats elsewhere.
Trump backed Paxton because he didn't think Cornyn was loyal enough to him,
despite the fact that Cornyn voted with Trump 99.2% of the time.
Trump preferred Paxton's attacks on Democrats
and his flaunting of his MAGA identity,
despite, or perhaps because of,
Paxton's many scandals.
As CNN's Patrick's Feitk explained,
in 2015, shortly after he took office as Texas Attorney General,
Paxton was indicted on charges of felony securities fraud.
a case ending in March 24 with an agreement that Paxton would pay restitution and complete community service.
In 2020, Paxton's top aides reported him to the FBI for abusing his office. He fired four of them.
A judge later agreed they were fired improperly and awarded them $6.6 million.
In 2023, the Texas House, dominated by Republicans, impeached Paxton on a bipartisan vote.
Under pressure from Trump, the Texas Senate acquitted him.
And then, last year, his wife, State Senator Angela Paxton,
filed for divorce on biblical grounds.
Trump appears to see politics as a dominant sport,
much like the mixed martial arts fighting promoted by Ultimate Fighting Championship,
whose arena is going up on the lawn of the White House
for the fights Trump will host on his birthday, June 14th.
Brian Wyckard of WBAL TV explains that workers are putting up a massive 90-foot-tall structure called the claw
to loom over a temporary octagon fighting arena in a way that the White House and the Washington Monument
will be framed for television during the event.
With his destruction of the east wing of the White House, the paving of the Rose Garden to create a patio that looks like the one at Mar-a-Lago,
and now the framing of the White House through a UFC arena,
Trump has asserted his dominance over the People's House.
Similarly, with his purging even of loyalists in favor of extremists,
he is asserting his dominance over the Republican Party,
turning it fully into the MAGA Party.
In a similar moment in the 1850s,
elite enslavers who dominated the Democratic Party
demanded party members line up behind their determination to spread human enslavement to the West.
Although the 1820 Missouri compromise that admitted Missouri as a slave state
protected the rest of the land in the Louisiana purchase north of Missouri's southern border from enslavement,
Democrats in 1854 forced through Congress the Kansas-Nebraska Act, permitting slavery there.
Their purity test was a harbinger of a dramatic political realignment.
Frustrated that the existing parties, the Whigs and the Democrats, were not taking a strong
enough stand against the demands of elite enslavers, those opposed to the Kansas-Nebraska
Act and the spread of slavery abandoned their own political allegiances and came together.
Conventions across the north called upon all free men to
fight together for the first principles of Republican government and against the schemes of aristocracy,
the most revolting and oppressive with which the earth was ever cursed or man debased.
As voters swung away from the Democrats in the 1850s, those Democrats left in office represented
the most extreme districts and were themselves the most extreme members of the party.
They tried to rally their base by appealing to racism, warning that black Americans would murder white people unless they remained enslaved and insisting that anyone opposing the spread of slavery was endangering the country and that the U.S. had always been a nation of and for white men.
The echoes of that tactic today are blaring as Trump and MAGA Republicans try to cement their power through racism and culture war issues.
Trump today insisted completely falsely that ethnic Somalis in Minnesota, almost all of whom are American citizens, are all crooks.
Media Matters yesterday reported that Proud Boy Enrique Tereo said he expected those Trump supporters convicted of crimes for their actions around the January 6th, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, would use the money Trump has promised them from the $1.776 billion.
dollar slush fund to spread conservative culture and to run for office to take over the system.
The Not One of Us theme is also playing out in Texas, where Republicans appear to be attacking
Democratic candidate for Senator James Tallerico, primarily with accusations that he is not
manly enough for Texas, falsely saying he is a transgender vegan. Paxton has called Tala Rico
Tofu Tala Rico, six-gender Jimmy, James Talafrico, and Low Tali Tala Rico.
And has said that Tala Rico is a threat to our very way of life and our values.
But Talariko seems to have gotten the memo.
He welcomed Kornan's supporters to his campaign and responded to the Republican attacks
by telling Ben Micellus of Midas Touch,
I'm an eighth generation Texan. I've been eating barbecue since before Ken Paxton's first indictment.
If all they have on me is lying about me being a vegan, I feel pretty good about our chances this November.
He has refused to take the bait and has stood firmly on the idea of a government that works for everyday Americans.
To Myceles, he made a point of suggesting that many of my family members, my friends, my neighbors,
voted for Trump because they thought he would lower costs and forever wars, release the Epstein files,
and drain the swamp. Instead, he's done the exact opposite. Talariko said he wants to speak directly
to those Texans who feel disillusioned, who feel like the system doesn't work for them,
that it only works for billionaires and puppet politicians like Paxton and Cornett.
If we can bring those Texans together across all these divisions in our politics,
if we can see past the distractions and the culture war tactics,
I think we can do something extraordinary, Tala Rico said.
We can end 30 years of one-party rule in Texas,
and we can transform American politics in the process.
Today, his campaign announced a tour called
The People v. Ken Paxton.
Unlike anti-Nebraska candidates in 1854,
Tala Rico and other Democratic candidates this year
have the advantage of running against a party
whose leader is openly corrupt.
In addition to the $1.776 billion slush fund,
the fortune and cryptocurrency deals, and so on,
David A. Ferrethold of the New York Times reported today
that the contractor given a no-bid contract
to repair the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool
is being paid and inflated and excessive profit margin.
The government is paying $13.1 million for the pool work,
seven times what Trump initially said it would cost.
Maxine Jossilow and Andrea Fuller of the New York Times
also reported today that Trump is using
$7 million worth of the entrance fees
visitors have paid to national parks across the
the country to pay for the work on the reflecting pool. He's also using nearly $60 million in those
national park fees to repair nine ornamental fountains in the capital. And the administration
appears determined to hide what it's doing. It proposed today in sweeping language that it will
require federal employees to sign a non-disclosure agreement a tool Trump has relied heavily on to
protect him from potential exposure for wrongdoing.
As Don Moynihan explained in Can We Still Govern,
the new rule would make it impossible for the American people to know
what government officials are doing.
That secrecy is hurting the American people in obvious ways.
Sarah Omermole of CNN reports that the administration has barred key U.S.
officials from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,
from talking to officials at the World Health Organization,
from which Trump withdrew the U.S.
This limitation has been relaxed slightly
since the outbreak of Hanta virus on a cruise ship with U.S. passengers
and a breaking Ebola epidemic in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Now U.S. officials can attend small, virtual meetings
in a listening capacity.
After a trip yesterday to Walter,
Reed Military Medical Center, after which Trump posted that everything checked out perfectly,
and the official White House social media account went further, posting perfect bill of health,
and in even bigger letters, perfect physical, Trump once again appeared to fall asleep
today at a cabinet meeting. He did, though, threatened to blow up U.S. ally Oman if it
doesn't behave over Trump's demands to open the Strait of Hormuz. Oman will behave just like
everybody else, or else we'll have to blow them up. They understand that. They'll be fine.
Yesterday, the U.S. military struck another small boat in the Eastern Pacific, bringing the number
of boats struck in the Eastern Pacific and the Caribbean to 58. At least 194 individuals have
been killed. The administration insists the boats are trafficking drugs but has produced no evidence
for that accusation. And as Eric Schmidt of the New York Times reported today, military experts say
the strikes are illegal, extrajudicial killings. Taking these patterns, along with others, into
consideration G. Eliot Morris at strength in numbers assesses that although Texas voters haven't
elected a Democrat statewide in 32 years, the Texas Senate election is a toss-up. In the midterm election
of 1854, Northerners tore through the ranks of congressmen who had voted for the Kansas
Nebraska Act. There were 142 northern seats in the House of Representatives.
voters put anti-Nebraska congressmen in 120 of them.
Anti-Nebraska coalitions elected 11 senators
and swept Democrats out of state legislatures across the north.
Still disorganized in 1854, by 1856,
those in the new coalition opposed to the slave power
had turned to a new political party, the Republican Party.
By 1859,
that new party found a champion, Illinois lawyer Abraham Lincoln, who articulated a new vision of
government that worked not for a wealthy cabal, but for the American people.
Letters from an American was written and read by Heather Cox Richardson. It was produced at
SoundScape Productions, Dead in Massachusetts, recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
