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Panic in the GOP establishment over Trump’s triumphs on Super Tuesday; Joan Walsh comments – shes The Nation’s national affairs correspondent.
Plus: What Trump supporters really think. Sasha Abramsky interviewed a bunch of them; he reports regularly on politics for The Nation.
Also: Trump says he reviles Muslims and reveres veterans—but some vets have been speaking out in defense of the Muslims they know and work with. Laila Lalami has that story—she’s The Nation’s newest columnist.
On Super Tuesday we had primary elections in a dozen states, and, in case people have forgotten, the winners were: On the Republican Side, Donald Trump won 7 out of 10 states. Ted Cruz had to win his home state of Texas—he did – and he also won two others. Marco Rubio never won any state, until Super Tuesday – he won Minnesota! And John Kasick almost won Vermont! So we have TWO Republican headlines: One, Trump triumphs; Two, nobody’s getting out. HAROLD MEYERSON comments.
Lunch at the Cemitas Poblanas truck, kindergarteners on their way to make pizza, and a chat with the EMT guys at the Fire Station
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Gary Younge looks back on Hillary’s 30-plus years in American politics and argues that “It is easy to forget what a mould-breaking, bad-ass figure Hillary cut when she first appeared on the national stage in 1992.”
And Jane Mayer of The New Yorker examines the secret efforts of the Koch brothers and their billionaire friends to move the Republican Party, and the country, to the right—the far, far right.
John Nichols explains how Bernie went from 50 points behind to tie Hillary in Iowa – and what she is doing to change course.
Also: Joan Walsh analyzes the GOP after Trump’s second place finish—as the party establishment has a chance to reassert itself.
Also: BILL McKIBBEN, founder of
Plus: ANNA DEVEARE SMITH, the actor and playwright, talks about her new work on the school-to-prison pipeline, and about performing in her home town of Baltimore after the police killed Freddie Gray.
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Tavis Smiley talks about Martin Luther King’s final year—the year that began with his speech condemning the war in Vietnam, where he called the US “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.” That year ended, of course, with the sanitation workers’ strike in Memphis.