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Balloon Juice

Come for the politics, stay for the snark.

There are some who say that there are too many strawmen arguments on this blog.

Relentless negativity is not a sign that you are more realistic.

Also, are you sure you want people to rate your comments?

Oppose, oppose, oppose. do not congratulate. this is not business as usual.

Every reporter and pundit should have to declare if they ever vacationed with a billionaire.

Dear media: perhaps we ought to let Donald Trump speak for himself!

Too often we confuse noise with substance. too often we confuse setbacks with defeat.

… gradually, and then suddenly.

“woke” is the new caravan.

Every decision we make has lots of baggage with it, known or unknown.

Putin must be throwing ketchup at the walls.

Republicans want to make it harder to vote and easier for them to cheat.

There are a lot more evil idiots than evil geniuses.

If you tweet it in all caps, that makes it true!

“In this country American means white. everybody else has to hyphenate.”

A thin legal pretext to veneer over their personal religious and political desires.

A tremendous foreign policy asset… to all of our adversaries.

If you cannot answer whether trump lost the 2020 election, you are unfit for office.

Republicans don’t want a speaker to lead them; they want a hostage.

Bark louder, little dog.

Reality always gets a vote in the end.

If ‘weird’ was the finish line, they ran through the tape and kept running.

Accountability, motherfuckers.

Nothing says ‘pro-life’ like letting children go hungry.

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Saturday Morning Open Thread

by John Cole|  February 28, 202612:43 pm| 190 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

Because I am a normal human being, I slept in until 7:30 because it is Saturday, and awoke to the news that we have brazenly started another mideast quagmire. It’s modern america in decline and every generation needs their own middle east quagmire, it’s how we keep the anti-Semitism and Islamaphobia alive and the arms dealers fed and get that vital jingoism pumping through the veins sorry about the fact you don’t have health care or clean water, we got bigger priorities- wars of choice, but you won’t be totally ignored we’ll give our old weapons to cops and ICE so they can beat you and shoot at you

USA USA USA!!! I fucking hate this government so fucking much.

Saturday Morning Open ThreadPost + Comments (190)

Guest Post: Speaker Emerita Pelosi At the Karsh Institute for Democracy

by Anne Laurie|  February 28, 20269:47 am| 34 Comments

This post is in: NANCY SMASH!, Proud to Be A Democrat, Something Good Open Thread

Pelosi at UVA 2
 
Thank you, commentor Jeffro:

Below are some of the pics I took while attending the “Congress: Cornerstone of Democracy” event put on at UVA yesterday by the Karsh Institute for Democracy.

(pics were taken inside the Rotunda at UVA)

Speaker Emerita Pelosi was warm and funny as we would all expect. My biggest takeaway at the end came at the end of Q&A, after she had been asked about her biggest concerns and biggest hopes for our country. She said she understands the outrage but her advice was “don’t agonize…ORGANIZE!” I have to agree. 🙂

Pelosi at UVA

Other tidbits:
* She said that our current era reminded her of Thomas Paine’s famous quote about how “the times have found us”. Paraphrasing NP here: “It was true then when it produced the American Revolution. It was true when Abraham Lincoln led us through the Civil War and kept our country together. And it is true now.”

* She kept coming back to the main theme: Congress is in Article 1 for a reason, and that many of our current problems revolve around Congress not doing its job (ie, conducting oversight of trump)

* She closed by noting that she was thrilled to see so many young folks in attendance (I mean come ON, it IS a university Madame Speaker Emerita! LOL) and encouraged young people to not only participate but to run for office – especially the young women in the audience.

Pelosi at UVA 1

She did say a few times that she felt, unfortunately, not enough Americans view ‘preserving democracy’ as a primary motivator for voting, and therefore focusing on issues like health care, affordability, etc was a smart way to go for most Dem candidates. But she did add that ICE’s violent insanity and trump’s Greenland obsession/attacks on NATO were registering with many voters, too.

She predicted that Dems will win the House handily due to the president’s consistent low approval ratings. She also noted poor candidate recruitment for the Rs (and vice versa for us) as well as lots of R retirements. She’s cautiously optimistic about the Senate, too!

Pelosi at UVA 3

Guest Post: Speaker Emerita Pelosi At the Karsh Institute for DemocracyPost + Comments (34)

Foreign Office Briefing: Green Shoots in Manchester

by Rose Judson|  February 28, 20267:32 am| 70 Comments

This post is in: Foreign Affairs, UK NOT OK

On the off-chance that anyone wants to talk about anything else this morning, here’s a post.

Let us look away from our newest criminal war for a moment to examine a good thing that just happened in Britain. On Thursday, voters in the Greater Manchester constituency of Gorton and Denton cast ballots in a parliamentary by-election. The seat had been held by former Labour MP Andrew Gwynne, who was made to resign after some offensive messages he wrote in WhatsApp leaked and caused a (justifiable) scandal. (Gwynne had won re-election to his seat with 50.8% of the vote in the 2024 general election.)

Hannah Spencer, MP for Gorton and Denton (Green Party), walking her four rescue greyhounds in a park on a sunny day.
The new MP for Gorton and Denton and her advisory council.

show full post on front page

There are about 120,000 people in the constituency, and it is, according to the Manchester Evening News, “a constituency of halves”, where some of the most deprived urban areas of the country exist cheek-by-jowl with rapidly gentrifying neighbourhoods. The population is 57% white, with most of the rest made up of a sizeable minority of residents from Asian backgrounds, many of whom are of Pakistani origin and/or Muslim.

G&D seemed like the ideal opportunity for Nigel Farage’s Reform Party to pick up a seat, especially after Keir Starmer blocked Manchester’s popular Labour mayor, Andy Burnham, from standing as a candidate. Burnham was (or is, I guess) widely seen as a potential replacement PM, but he has to get into parliament first, and candidates must be approved by the party. This move made Starmer even less popular with his own MPs, to say nothing of the general mood in Gorton and Denton itself.

Reform nominated Matt Goodwin, a former academic who set out to study the causes of political extremism on the right and contracted a terminal case of internet brain worms in the process. His career trajectory will look very familiar to Americans: a former centrist who became fash-curious, was criticised for becoming fash-curious, and then began to make a living performing frothing rage against “elites” on national television and via numerous book deals.

Goodwin doesn’t live in the constituency—he lives in Hertfordshire, north of London—but he began looking for a residence there.  Labour nominated a relatively inoffensive local councillor, Angelika Stogia, as their candidate. The media circus began. The prediction sites began to forecast a whomping win for Reform.

I can't believe this strategy didn't work

— Spelling Mistakes Cost Lives (@darrencullen.bsky.social) 2026-02-27T12:30:24.789Z

The Green Party nominated a young lady who was from Manchester and had previously lived in the constituency. Her name is Hannah Spencer. She is not a pundit or an academic or the graduate of an Oxbridge PPE program. She left school at 16, eventually qualifying as a plumber and gas engineer. She dipped her toe into politics after becoming an anti-dog racing activist (she owns several rescue greyhounds). Angered by inequality and the special privileges afforded to the super-rich, she joined the Green Party. She got elected to the city council in 2023, and came in fifth place as a candidate in a different Manchester district in the 2024 GE before her selection as the Gorton and Denton candidate.

Hannah Spencer walking into Westminster, sucking her teeth, tutting, and muttering "tell you what, you've had some cowboys in here."

— Tom Roberts (@tpgroberts.bsky.social) 2026-02-27T06:22:33.546Z

Aside from the fact that she’s a lady (remember that Labour is the only major UK party never to have had a woman as leader), she actually looks a lot like a traditional northern England Labour candidate: white, working-class background with a track record of local political and civic involvement.

While Goodwin sucked up national media oxygen, Spencer was out knocking on doors, speaking to local groups, releasing ads in Urdu and other languages used in the constituency—and also taking a course to get certified as a plasterer, which she passed. She did the novel thing of focusing on her neighbours’ needs and talking about how much she likes them, and how much she loves being from Manchester. In an article in Guardian this past Monday, she wrote:

We are not living on what Keir Starmer once called an “island of strangers” and we don’t want our immigrant neighbours living in fear. We look out for each other, we graft together and we muddle along. Our city has a long and proud history of welcoming people because we know we are stronger for it.

She became the first Green Party MP elected in a Westminster by-election on Thursday night because she was offering something nobody else was: positivity and a history of caring about the place she wants to represent. And while her win should not be over-interpreted as an indicator of anything going on nationally, she showed that there is—that there could be—an alternative to both Reform and Diet Reform (d/b/a the Labour Party).

This insightful thread by a UK-based NYT reporter who spent time in the area goes into several of the factors that contributed to Spencer’s win:

As the analysis starts of the Gorton and Denton result, I wanted to flag some aspects that my experience yesterday suggests are being over or under-played(Caveats – I went to Longsight, Gorton and Denton town centres and spoke to as many people as I could, but it was mostly during the working day)

— Lizzie Dearden (@lizziedearden.bsky.social) 2026-02-27T10:16:14.641Z

This graph from the Guardian shows Spencer’s decisive margin of victory:

Foreign Office Briefing: Green Shoots in Manchester

Can the Greens can win a GE in 2029? Almost certainly not: there are still only five of them at the moment. But they could help energise the broader left—not least by demonstrating that it’s still possible for ordinary people without massive wealth to get into democratic politics and make a difference. And if a couple dozen of dissatisfied Labour MPs—they are being noisier than usual since Thursday—want to cross the floor to join them, that could help dislodge the malignant barnacle clinging to the top of their party, too (although this will probably happen after May’s local council elections, in which Labour is almost certainly going to be shellacked, anyway).

Congratulations to the Rt. Hon. Hannah Spencer. Hopefully her clients won’t be too cross that she has to cancel her upcoming plumbing jobs.

Open thread.

Foreign Office Briefing: Green Shoots in ManchesterPost + Comments (70)

War Piggies

by Betty Cracker|  February 28, 20264:54 am| 182 Comments

This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Open Threads, Politics, Republican Stupidity, War, Assholes, General Stupidity

It rained here a lot yesterday, and then our power went down around sunset. Bill had made chocolate chip banana bread earlier, so we ate that for dinner. We felt childishly guilty about it because it was definitely the same as eating cake for dinner.

Since we live in hurricane country, we have tons of candles. As it grew darker, I lit a bunch  of them, creating a romantic ambiance. Then we retreated to the porch, drank a glass or three of wine and listened to the birdcalls and gentle rainfall. It was a pleasant way to spend the evening.

The power didn’t come back until after we’d snuffed out the candles and turned in for the night. So, we were blissfully oblivious to the fact that a flaccid, sweaty hot dog skin stuffed with greed and unearned self-regard and wearing a dumb white trucker hat came on the TV to bray about toppling a foreign regime.

Sweaty, corpulent man in a blazer and white shirt wearing a dumb white trucker hat.

I have no idea what will happen as a result of this foolishness, but it’s difficult to imagine anything these psychopaths do making the world a better place. The next time this pack of belligerent, bumbling chuckle-fucks effect an improvement will be the first.

***

Speaking of sweaty, beady-eyed sociopaths, the former Fox News personality who runs the Pentagon made good on his threat to yank the Department of Defense AI contract with Anthropic, designate that organization a national security threat and award the contract to OpenAI instead.

It’s unclear that Hegseth has the authority to do that, but in a post-law society, maybe that doesn’t matter. Here’s an excerpt of a statement from Anthropic, plus a link to the entire thing:

Earlier today, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth shared on X that he is directing the Department of War to designate Anthropic a supply chain risk. This action follows months of negotiations that reached an impasse over two exceptions we requested to the lawful use of our AI model, Claude: the mass domestic surveillance of Americans and fully autonomous weapons.

We have not yet received direct communication from the Department of War or the White House on the status of our negotiations.

We have tried in good faith to reach an agreement with the Department of War, making clear that we support all lawful uses of AI for national security aside from the two narrow exceptions above. To the best of our knowledge, these exceptions have not affected a single government mission to date.

We held to our exceptions for two reasons. First, we do not believe that today’s frontier AI models are reliable enough to be used in fully autonomous weapons. Allowing current models to be used in this way would endanger America’s warfighters and civilians. Second, we believe that mass domestic surveillance of Americans constitutes a violation of fundamental rights.

Here’s a tweet on the topic from OpenAI’s Sam Altman, whose wildly overvalued organization is the beneficiary of Hegseth-Trump’s spat with Anthropic:

War Piggy 1

Given the character of the so-called “Department of War” under Trump and Hegseth, my takeaway from this is that OpenAI tech will power the Pentagon’s dystopian domestic surveillance and self-guided robo-extermination units. Good to know.

Such is my personal paranoia level about all the planet-destroying plagiarism machines that when I first heard about the spat between Anthropic and the DOD, I wondered if it was a PSYOP to make the portion of the public that is wary of AI (i.e., the majority) believe there are good guy AI purveyors. I remain skeptical.

It’s unfortunate that all the decision-making about AI deployment is left to techno fascists in the private sector while allied reactionary clowns run the U.S. government and are personally in charge of its vast nuclear arsenal. And by “unfortunate,” I mean “fucking terrifying.”

It is also darkly amusing that everyone involved has to pretend that the Department of Defense is now called “Department of War” because the decrepit adolescents running the joint think that sounds badass and will kick anyone who calls the massive federal agency by its proper name out of the He-Man Woman-Haters Club treehouse.

Anyhoo, it’s supposed to rain all day today too. I’m tempted to shut off the electricity so we can once again experience the cozy darkness, obliviously eating additional chocolate chip banana bread and drinking more wine by candlelight.

The end.

War PiggiesPost + Comments (182)

War for Ukraine Day 1,464: A Brief Friday Night Update

by Adam L Silverman|  February 27, 202610:56 pm| 27 Comments

This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Military, Open Threads, Russia, Silverman on Security, War, War in Ukraine

A demotivational poster saved from the old Very Demotivational site. It is a cat's paw with the bottom of the paw facing the viewer raised in the air. Below the paw the caption reads "Help Me!!!!"

MEDIC!!!!!!

I’m not saying I overdid back and chest day, but I’m not not saying it! The real issue is because it was thunder monsooning, I used free weights instead of using my TRX while wearing my weighted vest. So I’m just sore in a different way.

Quick Rosie update. She’s doing great. I’d say she’s easily about 90% of where she was before the stroke/canine TIA. The biggest issue was getting her to eat, but after discussing with her vet yesterday, we adjusted the kibble and she’s been eating it like me at an all you can BBQ rib restuarant that also has all you can eat bacon. Thanks for all the good thoughts, well wishes, and prayers.

It’s been a long week, I’ve got an early start tomorrow, so I’m just going to run through the basics tonight.

President Zelenskyy sat for an interview with Sky News today.

“It’s hard for Americans to understand the Russian mentality, when they’re lying and when they’re telling the truth. I once told Jared and Steve that, honestly, it’s easier to assume they are lying all the time,” – Zelensky.

Precise assessment.

[image or embed]

— Maria Drutska (@mariadrutska.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 7:13 PM

Precise assessment.* To know when Russians are lying, you just have to see their lips move.

— Maria Drutska (@mariadrutska.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 7:13 PM

SKY NEWS: The Kremlin is claiming that Ukraine is trying to get a nuclear weapon via Britain and France.

ZELENSKY: With pleasure! But I didn’t receive any such proposals.

SKY NEWS: So we can put that to bed — that’s not happening at all.

ZELENSKY: No, it’s not happening.

[image or embed]

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:00 PM

Zelenskyy states that a troop withdrawal from Kramatorsk and Slovyansk would abandon 200,000 residents to Russian occupation. He says these civilians face execution, forced mobilization, or imprisonment as occurred in Crimea and the Donbas.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 2:23 PM

Here’s the full interview:

Zelensky said if Putin refuses a meeting the war will be long. If Putin agrees to a trilateral meeting Ukraine would have a chance in the coming months to try to end the war.

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 3:07 PM

Need some help finding an excuse to give Donald for why I can’t attend a negotiation with Zelensky.

Any ideas?

— Darth Putin (@darthputinkgb.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 4:55 PM

Medvedev dribbled something about him being mean on twitter and cried into his pink vodka.

— Darth Putin (@darthputinkgb.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 4:55 PM

Here is President Zelenskyy’s address from earlier today. Video below, English transcript after the jump.

show full post on front page

Detailed Plans for the Regions Have Already Been Prepared, Covering the Restoration of Energy Facilities and the Upgrading of Their Protection – Address by the President

27 February 2026 – 20:20

I wish you good health, fellow Ukrainians!

Today, an important meeting was held with our government officials, energy specialists, and military personnel – everyone responsible for protecting and upgrading our infrastructure, Ukraine’s energy sector. Detailed plans for the regions have already been prepared, covering the restoration of energy facilities and the upgrading of their protection, taking into account everything Russia has been doing over this winter and what it could attempt next. I instructed that certain points be refined and that these plans be prepared for the level of the National Security and Defense Council to be approved precisely at the national level, specifying exactly what needs to be done, what must be ensured, and who will be responsible. I count on the full engagement of regional and local authorities – those who can genuinely get things done. The successful practices already established in some regions and communities must be shared with other areas, those that have faced more problems and unresolved issues this winter. It is the local authorities who can make the greatest contribution to the resilience of communities, knowing which facilities require priority modernization and protection. The Government and all institutions of our state – everyone will help.

There are also many military aspects – tasks that must be implemented by the army and the Ministry of Defense. The formats tested recently have proven effective. When practically every strike and every impact was carefully analyzed, clear conclusions were drawn about what must change. I am grateful to everyone working exactly this way – adapting themselves and transforming defense approaches to truly respond to every threat of this kind and protect Ukraine effectively.

Today, I also discussed with Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko the substantial social steps prepared by the Government. Ukraine will carry out the annual pension indexation, benefiting more than ten million of our citizens. Pensioners will see increases of over twelve percent. The funds for this are allocated; the indexation must take place immediately, in March. Despite all the challenges of full-scale war, we conduct this indexation every year. Since the first year of the invasion, no matter how difficult it may be, Ukraine has ensured pension indexation, all necessary social payments, and the stable operation of the state’s social and financial systems. In the context of a full-scale war, this is a very significant result. I am grateful to everyone helping Ukraine make it possible.

Of course, I am also grateful to every Ukrainian entrepreneur, all our companies, and the entire Ukrainian business sector operating in Ukraine, paying taxes in Ukraine, maintaining and creating jobs, and allowing the Ukrainian budget to function. Despite everything – the war, Russian strikes, and all these outages – Ukrainians cover at least half of state and community spending. It is extremely important that we have internal foundations of resilience, as well as our work with partners, which has provided Ukraine with unprecedented external funding throughout these years of war.

I spoke with our diplomatic team. We continue to engage with people who have demonstrated strong experience in defending Ukraine’s interests. In particular, I met with Pavlo Klimkin. We are preparing to strengthen several areas of our diplomatic work in Europe and beyond. Ukraine’s interests must be represented both at the official level and in engagement with communities in those countries that are not yet free or remain under Russian influence.

There will be personnel changes within the diplomatic corps. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs is also preparing candidates for the position of Special Representative on Belarus and the Belarusian community in Europe. A more active policy is needed. And it is precisely the proactive efforts of our state and the proactive efforts of our people that deliver the best outcomes for Ukraine. When Ukraine does not waste a single day or miss a single opportunity, Ukraine’s interests are genuinely protected.

Glory to Ukraine!

Georgia:

Greetings from snowy, freezing Rustaveli Avenue — day 457 of daily, uninterrupted, nationwide protests. ❄️🇬🇪

🎥 George Jibladze

[image or embed]

— Rusudan Djakeli (@rusudandjakeli.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:02 PM

Slushy Tbilisi and Day 457 of #GeorgiaProtests

1. Further regime isolation, a Russian proxy and sanctions evasion enabler, pro-Iran, pro-CCP;
2. Targeted sanctions;
3. Aid to CSOs & media;
4. International investigation into chemicals use against protesters;

📷 MOSE

[image or embed]

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 4:19 PM

Georgians are always protesting. Beyond the daily evening rallies in 8+ cities — now on day 457 — other demonstrations continue across the country, like this silent protest at a metro station.

“Freedom to prisoners of conscience,” the sign reads.

📷 Mo Se

[image or embed]

— Rusudan Djakeli (@rusudandjakeli.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 9:25 AM

Much gratitude to @euromaidanpress.bsky.social for the opportunity for me to expose structural weaknesses of the Georgian Dream’s rushed dictatorship, which is now qualitatively different from previous projections of normalcy.

And I’m so glad to see @rusudandjakeli.bsky.social photo as the cover!

[image or embed]

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 6:54 PM

In my new @euromaidanpress.bsky.social article, I argue two main points:

1. The Georgian Dream has quit projecting normalcy, stopped caring about popularity, and entered a qualitatively different phase of the very rushed dictatorship: 1/3

[image or embed]

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:14 PM

to preemptively eliminate whatever self-organizing social fabric there is and to force the population into managed poverty or emigration;

2. The speed is quite a desperate sprint against time since the GD is structurally too weak to manage a successful dictatorship in the medium-to long-term. 2/3

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:14 PM

Many thanks to the great Euromaidan Press team and Editor-in-chief Alya Shandra herself!

Link: euromaidanpress.com/2026/02/27/g…

3/3.

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:14 PM

From EuroMaidan Press:

Something has shifted in Tbilisi. The Georgian Dream is no longer bothering to keep up appearances.

Instead, the regime is striking preemptively—dismantling every unit of social mobilization and pushing the country toward managed poverty and emigration. What’s unfolding is a systematic dismantling of Georgia’s social and economic fabric. But the process is rushed and brittle.

From late January to mid-February 2026, the regime launched a crackdown targeting democratic leaders and university faculties, neighbourhood pharmacies, and imported cars—all at once, with a speed and scope that defy the usual autocratic playbook.

Regimes typically tighten the screws gradually, saving the harshest measures for after dissent is crushed. In Georgia, it is all happening while political parties, civil society, and independent media are still functioning—and while people have been protesting daily for more than a year and a half. So why the rush?

Because the Georgian Dream knows it is structurally fragile—and is gambling against time.

The centrepiece is a sweeping “Grants Law” being fast-tracked through parliament. In theory, it could target not just opposition politicians and civil society organizations but remittances from the Georgian diaspora and even basic person-to-person transactions.

The law also criminalizes “external lobbying”—essentially any activity abroad promoting democracy in Georgia or advocating for EU integration.

To understand the stakes, consider what foreign-funded civil society actually does in Georgia. Georgian NGOs receive over 90% of their funding from abroad—and they do work the government won’t: monitoring elections, investigating corruption, providing legal aid, running shelters, supporting investigative journalism.

As scholar Julie George wrote, “what many CSOs in Georgia do is governance that the government does not.”

The Georgian Dream has been working to destroy this infrastructure since 2024, when it passed a Russian-style foreign agents law requiring organizations receiving more than 20% of their funding from abroad to register as “pursuing the interests of a foreign power”—with debilitating fines for noncompliance.

The vast majority of Georgia’s roughly 26,000 NGOs refused to register.

The Grants Law escalates from fines to prison. It blurs the lines between legal and illegal so thoroughly that the public is left wondering what lawful conduct even looks like anymore.

Numerous legal experts in Georgia have said as much, including Tamar Oniani, the Chairperson of Georgian Young Lawyers’ Association (GYLA). With criminal penalties of up to 6 years—and in some cases up to 12—the broad scope and vague wording do not inherently exclude remittances (11.9% of Georgian GDP in 2024). The exemption has been confirmed only verbally by some Georgian Dream MPs.

Meanwhile, while all Western funding is being criminalized, China continues to fund a program popularizing China on Georgia’s pro-Kremlin media outlet Obiektivi.

The law could also criminalize basic transactions within Georgia itself: Michael O’Flaherty, Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe, underlined in his 2 February statement that the new law “would encompass any cash or in-kind transfer from one person to another person that may be used to carry out activities with the belief or intention of exerting any influence on the government, state institutions or any part of society.”

In practice, the law will most likely be applied selectively. But its vast scope and deliberate vagueness mean it could criminalize almost anyone—and under a regime this reckless, that is the point. As constitutionalist Davit Zedelashvili notes, the regime has given critics a choice: prison or exile.

Even before the Grants Law, Human Rights Watch assessed the 2025 draconian laws to be “decimating the country’s vibrant civil society.”

The regime is also considering a ban—and jail time—for refusing to recognize the “legitimacy of constitutional bodies” (read: the legitimacy of the Georgian Dream). Three opposition party chairpersons, Zurab Girchi Japaridze, Giorgi Vashadze, and Nika Gvaramia, have just left jail, but their passports and ID cards have been confiscated to ban them from exiting the country, and they face further prosecution.

Others, chiefly Elene Khoshtaria, Nika Melia, and Mikheil Saakashvili, remain imprisoned, although Saakashvili’s case is older and stems from a somewhat different context.

Yet the regime is pressing ahead with prosecuting almost all democratic leaders over “state sabotage” and related “crimes.” The harshest charge—”assistance to a foreign country, foreign organisation or an organization controlled by a foreign state in hostile activities,” which the Georgian Dream interprets as advocating for targeted sanctions over Russia sanctions evasion and human rights violations—carries 7 to 15 years in prison.

Three leaders are being prosecuted specifically for sanctions advocacy: Elene Khoshtaria of Droa, Zurab Girchi Japaridze of Girchi–More Freedom, and Giorgi Vashadze of Strategy Aghmashenebeli. Japaridze and Vashadze have been banned from leaving Georgia, their passports and IDs confiscated.

The absurdity deserves spelling out. Russia still occupies 20% of Georgian territory since the 2008 invasion. After Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Georgian Dream refused to join Western sanctions against Moscow and began echoing Russian propaganda narratives—earning the regime the nickname “Russian Dream.”

Ordinary Georgians see it differently: Ukrainian flags fly alongside Georgian and EU flags at the daily protests against falsified elections, and Georgians openly view Ukraine’s fight as their own. The regime’s response is to jail the people calling for sanctions against Georgia’s occupier.

Several peaceful protesters are currently detained for protesting on a sidewalk outside the Parliament of Georgia—the daily location of protests for almost 450 days. Protesting on that sidewalk more than once is now a criminal offense punishable by up to a year in prison.

Much more at the link including images and the original embedded hyperlinks.

Ireland:

Can all loyal serfs please find their favourite Irish Putinist and warn them that this means NATO is about to invade their country & force them into the alliance.

Soon Dublin will be overrun with masked troops the UK denies are theirs.

giftarticle.ft.com/giftarticle/…

[image or embed]

— Darth Putin (@darthputinkgb.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 3:08 AM

Sweden and (sort of) France:

But sure.
Russia is “NOT ESCALATING”

A Russian drone flew close to the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle while it was docked in Malmö, Sweden, – SVT.

The drone reportedly launched from a nearby Russian vessel and approached the carrier during strategic exercises.

[image or embed]

— Maria Drutska (@mariadrutska.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 8:47 AM

Swedish forces took countermeasures to neutralize it, but contact was eventually lost.

The Charles de Gaulle is the largest non-American nuclear aircraft carrier in the world (over 260 meters long, carrying thousands of personnel and around 30 fighter jets).

www.svt.se/nyheter/inri…

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— Maria Drutska (@mariadrutska.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 8:47 AM

Slovakia:

Slovak PM Fico said his call with Zelensky left him convinced Ukraine is not interested in restoring oil transit through its territory.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:47 PM

The PRC:

Russian oil revenue keeps falling as China demands bigger discounts.

As India drops Russian oil, few global buyers mean Russia must choose between oil production cuts, or bigger discounts to sustain production.

And demand peaking may mean production cuts in April regardless.📉

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— Maria Drutska (@mariadrutska.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 3:25 AM

The US:

Foreign Policy brings us a deep dive into what Putin, the Kremlin, Russia really think of Trump:

U.S. President Donald Trump has repeatedly told Americans that he alone can end the war in Ukraine because he has a “very good relationship” with Russian President Vladimir Putin and a 28-point peace plan to make Moscow comply. Ahead of the pair’s April 2025 summit in Alaska, which occurred after Trump warned of unspecified “consequences” if Russia didn’t halt its attacks on Ukraine, Russia’s most popular talk-show host devoted an entire segment of his show to reminding viewers what Russia thinks of Trump’s threats. “We can destroy all of them with nuclear weapons,” Vladimir Solovyov said on air. “Let them think about this during our commercial break.” This isn’t fringe rhetoric; it’s primetime messaging on Russia-1, the flagship state TV channel. These and other segments have been preserved and documented by U.S. journalist Julia Davis for anyone who cares to look.

Trump is objectively the most popular foreign public figure in Russia, second only to Putin in raw media mentions. But it is not for the reasons the White House would prefer. Russian TV routinely features jokes about how Trump can be manipulated into doing things that clearly damage U.S. interests. On-air banter mocks his “psychological deadlines” for Russia to accept a cease-fire as meaningless. Television hosts and studio guests don’t conceal their satisfaction with the current U.S. administration, not just because it includes people like U.S. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard—whom Russian television has called “our girlfriend” for her frequently Kremlin-aligned views—but also because they see the United States’ geopolitical self-immolation as a boon that Moscow could never have engineered on its own. To Russians, Trump is the face—and often the punchline—of that process.

Trump’s malleability is a constant theme in these discussions. He is not portrayed as a serious politician to contend with but as someone between a useful fool and an irritating obstacle. Russian state TV flatters Trump when convenient, mocks him otherwise, and threatens him when he steps out of line. During one panel discussion, a military pundit calmly explained that Russia should force Donald Trump to make decisions that weaken the United States while reminding viewers that Washington remains “an adversary.” Nevertheless, Trump insists that he has a “great” relationship with Putin, who supposedly “respects” him. But it is Putin’s government that micromanages the media outlets that openly ridicule Trump.

The disconnect between how Trump thinks he’s perceived in Russia and how Kremlin propagandists actually talk about him is, on one level, comedic. But it also reveals Russia’s contempt for Trump personally and for everything he represents as president of the United States. Moscow portrays today’s United States as a declining state whose leader is hilariously unaware and can be goaded, bribed, or bullied into doing whatever serves Russian interests. As a bonus, this leader is dismantling the world order that the Soviet Union and Russia spent decades trying to unsuccessfully undermine. Trump’s foreign-policy antics are genuinely entertaining to Russian propagandists and function as nightly reminders to viewers of who, in the Kremlin’s telling, is winning.

In early 2026, Russian propagandists swooned over Trump’s fixation on Greenland. Solovyov told his audience that he had been “right about Trump all along,” calling him the president who “totally destroyed the entire system of international relations.” Around the same time, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov praised the “excellent” personal relationship between Putin and Trump, crediting their “mutual respect” for progress at talks in Alaska. However, Lavrov also warned that Russia would answer any militarization of Greenland with unspecified “military-technical measures.” The message is clear: Trump is preferred as the man dismantling the old order—right up until he tries to constrain Moscow. Then, the nuclear saber comes out for another rattle.

When Trump’s rhetoric crosses a line that Moscow has drawn, the tone shifts from flattery to open menace. Ahead of the Alaska summit, after Trump issued his warning of “consequences,” Solovyov reminded viewers that “no one has the authority to impose their will on the Russian president” and boasted that while the United States could retaliate, Russia “can do it faster and more effectively.” Former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has played a similar role with his frequent comments on Telegram. There, he has invoked Russia’s “Dead Hand” automated nuclear retaliation system and told Trump to watch The Walking Dead, a zombie apocalypse series, to understand “how dangerous” it is. Nuclear escalation threats are not an exceptional topic in this discourse. Rather, it is a recurring theme and pressure tool that immediately reverberates in Western policymaking circles.

Although Trump is relentlessly mocked and derided for failing to quickly strong-arm Ukraine into surrendering after his inauguration, he is also encouraged and praised when behaving as Moscow expects. “What a generous man! The U.S. position has changed to normalcy with Trump’s arrival,” declared Olga Skabeyeva, co-host of the daily talk show 60 Minutes, after Trump’s first peace proposal, which would force Ukraine to accept Russian occupation and block it from joining NATO. Her co-host and husband, Evgeny Popov, chimed in: “Absolutely wonderful! All of Trump’s cabinet personally hates Zelensky. It’s a radical dream team!” In these moments, Trump is not lauded as a strong U.S. leader but as the unwitting architect of the world that Moscow wants.

You won’t understand this coverage if you imagine Russian state media as the equivalent of Fox or MSNBC, just under a different flag. It is closer to a nightly strategic briefing, carefully orchestrated inside the Kremlin’s media management rooms and disguised as infotainment. Panelists openly discuss “forcing” Trump into making choices that benefit Russia, using his desire for a “deal” as leverage in negotiations, and Russia’s ability to resist any pressure from Trump because, as one pundit put it, “America needs this peace more than we do.” When tactically necessary, the hosts and panelists pivot from praising Trump’s Russia-friendly position on Ukraine to reminding viewers that the United States remains Russia’s main adversary and that no matter what Trump does, Russia’s course is unchanged.

The uncomfortable implication for a U.S. audience is that Trump is not a singularly feared or respected figure. He is just the latest in a series of world leaders whose personal ego and domestic chaos the Kremlin can exploit. The more Trump insists that Putin “respects” him and will make a deal only with him, the more Russian television portrays Trump as someone who has already accepted Russia’s terms but doesn’t realize it yet. That gap in perception is the real story. Trump has built his Ukraine policy and much of his foreign-policy image on the idea that he alone can manage Putin because the Kremlin sees him as strong. But in Russia’s nightly public messaging, he appears as something else entirely: a convenient accelerant of U.S. decline, a negotiator who can be manipulated, and, when fitting, a punchline sandwiched between nuclear threats. If this is what “respect” looks like on Russian state TV, then any peace treaty that Trump may or may not sign will be written in Moscow—and Americans will be the last to know.

Back to Ukraine.

Ukraine’s defence minister Fedorov says drone procurement is now data-driven to avoid corruption and scrap ineffective systems. He adds Ukraine worked with SpaceX to shut Russian Starlinks, cutting enemy streams elevenfold, and separately broke a northern Shahed mesh network.

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 5:35 AM

🚀The very first public footage of Ukraine’s FP-7 ballistic missile launches marks a new chapter in the country’s military capabilities.

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— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 10:48 AM

As claimed, a rare Russian heavy strike UAV, the Okhotnik worth $15-20 million, reportedly has been scrapped.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 2:54 PM

Several cruise missiles possibly including Flamingo are currently heading toward southern Russia according to DroneBomber.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 4:15 AM

DroneBomber, citing Russian monitoring channels, mapped the reported flight path of three Flamingo missiles. The tracks suggest all three followed the same route for about 1,800 km, largely along the Don River and its bends, potentially at very low altitude over the river corridor.

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— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 7:56 AM

DroneBomber followed up with a map of yesterday’s Ukrainian drone routes, with some tracks again running along the Don River corridor.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 8:08 AM

Kostiantinyvka:

28th Mech Brigade of the UGF 🇺🇦:

“Kostiantynivka. Russian forces struck a residential area with phosphorus. Then hit it with a 1.5-ton FAB-1500 bomb.

~2,000 civilians remain in the city. They are also hunted by FPV drones.

The man on the bicycle was clearly a civilian.

This is terror.”

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— Olga Nesterova (@onestpress.onestnetwork.com) February 27, 2026 at 12:10 PM

Pidserednie, Kharkiv Oblast:

As a result of a russian night attack on the village of Pidserednie in Kharkiv region, two people were killed and another was wounded‼️

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 7:43 AM

Kharkiv Oblast:

This is how civilians are evacuated from frontline areas of the Kharkiv region. Protective drone nets are necessary because Russia spares no one.

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— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 9:06 AM

Russian occupied Mariupol:

On February 27, a Pantsir-S1 air defense missile and gun system was destroyed on the outskirts of Mariupol

Notably, this appears to be the first recorded instance of a Pantsir system mounted on an MZKT wheeled tractor chassisbeing destroyed on camera.

[image or embed]

— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 6:34 AM

Kherson:

Russian channels posted footage of a kamikaze drone strike on the Kherson thermal power plant building. The timing is unverified at this time.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 7:49 AM

Odesa Oblast:

Moment a Russian Shahed is shot down over the Danube during this morning’s attack on Odesa region. Filmed from Romania.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 7:41 AM

Russian occupied Luhansk Oblast:

Footage of operators from the 1st Unmanned Systems Forces center striking an oil depot in occupied Luhansk today.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 3:37 AM

Russia:

The Moscow Times reported missile danger alerts in at least 13 Russian regions today, eight of them for the first time. Authorities imposed flight restrictions at airports including Kazan, Orenburg and Saratov.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 9:31 AM

Belgorod Oblast, Russia:

Something is detonating in Belgorod region of russia 💥👀
Watch with the sound on 🔊

[image or embed]

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 1:07 PM

As reported by local Belgorod media: Just now, during a missile attack, a Pantsir-S1 air defense system was struck in the area of Dubovoye settlement, Belgorod district.

[image or embed]

— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 7:07 AM

Kursk Oblast, Russia:

A drone suppressed by Russian electronic warfare fell onto an auto repair shop in Kursk killing one and injuring three.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 6:37 AM

Sverdlovsk Oblast, Russia:

A missile alert was issued in Novouralsk, Sverdlovsk region, around 1,800 km from Ukraine’s border.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 6:31 AM

The Udmurt Republic, Russia:

Exilenova+ published close-up footage of a 50,000 m³ tank burning at the Kaleykino pumping station. The reservoir has now burned out completely.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) February 27, 2026 at 5:40 AM

That’s enough for tonight.

Your daily Patron!

A new Patron video:

@patron__dsns

Доведеться прибирати самотужки…

♬ My little chompers – idiot

Here’s the machine translation of the caption:

You’ll have to clean yourself…

And the machine translation of the text overlayed on the video:

When spring is in two days, and the snow still hasn’t melted:

Open thread!

War for Ukraine Day 1,464: A Brief Friday Night UpdatePost + Comments (27)

Friday Night Open Thread

by John Cole|  February 27, 20268:33 pm| 89 Comments

This post is in: John Cole Presents "This Fucking Old House"

I think this was inevitable:

Forty-one percent of Americans now say they sympathize more with the Palestinians in the Middle East situation, while 36% sympathize more with the Israelis. The five-percentage-point difference is not statistically significant, but it contrasts with a clear lead for the Israelis only a year ago (46% vs. 33%) and larger leads over the prior 24 years.

From 2001 to 2025, Israelis consistently held double-digit leads in Americans’ Middle East sympathies, with the gap averaging 43 points between 2001 and 2018. However, public opinion began narrowing in 2019, several years before the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel and the subsequent war in Gaza. The cumulative effect of gradual changes in U.S. attitudes since then has led to the Israelis no longer being viewed more sympathetically.

I don’t know if this is the correct take on things (and I am sure Adam and many of you know more and will correct me), but I think this is the product of a number of things, one of which is that Republicans and Netanyahu marrying each other and allowing this to become a partisan issue, on top of all of us watching as the Bari Weiss’s of the world expanded anti-Semitism down to the point that having one outspoken Muslim faculty member in a poli-sci department of 70 at Columbia was in and of itself anit-Semitic, as well as everyone of being able to watch them just bulldoze Gaza in front of our eyes and lie directly into the camera and quietly admit to things months later, well, it’s hard to be surprised.

And the tragedy of it this intentional conflation of Jewish people and Israel by folks like Weiss and the Murdochs and all the usual suspects for political purposes is that Jewish people are not monolithic in their beliefs and many if not most American Jews are appalled (from what I remember like half of them overtly state Israel has committed genocide and like 70% fucking HATE Netanyahu), and now they are going to be the victims of the rising acts of real anti-Semitism across the country, meanwhile the Republicans have open and avowed nazis running things, and this issue will somehow only hurt Democrats in elections. It’s fucking maddening.

***

The cruelty is the point:

“After 2012, however, the Boy Scouts lost their way and a once great organization became gravely wounded. Diversity, equity, and inclusion, DEI, crept in. The name was changed to Scouting America. Girls were accepted. The focus on God as the ruler of the universe was watered down to include openness to humanism and earth-centered pagan religions… They even welcomed the destructive myth of gender fluidity and transgenderism to infiltrate their membership,” Hegseth said in a video posted to Twitter.

He then announced major changes at the organization, including new anti-transgender policies. “Scouting America has agreed to comply immediately with the provisions of executive order 14173. This includes reviewing and replacing politicized, divisive, and discriminatory language throughout the organization, programs, and all publications. No more DEI. Zero,” Hegseth said. “The Citizen in Society merit badge that encouraged scouts to explore diversity, equity, inclusion, and identity… that badge has been discontinued. Third, Scouting America will modify its policy to make clear that membership will be based solely on biological sex at birth and not gender identity. That means that the application, any application, will have only two sex designations, male and female, and the application must match the applicant’s birth certificate. Scouting will also make clear that biological boys and girls will not be allowed to occupy or share intimate spaces together, toilets, showers, tents, anywhere like that.”

He closed by saying that he wished Scouting America would return to not allowing girls in the program. “Ideally, I believe the Boy Scouts should go back to being the Boy Scouts, as originally founded, a group that develops boys into men. Maybe someday.”

What he fucking wants is Hitlerjugend.

***

Not a very good day with Bolo. I even called Tamara (who is sick) to yell about how much this dog is driving me insane. He literally will not go near me when Joelle is not here. But he has to go out. So I try to get him to go out into the back yard while keeping maxwell sequestered because he can not be free range outside until I shit a bajillion dollars and get the fence catproofed, and Bolo won’t go out unless I completely leave the room and walk into the bathroom or bedroom. Then he refuses to come in. So I just leave him outside with a bowl of water. And then he howls during my zoom meetings and gets Thurston barking. So I open the door for him to come in and he sees me and bolts outside to the furthest reaches of the yard. It took me 45 minutes to get him inside before my eye doctor appointment today (no prescription change- YAY!). It’s just absolutely maddening.

And even worse, while he is being a terrified asshole and I am ready to just fucking scream, I have to maintain my heart rate and keep a positive voice and flat or positive facial affect and it is just enough to drive you insane. Oh, and top of all that there is the ever present fear he will bolt, because that is what Shiba Inu’s fucking do. And if something happens to him, it will be my fucking fault and Joelle will hold it against me forever and say she won’t but she will.

I am such a likable person, too. I drop food all the time. I give great belly rubs.

*** Update ***

Twenty minutes ago Joelle and I were lying in bed planning the day tomorrow and Bolo came up between us and licked my head and let me touch him. PROGRESS.

Friday Night Open ThreadPost + Comments (89)

Upbeat Open Thread: Sherrod Brown, Doing the Work

by Anne Laurie|  February 27, 20267:12 pm| 84 Comments

This post is in: Local Races, Open Threads, Proud to Be A Democrat

Few, if any, candidates running this year other than Sherrod Brown have as consistent a record of appealing to what’s become a kind of holy-grail constituency for Democrats: the coveted “working-class voter.” I love a good @markleibovich.bsky.social profile.
www.theatlantic.com/politics/202…

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— Eric Michael Garcia (@ericmgarcia.bsky.social) February 26, 2026 at 1:08 PM

A little uplift, amidst the endless screaming. From the Atlantic, “Sherrod Brown Is Grinding It Out” [gift link]:

… Brown was sitting in a Toledo coffee shop, having just finished a roundtable discussion about rising health-care costs. A small group of Ohioans had expressed all manner of concerns about how they would afford their medical bills, co-pays, and prescriptions. This was the kind of event that Brown used to do a lot of before he departed the Senate after losing reelection in 2024.

Now that he’s running again, Brown, 73, seems to be satisfying some pent-up appetite for these interactions. He is the same aggressively rumpled figure who was a fixture around the Capitol for more than three decades (seven terms in the House, three in the Senate), and around Ohio politics for five decades. He conveys the frenetic bearing of an over-caffeinated college professor happily returned from a forced sabbatical…

Brown, however, represents a wild card on the national map: He is probably the Democrats’ best hope of flipping a seat that otherwise would likely stay Republican. Few, if any, candidates running this year have as consistent a record of appealing to what’s become a kind of holy-grail constituency for Democrats: the coveted “working-class voter.” Once the cornerstone of the party base, they have abandoned Democrats in droves over the past decade. Despite Ohio becoming more Republican during the Trump era, Brown has had more success getting elected in the state than anyone else in his party over the past 20 years.

While national Democrats are obsessed with finding leaders—ideally new ones—conversant in the language of affordability and economic insecurity, their garrulous guy in Ohio has been around forever, talking about just these things. From what I can tell, the major themes of Brown’s campaign in 2026 are pretty much indistinguishable from those of the 1990s and 2000s.

Brown told me he did not expect to run again this year, but found himself shocked at how quickly President Trump’s second term had devolved. He listed multiple factors: the parade of tech billionaires who were seated prominently at Trump’s inauguration, the “No Kings” protests against the administration, the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. What he didn’t mention is probably the most straightforward explanation for his campaign: wanting his job back…

… Brown started a foundation last year (not a gap year!) called the Dignity of Work Institute. He also wrote an essay in The New Republic titled “Democrats Must Become the Workers’ Party Again,” in which he declared that it would be “my mission for the rest of my life” to help Democrats reconnect with their working-class roots.

But it is perhaps another element of Brown’s appeal that he tends not to get bogged down in hifalutin theories or sociology (his Yale degree notwithstanding). He prides himself on being an unglamorous advocate, who has earned enough trust with enough voters to defy Ohio’s Republican trend lines. At least until he didn’t. Trump’s double-digit victory in Ohio over Kamala Harris in 2024 was too much for Brown to surmount, and he wound up losing to his Republican opponent, Bernie Moreno, by 3.5 points.

“Without Trump on the ballot, Sherrod would have won handily,” Ted Strickland, the Democratic former Ohio governor, told me. Strickland said that Brown’s gritty approach to governance is well suited to Ohio at this moment. “He’s not terribly inspiring in his speaking style,” Strickland said. “But he is who he is. I’ve known him a long time, and he’s been terribly consistent over the years.”…

Everywhere I go in Ohio, I hear the same thing: Ohioans are working harder than ever but still can’t get ahead.

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— Sherrod Brown (@sherrodbrownoh.bsky.social) February 26, 2026 at 7:34 PM

Upbeat Open Thread: Sherrod Brown, Doing the WorkPost + Comments (84)

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