Views & Opinions |
Views & Opinions |
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And the left can't stand it |
"The political left already hates Elon Musk," writes opinion contributor Liz Peek. But its anger towards the world's richest man is about to get worse. |
The left is furious with Musk's free speech advocacy, support for Donald Trump and even for putting electric vehicles on the map "because he used non-union labor to do it," says Peek. Now, Musk is becoming an important player in AI, which is causing the left more consternation. "Just as Musk's purchase of Twitter crushed liberals' stranglehold on social media, his growing presence in AI promises to dilute the left's control of the emerging technology," Peek writes. This "will likely prevent progressives from establishing a monopoly on revisionist history, in which the U.S. can be portrayed as a nation born in racism and sustained by exploitation and patriarchy." Read the op-ed at TheHill.com. |
Welcome to The Hill's Views & Opinions newsletter, it's Friday, Nov. 22. I'm Daniel Allott, bringing together a collection of key opinion pieces published from a wide range of voices. |
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Op-eds exploring key issues affecting the U.S. and world: |
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By Steven Lubet, Williams Memorial Professor Emeritus at the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law |
Fortunately, denaturalization is a judicial process, with a right to trial in federal court. Unfortunately, there is no right to appointed counsel in denaturalization cases, so every accused defendant will also bear the expense of retaining a lawyer. |
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By Mick Mulvane, former chief of staff to President Trump |
The DOGE will actually be the incoming president's second attempt at fixing the government. Back in 2018, then-President Trump tasked me, and the Office of Management and Budget that I led, with restructuring the federal bureaucracy. It was a gargantuan task. Other administrations had tried — most recently the Clinton administration — and failed. But we knew that the government was screaming out for reform. |
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By James D. Zirin, former federal prosecutor |
This time around, Trump has appointed people to his Cabinet whose cardinal virtue appears to be loyalty to him — not to the Constitution. They have no appetite to push back against Trump's desires to round up immigrants and deport them, arrest his political enemies, use the military against the American people and dismantle what he calls the "deep state" of government. |
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By Will Marshall, president of the Progressive Policy Institute |
For decades, the party has chased a beguiling mirage — a "new progressive majority" composed of left-wing activists, minorities, college graduates and professionals. Cast by the wayside were working families, who constituted roughly two-thirds of the electorate. |
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Opinions related to pivotal issues and figures in the news: |
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You're all caught up. See you next time! |
Views expressed by contributors are theirs and not the opinion of The Hill. Interested in submitting an op-ed? Click here. |
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