Dems’ new strategy? Hate Jews, Trump police are on – Latest News
Conservative: Dems’ New Strategy? Hate Jews
“Asked if burning a Jewish woman to death for her Jewish activism was anti-Semitic,” Melat Kiros “was unconvinced,” recollects Commentary’s Seth Mandel.
Yet Kiros’ polling saved rising after that, and final week she “ousted veteran Democratic Rep. Diana DeGette” in a main.
Her “victory followed that of Darializa Avila Chevalier, who attended a rally on October 8, 2023, that celebrated the Hamas rape and murder spree the previous day” — habits that’s “unambiguously antisemitic.”
Like Kiros, Chevalier “won because of antisemitism. Without it, the political world would never know she existed.”
It’s helped different progressives, too. Surely Dems “are uncomfortable with the fact that antisemitism has become a powerful currency” amongst their ranks, proper? Yet Jew-hate appears to have change into their go-to “electoral strategy.”
More From Post Editorial Board
Fraud watch: Trump Police Are on the Case
Health bosses Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Dr. Mehmet Oz simply revealed that “more than 1 million people enrolled in Obamacare plans lack Social Security numbers” — “a glaring warning sign for fraud,” fumes the Boston Herald Editorial Board.
The Justice Department additionally introduced “charges against 455 defendants, including 90 doctors” tied to $6.5 billion price of health-care schemes.
“Taxpayers assume the money they send to Washington each year goes to programs and people who legitimately need it.” But apparently no one “was watching the till.”
“How many have gotten away” with fraud? Fortunately, the Trump people goal to stop it: “If you’re a fraudster,” warns Oz, “here’s our advice”: “Run, because we are going to find you.”
DC beat: A Rules-Free ‘Authoritarian’
A new report simply discovered the Trump administration persevering with “to exercise a welcome and historic regulatory restraint,” cheers The Wall Street Journal’s James Freeman.
The report, by Competitive Enterprise Institute’s Wayne Crews, notes that the Federal Register is “on track to land at fewer than 3,000 rules at year-end” — “which has happened only twice before in history, both times under Trump.”
And some of Trump’s guidelines, Freeman factors out, spend “more time undoing than doing.”
Colorado congressional candidate Melat Kiros talking at a Colorado Democratic Party unity occasion in Denver on July 2, 2026. Colorado Sun by way of ZUMA Press Wire
True, there are exceptions: Trump says he likes to cut “red tape,” however “interventions outside conventional rulemaking,” like tariffs and antitrust actions, have deviated from that “wise statement.”
Still, regardless of “habitually” being known as an “authoritarian,” it looks like Trump “avoids telling Americans what to do more than any other recent president.”
Get opinions and commentary from our columnists
Subscribe to our each day Post Opinion e-newsletter!
Thanks for signing up!
Liberal: Don’t Count Kamala Out
Most observers doubt Democrats would “do something so, well, stupid” as to make Kamala Harris their presidential nominee again in 2028, quips Ruy Teixeira at The Free Press.
Yet “she continues to have a solid lead among likely Democratic primary voters.”
She’d even have “built-in support” amongst blacks, particularly black girls. And she’s “quite comfortable pandering to anti-Trump ‘#Resistance’ sentiment,” which is able to play properly and help her keep away from coverage questions, the place she’s “shaky” or saddled with hard-to-defend previous positions.
Yet, although she’d be a formidable candidate within the primaries, she’d be “terrible” within the common and “would minimize, not maximize, the Democrats’ chances.”
Then again, Democratic voters would be the ones to determine, and so they replicate a “party that has changed very little since the disastrous 2024 election.”
From the appropriate: Canada’s Nutty ‘Brain Drain’ Cure
Canada, land of “high taxes, regulations that stymie entrepreneurs” and poor “wage growth, is grappling with a ‘brain drain’” as a “disproportionate” quantity of “high-earning, highly educated Canadians” search for greener pastures overseas, observes City Journal’s Steven Malanga.
To staunch the bleeding, some Canadians proposed a “whopping half-million-dollar ‘exit penalty’ to leave for the US” for would-be emigrants who took benefit of Canada’s extremely backed schooling system.
Yet economists consider Canada’s “heavy tax and regulatory regimes . . . ‘stifle innovation and economic growth,’ ” and “wages have stagnated,” even for “talented” tech staff, who earn half as a lot as their American counterparts.
Canada already has a “levy on the capital gains,” even on unrealized good points, and its reply to undesirable emigration “is to tax them even more.”
— Compiled by The Post Editorial Board
