㽶Ƶ

Last week pro-Trump protesters stormed the legislature as lawmakers were set to review the Electoral College votes that made Joe Biden the president. ()

Here are some experts from 㽶Ƶ that can provide comment on this issue:

Wendell Nii Laryea Adjetey, Assistant Professor, Department of History and Classical Studies

Classified as: impeachment, incitement of insurrection, Trump, Pro-Trump, protesters, Capitol, US, legislature, experts, ٲԾéԻ, Mugambi Jouet, Jason Opal, barry eidlin, Wendell Nii Laryea Adjetey
Category:
Published on: 6 Jan 2021

Donald Trump became the third U.S. president to be impeached as the House of Representatives formally charged him on two counts on Wednesday, December 18. The first count charges him with abuse of power for allegedly pressuring the president of Ukraine to investigate his Democratic rivals while crucial U.S. security aid was being withheld. The second charges him with obstruction of Congress for stonewalling investigative efforts. ()

Classified as: US politics, Trump
Category:
Published on: 19 Dec 2019

"Trump pulls U.S. out of 'disastrous' Iran nuclear deal, will restore sanctions; President Donald Trump announced Tuesday the U.S. will pull out of the landmark nuclear accord with Iran, dealing a profound blow to U.S. allies and potentially deepening the president's isolation on the world stage." (

Classified as: Iran, Trump, Rex Brynen, Nuclear
Category:
Published on: 8 May 2018

Republicans—and some liberals—downplay the significance of the president’s outbursts. But his words are quietly radicalizing both the left and right, with untold consequences for the future of policy. [...] But Trump’s words are his substance. “Politics is persuasion as well as coercion,” the political scientist Jacob Levy wrote last week, rightly arguing that Trump has “changed what being a Republican means.”

Classified as: Trump, American politics, jacob levy
Category:
Published on: 20 Feb 2018

Jacob T. Levy, a political theorist at 㽶Ƶ, convincingly made the case for the real-world impact of Trump’s words in a recent essay for the Niskanen Center. 

Classified as: Trump, jacob levy, Niskanen Center, American politics
Category:
Published on: 13 Feb 2018

Jacob Levy offers a deeply thoughtful meditation on Trump’s use of language — on the power it has exerted over Republican voters and the GOP Congress, and on the folly of imagining that his words alone won’t do serious damage to American political life, as long as he is constrained from acting.

Classified as: jacob levy, Trump, language, American politics
Category:
Published on: 8 Feb 2018
Back to top