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Kash Patel drunk on power — and more?

Growing impression of U.S. Attorney General Kash Patel

The controversy surrounding FBI Director Kash Patel‘s alleged drinking problem is causing significant political damage. According to reporting from The Atlantic, current and former officials have described concerns about Patel’s alleged drinking and absences, including missed meetings and periods where he was unreachable in a national security role.

Those details are specific, visual, and easy to grasp. Recall that video and photos of Patel swigging beer in the locker room of the U.S. Olympic hockey team, on a vacation trip he took it Italy while Savannah Guthrie‘s mother remained missing and other important matters were pending. According to news reports, even Donald Trump disapproved of the awful optics in Patel’s public behavior.

And the Patel drinking story isn’t standing alone. In recent weeks, Trump has cycled through multiple high-profile officials. He fired U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi amid internal frustration tied to her handling of the Epstein files, while Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was pushed out after news reports of her lavish cosplay videos and luxury jet. Most recently, Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer was fired following allegations of sexual and other misconduct, becoming the third cabinet-level departure in a short span. Additionally, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has his own problematic past with alcohol abuse. And Health and Human Services Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr. faces new reports of yet more weird behavior with dead animals.

At best, these stories paint a picture of instability at the top of the Trump administration, and a pattern of personnel decisions that don’t hold up under scrutiny. At worst, Trump’s Cabinet is seen as a total clown car, indeed with the new nickname “Liquor Cabinet”.

That’s what gives the Patel story its staying power: it reinforces an emerging impression about how this administration operates — who gets put in positions of authority, and what happens after they’re there.

The issue regarding FBI Director Patel has now escalated even further. Lawmakers, including Democratic House Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Jamie Raskin, have opened an inquiry into the drinking allegations. And now there are two new reports: first, “The Atlantic investigative journalist behind last week’s bombshell story about Patel has said she has since been ‘inundated’ with messages from new sources corroborating her reporting.” Second, as if to validate the journalist’s statement, a 2005 letter from Patel to the Florida Bar was revealed wherein he admitted to having been arrested twice for public intoxication and public urination. All of this ensures that the questions around Patel won’t fade anytime soon.

At that point, the damage isn’t just about one official. It’s about the pattern. And patterns are easy for voters to remember.

Photo by netwalkerz_net, used under Creative Commons license. https://is.gd/uwZJxr

Is Epstein the big issue for the 2026 elections?

People have thoughts about Epstein

Right now, there seem to be two main issues that the news media and the public are talking about. The first one is the thuggish behavior of ICE agents attacking and imprisoning protesters, non-criminals, and even children. However, Donald Trump‘s administration is making it as difficult as possible for people to protest, film, or even write publicly about the illegal ICE activities.

The second issue the news media and many voters are talking about is the Epstein files. There, the Trump administration is having less success keeping the story under control. In recent testimony before Congress, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi tried her best to protect Trump and make the issue go away, at one point even saying that Americans should not be talking about the horrors of the Epstein files because “the Dow is over 50,000 right now.” However, every day, it seems additional prominent people become implicated in the Epstein story to one degree or another, from being friends or socializing with Jeffrey Epstein or riding on his plane, all the way to allegations of raping underage girls. In other countries, Epstein files revelations have taken down, demoted or sullied the reputation of high-placed officials and prominent figures, including:

President Biden warns of “oligarchy.” Will Americans care?

President Joe Biden

On Wednesday night, President Joe Biden delivered his farewell address from the White House Oval Office. Biden touted his accomplishments as President, including rescuing the country from the deadly COVID pandemic and deep recession inherited from Donald Trump, turning the economy around, creating a record number of jobs, strengthening NATO, and, lowering prescription drug prices for millions of seniors. Biden also cited his experience of 50 years of public service to this country. Along those lines, Biden was able to announce that, through his administration’s hard work, Israel and Hamas are reaching a cease-fire agreement that includes the release of hostages.

However, President Biden warned Americans about “the dangerous concentration of power in the hands of a very few ultra wealthy people.” He called this concentration of wealth, power and influence “an oligarchy,” and stated that such oligarchy “threatens our entire democracy.” Biden pointed to the tech field in particular, stating that he feared “the rise of a tech industrial complex that can pose real dangers for our country as well,” especially when it comes to how Americans receive their information:

Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation enabling the abuse of power. The free press is crumbling…. Social media is giving up on fact-checking. The truth is smothered by lies told for power and for profit. We must hold the social platforms accountable to protect our children, our families, and our very democracy from the abuse of power. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence is the most consequential technology of our time…. Nothing offers more profound possibilities and risk for our economy, and our security, for society…. But unless safeguards are in place, AI could spawn new threats to our rights, to our way of life, to our privacy….

News media recycle Clinton/Sanders playbook in Clinton/Trump race

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders at unity rally in July 2016.

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders at unity rally in July 2016.

Hillary Clinton is in trouble.” “The race is close.” Those are the types of statements we heard from the news media during the Democratic Party primaries between Clinton and Bernie Sanders earlier this year. In truth, the Democratic primary race wasn’t that close. Clinton won by hundreds of delegates and millions of votes, and her victory arguably came as early as the New York primary on April 19, followed the next week by the Connecticut/Pennsylvania/Maryland/Delaware/Rhode Island primaries, when Sanders lost by many delegates, which he failed to gain back thereafter.

Yet the mainstream corporate media did everything they could to create an artificially close horse race between Clinton and Sanders. One key tactic the media employed was to play up phony scandals against Clinton, play down similar stories against Sanders (his illegitimate son, he and his wife’s possible financial shenanigans, his failure to show his tax returns as his campaign had repeatedly promised, etc). Now that Clinton is battling Donald Trump in the general election, the national press are doing the same thing to make for a phony horse race between them.