Saturday, February 7, 2026

Dog Bites Man

By Nick Catoggio

Friday, February 06, 2026

 

A weird tic appears in certain critics whenever the president does something particularly loathsome, like dancing on the grave of a critic who was just stabbed to death by his son. They’ll hop onto social media and declare, with great solemnity, that our children and grandchildren will struggle to fathom how we put this man in charge.

 

Will they?

 

The opposite is more likely. Having come of age during Donald Trump’s presidency and inherited the slimy third-world political culture he’s creating, our children and grandchildren won’t bat an eye in hindsight at his antics. They’re marinating in a sludge of postliberalism, economic dislocation, and social-media anomie, as oblivious to their environment as fish are to water. What follows this era, after they inherit America, might plausibly make Trump seem decorous by comparison.

 

The moral trajectory of a postliterate society is clear and remorseless. It will not shock easily.

 

I certainly wasn’t shocked this morning to find that the president had posted a video featuring a brief shot of Barack and Michelle Obama as apes. That shot was taken from a longer fan-created clip depicting various Democrats as animals; press secretary Karoline Leavitt pointed back to it in a statement defending the president’s post, noting that the Obama footage “is from an Internet meme video depicting President Trump as the King of the Jungle and Democrats as characters from The Lion King.”

 

There are no apes in The Lion King, though, as others noted on Twitter this morning. Even if there were, a zillion other clips of the Obamas are available online that could have been used in the video that Trump published. Opting for one of the few that portrayed them as primates was a choice. And in light of his history, the president is owed no benefit of the doubt as to his innocent intentions: Demagoging Obama along racial lines is what made him a force in right-wing politics to begin with.

 

“Trump posts racist image of first black president” barely counts as news in 2026. It’s a dog-bites-man story (in more than one sense). I hadn’t even intended to write about it, as the depravity of the modern right and its leaders is ground that’s been well plowed in this newsletter over the past three and a half years.

 

But then something genuinely newsy happened. A few Republicans criticized the president for posting the video and, within a few hours, it was taken down and blamed on a staffer. (The archived version is here.)

 

Most notable was Tim Scott, the GOP’s lone African American senator and a longstanding Trump ally. “Praying it was fake because it’s the most racist thing I’ve seen out of this White House,” he said of the video. “The president should remove it.” (I appreciate his insinuation that the White House is frequently guilty of racist things, just not this racist.) House Republican Mike Lawler chimed in too, and in stronger terms: “The President’s post is wrong and incredibly offensive—whether intentional or a mistake—and should be deleted immediately with an apology offered.”

 

Man bites dog. That’s interesting. What gives?

 

Devil’s bargain.

 

The easy (and usually correct) answer is self-interest. Scott and Lawler each have an unusual amount of skin in the electoral game this November.

 

Scott is chairman this cycle of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, the group spearheading the GOP’s national strategy to hold the Senate. Lawler is one of the most vulnerable Republicans in the House, representing a D +1 district in New York. The last thing either needs given the headwinds they’re facing is Trump busting out Jim Crow stereotypes for a predecessor with a 59 percent favorable rating and his possibly more popular wife.

 

Obama supporters will be angry, African Americans will take personal offense, and the wider electorate may be moved to reflect on whether the behavior of the former or current president is the more ape-like of the two. One has a limited vocabulary, an alleged history of failing to restrain his primal urges, and a habit of ruling his party like an 800-pound silverback imposing his will on timid beta males, and it ain’t the black guy.

 

Arguably Scott and Lawler were simply protecting themselves and their party by disavowing Trump’s video, an elementary example of self-interest at work—but if so, that’s still pretty interesting. After all, why are Republicans suddenly worried about voters’ moral outrage at the president after 10 years of coup attempts, criminal indictments (plus one conviction), sexual misconduct allegations, Access Hollywood videos, and many, many, many “mean tweets”?

 

That was all a matter of public record when Americans handed him the presidency and a popular-vote victory in 2024. Didn’t most of us long ago grow numb to his dog-bites-man moral offenses, making today’s disavowals unnecessary?

 

Maybe not. The tolerance some voters have traditionally had for Trump’s personal putrescence could be less a case of numbness than of cynicism. I’ve described their relationship to him before as a devil’s bargain in the ruthlessly transactional spirit of the president himself: Americans were willing to accept four more years of moral insanity in return for bringing back the economic growth and lower cost of living of 2019.

 

Because Trump has failed to keep up his end of that bargain, dissatisfied Americans might be deciding that they no longer need to keep up their end of it either. If so, the “mean tweets” that were eye-rolled away during his first term will hit differently now—insults added to the injury voters have suffered from watching him sneer at affordability as a second- or third-tier concern. (I mean, for cripes’ sake.) Remove the electorate’s economic incentive to rationalize having chosen a villainous president and, go figure, it might stop doing so.

 

Scott and Lawler aren’t crazy to worry about it.

 

Mean tweets.

 

It was also easier for the average joe to ignore the “mean tweets” when figures like James Mattis and John Kelly were working to keep the president on the rails. In Trump 1.0, a swing voter who had rolled the dice on him over Hillary Clinton might dismiss something like the Obama video as an unfortunate eccentricity of a president whose administration at least governed more responsibly than it tweeted. Not anymore, though.

 

Unrestrained by Congress and enabled by a staff of postliberal lackeys after his own heart, Trump’s second term has functioned as a sort of mathematical proof that those of us who saw something pathological and disqualifying in his “mean tweets” were correct to do so. It’s not just the major grotesqueries, like menacing Denmark over Greenland or creating a secret police force to enforce immigration law or bribe-taking on a world-historic scale. It’s the petty megalomaniacal stuff—the ballroom, the Kennedy Center, the triumphal arch.

 

Just yesterday, Axios reported that the president recently offered Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer a deal that would have freed up billions in funding for a major infrastructure project in New York. His ask: He wanted Schumer to support renaming Penn Station and Washington’s Dulles International Airport after Trump.

 

That’s the kind of thing that makes the “mean tweets” hit differently this time. In context, they seem less like trivial excesses driven by the gonzo insult-comic side of Trump’s persona than the madness of a would-be Caesar who’s losing his inhibitions and his mind. When the U.S. ambassador to Poland recently threatened to blacklist the new speaker of that country’s parliament for refusing to support the president’s Nobel Peace Prize bid, one Polish MP responded by comparing Trump explicitly to Nero.

 

Through that lens, the Obama video isn’t the act of an impish edgelord who occasionally misjudges the red line when trying to provoke. It’s a case of fiddling as Rome burns by a twisted authoritarian who’s accountable to no one. I wonder, in fact, whether Trump’s renewed obsession with Obama isn’t his way of coping with the reality that he’s lost the country: His resentment of his more popular predecessor, a darling of the elites whose approval the president has always craved (and who, unlike him, didn’t need to get his Nobel Peace Prize secondhand), is flaring as his own support declines.

 

Off the bandwagon.

 

So perhaps Americans’ patience for his petty villainy is finally (finally) wearing thin, eroded by foolish policy priorities, churlish ruthlessness toward U.S. allies and political enemies, and an economy that hasn’t delivered on expectations. For swing voters and young voters who didn’t pay close attention to politics during his first term, his behavior over the past year may have come as a sincere revelation, belated proof that the Orange Man Is Bad after all. The “Mom Confession” surely isn’t a phenomenon restricted to Saturday Night Live.

 

But for others, who knew what the country was getting into by reelecting him and were fine with it, watching his popularity slide may be stirring a cynical sort of opportunistic moral reawakening. If Trump is destined to be despised, it’s in their own interest to at least feign some of the misgivings that other Americans feel.

 

And I don’t just mean elected Republicans like Scott and Lawler. Yesterday one of the president’s dependable apologists, author Eric Metaxas, was aghast—or pretended to be, at least—over Trump’s boorish speech at a religious event. “Didn’t anyone on the President’s team advise him that the National Prayer Breakfast is a prayer breakfast?” he wrote. “Didn’t someone write a speech for him? What’s going on? I think they need to bring me in to help. It’s that bad.”

 

There’s a term to describe the cowardly practice of blaming Trump’s advisers for his moral failings in lieu of blaming Trump himself. Not content with having hedged that way, though, Metaxas eventually deleted his tweet altogether. And I understand why: One of the strictest taboos on the American right since 2015 is faulting Trump and/or his deputies for behaving immorally, a form of critique that’s become entirely left-coded. Any moral indictment of the leader by a Republican must be framed in terms of power (“what Trump is doing is hurting the GOP’s electoral chances”), never in terms of righteous disapproval. Metaxas flouted that taboo and retreated once he realized it.

 

But the fact that his loyalty to Trump has weakened enough for him to have flouted it, however briefly, is significant. Ditto for Scott, Lawler, and Republican Sen. Roger Wicker, all of whom condemned the Obama video in moral rather than instrumental terms. (So did Republican Sen. Katie Britt, sort of, although her use of the passive voice isn’t a profile in courage.) And ditto for the self-professed Trump voter who called into C-SPAN today and condemned the president for the Obama clip in such scathing moral terms that a clip of it has gone viral on social media.

 

This is not how the Republican Party has operated for the past 11 years. Is this how it’s going to operate over the next three?

 

Wishful thinking.

 

Well, sure. More so than it has in the past, at least. How could it not?

 

The president is term-limited (in theory), unpopular, and capable at any moment of foisting some needless new political liability on his party, as we saw this morning. Burdened with his baggage, Beltway Republicans increasingly fear that the Senate is in play this fall, not just the House. Incumbents in the party who typically worry about not being seen as Trumpy enough in a primary suddenly need to worry about being seen as too Trumpy in a general election, as Tim Scott and Mike Lawler would tell you. They need “distance” from him.

 

There are other signs his grip on the party has slipped lately. After the president called on Congress this week to “nationalize” the midterm elections, various Senate Republicans quickly shot down the idea. Nor is his base as willing to champion his passion projects as it used to be: Despite straining to convince Americans that annexing Greenland by any means necessary was an urgent national priority, Trump managed to persuade only 23 percent of Republicans to support taking the island by force.

 

We as a people are destined to suffer many more indignities of an “Obamas as apes” magnitude over the rest of his term. A party that’s already begun thinking about its future after Trump will have less reason to defend them.

 

On the other hand: Is all of this (or most of it) just wishful thinking? There’s precious little evidence since 2015 that the GOP has faced, or will face, serious political jeopardy from voters over Trump’s race-baiting if Republicans don’t push back aggressively against it.

 

The White House has spent the past year signaling its preference for a whiter, and more white-centric, America in every way it can think of, yet I’m unaware of any sharp reaction to it—even in polling of black voters. Some data shows black support for Trump basically flat over the previous 12 months; other data suggests he has declined among that group but largely due to the economy, the same issue that’s deflated his numbers among practically every other demographic.

 

He became a right-wing folk hero before his first run for president by accusing Barack Obama of being secretly African by birth. Fifteen years later, as his immigration goon squad runs roughshod over Minneapolis in pursuit of “low-IQ” Somali immigrants, he’s mocking the Obamas as apes. Having been inured to this crapola for so long, how could most Americans not be numb to it by now? To borrow a finance term, racism was long ago fully priced into Trump’s political stock.

 

So when Tim Scott et al. denounce it, they’re probably not trying to preempt a backlash that almost certainly isn’t coming. They’re acting out of a healthy but increasingly antiquated Pavlovian instinct: When you see racism that remarkably blatant (even by Trump’s standards!), from someone that remarkably powerful, you have a moral duty to challenge it. I’m glad they did.

 

Appreciate it while you can, though. Your children and grandchildren, and thus the political class that serves them, might feel differently.

You Can Do Anything As Long As You Do It For Palestine

By Seth Mandel

Wednesday, February 04, 2026

 

A play in three acts:

 

On August 6, 2024, a group of Palestine Action activists broke into an Israeli defense contractor’s factory in Bristol, England, smashing equipment and injuring police with sledgehammers.

 

During the trial, five of the six defendants, according to the Guardian, “[told] jurors they had entered the factory without permission and damaged Elbit’s equipment including computers and drones.”

 

Today, the defendants were found not guilty of aggravated burglary.

 

Palestine Action is one of the more extreme pro-Hamas groups in the Western constellation. It has been outlawed in the UK as a terrorist organization. During the break-in, one of them smashed a police officer from behind with a sledgehammer, breaking her spine and leaving her unable to bathe or get into bed by herself for three months. She is still on restricted duty due to the injuries. Her assailant was found not guilty.

 

You might be wondering: What was the defendants’ actual defense, since they admitted to breaking in and damaging property? Here is a description of the argument made by the attorney for one of the alleged perpetrators, Charlotte Head:

 

“Rajiv Menon KC, representing Head, said any violence by the defendants was clearly unplanned, that the defendants had not expected security guards to enter the factory and were ‘completely out of their depth’.

 

He compared Head to the suffragettes, while describing Elbit Systems, of which Elbit Systems UK is a subsidiary, as a ‘dreadful company [that] has played a critical role in the killing of tens of thousands of Palestinians’.”

 

The violence was unplanned, you see. They came with sledgehammers and they used the sledgehammers, but they didn’t expect to have to use the sledgehammers; they were just surprised by the appearance of the police.

 

Not guilty.

 

Because this was a jury trial, there really is no disputing the implications: Britain is cooked.

 

For those seeking at least a hint as to why the court ruled that smashing in the spines of police officers is officially approved behavior in the United Kingdom, one clue comes to us from the Jewish Chronicle:

 

“While the jury was in retirement, the court heard posters had been put up on bus stops and lampposts near the building which said: ‘The jury decide not the judge,’ ‘Jury equity is when a jury acquits someone on moral grounds,’ and: ‘Jurors can give a not guilty verdict even when they believe a defendant has broken the law.’

 

“The prosecution said it was aware of the signs being put up in public places during the trial, which set out the principle of ‘jury equity’ — the capacity of a jury to return a verdict according to conscience — and that police had been taking the posters down.”

 

Translation: You may find the defendants not guilty if you sympathize with the psychotic “anti-Zionism” that motivated their violence.

 

Again: the British legal system is a joke.

 

To be fair to the UK, it is not the first state in Europe to enshrine “the Jewish exception” into law. In 2021 in France, Kobili TraorĂ© was deemed not responsible for his actions by the courts, ostensibly because he had smoked marijuana. What were his actions? He beat 65-year-old Sarah Halimi and then threw her out her window to her death. According to his psychiatric evaluation, he was sent into a violent rage by the sight of Halimi’s mezuzah.

 

Again, to translate: He realized she was a Jew, so he killed her. This was deemed a psychiatric episode not murder. In France, if you hate Jews so much that it makes you act crazy, you are permitted to murder random Jews. In the UK, if your hatred of Jews compels you to go on a violent rampage, you can count on “jury equity” to find you not guilty of the crimes you admitted to in court.

 

The sick man of Europe is Europe.

The Obama Meme on Trump’s Truth Social Was Exactly What It Looked Like

By Hana Kiros

Friday, February 06, 2026

 

Donald Trump supercharged his political career by claiming that Barack Obama wasn’t American. Yesterday, 16 minutes before midnight, the president’s account on Truth Social posted a video that suggests Obama isn’t even human. It briefly shows the head of the first Black president and that of his wife superimposed onto the bodies of apes. They dance along to “The Lion Sleeps Tonight.”

 

The video, which Trump’s account shared twice, seems to be a screen recording. Its first minute shows a clip promoting the lie that voting-machine tampering handed Joe Biden the presidency in 2020. Then, someone seems to swipe up, and the clip depicting the Obamas as apes flashes into focus.

 

The clip is on the screen for only a moment before the recording returns to the voting-machine video. And just before noon today, both posts of the video were removed from the president’s Truth Social account. (When I asked why, a White House official who declined to provide their name claimed that an unnamed employee “erroneously made the post.”)

 

In the interim, hundreds if not thousands of people responded to the clip with enthusiasm.  Immediately after the video was first posted on Truth Social, the memecoin $APEBAMA was minted. Within 12 hours, more than $4 million worth of $APEBAMA had been traded back and forth. In an X group with the same name that now has hundreds of members, the pinned tweet implies that the meme stock will succeed because of how outrageous the video is: “this is pretty much on par with him calling Obama a nigga.” Some members posted their own depictions of Obama as a monkey or ape. The ape video’s apparent creator, the X user @xerias_x, reposted the full video to their X account early this morning. Besides the Obamas, the video shows a menagerie of Democratic politicians as animals, bowing down to Trump, who appears as a lion. It now has more than 1 million views. (@xerias_x also seems to be the originator of an AI-generated video Trump reposted in October that shows the president raining down what appears to be excrement on protesters from the sky.)

 

The “joke” that Trump’s account spread is plainly sinister. The idea that Black people sit somewhere between white people and apes has long been used to justify cruelty. In 1377, a historian wrote that Africans “have attributes that are quite similar to those of dumb animals,” meaning they “are, as a whole, submissive to slavery.” Cartoons circulated during the Civil War were printed with images similar to the one Trump posted: One labels a monkey holding a book upside down as a NEGRO-MAN; another depicts a Black man on all fours, accompanied by the words WHAR’S JEFF DAVIS. In 1906, a man born in what was then the Belgian Congo, Ota Benga, was displayed at the Bronx Zoo in a cage with an orangutan. In 1975, white teenagers harassed Black students desegregating a Boston public school with the chant “Two, four, six, eight, assassinate the nigger apes.”

 

The ape caricature still colors how Black people are received in America. But this morning, the administration played the video off for laughs. “This is from an internet meme video depicting President Trump as the King of the Jungle and Democrats as characters from the Lion King,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote in response to a comment request before the Truth Social posts were removed. (The Lion King features a monkey named Rafiki, but no apes appear in the film.)

 

The White House did not answer my questions about why the administration initially defended the video, or why it remained up on the president’s account for 12 hours. Even if a staffer did post the Obama video, its message is resonant with the president’s past statements and actions. Trump has called Somalis “low-IQ,” and his administration recently announced rules that will ban nearly 90 percent of African immigrant visa applicants.

The ‘Gender-Affirming Care’ Reckoning Begins

By Judson Berger

Friday, February 06, 2026

 

“May Varian’s legal victory open the litigation floodgates!”

 

May it be so.

 

Wesley J. Smith’s petition above followed the recent news that a woman given a double mastectomy when she was 16 was awarded $2 million in a first-of-its-kind malpractice judgment for a detransitioner.

 

The case of 22-year-old Fox Varian was easy to miss; its resolution, highlighted by independent reporter Benjamin Ryan, was mostly ignored in mainstream press. But Varian’s lawsuit against her psychologist and plastic surgeon contained a familiar story for anyone who’s followed these kinds of cases (or who listened to National Review’s Detransitioners podcast series): Her mother was led by medical professionals to believe her daughter’s breasts had to be removed to treat her gender dysphoria; she resisted, then eventually relented.

 

With this judgment, other detransitioners see hope that physicians urging these interventions will eventually be held similarly accountable — and that more patients will come forward.

 

“Frankly, I think that $2 million is not nearly enough to compensate for the damages that these doctors have done to my generation,” Chloe Cole, one of the most visible detransitioners, told Fox News earlier this week. Still, she said the award, in a blue state like New York, bodes well for the rest of the 28 known detransitioner lawsuits (some of which have already been settled or dismissed), including her own. Cole predicted “hundreds, if not thousands,” of additional lawsuits could eventually be filed.

 

Perhaps more important than any individual judgment is the impact such decisions could have on the gender-medicine enterprise as a whole.

 

While the Trump administration and a host of GOP-led states have cracked down on the interventions for minors — surgeries, hormone therapy, puberty blockers — the issue is so intractably politicized in the U.S. that, even with last year’s Supreme Court decision in Skrmetti, it’s easy to envision reforms being rolled back when power changes party hands. (Consider that California’s attorney general just sued a children’s hospital for halting “gender-affirming care” for patients younger than 19; progressives’ commitment to the issue is uncannily unrelenting.) The threat of multimillion-dollar judgments, though, could be a powerful-enough force to rein in the medical industry on a lasting basis.

 

Perhaps the timing was coincidental, but the American Society of Plastic Surgeons this week became the first major medical association to come out against transgender surgeries for minors. As Haley Strack reports, the American Medical Association, while not making a “definitive statement,” agreed that “surgical interventions in minors should be generally deferred to adulthood.” The ASPS position statement cited a range of considerations that have been front and center in this debate for years among those urging restraint. Acknowledging “re-examinations” of the field in other countries, the organization said, “Systematic reviews and evidence reassessments have subsequently identified limitations in study quality, consistency, and follow-up alongside emerging evidence of treatment complications and potential harms.” Importantly, the group advised that “plastic surgeons should be aware that medical decision-making competence among minors is a matter of debate, particularly when patients are experiencing distress and considering treatments with lifelong consequences.”

 

When common sense looks revolutionary, you know you’ve entered the debate over transgender medicine.

 

The government and/or medical professions could have taken a beat at any point over the last decade, clinically assessed the risks, and suspended these practices. Now, the lawyers are swooping in. They’ll do it the hard way. As Wesley writes, what truly menaces the sector’s future is “the threat of major malpractice verdicts and a consequential inability to obtain liability insurance against such cases.”

 

From National Review’s editorial:

 

This was a predictable and predicted outcome. It became inevitable that such things would happen once medical professionals decided en masse to follow fashion and ideology and disregard warnings that they were performing irreversible operations on people too young to consent. . . .

 

Once having tasted victory, [the lawyers] will keep coming, and they will not be gentle. Lawsuits are cold comfort to the victims now struggling through detransitioning, but they deliver justice, and money talks.

Why EU Leaders Are Having Second Thoughts About Admitting Ukraine

By John Gustavsson

Saturday, February 07, 2026

 

Ukraine has made no secret of its desire to join the European Union. Recently, President Volodymyr Zelensky made it clear that EU membership is one of the “security guarantees” that he and his country are seeking to end the war with Russia, aiming for an accession date in 2027. While EU membership is an understandable aspiration for Ukraine, an increasing number of European leaders are realizing that having Ukraine join the union prematurely would be a mistake, both for the country and for the union.

 

In the early days of the war, few European leaders raised any objections to the idea of fast-tracking Ukraine’s membership application, and it was widely assumed that Hungary would be the only major stumbling block to Ukraine’s accession. Now, though, skepticism appears to be growing, with leaders including German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani recently outright dismissing talk of Ukraine joining the EU in 2027, with the former stating that Ukraine is unlikely to join before 2034.

 

They are right to be dismissive. While Ukraine should be economically integrated with the European Union’s single market, there are several reasons why full EU membership would, at this point, risk backfiring both for the EU and for Ukraine.

 

While Ukraine’s large agricultural sector would help to lower food prices for struggling European consumers, it would also constitute a serious burden to the EU’s budget. Under the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), between a quarter and a third of the EU’s budget, adjusted from year to year, goes towards agricultural subsidies. Under current rules, Ukrainian farmers would be entitled to more subsidies than any other EU member, thanks to its excellent black soil and large agricultural sector. This would necessitate either increasing the EU’s budget — an inevitably controversial move, particularly among Northern and Western member states — or a 20 percent cut in subsidies to everyone else. The latter is something that would not be well received by other large recipients of said subsidies, such as Italy, Poland, and Spain.

 

Making matters more difficult, CAP has already been heavily criticized for providing an unfair advantage to less developed EU countries, where environmental and animal welfare standards are lower and the subsidies provide a much greater share of gross farm revenue. If a large, poor country like Ukraine were to join the EU, this debate would be reignited.

 

The fact is that Ukraine is very poor. Even before the war, Bulgaria, the poorest EU member, had a GDP per capita that was two and a half times higher than Ukraine’s. Ukraine’s comparative poverty creates a problem for the EU’s cohesion policy, which takes up roughly another third of its budget. Cohesion policy funds are intended to develop the union’s poorest regions, and while these funds are capped by the EU at 2.3 percent of GDP of the receiving country, Ukraine would still be among the very top recipients in the EU. Ukrainian EU membership would lead to many regions that are currently receiving funds no longer being underdeveloped enough to qualify, something that in turn would trigger political backlash.

 

Ukraine’s accession to the EU would also result in an eastward shift in the union’s balance of power — one that would likely be unwelcome to progressive bureaucrats in Brussels. With a pre-war population of over 40 million, Ukraine would be the largest Eastern European member state and the fifth-largest member state overall; its influence in the European Parliament and other institutions would reflect this. With the EU already having a complicated relationship with some of its larger eastern members, it should not come as a surprise that the prospect of a further geographic shift in influence is not one that has Brussels policymakers jumping for joy. Enthusiasm is further tempered by the uncertainty over what Ukrainian politics will look like after the war. Progressive European bureaucrats don’t want to accidentally admit another Hungary.

 

It may seem that these are all problems for the EU rather than for Ukraine. But there are also good reasons why, right now, EU membership would be bad for Ukraine.

 

More than 4 million Ukrainians reside in the EU as refugees. Under the Temporary Protection Directive, Ukrainians are free to seek refuge anywhere in the EU without having to go through the process of applying for asylum. But, as the name implies, this protection is only temporary and will be rescinded after the war’s conclusion.

 

Yet if Ukraine were to join the EU immediately or shortly after the end of the war, these refugees would be free to stay in their new countries. Furthermore, even more Ukrainians would be free to leave and take advantage of the EU’s freedom of movement. Many young and skilled Ukrainian emigrants who are desperately needed to rebuild their homeland would no doubt decline to return.

 

Some have countered that EU membership would boost Ukrainian growth, thus attracting the diaspora to return. Sadly, this is wishful thinking: Poland’s population is still below what it was in 2004 when it joined the EU, and it is still falling, despite Poland long being one of the EU’s fastest-growing economies. The same holds true for Romania and Bulgaria, which have both seen excellent economic growth since joining in 2007 but have lost significant proportions of their populations to emigration.

 

A large and sudden influx of EU money may also prove to be a curse as much as a blessing. While corruption levels in Ukraine have been vastly exaggerated by pro-Russian voices such as Tucker Carlson, corruption remains a real problem and is indeed worse than in any current EU member state. In a worst-case scenario, an influx of subsidies and grants from the EU could serve to supercharge existing corruption, unless Ukraine is able to establish sufficient anti-corruption safeguards prior to joining. Much remains to be done on the corruption front, and this work will almost certainly take several years.

 

There are also more basic, prudential reasons for Ukraine to hold off on joining. As in most Eastern European countries, pro-EU sentiment in Ukraine has grown as a response to Russian actions. Much of the recent surge in support for the EU stems from a war-induced wish to break free from Russia’s sphere of influence. Consider, for example, that prior to Russia’s 2014 occupation of Crimea, polls consistently found Ukrainian support for EU membership to be below a majority.

 

While their westward aspirations are valid and admirable, Ukrainians should be mindful of the practical implications of EU membership. Much of the friction between the EU and its eastern member states stems from these states having not realized just how much sovereignty they cede upon joining the union (and not realizing that the EU will always ask for more). And, as Britain has demonstrated, once you are in, it is very hard to leave.

 

For now, Ukraine should aim for deeper integration into the EU’s single market — though, crucially, without freedom of movement. While Brussels has historically refused to grant full access to the single market without attaching free movement (as it considers the “four freedoms” inseparable), Ukraine is clearly a special case. At present, neither Ukraine nor the EU would benefit from free movement; Ukraine needs its people back, and allowing them to stay would risk exacerbating already growing tensions in countries with large numbers of Ukrainian refugees. Under a comprehensive arrangement modeled after nonmembers such as Norway and Switzerland, Ukraine could see its businesses and farmers granted access to the 450 million consumers in the single market while, importantly for Europe, remaining unable to access EU funds and representation.

 

Ultimately, the case against a premature EU accession is at least as much about protecting Ukraine’s own reconstruction as it is about sparing the union fiscal and political strain. A hasty EU entry risks entangling Ukraine in bureaucratic webs that are ill-suited to its postwar needs. Prioritizing single-market integration without full obligations, on the other hand, would help ensure economic vitality, stem the brain drain, and allow Ukraine to retain the sovereignty it has fought so hard to protect. Above all, this more prudent approach would allow Kyiv to channel its political capital into securing the kind of hard security guarantees that no EU treaty can ever hope to replace.

America’s Irreversible Goodbye to Climate Governance

By Samuel Furfari

Saturday, February 07, 2026

 

In January, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to withdraw the United States from 66 international organizations deemed “redundant, poorly managed, unnecessary, costly, ineffective,” or that were instruments of America’s adversaries. Among them are various United Nations agencies and, most significantly, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the 1992 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the latter of which is the backbone of global climate governance.

 

During his first term, President Trump removed the U.S. from the Paris Agreement. But a newly elected President Joe Biden promptly returned the nation to the agreement in 2021, making it a central gesture of his climate diplomacy. The episode exposed the fragility of America’s international climate policy: A simple change in administration could send the U.S. in or out of sweeping, long-term agreements, rendering global climate commitments mere extensions of domestic, partisan politics.

 

This time, however, there is a degree of permanence to the change. By targeting the UNFCCC itself, the Trump administration has dismantled the legal framework that made possible reversal by a simple executive decree.

 

Adopted under the 1992 Convention, the Paris Agreement is built on the institutional architecture of the UNFCCC, whose bodies provide the agreement with necessary support. These include the Conference of the Parties, the secretariat, and a system for financial contributions. Paragraph 3 of Article 28 of the Paris Agreement reads as follows: “Any Party that withdraws from the Convention shall be considered as also having withdrawn from this Agreement.” By leaving the Framework Convention, Washington severs the link that allowed Biden’s reentry into the Paris Agreement. Trump’s withdrawal is not tactical, but structural.

 

The key precedent insulating Trump’s decision from a Supreme Court challenge is Goldwater v. Carter, in which the high court in 1979 declined to review President Carter’s unilateral termination of a mutual defense treaty with Taiwan, strengthening executive authority over treaty withdrawals. In practice, therefore, a president can withdraw from a treaty without a clear judicial avenue to stop him. The Trump administration sits in a legally comfortable position: Opponents have no leverage to undo the move, and attempts to seek a new Supreme Court ruling would risk further entrenching executive power over treaty termination.

 

Democrats are paying the price for designing Paris to avoid Senate ratification. Knowing they lacked a two-thirds majority in the upper chamber, the Obama administration insisted on voluntary, non-binding contributions and targets, which ensured Paris would rest on a reversible presidential signature rather than durable treaty law.

 

The Trump administration has fully absorbed these lessons. During his first term, Trump withdrew only from the Paris Agreement, leaving the UNFCCC intact and allowing his successor to rejoin easily. This time, Trump’s action is far more radical: By targeting the Framework Convention itself, Trump deprives future presidents of an easy diplomatic reversal.

 

Politically, the message is clear: Washington increasingly views climate diplomacy as an instrument of external constraint — beneficial to America’s strategic competitors, a burden on U.S. industrial competitiveness, and costly.

 

Formally, the U.S. could rejoin the UNFCCC, but it would now require a level of political consensus that no longer exists. Approved in 1992, when bipartisan faith in a painless energy transition was at an all-time high, the Convention today confronts economic and geopolitical realities that expose prior illusions and make revival unlikely any time soon.

 

What are Europe’s climate true believers supposed to do now? One question, though rarely voiced publicly in Brussels, Strasbourg, or Berlin, persists in the minds of European Union policymakers and regulators: How long will the EU remain wedded to a climate strategy that no longer meaningfully binds either the United States or emerging nations beyond toothless declarations? The EU continues to lock itself into ever more ambitious targets (a 90 percent carbon dioxide reduction from 1990 levels by 2040), while eroding its industrial base, deepening its dependence on China, and widening the gap between rhetoric and the reality of global emissions.

 

Instead of responding to Trump’s withdrawal with their usual ritual denunciations, European leaders should ask the following question: If the world’s leading economic and military power no longer wants to be trapped in U.N.‑led climate architecture, isn’t it time for the EU to reassess its own commitments with clear eyes? The wrong answer will leave Europe discovering too late that it has sacrificed its prosperity and strategic autonomy to a climate lunacy abandoned by its closest — and most consequential — allies.

 

 

Did AIPAC Blow Themselves Up in New Jersey?

By Noah Rothman

Friday, February 06, 2026

 

It looked as if the former representative from New Jersey’s seventh congressional district, Tom Malinowski, was going to sail to victory in the Democratic primary race that took place last night in his new home district, New Jersey’s eleventh. It looked that way even as the votes began rolling in, leading a variety of ballot watchers to declare him the presumptive victor. But an unanticipated surge of Election Day votes for his most potent progressive challenger in the race, Analilia Mejia, upended the conventional wisdom. As of this writing, Mejia leads Malinowski by less than a single percentage point. It may be days or even weeks before the outstanding ballots in this razor-tight race are fully counted.

 

What explains the surprise result in this relatively upscale, suburban district that only leans toward Democratic candidates? After all, “this is a district,” Jewish Insider’s analysts observed, “filled with Wall Street bankers, venture capitalists, and other wealthy white-collar workers that was a reliably Republican area not long ago.” Well, theories abound.

 

Some contend that Malinowski’s performance is attributable to the bad odor about Democratic establishmentarian figures at a time when progressive dissatisfaction with the status quo is the most potent force in left-of-center politics. Others say it’s part of the breakdown of Democratic machine politics everywhere, New Jersey very much included. But there are others who contend that the success of Malinowski’s progressive opponent is attributable to the work of her opponents outside the Democratic firmament.

 

A far-left progressive endorsed by the “Squad,” Mejia has cast herself as hostile to Israel’s defensive military priorities. But rather than target her or boost their more stalwart allies, the largest Israel lobby in America, AIPAC, spent vast sums distributing ads designed to drive up Malinowski’s negatives. It wasn’t an entirely unsound strategy. AIPAC reportedly sought to punish the congressman for supporting the conditioning of aid to Israel, fearful that the former congressman would have significant influence over the direction of U.S. foreign policy if he were restored to the lower chamber. In the process, AIPAC’s critics allege, the pro-Israeli lobby inadvertently activated progressive voters who share Mejia’s hostility toward the Jewish state. In this telling, AIPAC is to blame for its own unenviable circumstance.

 

The wildest version of this theory (which only crossed my transom because mainstream political reporters seemed to see value in it) maintains that AIPAC wanted to boost Mejia because it operated under the assumption that Republicans are racist:

 

The image shows two political figures, one with a speech bubble and another with a speech bubble, discussing the impact of AIPAC's spending and political strategy.

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

 

In the hours since the votes rolled in, the notion that AIPAC is responsible for its own woes has congealed into conventional wisdom. The generally unquestioned assumption is that, to the extent that American Zionists’ interests will be harmed by Mejia’s presence in Congress, the Zionists essentially did this to themselves. It’s a monocausal explanation for a complex set of circumstances that should be less compelling than it seems to be for many.

 

And yet AIPAC may not have undone itself entirely. “It’s hard to imagine Democrats, running in a very favorable political environment, losing the general election,” Jewish Insider’s analysts note in a closing aside. “But you couldn’t find a more problematic candidate than a socialist running in a capitalist-minded district.” Indeed. Even if 2026 ends up being a bad year for the GOP, there’s always a candidate or two that the winning party’s primary electorate sets up for a humiliating defeat. Forcing the general electorate in this D+5 district to endorse Elizabeth Warren’s agenda may still end up being a bridge too far.