Rachel Maddow Works On A Weekend
Over New Year's I noted that NewsNation and CNN had second-string reporters out in the Minnesota snow, not really covering the Somali fraud as much as doing what they could to get ahead of Nick Shirley's reporting. One of Shirley's insights, I feel pretty sure, was that mainstream media doesn't work very hard, and the Christmas break was a perfect time to drop his video, when the cartel had tacitly agreed there'd be no other news.
I also inferred that Trump and his key people had come up with the same strategy over the Venezuela raid, with the news coming out on one of the deadest Saturdays of any year. Let's remember that for Trump, there's no such thing as bad publicity, he makes the news simply by being Trump. It's a losing game for anyone to try to upstage him, but the suits at MS NOW gave it their best shot: they got Rachel Maddow in on a Saturday.
Part-time MS NOW host Rachel Maddow remarkably showed up to work on a weekend, appearing on the network from a mysterious remote location on Saturday morning to criticize President Donald Trump's military operation that captured Venezuelan dictator Nicolas Maduro.
"Not only will [Trump] care about people saying this is illegal, he'll see that as an asset," Maddow said in an appearance on colleague Ali Velshi's weekend morning show, suggesting that the president is a "would-be strongman" who ordered the operation to provoke a war and give himself "expanded powers" against domestic political opponents.
Maddow's appearance on MS NOW—and certainly on the weekends—is a relative rarity. She is believed to be the second-highest paid employee at Versant, the new spin-off company made up of Comcast's discarded cable networks, after CEO Mark Lazarus, but she usually only works on Mondays.
As I noted yesterday, China should be paying special attention to what Trump pulled off in Venezuela, and its foreign ministry immediately reacted:
"China is deeply shocked and strongly condemns the use of force by the U.S. against a sovereign country and the use of force against the president of a country," a ministry statement said.
The Venezuela strike, following the Irsn B-2 raid, has got to put the Chinese on notice that US use of force is likely to be a surprise, unconventional, meticulously planned, and calibrated in such a way as to make any counterstrike irrelevant. This would almost certainly be what would happen just before any Chinese move against Taiwan.But foreign militsary adventures always have a domestic component. The Venezuela raid has wrong-footed the Democrats:
The vast majority of Democrats are raging at the Trump administration for once again sidelining Congress despite its constitutionally mandated role in authorizing and overseeing military actions.
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) said in a statement: "The Trump administration has not sought congressional authorization for the use of military force and has failed to properly notify Congress in advance of the operation in Venezuela."
Several House Democrats floated the idea of impeachment Saturday, with Rep. Jared Huffman (D-Calif.) even telling Axios: "We are in 25th Amendment territory now."
It's amazing how unrealistic this idea is -- under the 25th Amendment, Vice President Vance would have to convince, among others, Secretaries Rubio, Hegseth, Nome, Bessent, and Kennedy that Trump was unable to perform his duties, and then he'd have to get two-thirds of both houses of Congress to confirm it. Impeachment would be easier. At the same link,
House Democrats are set to meet virtually for an "emergency" caucus meeting Sunday afternoon, a senior House Democrat told Axios.
Meanwhike,🚨 BREAKING: Team America is celebrating because ELON MUSK just had dinner with President Trump at Mar-a-Lago
— Eric Daugherty (@EricLDaugh) January 4, 2026
The crowd LOVES IT!
Elon is ALL-IN on helping save Trump’s term from the Democrats in the midterms
THE BOYS ARE BACK 🔥🇺🇸
pic.twitter.com/7MYm9IFjJD





