DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

MAGA warned it has an expiration date: ‘Trumpism will not last’

February 10, 2026
in News
MAGA warned it has an expiration date: ‘Trumpism will not last’

A New York Times columnist on Tuesday pointed out that MAGA will have its expiration date as President Donald Trump‘s desire to destroy or rebrand will ultimately be scrubbed when he’s gone.

Michelle Cottle described in her column how Trump is on a “renaming crusade” from the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to his threats to only release federal funding to complete the rail tunnel under the Hudson River in exchange for naming New York’s Penn Station and Dulles International Airport near Washington, D.C., after himself. His moves are “aimed not at building a legacy so much as appropriating those of others. He seems to find that approach easier.”

But as Cottle explained, Trump’s power won’t last forever, and neither will his “presidential graffiti.” Like many countries that have removed the names of “discredited authoritarians from the public square,” Americans can expect this to happen someday in the United States.

“As president, the real estate mogul and self-proclaimed builder of great things has turned out to be not much of a builder at all,” Cottle wrote. “He tears stuff down. Occasionally, as with the East Wing of the White House, he destroys something meaningful, with an eye toward replacing it with a bigger, golder version more befitting his imperial tastes. But he seems to lack what it takes to create or even to inspire institutions or monuments built to endure.”

His political legacy — the MAGA movement — will likely not outlast him once he’s gone.

“Trumpism will not last forever,” Cottle wrote. “Elements might endure, but the MAGA movement is at heart a cult of personality unlikely to outlast its singular leader for very long in its existing form. And whenever the fever breaks, America can begin to figure out when and how much of Mr. Trump’s self-honoring to roll back.”

The process after Trump will “probably be slow and steady,” the writer said.

“Removing presidential graffiti promises to be one of the easier repair jobs,” Cottle wrote. “Government agencies, policy programs, democratic norms, the rule of law — Mr. Trump is smearing his grubby fingerprints across so much more than a few edifices. The reconstruction will be long and daunting, especially if we take the opportunity to (with apologies to President Joe Biden) build back better. There are no quick fixes. Pretending otherwise would just lay the groundwork for public disappointment and bitterness.”

The post MAGA warned it has an expiration date: ‘Trumpism will not last’ appeared first on Raw Story.

Ariela Barer replaces Odessa A’zion in ‘Deep Cuts’ after casting controversy
News

Ariela Barer replaces Odessa A’zion in ‘Deep Cuts’ after casting controversy

by Los Angeles Times
February 10, 2026

After much controversy surrounding the role, Ariela Barer has been cast as Zoe Gutierrez in A24’s upcoming feature film “Deep ...

Read more
News

America’s new love affair with gambling drives Kalshi to $871 million haul on Super Bowl Sunday

February 10, 2026
News

Don Lemon Hires Federal Prosecutor Who Quit Over Immigration Crackdown

February 10, 2026
News

Bridge Owner Lobbied Administration Before Trump Blasted Competing Span to Canada

February 10, 2026
News

Why video of a masked intruder is such a game-changer in the Nancy Guthrie investigation

February 10, 2026
Inside a Detention Site at the Heart of Europe’s Harsh New Approach to Immigration

Inside a Detention Site at the Heart of Europe’s Harsh New Approach to Immigration

February 10, 2026
I’ve got all the parenting skills. I just don’t use them when I care for my grandkids.

I’ve got all the parenting skills. I just don’t use them when I care for my grandkids.

February 10, 2026
The job market is so tough white-collar workers are ‘reverse recruiting,’ shelling out thousands to get headhunters to find them their next role

The job market is so tough white-collar workers are ‘reverse recruiting,’ shelling out thousands to get headhunters to find them their next role

February 10, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026