donald trump
- Anthony M. Derluas II, 58, said yelling "Heil Hitler, heil Trump" at Wednesday's "Fiddler on the Roof" performance was “beyond a mistake."
- Reaction to the drunken outburst reveals fears about guns, bigotry and Trump
- A man shouted a pro-Nazi and pro-Trump salute during a performance of “Fiddler on the Roof” at Baltimore’s Hippodrome Theatre on Wednesday night. Audience members feared the worst was about to happen.
- There as no pandemonium when a man shouted support for President Donald J. Trump and Adolf Hitler at a performance of Fiddler on the Roof at the Hippodrome Theatre.
- “Documenting Hate: New American Nazis” chronicles a neo-Nazi group that includes former and current members from the U.S. military. The group advocates “lone wolf’ terrorist attacks on Jews like the recent one at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh.
- More than a week after the final votes were cast (but not necessarily counted), it's now looking like the Democrats had a blue wave after all, says Jonah Goldberg.
- The problem isn't an unfair press, the problem is Donald J. Trump is a horrific president.
- Donald Trump and his allies aren't disguising the fact they want Americans to believe there's rampant voter fraud without a shred of evidence backing their increasingly outrageous claims.
- Less than a week after outgoing Attorney General Jeff Sessions issued a memo dramatically scaling-back the ability of federal law enforcement officials to use consent decrees to enforce police reforms, the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights will call for a re-commitment to such efforts.
- It's telling that Sean Hannity of Fox "News" is Mr. Trump's idea of a real journalist, says Leonard Pitts Jr.
- One of the basic rules of journalism is that a reporter stays out of the news. Some reporters test the limits of that rule and Acosta has a reputation for baiting the Trumpster. It’s just too easy.
- The Sun fans racist flames in defending black journalists who were criticized by President Donald J. Trump.
- The Sun shows bias in defense of black journalists criticized by President Donald J. Trump.
- Robert Reich: In reality, voters in red states are more dependent on "welfare" than voters in blue states.
- I understand that there is excitement about a record 113 million people who voted last week. However, that number represents only 49 percent of eligible voters. This is an improvement from the 36 percent participation in 2014. But isn’t 36 percent a low bar?
- Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh has filed a motion in federal court challenging President Donald Trump's appointment of Matthew Whitaker as acting U.S. attorney general. Frosh’s motion in U.S. District Court in Baltimore argues the appointment is “illegal and unconstitutional.”
- In the conflict between Trump and the media, it's not the president who bullies and tries to intimidate.
- Mainstream media's war on Donald Trump deserves a little resistance like banning CNN's Acosta.
- Those of us whose heritage includes survival of slavery, dictatorships, holocausts, genocides, ethnic cleansings and internments are especially sensitive to stirrings that imperil democracy. President Trump has us alarmed.
- CNN is suing President Donald Trump and top aides on the White House communications team in an effort to get correspondent Jim Acosta’s press credentials immediately restored, the network announced this morning.
- U.S. needs a free press and Americans should recognize that banning CNN correspondent from the White House is outrageous.
- If President Trump is as innocent as he claims, he ought to leave Mueller probe in the hands of Rod Rosenstein.
- President Trump's long-expected firing of Attorney General Jeff Sessions may be a prelude to an outrageous, blatant political crime that could make the Watergate scandal of the 1970s pale in comparison.
- One of the big problems with the media in recent years is the way we always seem to be chasing the latest tweet to the exclusion of slowing down the nanosecond news cycles and helping viewers and readers make sense of the news. Case in point: Last week's midterms.
- Carroll County is in great hands with the folks who were elected, and our state is in good shape with Gov. Hogan as our head coach. Now that the election is over, it is time for these newly elected officials to get on the field and remind voters why we drafted them for our team.
- President Donald Trump has announced his first recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and they include the wife of a major Republican Party donor, the longest-serving Republican senator in U.S. history, Elvis Presley and Babe Ruth.
- President Donald J. Trump on Friday called White House correspondent and CNN political analyst April Ryan a “loser” and “nasty,” and hinted that he is considering revoking press credentials of journalists.
- Tuesday’s election results mean that in 2019 Democrats will hold the top job in seven of Maryland’s eight largest jurisdictions. Meanwhile, Republicans — still riding high from Hogan’s historic win over Democrat Ben Jealous — looked around the state to see their bench had been decimated.
- Seventy women won election Tuesday — about 30 of them new to the House and Senate — as part of a surge of woman across the country that shattered glass ceilings for gender, race and religion. Overall, Maryland will see a net gain of seven more women when the legislature reconvenes in January.
- Before he was fired by President Donald Trump on Wednesday, Attorney General Jeff Sessions signed a memo that appears to curtail the Department of Justice’s ability to implement and enforce consent decrees like the one Baltimore has entered to reform its police department.
- Results in the congressional and gubernatorial races were a mixed bag for both parties, says Jules Witcover.
- Carroll County Times Letters to the editor on the proposed Civil War memorial in Taneytown, President Trump and an old-timer.
- Democrats cannot claim a mandate given the limits of their victory; and Republicans must strive to improve within the next two years to suffer additional defeats.
- More than 100 people protested outside Congressman Andy Harris's Bel Air office Thursday in support of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into suspected Russian meddling on behalf of Donald Trump's 2016 campaign after AG Jeff Sessions was forced to resigned.
- Hundreds protested in Baltimore, Catonsville and Bel Air on Thursday as part of a national response to fears that President Donald Trump will quash the Russia investigation.
- About 200 people gathered outside the Catonsville Fire Station on Frederick Road Thursday, rallying in support of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation and protesting President Donald Trump’s actions related to it.
- Despite what Trump says, he will never collaborate with Democrats.
- CNN White House correspondent gets banned with doctored video - demonstrating the White House is irony free.
- Democratic Party made gains in midterm elections but it's a baby step at best.
- Even by the contentious standards of President Trump’s generally troubled relationship with press, what happened Wednesday at the White House between him and reporters from CNN, NBC, PBS and American Urban Radio Networks is truly shocking. His response to CNN's Jim Acosta is beyond the pale.
- “All politics is local,” so for me the big headline was that Carroll County voters ousted a judge backed by the local Republican powers and replaced him with a woman who happens to be a Democrat. That, in my view, is a microcosm of the national story.
- The day after becoming just the second Republican to be re-elected governor in Maryland history, Larry Hogan pledged to continue governing the blue state as a centrist as he laid out some of his second-term agenda.
- Maryland Rep. Steny Hoyer will seek majority leader spot — not speaker, sources say. Elijah Cummings, who won his 13th term, was expected to become chairman of Oversight and Government Reform
- The Sun's media critic David Zurawik talks about Sean Hannity's role as a shill for President Trump.
- Gov. Larry Hogan cruised to a second term Tuesday night, but failed to take others from his party along for the ride. Voters said they voted against most Republicans — other than Hogan — out of their disdain for President Donald Trump.
- A slew of diverse candidates, representing different races, ethnicities and religions, makes history in elections across the country.
- Election shows Republicans still see other people as a threat and not an opportunity.
- Enjoy the talk of bipartisanship because it's doomed: Voters just rewarded Democrats and Republicans alike for intransigence.
- The biggest surprise of the election is that voters didn't show greater disgust for President Trump.
- Now that the Democrats have won the House, but not the Senate, a chorus of smarty-pants will insist the president faces only nuisance House investigations, no real check. That is not true, and here’s why.