Will Putin and Trump go down together?
With Donald Trump punishing Republicans who don't bow deeply enough to him, and asking the rest of us to front nearly $2 billion in a slush fund to pay off the January 6 rioters who invaded the US Capitol building five years ago, November 2026 doesn't look very promising for Republicans. He's apt to lose his House majority, thereby ensuring Impeachment 3.0. More important, he may also lose the Senate. That won't remove him from office (an impeachment is an indictment; it's the Senate that convicts, and it takes a two-thirds majority to do that) but it will certainly render him a lame duck. For most Americans, that's probably the best outcome, since President JD Vance would not only take us in the wrong direction, but could very well remain in office until January 2037.
As dictator-for-life, Vladimir Putin needn't fear impeachment nor even an honest public-opinion poll, but he too could be a lame duck by the end of the year. His pathetic Victory Day parade on May 9, without the cannon and tanks and missiles that in years past made the boast impressive even if unhistoric. (Hitler's successors actually surrendered to the Allies on May 8.) Stalin's Red Army battled the Wehrmacht for 47 months before reaching Berlin; Putin's has been at war with Ukraine for 51 months already and is farther from Kyiv than it was four years ago. Indeed, there are those who say that the Russians have actually lost territory so far in 2026.
Trump of course could bail him out, but would Speaker of the House Hakeem Jeffries permit that?










