Democratic Party
Date Range
Score Range
Democratic Party portrayed as deceitful and constitutionally illegitimate
[loaded_language], [editorializing]
“The state attorney general offers only 'babbling spin' in defense of all this, betting that the court will 'shrug away the problems' rather than make 'Democrats face the ultimate disaster.'”
Democratic Party, especially Black Democrats, portrayed as under threat
[appeal_to_emotion] The article highlights the potential loss of seats by 'Southern Black Democrats' as an imminent political consequence, framing them as vulnerable.
“Some Southern Black Democrats could lose their seats in Congress and legislatures as soon as November.”
Framed as politically motivated and illegitimate in legal actions
Habba dismisses Letitia James and Jack Smith as not bringing 'real cases,' implying partisan abuse of legal power, and the article reports this without challenge, reinforcing a narrative of Democratic-led institutions as adversarial.
“We are not Jack Smith, we’re not Letitia James, we bring real cases against people”
framing the Democratic Party as undergoing a significant internal ideological shift toward abundance politics
[framing_by_emphasis] and [loaded_language]: The article emphasizes the 'full penetration of political discourse' within the Democratic Party as a major achievement, using celebratory language to frame ideological influence as a sign of momentum.
“The degree to which the concept of abundance has reached something like full penetration of the political discourse — certainly, the discourse of the Democratic Party.”
Democratic policy framed as overreach and illegitimate enforcement
The article includes Trump’s executive order accusing the Biden administration of targeting gun sellers and increasing enforcement actions, without independent verification. This perpetuates a narrative of Democratic illegitimacy in regulatory authority.
“led to a nearly six-fold increase in enforcement actions against those sellers.”
Democratic lawmakers portrayed as corrupt or hypocritical by implication
The article amplifies Zeldin's insinuation linking Rep. Menendez Jr. to his father's corruption scandal via the 'gold bars' reference, using loaded language and selective quoting to imply guilt by association without clarifying the father-son distinction.
“How about the Gold Bars being thrown off the Titanic?”
Democratic Party framed as disengaged or indifferent to presidential security threats
The article notes Republican lawmakers are pushing for action while Democrats are only vaguely referenced as potentially 'open to discuss' funding, with no named Democratic voices or positions provided. This omission marginalizes Democratic participation.
“REPUBLICANS EYE PICKING UP $400M TAB FOR TRUMP'S BALLROOM AS SOME DEMS OPEN TO 'DISCUSS' IDEA”
Framed as hostile, morally corrupt adversaries responsible for national decay and violence
The article attributes political violence and moral collapse to unnamed 'liberals' and media figures, directly linking them to the assassination of Charlie Kirk and attempts on Trump. This constructs a narrative of the left as existential threats.
“These people have perverted the truth to the point that they motivated the murder of my husband. They have continuously tried to assassinate the president, and anyone who stands in their way is labeled ‘hateful,’ ‘racist,’ ‘fascist,’ and every other trigger word that is grossly dishonest.”
framed as outsiders being mocked and isolated
The article repeatedly highlights how Democrats are 'brutally mocked' and 'embarrassed' by Republicans, celebrities, and commentators, using social media ridicule to position them as socially and politically ostracized.
“Seems kind of embarrassing for an actual King to get cheered by No Kings people”
portrayed as hypocritical and dishonest
The article frames Democratic lawmakers as hypocritical for participating in 'No Kings' protests while applauding King Charles, using mocking language and selective conservative commentary to imply dishonesty and performative politics.
“were brutally mocked on Tuesday for applauding and warmly greeting King Charles III during his joint address to Congress.”