President Donald Trump is hurtling toward a “Nixonian” ending, former Republican congressman and TV host Joe Scarborough writes in a Washington Post op-ed.

“Even in President Trump’s America, no man is above the law,” writes Scarborough, who hosts the MSNBC show “Morning Joe.” His op-ed comes in the wake of Trump’s assertion that he can pardon himself. “The president’s hapless lawyers seem to have convinced Donald Trump, like Richard M. Nixon before him, that ‘when the president does it, that means that it is not illegal,’” Scarborough says. “But that twisted interpretation of presidential authority is dead wrong,” he writes.

See:Legal experts divided on whether Trump can self-pardon.

Sanders on Schultz: Sen. Bernie Sanders blasted outgoing Starbucks SBUX, -1.14% executive chairman Howard Schultz, saying the possible presidential candidate was “dead wrong” about health care and government spending.

Sanders, a Vermont independent, was responding on CNN to remarks Schultz made this week in which he signaled he’s open to running for office and argued the Democratic Party ought to be more concerned about fiscal responsibility. Schultz asked how things like single-payer health care and government-guaranteed jobs would be paid for, saying “I don’t think that’s something realistic.” Sanders hit back, “you have a guy who thinks that the United States apparently should remain the only major country on earth not to guarantee health care to all people.”

Also see:Is Howard Schultz the Donald Trump of the left? Starbucks career could be a double-edged sword.

Romney predicts Trump 2020: Mitt Romney once called Donald Trump a “con man,” but the GOP’s 2012 presidential nominee now predicts that Trump would “easily” win his party’s White House nomination in 2020 and “solidly” win a second term. Romney, now a Republican Senate candidate in Utah, made the prediction Thursday at an invitation-only summit in the state, the Associated Press writes. Romney tied his prediction to what he called the strong economy and Democrats being “likely to nominate someone who is really out of the mainstream of American thought.”