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Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #112 on: December 23, 2021, 12:48:44 AM »
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Criminals working on more corrupt GOP candidates campaigns. 

Stephen Miller and Hope Hicks advising Pennsylvania candidate after Trump’s pick flames out



Top alums of the Trump administration are backing the U.S. Senate campaign in Pennsylvania of hedge fund executive David McCormick.

"The list includes Trump White House veteran Hope Hicks. Hicks, who has been helping McCormick arrange meetings and reach out to people ahead of his anticipated early 2022 announcement, is working on her first campaign since being a top staffer on Trump’s 2016 effort," Politico reported Wednesday. "Two other prominent top staffers in the Trump administration — Stephen Miller and Cliff Sims — are also expected to serve in advisory roles. Several others, including Kellyanne Conway, Tony Sayegh, Matthew Pottinger and Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who is running for governor in Arkansas, are also supportive."

Trump backed Sean Parnell for the Pennsylvania Senate seat.

"The only reason Senator 'Gloomy' Pat Toomey is not running for the Senate in Pennsylvania is that I would not give him an endorsement—I feel he has been a terrible representative for both Pennsylvania and the United States, as a whole," Trump said in a September statement. "Fortunately for Pennsylvania, we have a great Senate candidate, Sean Parnell, who I have just given my Complete and Total Endorsement. He will do all of the things that Toomey is incapable of doing."

Less than three months later, Parnell quit the race after losing custody of his children. Now Trump allies are trying their luck with McCormick, who is married to former Trump White House official Dina Powell.

Also running is television personality Mehmet Oz, who goes by Dr. Oz.

"Oz’s team has its own connection to the former president: He has hired Larry Weitzner, who helped craft the TV commercials on Trump’s 2016 and 2020 campaigns. The candidate has been making regular appearances on the Fox News Channel program of Sean Hannity, a Trump favorite," Politico reported. "A third candidate, Carla Sands, has been promoting her role as Trump’s ambassador to Denmark."

Read the full report:

https://www.politico.com/news/2021/12/22/trump-alums-david-mccormick-staff-525935

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #112 on: December 23, 2021, 12:48:44 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #113 on: December 23, 2021, 07:56:54 AM »
This 232-year-old power has never been used by Congress — but it could save the republic

The Founders of this nation, and the Framers who wrote our Constitution, created (as Ben Franklin famously said) a constitutional republic: a government “deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed” through citizens’ (then white men) right to vote.

They referred to this as “republicanism” because it was based on the Greek and Roman republics (then thousands of years in the past but still remembered and idealized), and when put into law they called it “a Republican Form of Government.”

Today that form of government in crisis in America, as that core right to vote that defines republicanism is under attack by Republican legislators in red states across our nation.

“In emergency, break glass” is the almost-never-used option available should a building catch fire or otherwise be in crisis. There’s a similar alarm and safety valve built into the US Constitution that, like that glass in so many buildings, has never before been used to protect our republic.

It’s called the Guarantee Clause, and it’s the basis of the Right To Vote Act that has passed the House and is stalled by a Republican filibuster in the Senate.

The Guarantee Clause, however, has never been used as a part of our everyday politics or law: most people, in fact, have never heard of it.

It’s never been used or adopted as law by the courts so it’s essentially “potential power,” a powerful but tightly coiled force quietly waiting for a real emergency, buried deep in our Constitution for 232 years.

But it comes alive when Congress activates it for the first time, which could be right now because the Freedom to Vote Act does just that, explicitly firing it up by name.

Joe Manchin is one of its co-sponsors, although it’s mostly an effort by Senators Klobuchar (its main sponsor), Kaine, King, Merkley, Padilla, Tester, and Warnock. On the Republican side, it appears to have support from Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski.

And when you understand the background of the Guarantee Clause, the urgency and the consistency of The Right To Vote Act with the Framer’s vision about the possibility of this political moment is unmistakable:

July 18, 1787

It was a brutally hot summer in Philadelphia that year, and a week and a day after a mob chased down Mrs. Korbmacher on the streets outside Independence Hall (then the seat of the Pennsylvania legislature) and beat her to death for witchcraft.

Inside the Hall, the delegates were writing the Constitution for a new nation, and the question had come up whether the new US government should have the power — or the obligation — to “guarantee” that no state could so change its laws as to deprive its citizens of a “Republican Form of Government.”

This was particularly important, as British law at the time specifically outlawed republicanism: only monarchy was allowed, and citizens had to swear fealty to the king. Nowhere in the “civilized world” of 1787, in fact, was it legal for a nation to elect their own representatives and live under their own laws, all made and enforced “by the consent of the governed” through “a Republican Form of Government.”

At the end of the long, intense day, James Madison wrote a short letter to Thomas Jefferson, who was then the US envoy to France and living in Paris, assuring him he was taking “lengthy notes” but couldn’t fill his mentor in on the details because he was “still under the mortification of being restrained from disclosing any part of their proceedings.”

In fact, those notes taken during the Convention wouldn’t see publication for another roughly 50 years, after all the men in the Hall were dead, a concession to numerous delegates who’d essentially sold out their wealthy acquaintances by ensuring a republican democracy or allowing slavery to continue (there were compromises on both sides, some of which, like the electoral college and setup of the 2-votes-only-regardless-of-population Senate, cripple us to this day).

Before them for debate that day was proposed constitutional language: “That a republican constitution and its existing laws ought to be guarantied to each state by the United States.”

An immediate objection came up from both New York’s Gouverneur Morris and New Jersey’s William Houston, because that language would allow the new states to keep laws that some delegates thought weren’t “republican” in nature.

Morris, in particular, was an outspoken abolitionist and (from the left) wanted slavery phased out, and also opposed (from the right) laws like the one Rhode Island’s legislature was then debating that would have equalized all wealth in that state every 13 years. That “Jubilee” idea was a prescription for chaos, Morris believed, and thus a threat to the new republic.

The judgment of history weighed on Morris. Madison later recounted that, “He came here as a representative of America; he flattered himself he came here in some degree as a Representative of the whole human race; for the whole human race will be affected by the proceedings of this Convention.”

Thus it was no surprise when Morris rose to object that the proposed language could keep terrible state laws in place.

“Mr. GOUVERNEUR MORRIS thought the resolution very objectionable,” Madison wrote. “He should be very unwilling that such laws as exist in Rhode Island should be guarantied.”

New Jersey’s William Houston, a mathematics professor and abolitionist who served as a Captain in Washington’s army, concurred — although he was more concerned with not wanting to encourage laws that maintained slavery and debt peonage.

“Mr. HOUSTON,” Madison noted, “was afraid of perpetuating the existing constitutions of the states. That of Georgia was a very bad one, and he hoped would be revised and amended.”

At which point several men rose to point out they were debating the power of the federal government to “guarantee a Republican Form of Government” to all the states — but what if power-hungry people in a particular state were to rise up in rebellion and seize control of that state’s government, thus ending statewide republicanism and creating a minor dictatorship or cult?

And then, what if that state then threatened other states’ ability to have a government reflecting the will of the people?

Or tried to take them over either by corrupting them from within or invasion? (This was not an idle fear: both happened just 74 years later in 1861.)

Massachusetts’ Nathaniel Gorham was particularly outspoken about this, given how there had been attempts by both rich landowners and Pilgrim clergy in his state over the past century to turn the state into a dictatorial theocracy (leading Roger Williams to flee and split off Rhode Island in the 1670s).

If such a thing were to happen again and succeed, Gorham wondered, shouldn’t the federal government have the power to intervene so it could guarantee the states around Massachusetts and its residents a republican form of government where those with political power had to answer to “the people” rather than just the clergy or the rich? What if a wealthy oligarch declared himself a monarch?

“Mr. GORHAM thought it strange that a rebellion should be known to exist in the empire,” Madison wrote, “and the general government should be restrained from interposing to subdue it. At this rate, an enterprising citizen might erect the standard of monarchy in a particular state; might gather together partisans from all quarters; might extend his views from state to state, and threaten to establish a tyranny over the whole,—and the general government be compelled to remain an inactive witness of its own destruction.” [emphasis added]

In response, Pennsylvania’s James Wilson, a scholar of Greek democracy and an abolitionist, suggested different language for the Fourth Section of the Constitution’s Fourth Article:

“[T]hat a republican form of government shall be guarantied to each state; and that each state shall be protected against foreign and domestic violence.”

That did the trick.

“This seeming to be well received,” Madison noted, “Mr. MADISON and Mr. RANDOLPH withdrew their propositions, and, on the question for agreeing to Mr. Wilson’s motion, it passed, nem. con.” The convention then adjourned for the day and Madison went home to write his letter to Jefferson.

That day’s debate is what gave us Section 4 of Article IV of the Constitution:

“The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened) against domestic Violence.”

It’s an amazing sentence, that could be as sweeping in its power as the Commerce Clause (which JFK and LBJ used to force integration of the South), but has never really been used in any meaningful way since it was written on that hot summer day in 1787.

The first time this “Guarantee Clause” came before the Supreme Court, slavery was the law of the land and Chief Justice Roger Taney, a former slaveholder, was determined to keep it that way by bottling up that Clause’s power.

Seven years before he tried to cement slavery into the law of every state in the union with his Dred Scott decision, Taney ruled in Luther v Borden (1849) that his Supreme Court would never be allowed to interfere with state’s rights on the basis of the Guarantee Clause.

“Under this article of the Constitution,” Taney wrote, “it rests with Congress to decide what government is the established one in a state.”

In other words, Taney said: The definition of what a ‘Republican Form of Government’ actually means isn’t yet laid out in the law or previous interpretations of the Constitution: therefore, it’s politics. And politics is the province of Congress, not the Supreme Court, which must limit itself to law.

On that foundation, later Supreme Courts repeated Taney’s assertion that the question was political and not one to be decided by the courts: instead it was up to the politicians in Congress if they were going to “guarantee a Republican Form of Government” to — or within — any particular state at any point in the future.

Taney was quoted “lucidly and cogently” in Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph v Oregon (1912) and Chief Justice John Roberts noted in 2019 that, “This Court has several times concluded that the Guarantee Clause does not provide the basis for a justiciable claim.”

Thus, to this day, it’s up to Congress, not the Court, to decide what a “Republican Form of Government” is and how Congress will guarantee it to and/or within every state.

Which brings us to today, and how Congress can end partisan gerrymanders, dial back the power of money in politics, and guarantee the right of every American citizen to vote without undue difficulty.

The opening of the Freedom To Vote Act lays it out clearly:

“Congress also finds that it has both the authority and responsibility, as the legislative body for the United States, to fulfill the promise of article IV, section 4, of the Constitution, which states: ‘The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a “Republican Form of Government.”’” [emphasis added]

The proposed law even notes as justification for its existence how the Supreme Court has dropped — or laid down — the ball and therefore Congress must pick it up:

“Congress finds that its authority and responsibility to enforce the Guarantee Clause is clear given that Federal courts have not enforced this clause because they understood that its enforcement is committed to Congress by the Constitution.”

The Freedom To Vote Act ensures a “Republican Form of Government” in America by providing:

- Automatic voter registration and online registration for 16 year olds who will be 18 and thus eligible to vote in the next election

- Same day voter registration nationwide

- Ends partisan gerrymandering

- Limits campaign contributions to a maximum of $10,000

- Criminalizes “pass through” groups to get around campaign finance laws

- Requires companies to fully and rapidly disclose all election spending over $10,000

- Requires all websites (like Facebook) with more than 50 million users to create a publicly available and publicly searchable archive of political adsBrings web-based election expenditures under the same disclosure rules as TV.

- Makes it a federal crime to prevent a person from registering to vote

- Requires 14 consecutive days for early voting, at least 10 hours each day

- Requires easy access to polling places for rural and college campus voters, and easy access to voting for all voters by public transportationGuarantees that all voters, nationwide, can vote by mail with no excuses necessary

- Guarantees that all voters can put themselves on a permanent vote-by-mail list and automatically receive a ballot in the mail

- Requires states to give voters the ability to track their mail-in ballots to be sure they’re counted or contest any challenge to their ballot

- Forbids states from forcing mail-in voters to have their ballots witnessed, notarized or jump through other onerous hoopsRequires secured and clearly labeled ballot drop boxes in all jurisdictions

- Requires the Post Office to process all ballots on the day they’re dropped off and without postageRequires states to keep voting lines shorter than 30 minutes in all cases and places

- Allows people waiting in line to vote to receive food or water from others

- Gives the right to vote to all felons who have served their sentences, in all states

- Prohibits voter “caging” where failure to return a postcard gets you purged

- Prohibits states from deleting voters from the rolls because they haven’t recently voted

- Empowers voters to sue in federal court any state or local officials who interfere with their right to vote

- Criminalizes intimidating, threatening or coercing any election official or election worker

- Requires federal prosecution of anybody who tries to harm or undermine public officials by doxxing the personal information of an election worker or their immediate familyMakes it a federal crime to publish or distribute false information about elections (when, where, etc.)

- Increases federal penalties for voter intimidation or otherwise interfering with your absolute right to voteKeeps partisan “poll watchers” at least 8 feet from voters in all circumstances, including while voting

- Requires paper ballots in all cases and all elections (there are exceptions for disabled voters)Requires post-election auditsProvides criminal penalties for any candidate or campaign that fails to fully and immediately report any interactions with foreign governmentsGives lower income individuals $25 they can use to give to candidates in $5 or more increments.


The Freedom To Vote Act is more urgently needed with every passing day, as multiple Republican-controlled states openly (and ironically) tear down actual “republican principles” of representative government by continuing to pass laws that pre-rig election outcomes.

Some have even gone so far as to introduce laws that authorize their legislatures to ignore or reject votes they don’t like, in anticipation of the 2024 election.

Passing this law must now be the Senate’s first priority because, “It’s a republic, ma’am, if you can keep it."

https://www.rawstory.com/voting-rights-2656094670/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #114 on: December 23, 2021, 11:21:36 PM »
Joe Biden 'saved Christmas' — and Democrats should put it on a bumper sticker: Morning Joe



Fears that supply chain issues would destroy Christmas failed to materialize — and Democrats should put it on a bumper sticker, according to one MSNBC personality.

That advice came from former Rep. Joe Scarborough (R-FL) on MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

Politico White House bureau chief Jonathan Lemire noted that Biden press secretary Jen Psaki joked that the White House saved Christmas.

"Put it on a bumper sticker," Scarborough advised.

"Republicans would put it on a bumper sticker," he explained. "The White House should put this -- 'the White House that saved Christmas.' If you don't think Republicans wouldn't doesn't that, you don't know Republicans."

Later in the segment, Scarborough explained his thoughts on Democrats' messaging.

"Democrats, they like to apologize or put caveats on bumper stickers. You didn't see 'Make America Great Again' asterisk. It doesn't work that way," he said.

Watch:


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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #114 on: December 23, 2021, 11:21:36 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #115 on: December 24, 2021, 12:01:51 AM »
Democrats can win the Senate in 2022 -- and make it Manchin-proof



The Democratic Party enters the 2022 midterm elections in far better position than conventional wisdom suggests for maintaining -- and even increasing -- their slim control of the U.S. Senate.

The reason is simple: Math may mean more than history in the upcoming cycle.

History is clear: The American political party in power routinely gets crushed in Congressional midterm elections. In the past 21 election cycles dating back to 1938, the incumbent lost seats in both the chambers 15 times. (Only once, in the first post-911 election of 2002 under President George W. Bush, did it gain in both the House and Senate).

The pattern is especially pronounced in the House, where 19 of those 21 elections saw losses for the party in power. The Democrats hopes of holding their slim control of the House in 2022 therefore seem dim. That would be true even if Republicans didn’t hold their monstrous gerrymandering advantage as the party controlling most statehouses after a Census.

But the Senate is an entirely different matter. Overlooked in most analyses is that the Democrats enter the election in a far stronger position than Republicans based upon the specific seats that are in play.

Two-thirds of the Senate is not up for election in each two-year cycle. So, it is the nitty gritty of the contested third that provides the lens through which election prospects should be viewed.

In the case of 2022, the Democrats enter the race with a significant advantage among the seats not being contested. And of the ones in play, Democrats are defending incumbents while all the vulnerable open seats are currently held by Republicans.

It’s far too early to draw conclusions about next November -- in any direction. But much political talk today focuses upon assumptions of midterm electoral history or even President Biden’s weak poll numbers. Those numbers, too, can change -- just as Donald Trump’s future status in the criminal-justice system might.

When viewed seat by seat in the Senate, the Democrats’ prospects are brighter than their present “woe is me” tenor would suggest.

Here’s an overview:

For starters, there are 66 seats not up in 2022. Of those, Democrats (and independents who caucus with them) hold 36 seats. Republicans hold just 30.

There are 24 seats which appear solid for the party holding them. Of those, 10 are held by Democrats, 14 by Republicans. That brings the total of likely safe seats to 46 Democrats, 44 Republicans.

That leaves 10 seats more realistically in play. CNN labeled them as “most likely to be flipped” in a November analysis. It tracks with projections by the Cook Political Report except for Missouri, which Republicans now fear is in jeopardy, as reported recently at Raw Story.

What’s notable -- and underestimated -- is that of those 10 seats, only four are held by Democrats and six by Republicans. Even more significant, all four Democratic seats are held by incumbents seeking reelection, while four of the six Republican seats are open seats in which the incumbent is retiring.

Incumbency remains an advantage for both sides. According to data at opensecrets.org, in the past 40 years the reelection rate of Senate incumbents has dropped below 82% only three times (75% being the lowest). And it has been as high as 96.3%.

Barring a dramatic upset on either side in the “safe” seats, the Democrats could maintain their perilous 50-50 “majority” in the Senate by defending their incumbents. That presumes no flips among the six Republican seats in play.

If they can hold their current seats, Democrats then would need just one pickup among the six Republican seats in play to “Joe Manchin-proof” their caucus at 51 members. They’d need a second pickup to get to 52 for a cushion that might diminish the influence of the likes of moderate Sen. Kirsten Sinema of Arizona.

Nothing is certain nearly 11 months before any election. But here’s a snapshot of the 34 seats up for election in 2022, beginning with the 10 most likely in play:

FLIPPABLE SEATS--DEMOCRAT (4)

Arizona: Sen. Mark Kelly. He unseated Sen. Martha McSally in a 2020 special election by 88,000 votes, or 2.4%. That was tight, but more than eight times Biden’s 10,467 win in that cycle. Kelly raised $8 million in the last quarter alone, CNN reports. And there’s this on the other side: “The primary in Arizona is still a free-for-all that's causing some concern for the GOP. As the major statewide elected official in the race, Attorney General Mark Brnovich would seem to start with an advantage, but he raised only $564,000 in the third quarter, which would be mediocre money for a candidate in a competitive House district, let alone a top-tier Senate race. He's also taking incoming fire from his GOP rivals. A super PAC backing Blake Masters, the president of the Thiel Foundation, is attacking Brnovich on the air on immigration.” All that said, Arizona is the least blue of the incumbent seats Democrats are defending.

Georgia: Sen. Raphael Warnock. He unseated Sen Kelly Loeffler in a 2020 special election runoff by 93,000 votes or 2%. Stacey Abrams’ announcement this month that she will make another run for governor ensured that Georgia will likely be the most-watched state in the 2022 elections. It also is a good sign for Warnock, according to strategist Donna Brazile, according to the New York Times: “What he’ll get from Stacey is somebody who can stir up the electorate to get the results he needs to win in 2022,” Ms. Brazile said.” The Times added, “Herschel Walker, the Georgia college football legend backed by Mr. Trump, is the favorite among seven Republicans who have filed to run so far. He has faced repeated accusations of threatening his ex-wife.” Warnock smashed Georgia fundraising records in the third quarter to emerge with $17.2 million in hand. He will undoubtedly be running against a well-funded opponent, but his own numbers show Warnock is ready to battle.

Nevada: Sen. Cortez Masto. A two-term incumbent, she won reelection in 2016 by the same 2.4% margin that Trump lost the state in that year and 2020. But unlike the other Democrats on this list, Masto -- the Senate’s lone Latina -- seems certain to face a well-known candidate with unified Republican support in former state Atty. Gen. Adam Laxalt. The grandson of former Nevada senator and governor Paul Laxalt, he was among the most vocal advocates of Trump’s Big Lie in the 2020 election. Laxalt lost a 2018 bid for governor, but he is supported by both Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. The Nevada Independent reports that Masto starts the race with better approval ratings than Laxalt and a 4-point lead.

New Hampshire: Sen. Maggie Hassan. She unseated Sen. Kelly Ayotte in 2016 by just 1,017 votes. But the moderate Hassan received good news last month when her most formidable Republican challenger -- Gov. Chris Sununu -- ruled out a race for her Senate seat, as has Ayotte. Reports the Times: “Sununu's announcement that he would forgo the race disappointed national Republicans, who had been salivating over taking out Hassan. Had he run, this seat would have shot near the top of the list of seats likely to flip. Republicans have long maintained that Hassan would be among the most vulnerable incumbents even without the governor running, but as of now they don't have an A-list candidate.” Biden won the state by seven points in 2020.

SAFE DEMOCRATIC SEATS (10)

California: Sen. Alex Padilla

Colorado: Sen. Michael Bennet

Connecticut: Sen. Richard Blumenthal

Hawaii: Sen. Brian Schatz

Illinois: Sen. Tammy Duckworth

Maryland: Sen. Chris Van Hollen

New York: Sen. Chuck Schumer

Oregon: Sen. Ron Wyden

Vermont: Open

Washington: Sen. Patty Murray

SAFE REPUBLICAN SEATS (14)

Alaska: Sen. Lisa Murkowski

Alabama: Open

Arkansas: Sen. John Boozman

Idaho: Sen. Mike Crapo

Indiana: Sen. Todd Young

Iowa: Sen. Chuck Grassley

Kansas: Sen. Jerry Moran

Kentucky: Sen. Rand Paul

Louisiana: Sen. John Kennedy

North Dakota: Sen. John Hoeven

Oklahoma: Sen. James Lankford

South Carolina: Sen. Tim Scott

South Dakota: Sen. John Thune

Utah: Sen. Mike Lee

https://www.rawstory.com/democrats-senate-2022/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #116 on: December 24, 2021, 12:08:25 AM »
A 'flood' of right-wing 'dark money’ played a major role in Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation



Although Democrats have won the popular vote in seven of the United States’ last eight presidential elections, six of the U.S. Supreme Court’s nine justices are Republican appointees — including Justice Amy Coney Barrett, whose confirmation was rammed through the U.S. Senate only a month before then-President Donald Trump was voted out of office. The far right wanted Barrett confirmed ASAP, and according to Daily Poster reporters Andrew Perez and Julia Rock, “conservative dark money” played a major role in Barrett’s “confirmation campaign.”

Perez and Rock, in an article published on December 19, report, “A conservative dark money group led by former President Donald Trump’s judicial adviser Leonard Leo bankrolled Amy Coney Barrett’s Supreme Court confirmation campaign with nearly $22 million in anonymous cash, while another nonprofit that Leo helps steer saw a fundraising bonanza and showered cash on other organizations boosting Barrett, according to tax returns obtained by The Daily Poster. The new tax returns shed light on how Barrett’s successful last-minute confirmation campaign was aided by a flood of dark money.”

Those tax returns, the reporters add, “also reveal the rapid growth of Leo’s already highly successful dark money network and its tentacles in the broader conservative movement.”

“Leo is a longtime executive at the Federalist Society, a group for conservative lawyers,” Perez and Rock explain. “He formed the Rule of Law Trust (RLT) in 2018, and the group quickly raised nearly $80 million. RLT started spending that money in 2020, donating $21.5 million to the Judicial Crisis Network (JCN), another group steered by Leo that played a key role in Republicans flipping the Supreme Court and building a conservative supermajority.”

Perez and Rock add that JCN “spent millions pressing Republican senators to block (President Barack) Obama’s 2016 Supreme Court pick, Merrick Garland, and subsequently spent millions boosting each of Trump’s High Court nominees — Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Barrett — all while Leo was advising Trump’s judicial strategy.”

The fact that JCN opposed Garland’s nomination so vehemently speaks volumes. After Justice Antonin Scalia’s death in 2016, Obama went very centrist with his Garland nomination; he didn’t nominate someone as liberal as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg or Chief Justice Earl Warren. And Obama was more than willing to meet Republicans half way.

In fact, Garland, as U.S. attorney general under President Joe Biden, has cited Edward Levi — Republican President Gerald R. Ford’s attorney general during the mid-1970s — as his role model for how the U.S. Department of Justice should operate. Ford, of course, was vice president under President Richard Nixon before Nixon resigned, in August 1974, because of the Watergate scandal. And the JCN is so far to the right that they consider even the legal and judicial standards of the Ford Administration too liberal.

"Leo also helps direct the 85 Fund, a charitable organization being used to fiscally sponsor a host of conservative nonprofits, including the Judicial Education Project, which has long been JCN’s sister arm,” Perez and Rock note. “The 85 Fund reported bringing in nearly $66 million in 2020, according to its latest tax return. That’s a huge increase over the roughly $13 million the organization raised in 2019, per OpenSecrets, which found the majority of the 85 Fund’s 2020 money came from DonorsTrust, a group known as a ‘dark money ATM,’ for its use as a pass-through vehicle.”

https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2021/12/conservative-dark-money-group-raised-record-50m-in-2020-after-election-rebranding/?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=twitt_darkmoney-rebrand/12/16/21

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #116 on: December 24, 2021, 12:08:25 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #117 on: December 24, 2021, 11:22:13 PM »
These right wing MAGA's are despicable.

Defiant MAGA candidate replaces prohibited 'Let's Go Brandon' Christmas display with larger 'FJB' lights

A Trump-loving congressional candidate in Florida has replaced his controversial "Let's Go Brandon" Christmas display with a lighted "FJB" sign that is nine times larger.

Both displays, of course, are intended to convey the same message: "F*** Joe Biden."

Martin Hyde was facing fines of up to $150 per day from his homeowners association in Sarasota over the "Let's Go Brandon" sign, which he created with lighted letters on a second-floor balcony facing the street, according to the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. The display included an inflatable Santa Claus standing behind the sign on the balcony.

"Hyde has embraced 'Let's Go Brandon' as he tries to challenge Republican U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan from the right. He had bumper stickers and shirts made with the phrase on them," the newspaper reports. "Known for being provocative and outspoken, Hyde hired Roger Stone, a famous GOP provocateur, as a campaign consultant. So it may not be surprising that his Christmas display also would veer into the realm of provocation."

After being warned about the "Let's Go Brandon" display by the homeowners association, Hyde took it down and unveiled lighted "FJB" letters on Wednesday night. He says the new display cost him $1,000 to have made, and he's willing to risk being fined for it.

"He parked his campaign bus outside and played music while offering free pizza, beer and wine to supporters," the newspaper reports. "He gave a speech and then unveiled large lettering wrapped in Christmas lights that read "#FJB."

“When you poke the bear, there are outcomes and circumstances," Hyde told the newspaper.

"We had a blast in Sarasota pushing back on 'Cancel culture,'" he wrote above video from the event on Facebook.

Hyde, who reportedly lives in a liberal-leaning neighborhood, accused the homeowners association of selectively enforcing its ban on signs.

"If I put a message up there they liked, they’d be slapping me on the back," he said. "It’s got everything to do with they don’t like what it says."

But homeowners association president John Habbert said the dispute has nothing to do with politics.

"When he purchased his house, Mr. Hyde signed documents stating that he would abide by all HOA rules -- including no signs other than house numbers or For Sale notices," Habbert said. "Other residents have been asked to remove signs and have complied without any problems, but Mr. Hyde refuses to do so."

https://www.rawstory.com/martin-hyde-biden-sign/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #118 on: December 27, 2021, 12:43:09 AM »
Ron DeSantis flattened by top Florida paper for fear-mongering in Christmas Day editorial



Florida's Republican governor was blasted for being a "reactionary and authoritarian" liar in a hard-hitting Christmas Day editorial published by the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

"Remember the boogeyman, that specter your parents invoked to make you behave? Almost every culture has one. So do politicians when they want to create fear. Gov. Ron DeSantis has a boogeyman for the people of Florida. It is a real thing known as critical race theory — a discipline taught at some colleges but not in Florida public schools," the newspaper explained. "The governor wants nonetheless to ban it from schools and, for good measure, from the human resource policies and sensitivity training courses of privately owned businesses. That is not conservative; it is reactionary and authoritarian."

DeSantis calls his proposal the Stop the Wrongs to Our Kids and Employees (W.O.K.E.) Act.

"It perpetuates two persistent great lies: That racism did not have a major influence on American history and that it is not an issue now," the newspaper explained. "That is the current dogma of DeSantis’s Republican Party in its determination to retain the allegiance of white voters who are terrified of losing social and political dominance to changing demographics. Demonization of critical race theory, by making it into a boogeyman, is one front in the Republican culture wars. DeSantis would make Floridians ignorant of the most troublesome aspects of our past, present and future."

The editorial board concluded that DeSantis "knows critical race theory isn’t being taught in the schools," but is lying about the issue anyway.

"There’s been nothing like the DeSantis bill in the 96 years since Tennessee outlawed the teaching of evolution. John Scopes, a high school teacher, volunteered to test the law in what became known, to the state’s everlasting mortification, as the 'monkey trial.' Tennessee failed to repeal science, of course, but it did stunt the intellectual growth of a generation of children," the newspaper explained. "In the same vein, Virginia textbooks in the mid-20th century fed students a fiction of happy slaves who loved their kindly masters. One particularly deceitful illustration portrayed a well-dressed Black family — father, mother and children — being welcomed with a handshake aboard a slave ship."

The newspaper explained the impacts of DeSantis' lies.

"Although the Civil War ended slavery, it took another century to outlaw Jim Crow. But the effects persist, documented by the racial disparities in employment, income and incarceration; in ghettoes segregated by government housing policies; and by how Republican legislatures try to suppress Black votes. These truths are evident almost everywhere that honest eyes look," the editorial board wrote. "In truth, no one is teaching kids to hate our country or each other, but we do need to teach them not to hate each other, even unconsciously, and to recognize prejudices for what they are. That cannot be done by pretending they do not exist."

https://www.rawstory.com/ron-desantis-woke-act/

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Re: U.S. Politics
« Reply #118 on: December 27, 2021, 12:43:09 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: U.S. Politics
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Wisconsin  Republicans pump new life into scrutinizing the 2020 election
The aim of the investigations has shifted to trying to subvert election boards and long-standing voting protocols


CHIPPEWA FALLS, Wis. — The cash bar was open for business, the Lilydale Dance Hall decked out in holiday garland, but Michael Gableman wasn't here with good tidings.

The attorney stood in front of Republican activists to share horror stories he'd heard in his investigation of the 2020 election: ballot harvesting, dead people left on state voter rolls and private grants to operate COVID-era elections used to get out the vote for Joe Biden, some claims misleading, some unsubstantiated. Gableman admitted he doesn't think China or Russia hacked into voting machines, but they easily could have.

"I don't think there's anything too confusing about taking the dead people off of the voter rolls," Gabelman said under the holiday lights, a stark reminder that more than a year had passed since Donald Trump lost the presidency.

Scenes like this are playing out across Wisconsin in the most aggressive effort by Republicans in any battleground state to pump new life into scrutinizing the last election. While some of the players are the same, their aim is different than it was a year ago, when groups unsuccessfully tried to overturn results that elected Biden. Republicans' focus now is trying to subvert election boards and long-standing voting protocols in Wisconsin ahead of the critical midterm and 2024 presidential race.

"What you are seeing are people literally advocating for maybe having an election but allowing the state Legislature to override it regardless of who wins and install their own preferred candidate," said Ann Jacobs, the Democratic chair of the bipartisan Wisconsin Elections Commission, which is under attack by Republicans. "For a while it was sort of done quietly, and now it is just out in the open, this advocacy for the elimination of democratically elected representatives."

Gableman's taxpayer-funded investigation into the election has stretched on for months, flooding the state's large cities with data requests. He's asked to jail the mayors of Madison and Green Bay if they don't comply with requests for private interviews. Some Republicans are calling for mass resignations from people who run Wisconsin elections. The Racine County Sheriff wants criminal charges brought against most members of the the Wisconsin Elections Commission.

"On the one hand, it's absolutely laughable because there's no legal basis here. They clearly don't know what they're doing," Madison Mayor Satya Rhodes-Conway said. "On the other hand, it's terrifying because it illustrates the lengths they are willing to go to cast doubt on our elections."

Madison's election clerk has faced death threats, poll workers are frustrated and morale in the office is low, Rhodes-Conway said, as the latest push sows fresh doubts among voters about unsubstantiated claims of massive voter fraud. She said Gableman's current investigation is just "one piece of the picture."

"If you couple that with all of the lawsuits, all of the elections-related complaints, the legislation that has been introduced and in some cases passed to make it more difficult to vote, the dialogue and the conversations in the public sphere and the press, that's what worries me," she said. "All of that adds up to setting the stage for state legislatures around the country to overturn the will of the people in democratically conducted elections."

Wisconsin Republican U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson has gone the furthest. He says a provision in the U.S. Constitution allowing state legislatures to set the time and place of federal elections means Republicans who control the statehouse could simply take over federal races without the approval of Democratic Gov. Tony Evers.

The Legislature has done the work of setting the time and place of federal elections by passing laws that were signed by a governor, said Kevin Kennedy, who ran elections in the state for more than three decades. To undo those, Kennedy says lawmakers would have to get approval from the governor again.

"It really is part of the total strategy for 2022 and 2024, which is to say you can't trust the election process unless we are in charge," he said. "It's ironic that they are going to take that position, because most of what they are doing is being very, very critical. They are not offering constructive alternatives."

Republicans controlled the governor's office and Legislature when they created the Wisconsin Elections Commission in 2016, after controversies prompted them to shut down a different accountability board, run by Kennedy.

But in the wake of Trump's roughly 21,000-vote loss in the state, Republicans have scrutinized decisions made by the evenly-split commission during the pandemic, including a ruling last March to not send special voting deputies into nursing homes to assist residents.

No one criticized the bipartisan vote at the time, which commissioners argued was necessary as nursing homes closed their doors to most visitors. But the Racine County Sheriff said in an October press conference that investigators in his office have now heard examples of staff taking advantage of residents in one care facility as they tried to vote.

He said the commission violated the law by not allowing deputies in, calling for felony charges against five of its six members. No prosecutors in the state have moved on his request.

"It's not up to me to decide what's legal or what's not," said Robert Spindell, a Republican appointee on the elections commission who has supported calls to dig into the 2020 election. "It's really irrelevant whether there was any fraud or not, the point here is that there are many people who do not have faith in the elections, or that it was handled fairly, and we need to have these questions answered."

The Wisconsin Legislature ordered an investigation from the nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau, which found no new evidence of voter fraud, but recommended dozens of changes to the elections commission.

Republicans in the assembly and Gableman are also zeroing in on a shared $6.3 million election administration grant from the Mark Zuckerberg-funded Center for Tech and Civic Life, which was split among the state's five largest cities last year. The grants were given to help administer COVID-safe elections, but Republicans allege the money gave too much information to outside groups over how elections were run.

Election leaders and city officials have said they're proud of the actions they took in extraordinary circumstances to make sure people were able to safely exercise their democratic right to vote during the pandemic. Everything was done out in the open, including in more than 40 hearings held by the elections commission last year, Jacobs said.

"It's really a rejection of government as something that can be trusted and function appropriately," she said. "And the misguided believe that what we feel is more important than what is real."

Part of the issue for Republicans is that they're stuck, said Rep. Mark Spreitzer, the Democratic lead on the assembly's election committee. Recounts and the courts in Wisconsin upheld the results of the 2020 election, and the governor vetoed Republican-backed election law changes.

Assembly Republicans have held sporadic hearings on the election over the last year and Speaker Robin Vos brought in Gableman, a retired Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice, to conduct his investigation. Vos's office did not return a request for comment.

"In almost all cases, it is clear at least to me that there's not going to be any finding of actual illegality and wrongdoing under current laws," Spreitzer said.

Gableman's inquiry has faced criticism from the start as a partisan effort. The investigation is staffed by several people with connections to Trump and past efforts to overturn the election results. Gableman's office did not respond to a request for comment.

Republican state Sen. Kathleen Bernier, a former elections clerk who leads the chamber's elections committee, wants the investigation to wrap up its work.

She criticized Gableman's meetings as "jazzing up" the base, but she's worried it will have the opposite effect, depressing turnout from Republicans who don't trust the systems her colleagues have been attacking.

"This is a charade, what's going on with this constant drumbeat of all the massive voter fraud," she said at a press conference this month. "This country was based on states' rights and individual liberty, and we are being played from the top down."

https://www.startribune.com/wisconsin-republicans-pump-new-life-into-scrutinizing-the-2020-election/600130326/