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Month: September 2022

A very unhealthy democracy

A sad comment on our country

Here we go again…

A spate of headline-grabbing school shootings and election-related threats is making some schools and churches reconsider whether it is safe to continue serving as polling locations — prompting concerns among some election officials that voters may face more difficulty casting their ballots in November and beyond.

“Churches used to be our go-to group,” Mary Jane Arrington, supervisor of elections in Florida’s Osceola County, told ABC News. “And now they have become harder and harder to talk them into letting us be there.”

With just six weeks until Election Day, ABC News found that several states — including Florida, Texas, Michigan and New Jersey — are seeing long-time polling locations either decline to serve as polling centers this election cycle, or express interest in phasing themselves out of the process in future cycles.

‘We’re trying to protect ourselves’

In Monmouth County, New Jersey, Brian Graime of the Manalapan-Englishtown Regional School District said he is working with town officials to remove two schools currently serving as polling locations from the list of polling centers for the next election cycle.

Graime, the school district’s Board of Education president, said the growing number of potential threat actors has made it difficult to justify the foot traffic at schools on election days.

“Could it be somebody that’s there to vote? Could it be somebody who’s there to disrupt the voting? Could it be that one-in-a-million situation that has unfortunately occurred in Parkland, Sandy Hook, and Uvalde?” Graime said. “We do threat assessments constantly in our school district. We’re trying to protect ourselves from everything.”

Since 2020, election workers across the country have reported facing a wave of intimidation and threats of physical violence by activists still intent on contesting the 2020 presidential election. The tactics have left some officials scrambling to secure polling locations for the upcoming midterms.

“Part of it is security,” said Arrington. “I think the other part is our candidates and voters can’t behave.”

Arrington told ABC News that because Osceola has become one of Florida’s fastest-growing counties, securing polling locations is one of the biggest challenges officials are facing this election cycle.

“We don’t have a lot of options,” said Arrington. As a result, she said the county has had to “rely more and more on schools,” which she said are usually a last resort.

Osceola is one of three Florida counties in which officials told ABC News that Catholic churches have been declining to serve as polling centers for the midterm elections. The directive came from the local diocese, officials said. The Orlando diocese did not respond to ABC News’ multiple requests for comment.

An official with Polk County told ABC News they have seen “many polling locations drop out,” including all of the Catholic churches that had served as polling locations for decades.

‘An added layer of complexity’

John Cohen, a former Homeland Security official who is now an ABC News consultant, said that the increase in calls for violence directed at election officials has prompted officials to try to increase security and take other measures to safeguard staffers and systems.

“At the same time, extremists are conflating calls for violence directed at the election infrastructure with other extremist ideological narratives, particularly focusing on the Jewish community, schools, and other faith-based institutions,” said Cohen. “And so, in the cases where a polling spot is in a church or synagogue or a school, there is an added layer of complexity, both from a prevention perspective and from a security measures perspective.”

The concern over school and church safety has in some cases driven a wedge between school administrators and election officials. ABC News obtained email exchanges and letters between school officials in New Jersey and the Union County Board of Elections, in which they grappled over who should foot the bill for increased Election Day security.

“While the district understands and respects the importance of providing voters with access to polling locations, our district faces additional costs and security concerns associated with voting in our schools,” wrote Janet Walling, the Superintendent of Mountainside School District in an email to the Union County Board of Elections.

After Walling suggested the county use other polling locations, the Union County Board of Elections reached out to a local church — but were turned down because “they [were] not receptive to serving as a polling location,” according to an email exchange.

“The schools are voicing concern over security on Election Day, and their primary concern is strangers coming in and out of the building unchecked, and possibly intermingling with the students,” Nicole Dirado, a Union County election administrator, told ABC News.

Under New Jersey law, public buildings like schools are considered the first priority for polling sites, and schools are mandated to open their doors as polling locations.

But an increasing number of school districts have expressed concerns about serving as polling locations and have asked local municipalities to find alternative locations — including at least two other school districts in Monmouth County, the county’s elections board administrator, Robin Major, told ABC News.

The ones that are able to find alternative sites and back out are lucky, Major said, because most schools — especially ones in smaller rural towns — are unable to pull out even if they want to because “they simply don’t have many other options.”

A further challenge, said Major, is that the state’s election offices “try not to disrupt these sites that voters are used to going to” as Election Day approaches, in order to keep from disenfranchising voters that might not get notified of the change in time.

‘A template’ for other states

They report several other states are having the same problem. Meanwhile, the Republicans are trying to end vote by mail, drop boxes, drive up drop-off and any other way to make voting easier. And now they are threatening the polling places and election workers. Basically, they are trying to make voting extremely difficult. But I have to wonder — do they assume that their own voters won’t be affected by this?

This is all very sad. We barely started to emerge from Jim Crow voting obstacles and now we’re rushing back into an era of massive vote suppression through intimidation. Can these people ever be stopped?

DeSantis’s lib-owning gets even darker

DeSantis planned another migrant stunt and for some reason (could it be because of the intense backlash? lawsuits?) he cancelled it at the last minute

And, guess what?

WOW. It gets even worse. “Perla” lied to dozens more asylum seekers, put them up in a hotel for days with false claims about jobs and housing, and when DeSantis suddenly cancelled the Delaware flight yesterday, she dumped some back at the shelter and stranded the others.

It looks like the Miami Herald now has photos of “Perla” that multiple people have confirmed is her.

Her true identity is likely going to come out very soon, I imagine.

Aaaand one migrant at the shelter got “Perla” ON VIDEO cruising around the shelter and “recruiting” people for DeSantis’s stunt with lies.

She was driving around in a comically conspicuous black SUV and acting so sketchy a random guy at the shelter started recording her.

For the people at the hotel, there was nothing funny about what DeSantis’s people had done.

One man had been hoping the flight to Delaware might help get him closer to Washington, DC, where he has a court hearing (may be an ICE check-in).

Now he’s stranded in Texas.

One 19-year-old, a kid, was out in the streets when “Perla” gave him somewhere to sleep and promised him a better future.

He told the Herald that her deception left him devastated: “I want to cry because I feel hopeless. I have nothing. How do I work? How do I survive?”

When DeSantis cancelled the flight yesterday and “Perla” got a bus to dump people back at the shelter, not everyone got told.

“‘They left and that was it,’ [Luis Oswaldo] said. ‘They didn’t give out more food. I have water from the lobby.’

‘I’m ‘eating’ water now,’ he said.”

For those who didn’t click through at the top of the thread, this fantastic reporting from @Blaskey_S and @NickNehamas is a must-read. Boots-on-the-ground reporting at its best.

http://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/immigration/article266089771.html

Originally tweeted by Aaron Reichlin-Melnick (@ReichlinMelnick) on September 22, 2022.

Get a load of this:

WHEN FLORIDA GOV. RON DESANTIS set out on his stunt to highlight liberal hypocrisy last week, he contracted with Vertol Systems, Inc., to pull it off. For $615,000, the aviation firm founded in Oregon agreed to fly 48 Venezuelan migrants from the San Antonio, Texas, area to the chic Massachusetts vacation destination of Martha’s Vineyard, where they were left to fend for themselves.

It was a political win-win for DeSantis: In Florida, Vertol and its president have contributed exclusively to Republican causes, including to the Florida legislature’s appropriations chief, his DeSantis transportation-appointee father, and the state Republican party, according to campaign finance records reviewed by The Intercept.

Niiiiiice….

Leave the poor schmuck alone

I’m late to this conspiracy party

“You guys are trying to make this poor schmuck [Ray Epps] who showed up to your protest into something a lot bigger than he is. He’s just trying to survive and he’s on your side. You don’t have many voters left, you might want to try to hang on to them.”

There are so many RW conpiracy theories out there that I missed this one referenced in a House Judiciary Committee meeting on Wednesday (Business Insider story from July):

Ray Epps, a Marine veteran and business owner from Arizona, traveled to Washington D.C. to show his support for former President Donald Trump on January 6, 2021.

And although he’s not among the hundreds of Capitol rioters who were arrested and charged, the events that followed ruined his life, he said.

Epps, 61, became the center of a conspiracy theory, pushed by the former president himself, that would cause him to sell his business and his home and go into hiding, according to an interview he gave to The New York Times that was published Wednesday.

“And for what — lies?” Epps told The Times. “All of this, it’s just been hell.”

The baseless theory stemmed from attempts by some on the right to blame the Capitol riot on federal agents, who they claimed wanted a reason to provoke a crackdown on conservatives.

video of Epps taken on January 5 showed him telling other Trump supporters they needed to go into the Capitol the following day. Epps was never arrested, prompting right-wing internet sleuths to accuse him of being an undercover FBI agent or informant trying to stir up violence — despite videos that show Epps urging others to be peaceful and trying to deescalate confrontations between police and the rioters on January 6.

The theory was eventually picked up by right-wing media and Republican politicians, including Rep. Thomas Massie and Sens. Ted Cruz and Tom Cotton, among others. Trump himself mentioned Epps’s name at a rally in January, suggesting he may have been working for the feds.

Massie brought up Epps again yesterday. Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) let into him.

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Request a copy of For The Win, 4th Edition, my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us

Donald’s bogus journey

“I declassified everything”

Anyone sane and watching New York Attorney General Tish James’ Wednesday press conference announcing a lawsuit against Donald Trump knew immediately that TFG, his family and close associates in the Trump Organization were not going to have a good day. Naturally, Fox News quickly cut away from the James press conference.

The day got worse later when a unanimous, 3-judge federal appeals court panel issued a scathingly polite dismissal of “the decision by Judge Aileen M. Cannon …to broadly intervene in the Justice Department’s investigation.” The decision allowed the DOJ to continue its investigation into what harm to the national interest may have occurred from Trump’s taking national defense information from the White House to Mar-a-Lago in January 2021. Trump’s argument that he declassified the documents is “a red herring,” the court concluded, and irrelevant to the investigation at hand “because declassifying an official document would not change its content or render it personal.”

But Trump, the MAGA cult, and Fox News love their red herrings. Trump gave Sean Hannity an interview Wednesday night in which he kept fish-mongering the declassification argument. It was crazed and incoherent.

“I declassified everything,” Trump said, just by thinking about it, he offered before suggesting the FBI might have been looking in Mar-a-Lago for Hillary Clinton’s emails.

In the Trump era, I’ve often suggested to friends that if they ever wondered what it was like to live through a mass insanity, wonder no more.

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Request a copy of For The Win, 4th Edition, my free, countywide get-out-the-vote planning guide for county committees at ForTheWin.us

There is no Team Normal

Don’t believe any Republican who says on background that they were just trying to please Orange Jesus and his fans and they know he actually lost the election. It makes no difference what they believe. This is what they do. Or rather don’t do. They want their team to have the ability to finish what Trump started.

A New Contract on America

And they don’t want you to see it

Marjorie Taylor Green, back in the fold, was apparently standing by McCarthy’s side as he rolled this out. It’s MAGA all the way.

Where liars go one, liars go all

A Trumper exposed

They lie, they just lie:

Campaigning for a northwestern Ohio congressional seat, Republican J.R. Majewski presents himself as an Air Force combat veteran who deployed to Afghanistan after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, once describing “tough” conditions including a lack of running water that forced him to go more than 40 days without a shower.

Military documents obtained by The Associated Press through a public records request tell a different story.

They indicate Majewski never deployed to Afghanistan but instead completed a six-month stint helping to load planes at an air base in Qatar, a longtime U.S. ally that is a safe distance from the fighting.

Majewski’s account of his time in the military is just one aspect of his biography that is suspect. His post-military career has been defined by exaggerations, conspiracy theories, talk of violent action against the U.S. government and occasional financial duress.

Still, thanks to an unflinching allegiance to former President Donald Trump — Majewski once painted a massive Trump mural on his lawn — he also stands a chance of defeating longtime Democratic Rep. Marcy Kaptur in a district recently redrawn to favor Republicans.

Majewski is among a cluster of GOP candidates, most running for office for the first time, whose unvarnished life stories and hard-right politics could diminish the chances of a Republican “red wave” on Election Day in November. He is also a vivid representation of a new breed of politicians who reject facts as they try to emulate Trump.

And yes, he’s QAnon.

He is just one of many. And frankly, I would be surprised if the GOP voters there care. They have also adopted the notion that lying is fine as long as you are loyal to the team. In fact, like their Dear Leader, they think it’s “smart.”

Here’s some footage of this idiot:

The worst thing he did

He killed his own followers. In huge numbers.

And it was worse than we knew:

Then-President Donald Trump ordered Alex Azar, then his health and human services secretary, to immediately approve the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine as a coronavirus treatment because Fox News host Laura Ingraham had said it was effective, according to a new book.

Trump, an avid Fox viewer who regularly turned the network’s programming into White House policy, became transfixed by the drug after his trusted Fox hosts started talking it up in mid-March of 2020, as the novel coronavirus swept across the country. If hydroxychloroquine had worked as the COVID-19 miracle cure Fox claimed, it would have allowed Americans to swiftly return to normal life without fear of becoming seriously ill from the virus. Unfortunately, hydroxychloroquine is not an effective coronavirus treatment, according to numerous studies as well as U.S. and international health agencies

Peter Baker and Susan Glasser shed new light on the role Fox played in convincing Trump that hydroxychloroquine would be a COVID-19 “game changer” in their new book, The Divider: Trump in the White House, 2017-2021

They chronicle a phone call between Trump and Azar that took place on March 18, 2020, two days after Ingraham had praised the hydroxychloroquine’s potential during an interview with the Long Island lawyer Gregory Rigano, who championed the drug.

“Laura says hydroxychloroquine works. It’s perfectly safe, so just approve it,” they write that Trump told Azar during the phone call. 

When Azar protested, the then-president told him, “Laura takes it. It’s safe,” Baker and Glasser report. 

“I want it approved today. That’s an order,” he ultimately demanded, according to the book.

He went out and touted it in his clownish press conference the next day.

[T]he Fox-Trump feedback loop went into full swing: Fox ran hundreds of segments talking up the drug’s benefits; Trump tweeted praise of the drug in response to the coverage and successfully pressured health officials to issue guidance supporting the use of the drug as a coronavirus treatment; and Ingraham visited the White House with two members of her “medicine cabinet” to meet with Trump and FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn and push for additional support for the treatment.

The federal government ultimately amassed a stockpile of 66 million doses of a drug that is not effective in treating COVID-19 because Fox hosts told Trump that it worked and he believed them. Meanwhile, the network moved on to peddling ivermectin, another drug studies show is ineffective in treating COVID-19, while slandering the actually effective COVID-19 vaccines. The results for Fox’s viewers have been devastating.

That NY AG lawsuit dropped on Trumps head

And it’s spectacular

Letitia James announced a massive lawsuit against Trump and his spawn and the Trump organization:

For 20 years, Donald Trump and his family enriched themselves through “numerous acts of fraud and misrepresentations,” New York Attorney General Letitia James alleges in a new lawsuit that accuses the Trumps of “grossly” inflating the former president’s net worth by billions of dollars and cheating lenders and others with false and misleading financial statements.

The civil lawsuit, filed Wednesday in State Supreme Court in Manhattan, seeks a $250 million judgment and a prohibition on any of the Trumps leading a company in the state of New York.

“We found that Mr, Trump, his children, and the corporation used more than 200 false asset valuations over a ten year period,” James said at a press conference announcing the charges.MORE: Trump PAC payments to law firm fighting New York probe top $1 million

Among other allegations, the suit claims that the former president’s Florida estate and golf resort, Mar-a-Lago, was valued as high as $739 million, but should have been valued at around one-tenth that amount, at $75 million. The suit says that higher valuation was “based on the false premise that it was unrestricted property and could be developed for residential use even though Mr. Trump himself signed deeds donating his residential development rights and sharply restricting changes to the property.”

James is referring her findings to federal prosecutors in Manhattan, who could possibly open a criminal investigation into bank fraud, according to a footnote in the lawsuit.

Through “persistent and repeated business fraud,” the Trumps convinced banks to lend money to the Trump Organization on more favorable terms than deserved, according to the lawsuit, which named the former president, three of his adult children, the company, and two of its executives, Allan Weisselberg and Jeff McConney.

“Mr. Trump made known through Mr. Weisselberg that he wanted his net worth on the Statements to increase — a desire Mr. Weisselberg and others carried out year after year in their fraudulent preparation of the Statements,” the lawsuit said. “The scheme to inflate Mr. Trump’s net worth also remained consistent year after year.”

Weisselberg last month pleaded guilty to unrelated criminal charges of tax evasion brought by the Manhattan district attorney’s office, which has been conducting a parallel investigation. Following the filing of Wednesday’s lawsuit, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg issued a statement saying, “Our criminal investigation concerning former President Donald J. Trump, the Trump Organization, and its leadership is active and ongoing.”[…]

“Today’s filing represents the culmination of nearly three years of persistent, targeted, unethical political harassment by the New York State Attorney General, Letitia James,” said a Trump Organization spokesperson in a statement. “While the job of the Attorney General is to protect the interests of the public, today’s filing, for the first time in the history of the Attorney General’s office, seeks to protect the interests of large, sophisticated Wall Street banks. However, not only was no bank harmed — actually, they profited handsomely to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars in interest and fees — and never once took issue with any of the loans in question.”

James, however, said Wednesday, “White collar financial crime is not a victimless crime. Everyday people cannot lie to a bank.”

During a deposition last month, Trump repeatedly invoked his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. The lawsuit includes numerous instances in which Trump invoked the Fifth when asked to explain how the company calculated the value of certain properties. In a civil trial, jurors would be able to draw a negative inference about Trump declining to answer.

The attorney general’s investigation began in March 2019, after Trump’s former lawyer, Michael Cohen, testified before Congress that Trump’s annual financial statements inflated the values of Trump’s assets to obtain favorable terms for loans and insurance coverage, while also deflating the value of other assets to reduce real estate taxes.

Trump valued his Trump Tower apartment at $327 million, James said Wednesday. “No apartment in New York City has ever sold for that amount,” she said, adding the inflated valuation was based on exaggerated square footage despite Trump knowing it wasn’t that big.

The suit also said a 2012 statement valued rent-stabilized apartments in the Trump Park Avenue property as if they could be rented at market value. As a result, units collectively worth $750,000 were valued at nearly $50 million, according to the lawsuit.

Trump Turnberry, a golf club in Scotland, was valued at nearly $127 million, but the suit said that since it opened in 2017 the golf course has operated at a loss each year.MORE: Trump repeatedly pleaded the Fifth in hours-long deposition for New York AG probe: Sources

“As a result, using values for the golf course ranging between $123 million and $126.8 million based on employing the Fixed Asset Scheme is materially false and misleading; the golf course should have been valued at a much lower figure,” the attorney general’s suit said.

“The examples I laid out barely scratch the surface,” James said Wednesday. “Claiming you have money you do not have does not amount to the art of the deal. It’s the art of the steal.”

“The magnitude of financial benefit derived by Mr. Trump and the Trump Organization by means of these fraudulent and misleading submissions was considerable,” the suit said.

One of Trump’s worst attorneys is representing him in the case. (He thinks she’s hot, apparently.) Her comment:

“Today’s filing is neither focused on the facts nor the law — rather, it is solely focused on advancing the Attorney General’s political agenda,” Trump attorney Alina Habba said in a statement Wednesday. “It is abundantly clear that the Attorney General’s Office has exceeded its statutory authority by prying into transactions where absolutely no wrongdoing has taken place. We are confident that our judicial system will not stand for this unchecked abuse of authority, and we look forward to defending our client against each and every one of the Attorney General’s meritless claims.”

You can read the filing here. It’s a doozy.

And in a civil case they can tell the jury that they can hold this against him:

By the way, this alleged fraud went on while he was president.

How’s the cult taking it?

Stay tuned.

Barr and Yoo’s critical mistake

They enabled a despot

It has been startling to see former Attorney General Bill Barr, at one time Donald Trump’s most powerful henchman, turn on him so viciously, both during the post-election period and the latest Trump scandal regarding the theft of government documents. Barr published a memoir a few months ago in which he vociferously defends Trump’s four years in office (even while saying his former boss was “prone to bluster and exaggeration” and may not have had the ideal temperament for a president). He proudly stands by all of his ham-handed interference in the justice system on behalf of Trump and his cronies behalf but then, almost inexplicably, seemed to draw the line at boosting Trump’s Big Lie after the election was over. Now we see Barr testifying before the House Jan. 6 committee and appearing on Fox News to call Trump’s excuses in the Mar-a-Lago document scandal a “crock of shit.” Apparently Barr is a champion of the FBI and the Department of Justice all over again.

Most people, including myself, originally viewed this as the usual rehabilitation tour by a Trumper who belatedly realized that he had trashed his reputation in service of an irredeemable sore loser. But now I think it’s clear that is just happening because Trump lost. It’s nothing more than that. Had he won the 2020 election, there’s every reason to believe Barr would still be in there, pushing Trump’s political and personal agenda without the slightest compunction. But once it was clear there would be no second term, Barr cut his losses: Trump was no longer useful to him.

Why do I think this? Mainly because of all the other old-time right-wingers who backed Trump (or who said nothing while he trampled on the Constitution and the rule of law) and are suddenly coming out of the woodwork to speak out against him. They have an agenda they care about and it basically has nothing to do with Donald Trump. For them, he was merely a means to an end.

Take, for example, John Yoo, the UC Berkeley law professor and former official at the DOJ Office of Legal Counsel who wrote the notorious “torture memos” early in the George W. Bush administration that sought to create a legal justification for grotesque, medieval interrogation practices. In 2020, Yoo published his book “Defender in Chief: Donald Trump’s Fight for Presidential Power,” a paean to Trump’s authoritarian policies that characterized the Russia investigation as “the revolt of the FBI” and insisted that the president had power to do pretty much anything.

Lately, however, Yoo has been appearing on TV calling the government’s case against Trump on the Mar-a-Lago documents “stunning.” He told an audience at the National Conservative Conference that Trump had definitely broken the law, only wondering whether it would be smarter to prosecute him for something bigger, like the Jan. 6 insurrection. Two years ago, Yoo extolled Trump as a historic American hero; now he wants him thrown in jail.

It’s pretty obvious that Yoo never really cared about Donald Trump, and neither did Bill Barr. They cared about their “unitary executive” theory and found in Trump a man who was so ignorant and so easily manipulated that when they told him he had unlimited power under Article II of the Constitution, he was willing to go far beyond what any sensible person would do — even someone who fully bought into their theory, like former Vice President Dick Cheney. Trump was their guinea pig. How far would he go? What would the system bear before it snapped?

Trump’s two impeachment acquittals made clear that as long as he had the party behind him, he could get away with anything. He doesn’t anymore.

Josh Gerstein of Politico reported on Tuesday that Yoo speaks for quite a few Federalist Society conservatives who are suddenly perturbed to see Trump continuing to believe that he maintains presidential powers even after leaving office. From Trump’s point of view, all these people told him he could appropriate government documents as his own and declassify them without telling anyone. So what’s the problem? Yoo told Politico, “I think most people who agree on the unitary executive also think it’s the president who decides what’s classified and unclassified — the current, incumbent, sitting president.” They probably never explained that part to Trump?

John Yoo and Bill Barr never cared about Donald Trump. They found in him a man who so ignorant and so easily manipulated that when they told him he had unlimited powers, he pushed them far beyond any previous president.

Gerstein notes that the Federalist Society has been the spawning ground for this philosophy of untrammeled presidential power and that Judge Aileen Cannon — who has bent over backward to help Trump in the Mar-a-Lago case — is a member. Indeed, that was basically her only qualification for the bench. Cannon’s rulings are creating a lot of angst among her Federalist Society brethren, however. She looks to be a Trump loyalist rather than a far-right ideologue like Barr and Yoo, who believe that presidents are essentially elected kings — who must pass the crown to the next king once their four or eight years are over.

In fact, it seems conceivable possible that Cannon sees Trump as still the rightful president, since she has accorded him privileges that no other person under investigation for these crimes would ever get. If she’s a true-blue Trump supporter, she may even believe that he’s going to be “reinstated.” Millions of his followers do. How else can we understand why Cannon would think that a man who is effectively a disgruntled former federal employee who walked out the door with classified documents and refuses to give them back should get a special master to determine whether some bizarre interpretation of he executive privilege might entitle him to keep them?

Barr and Yoo and others who encouraged Trump to believe that the Constitution gave him unlimited power didn’t anticipate that he might think that included the power to determine the outcome of a presidential election. After Trump lost, even Barr and his cronies wouldn’t go along with the notion that a “unitary executive” has the power to overturn an election. So they cut their losses and moved on, assuming that Trump would be forced to do the same.

Apparently, it never occurred to them that telling a benighted, narcissistic (but cunning) head case like Donald Trump that there were no limits to his authority might not work out so well. Neither did it occur, apparently, to the Federalist Society or to Mitch McConnell that planting Trump cultists by the dozens in the federal judiciary with lifetime appointments might be a bad idea. Now they’re shocked and dismayed that the forces they unleashed have gotten away from them. Who could have ever predicted such a thing? 

Salon