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Month: October 2022

In yer face, RNC

Democrats are blitzing on abortion

Democrats are outspending Republicans on Facebook ads in the lead-up to the 2022 elections. Heavy on women’s reproductive rights.

Axios:

Democrats are pouring millions into Facebook ads about reproductive rights leading up to this year’s midterms, according to new data, while Republicans are focused on the economy and Donald Trump.

Why it matters: Abortion rights have proven to be a hot-button issue for Democrats down-ballot, helping the party rally voters amid attacks about inflation and the economy.

Driving the news: Democrats have spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on Facebook ads about abortion in the past three months, according to an analysis by Axios using data from Bully Pulpit Interactive.

      • The data measures ad spending from the three major Democratic committees (DNC, DSCC, DCCC) compared to the three major Republicans committees (RNC, NRSC, NRCC).
      • Democrats began spending heavily on reproductive rights messaging with a blitz in late June following the Supreme Court’s vote to overturn Roe v. Wade. The data shows a steady increase in spend leading up to the election.

Republicans have spent their online budgets on the economy.

Neither team has focused on Joe Biden. This being Jim VandeHei’s and Mike Allen’s site, Axios spins this as Democrats “distancing” themselves from Biden on Facebook rather than attacking Republicans’ weak point and reminding women, especially suburban women, which party has their freedoms foremost in mind.

“Democrats have out-aired their Republican counterparts on broadcast television across nine of the top 10 most of the most competitive Senate races, thanks to an unprecedented level of outside spend from super PACS and outside groups, according to the Wesleyan Media Project,” the report continues.

Hard to know whether that means much. Broadcast TV ads seem to benefit TV stations and ad buyers (who take a cut) more than candidates.

Democrats are finally upping their home-stretch spending in North Carolina where polls suggest Cheri Beasley remains in striking distance of Republican Ted Budd. But the race has drawn less national attention than Pennsylvania or Ohio:

Recent polling has shown a close race, but Democrats have struggled to win North Carolina Senate races in recent election cycles. Trump won the state by 1 percentage point in 2020 as GOP Sen. Thom Tillis won re-election by 2 points, defeating Democrat Cal Cunningham, whose campaign was upended by allegations of an extramarital affair.

The Cook Political Report rates the North Carolina Senate race Lean Republican.

The low-key Judge Beasley has spent her career (and won statewide office) presenting herself as a staid jurist. Running in a partisan political environment requires more spring in her step than she’s shown through the campaign. The level of enthusiam from voters here is not what it needs to be for a Democrat atop the ticket in an off-year election. Beasley will need more than TV ad spending. She may need to throw a bomb to propel her campaign across the goal line.

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Your feel good moment of the day

We all need something to smile about

Watch all the way to the end:

This is what sports are good for. Unalloyed joy (and sorrow) shared by people who otherwise might never share an emotional moment together.

Fact Check: Trump delusional edition

His comments at the rally yesterday about the former presidents was even more off the wall than usual.

Daniel Dale of CNN:

This is a dishonest claim. The truth: *the National Archives* sorted Bush docs for his library in a heavily secured facility (patrols, cameras, sensors) that happened to be a former alley/restaurant. As with Obama docs the Archives took to Chicago, Bush didn’t take them himself.

Here’s a 1994 article about the Archives’ work with Bush documents in the secure facility that happened to be a former bowling alley/restaurant. Trump made it sound like Bush himself had carelessly taken docs to an alley/restaurant.

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-06-26-mn-8638-story.html

And here’s a 1993 WaPo article about NARA using a former alley to temporarily house Bush documents. No equivalence between “NARA takes docs to NARA facility that used to be something else” and “Trump takes docs to his home and won’t give them back to NARA”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1993/08/30/the-trip-down-bushs-memory-lane-starts-humbly-in-old-bowling-alley/

One more: a senior official at the Bush library said in February that, in the 1990s, NARA built a secure space to house classified documents within the larger warehouse that used to be an alley.

https://people.com/politics/secrets-from-presidential-papers-direct-from-an-archivist/

Originally tweeted by Daniel Dale (@ddale8) on October 10, 2022.

Importantly, the archives knew what every document was and catalogued it before it went anywhere. Nobody knew what Trump had taken. In fact, they still don’t.

Kevin the liar

He IS a Republican after all

He will do anything to keep Orange Julius Caesar happy:

During a private meeting last summer, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy told two police officers who defended the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, and the mother of a third who died after the riot, that former President Donald Trump had no idea his supporters were carrying out the attack, according to newly obtained audio of the conversation.

Testimony to the House Select Committee on January 6 revealed that Trump watched television for hours as the rioters engaged in a brutal fight with law enforcement.

But McCarthy maintained Trump was unaware of the violence inside the Capitol when he spoke with Trump by phone that afternoon. He also appeared to take credit for getting the then-President to make a late-afternoon public statement urging his supporters to “go home,” according to one of the meetings’ attendees, then-DC Metropolitan police officer Michael Fanone.

“I’m just telling you from my phone call, I don’t know that he did know that,” McCarthy said during the June 2021 meeting about Trump’s knowledge of the fighting, according to audio secretly recorded by Fanone at the time and detailed in his new book titled, “Hold the Line: The Insurrection and One Cop’s Battle for America’s Soul.”

The District is a single-party consent jurisdiction for recordings, meaning it is legal for one party to record another without permission. CNN has reached out to McCarthy’s office for comment.

The meeting came as a number of House Republicans were attempting to downplay or distort the facts of what took place on January 6, when Trump’s false claims of a stolen election triggered a deadly attack on the Capitol by a violent pro-Trump mob.

It also took place as McCarthy was “backing off on a pledge to appoint Republicans to the special January 6 Committee,” Fanone writes, adding: “The only reason McCarthy had agreed to meet with us was because he’d been getting heat for refusing to see me.”

Fanone said Monday morning that he wasn’t surprised by McCarthy’s comments in the meeting, arguing that he “saw how he had deviated from his original statements immediately after January 6 to seize upon the politics of the moment.”

“But I’m glad I recorded it. That’s why I recorded it, was because I didn’t expect Kevin McCarthy to, No. 1, tell the truth; No. 2, recount the conversation accurately; and No. 3, I wanted to show people how indifferent lawmakers are, not just Republican lawmakers, but all lawmakers, to the actual American people that they are representing,” he told CNN’s Brianna Keilar on “New Day.”

While some details of the meeting were reported on the day it occurred, the newly released audio underscores just how quickly Trump regained his grip on the Republican Party following the January 6 attack despite an initial groundswell of bipartisan outrage over his unwillingness to denounce the violence as it was happening.

McCarthy himself said he considered asking Trump to resign in the immediate aftermath of the attack, according to previously released audio of a private conversation between the House minority leader and other Republican lawmakers.

Fanone, who was stun-gunned several times and beaten with a flagpole during the riot, had previously made several attempts to meet with the California Republican to discuss the insurrection before McCarthy ultimately agreed, according to his new book.

Republicans, including McCarthy, had largely opposed efforts to examine the circumstances of the insurrection, drawing intense criticism from Fanone and several other police officers who were there.

US Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn, who also defended the Capitol during the insurrection, and the mother of late Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick also participated in the meeting with McCarthy and all three repeatedly pressed McCarthy to acknowledge Trump’s role in spurring on the attack, according to the recording. Sicknick suffered multiple strokes and died a day after the riot.

It was his mother, Gladys Sicknick, who first challenged McCarthy’s claim about what Trump knew and when he knew it.

“He already knew what was going on,” she said of Trump, according to the audio obtained by CNN. “People were fighting for hours and hours and hours. This doesn’t make any sense to me.”

Later in the meeting, Fanone also confronted McCarthy about his defense of Trump, telling the Republican leader: “While you were on the phone with him, I was getting the shit kicked out of me!”

“I asked McCarthy why he would take credit for Trump’s pathetic, half-hearted late-afternoon video address to his followers. I said, ‘Trump says to his people, ‘This is what happens when you steal an election. Go home. I love you.’ What the f–k is that? That came from the president of the United States,” Fanone writes in his book.

All three urged McCarthy to condemn 21 members of his own party who voted earlier that month against awarding the Congressional Gold Medal to officers who defended the Capitol and pushed him to commit to a serious “insurrection investigation,” Fanone writes in his memoir.

“I told McCarthy I felt betrayed by the way some Republicans were twisting a riotous assault on law enforcement officers into a fundraising grift,” Fanone writes in his book.

“‘It’s crap,’ I said. ‘It’s disgraceful,’” he adds, recalling his comments during the meeting and noting that “McCarthy offered no response.”

McCarthy said ahead of his meeting with Fanone that he has “no problem talking to anybody about” his conversation with Trump on January 6 when asked by CNN if he would speak to the committee about the call.

Fanone suffered a heart attack and a concussion during the insurrection and is dealing with a traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Nope. McCarthy lied. We all know it. The man watches more TV that the average nursing home resident. He’s obsessed with television. There is ample testimony from many people that he was hooked on the TV

Of course, she lost her primary this year. The man who replaced her is a far-right wingnut.

QOTD: Ron Johnson

Does he really think voters are that stupid? Really?

Don’t be selfish

Get the booster for The Dude

That ad doesn’t speak to people who aren’t immunocompromised but it should. People who are, live among us all and we should all do what we can to avoid getting COVID and spreading it around.

Update:

Will Michael Moore be right again?

Honestly, I have no reason to believe that his powers of prognostication are any better than anyone else but I think we all need a little burst of optimism once in a while in this dark time. He could be wrong, of course. He could also be right:

Remember when everyone thought Hillary Clinton would win the 2016 election? No, I don’t just mean win the popular vote: Win it all and win big. FiveThirtyEight, Nate Silver’s political projection site, had Clinton’s chances of winning at 71.4 percentFrank Luntz tweeted on Nov. 8, 2016, “Hillary Clinton will be the next President of the United States.” One GOP insider declared that for Trump to win, “it would take video evidence of a smiling Hillary drowning a litter of puppies while terrorists surrounded her with chants of ‘Death to America.'” Pundit after pundit, on the left and the right, joined the chorus of mainstream news outlets to declare that the election was Clinton’s.

There was, however, one lone voice of dissent: Michael Moore. In July 2016, Moore wrote “Five Reasons Trump Will Be President.” That article mostly went unnoticed by mainstream media after the election, when everyone finally realized Moore was right but it was way too late to make a difference.

Fast forward to the 2022 midterms and we find ourselves in a similar scenario, but turned upside down. Now the media is basically repeating again and again that Democrats will lose in November, while Moore is suggesting the opposite. Moore isn’t just echoing the widespread notion that Democrats could hold the Senate while losing the House. He is suggesting that voters “are going to descend upon the polls en masse — a literal overwhelming, unprecedented tsunami of voters — and nonviolently, legally, and without mercy remove every last stinking traitor to our Democracy.”

That prediction is likely to cause hyperventilation at all points of the political spectrum. Could he really be right?

To make his point, Moore is going beyond armchair punditry and sending out what he is calling a “tsunami of truth,” where each day leading up to the election he offers one specific factual reason why he is right and why it makes sense to be optimistic.

In his second installment, he covered the story of the recent election for the Boise Board of Education, in which Republican Steve Schmidt, an incumbent, was up for re-election. Considering that Trump won Idaho’s capital city with 73 percent of the vote, it made sense to assume Schmidt would win again. But as Moore explains, Schmidt had been endorsed by a far-right extremist group, the Idaho Liberty Dogs, that led a campaign against the local library, calling their LGBTQ+ and sex ed materials “smut-filled pornography.” According to Moore, they even showed up at local Extinction Rebellion climate strikes brandishing AR-15 assault rifles.

So in a surprising turn of events, the Idaho Statesman, Boise’s daily news paper, chose not to endorse Schmidt because he refused to denounce the Idaho Liberty Dogs. Instead, the paper endorsed his opponent, an 18-year-old high school senior and progressive activist, Shiva Rajbhandari, who was also co-founder of the Boise chapter of Extinction Rebellion.

Rajbhandari won. A teenager beat a Republican incumbent in a traditionally red city in one of the reddest states. Moore’s point is that if these kinds of seismic shifts are happening at the polls in Boise, there’s reason to think that this election won’t follow traditional patterns. Voters, he believes, have had enough of the power of right-wing extremists and the threat they pose to democratic values.

In his next “tsunami of truth,” Moore reminded readers that despite all the ways that the media tends to make the American right seem massively powerful, they’re really just a big bunch of losers. Republicans have lost the popular vote in seven of the eight last elections. As Moore explains it, “Only because of the slave states’ demand for the Electoral College — and the Republicans’ #1 job of gerrymandering and voter suppression — do we even have to still deal with their misogyny, their destruction of Planet Earth, their love of guns and greed, and their laser-focused mission to bury our Democracy.”

That leads to the next installment: Republicans will lose because this time around they are “running the biggest batch of nutters nationwide in American electoral history.”  He then promises to offer a list of the top 10 “biggest whackadoodles on the Republican side of the ballot.”

No. 10 on Moore’s list is Mathew DePerno, Republican candidate for attorney general in Michigan. Like nine other candidates in the 30 state attorney general races this fall, DePerno is an election denier. But he’s not just a common, garden-variety election denier; he was allegedly personally involved in a voting system breach. That’s right: the Republican candidate who hopes to become Michigan’s top law enforcement official is under investigation by the current attorney general for “unauthorized access to voting equipment.”

But that isn’t the half of it. DePerno also thinks that the Plan B birth control pill is a “form of murder.” Moore explains that DePerno “believes that ‘life’ doesn’t begin at conception — he insists it begins BEFORE conception and it should be against the law for anyone to interrupt a sperm on its way to do its ‘job.'” As if that weren’t enough to categorize DePerno as batshit extreme, he has attacked his opponent with memes that include the white supremacist symbol of Pepe the Frog while comparing his campaign to delivering Michiganders a “really big red pill.” Not a Plan B pill, which he likens to fentanyl.

Confirming Moore’s view that DePerno’s extremism will only going to appeal to a narrow Trumper base, the twitter replies to DePerno are uniformly critical and sarcastic. Like this: “I did nazi that coming. (actually, I did.).” Or this: “I want what you are smoking.” Or this post, from @NeverTrumpTexan, “You could just say you were Nazi. It is much easier than what ever that is.” Surveying the 50 most recent replies to his tweet, among which include one from Keith Olbermann, every single one is critical and sarcastic.

Moore’s 45-day “tsunami of truth” is a clever way to tap into the energy he has described as “Roevember.” Moore coined the term back in August, when a funny thing happened in Kansas. Six weeks after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, Kansas held an election, which included proposed amendment to the state constitution that could have allowed the legislature to ban abortion. In a surprising shift from typical voting demographics, turnout for the vote was massive, 60 percent higher than in 2018 — and Kansans overwhelmingly voted to reject the anti-abortion amendment.

And that was Kansas, another consistently red state in recent years.

So if we’re seeing a swing away from Trump-style Republicans in Kansas and Idaho, there is reason to believe that the combination of Trump fascist nutters on the ballot, the revelations from the Jan. 6 committee hearings, the various investigations into Trump and, last but definitely not least, the fact that the Supreme Court put abortion back on the ballot could lead to the type of voting tsunami Moore is predicting.

Which leads us to wonder why the media isn’t covering that story, but is still offering the same stale script about Biden’s low favorability and Republican chances of taking back both the House and the Senate. Even Jen Psaki, Biden’s former White House press secretary turned MSNBC commentator, offered the downer view that the president wasn’t helping his party win.

[…]

Moore suggests the media is “either too overworked or too lazy or too white and too male to open their eyes and see the liberal/ left/progressive/working class and female uprising that is right now underway.”

But there’s more. For decades, media scholars have described what they call the “protest paradigm.” These are the predictable patterns journalists follow when covering protests. They include, for example, a habit of focusing on “small, inappropriate samples of individual protesters,” which leads the audience to misunderstand the true nature of the larger movement. The protest paradigm also refers to the news media’s habit of allowing elites to frame the story, which misses the positions of average citizens. Even worse, Indiana University professor Danielle Brown explains that this type of coverage “favors spectacle, conflict, disruption and official narratives over the substance of movements that challenge the status quo.”

We can observe many of the same habits when the press covers elections. And given that this election in particular could be understood as a protest vote — protesting the assault on women’s rights, LGBTQ rights, immigrants’ rights, democratic rights, etc. — it makes sense to think of this election more in terms of a mass movement than as an example of democracy as usual.

Framing the upcoming vote as a mass uprising of nonviolent civil resistance is exactly Moore’s plan. As he explains, his goal isn’t just to offer the public another version of the truth; it is also to call out the problems with media coverage. “Much of what many in the media are telling you is patently false and just plain wrong,” he writes. “They are simply regurgitating old narratives and stale scripts. They are either too overworked or too lazy or too white and too male to open their eyes and see the liberal/ left/progressive/working class and female uprising that is right now underway.”  

Moore has a long history of questioning the status quo and bucking conventional thought patterns. Whether getting booed off the Academy Awards stage for opposing the war in Iraq or being the lone voice predicting that Trump would win, Moore has never shied away from disagreeing with the pundit class and political elites. But he doesn’t just do it for shock value; he does it because he’s paying attention to the political climate in ways the mainstream media tends not to. 

Is Moore right that there will be a tsunami of voters determined to defeat the enemies of democracy? The only way to learn the answer is to stop trying to read the tea leaves and focus on making it happen.

I have no faith in my own powers of prediction. I watch the polls and then hear the pollsters all say they’re skewed and I don’t know what to think. But like Moore, I see the data we actually have going into this election and it gives me some optimist that he’s on to something, Anyway, a little optimism never hurt anyone.

Take back your state legislature

This experiment in popular sovereignty depends on it

Legislative control in state capitols.

Once sleepy state legislative races are important as hell. Democrats lost over 900 state legislative seats during the Obama years. There is a lot of ground to make up. It matters.

The Dobbs decision left reproductive rights to the states. But a Republican Congress would just as soon pass a national abortion ban if the GOP takes the federal executive and legislative branches in 2024. And if it doesn’t, there is plenty more mischief for Republicans to do at the state level. Voting rights, gun laws, health and education are at stake, as well as whether this country remains a democracy, or just one in name only.

If the Roberts Supreme Court rules to endorse the independent state legislature theory in Moore v. Harper (thank North Carolina’s Republican legislature for that case), “state legislatures could have a pathway to overrule the popular vote in presidential elections by refusing to certify the results and instead sending their own slates of electors,” The New York Times reports:

While that might seem like a doomsday scenario, 44 percent of Republicans in crucial swing-state legislatures used the power of their office to discredit or try to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election, according to a New York Times analysis. More like-minded G.O.P. candidates on the ballot could soon join them in office.

Republicans have complete control over legislatures in states that have a total of 307 electoral votes — 37 more than needed to win a presidential election. They hold majorities in several battleground states, meaning that if the Supreme Court endorsed the legal theory, a close presidential election could be overturned if just a few states assigned alternate slates of electors.

Democrats’ chances of bringing Republicans’ total below 270 are narrow: They would need to flip the Michigan Senate or the Arizona Senate, and then one chamber in both Pennsylvania and New Hampshire in 2024, in addition to defending the chambers the party currently controls.

Democrats and Republicans have set their sights on half a dozen states where state legislatures — or at least a single chamber — could flip in November. Democrats hope to wrest back one of the chambers in Michigan and the Arizona Senate, and flip the Minnesota Senate. Republicans aim to win back the Minnesota House of Representatives and take control of one chamber, or both, in the Maine, Colorado and Nevada legislatures. They are also targeting Oregon and Washington.

But the vagueries of the independent state legislature theory do not actually inspire people to get off their couches. It’s too far removed from frontal-lobe concerns about how to pay for groceries. The crank theory is not a topic that comes up in conversations candidates have on potential voters’ doorsteps.

https://www.ncsl.org/Portals/1/Documents/About_State_Legislatures/State-Partisan-Composition-Table-June-2022.pdf

Many of those doorstep conversations occuring right now involve state legislative seats that will influence not just how presidential races are decided. They will decide, indirectly perhaps, whether this experiment in popular sovereignty survives MAGA madness.

Republicans as a Trump-inspired minority cult have abandoned democracy as a principle. Power is a stronger narcotic. Equality under law is for suckers. Fair elections are for losers. Strongmen are role models. But so long as Republicans can control election and legislative outcomes, wherever they maintain their grip they will perform democracy theater. They will hollow out the constitution they claim to revere until it is as insubstantial as Marley’s ghost. Scrooge was not beyond saving. It’s not clear the GOP is.

The graphic above is the national scorcard as of June 1. Take making it bluer as seriously as you might U.S. House and Senate and governors’ races. Parties in the majority get to set the rules. At least for now.

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The empire strikes back

At least 10 dead as Russian missiles hit Kyiv, other Ukrainian cities

Young girl hit by debris from Russian missile attack on Kyiv while recording phone message.

Sometimes headlines write themselves.

At least 10 are dead and 60 injured across Ukraine, according to the latest report from Kyiv, as a barrage of Russian missiles stuck the Ukrainian capitol and other cities. Some missiles struck central Kyiv. Others hit critical electrical infrastructure and cities previously considered safe havens from the war.

Ukraine claimed it shot down 43 of 83 Russian missiles and called for more Eurupean aid to strengthen its air defenses.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky issued a statement via Telegram, “This is the 229th day of the full-scale war. This is the 229th day they are trying to annihilate us and wipe us off the face of the earth. That’s it, in a nutshell.” Do not leave your shelters, Zelensky urged. “Let’s hang in there and be strong.”

Washington Post:

Russian President Vladimir Putin boasted of a “massive strike” across Ukraine at a meeting of his Security Council on Monday. Accusing Ukraine’s special services of carrying out an attack on the Crimean Bridge, Putin warned of “harsh” reprisal. “Its scale will correspond to the level of threats,” he said. Ukrainian officials called for a “resolute response” from allies to the torrent of attacks on energy facilities and civilian targets — including in the heart of Kyiv, the first major strikes in the capital in months.

The Crimean bridge explosion was a stinging insult for the Russian dictator. It was clear there would be reprisals (Washington Post):

“There is no doubt that the attack was aimed at destroying critical civilian infrastructure of the Russian Federation,” Putin said in a video released by the Kremlin on Sunday. The 12-mile span, while used by civilians, is a crucial military logistics conduit for Russia’s military, the only direct road and rail route from mainland Russia to Crimea, which the Kremlin invaded and illegally annexed in 2014.

[…]

Putin has been under pressure to up the ante in what the Kremlin calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine after a succession of recent battlefield failures. In the past six weeks, Ukraine has routed Russian forces from the northeast Kharkiv region, and pushed them back in the eastern Donbas region and southern Kherson region.

But while hitting Kyiv might please Russian hard-liners who have been calling for more attacks on the capital, it will not reverse Russia’s core strategic programs, including losses of soldiers and equipment, flagging morale, and repeated logistical failures.

Ironically, MSNBC’s Mehdi Hasan Sunday night interviewed Mark Hamill of Star Wars fame. Ukraine recruited Hamill to raise funds for the country’s “Army of Drones” effort. The war is a real David versus Goliath struggle, Hamill observed. Not unlike the fictional struggle that made him internationally famous.

“Who would support Russia?” an incredulous Hamill asked in commenting on domestic response to the Russian invasion.

“Oh, yeah, Fox News, OAN, Newsmax. It’s really, really strange.”

Also, Republican Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Matt Gaetz, Lauren Boebert, and other authoritarianism-curious Trump cultists. And dupes like this guy:

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