U.S. Senate Results

Republicans will regain the Senate majority. As of Thursday, November 14, they hold 53 seats (when including Pennsylvania, where Democrat Bob Casey has not conceded).

Unless otherwise indicated, the AP has called these races:

Arizona. Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego is projected to have defeated the execrable Kari Lake.

California. Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff is projected to win. Schiff will have won both the general election and a special election to fill the seat of former Sen. Dianne Feinstein, deceased, which is currently held by Laphonza Butler, a "placeholder" appointed by Gov. Gavin Newsom (D). Schiff will be seated immediately.

Connecticut: Democrat Chris Murphy is projected to win re-election.

Delaware: Democrat Lisa Blunt is projected to win.

Florida: Republican Rick Scott is projected to win re-election.

Hawaii. Democratic Sen. Mazie Hirono is projected to win re-election.

Indiana: Republican Jim Banks is projected to win.

Maine: Independent Sen. Angus King is projected to win re-election. King caucuses with Democrats.

Maryland. Democrat Angela Alsobrooks is projected to win over former Republican Gov. Larry Hogan. Democratic Sen. Ben Cardin (D) is retiring.

Massachusetts: Democratic Sen. Elizabeth Warren is projected to win re-election.

Michigan: Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin is projected to win.

Minnesota. Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar is projected to win re-election.

Mississippi: Republican Roger Wicker is projected to win re-election.

Missouri. Republican Road Runner Sen. Josh Hawley is projected to win re-election.

Montana. Republican Tim Somebody-Shot-Me-Sometime Sheehy is projected to have defeated Sen. Jon Tester.

Nebraska. Republican Sen. Deb Fischer has held off a challenge from an Independent candidate.

Nebraska. Republican Sen. Pete Ricketts is projected to win re-election. This is a special election.

Nevada: Democratic Sen. Jacky Rosen is (at long last) projected to win re-election.

New Jersey: Democrat Rep. Andy Kim is projected to win the seat previously vacated by Democrat Bob Menendez, who resigned in disgrace after being convicted on federal bribery & corruption charges. Kim will be the first Korean-American to hold a U.S. Senate seat.

New Mexico. Democratic Sen. Martin Heinrich is projected to win re-election.

New York. Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand is projected to win re-election.

North Dakota. Republican Sen. Kevin Kramer is projected to win re-election.

Ohio. Republican Bernie Moreno is projected to have defeated Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown. This is the second pick-up for Republicans Tuesday.

Pennsylvania. Republican Dave McCormick is projected to have defeated incumbent Democrat Bob Casey, although Casey has not conceded.

Rhode Island: Democrat Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse is projected to win re-election.

Tennessee: Republican Sen. Marsha Blackburn is projected to win re-election.

Texas: Republic Sen. Ted Cruz, the most unpopular U.S. senator, is projcted to win re-election.

Utah. Republican Rep. John Curtis is projected to win the seat currently held by Sen. Mitt Romney (R).

Vermont: Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders is projected to win re-election.

Virginia. Democratic Sen. Tim Kaine is projected by NBC News to win re-election.

Washington. Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell is projected to win re-election.

West Virginia: Republican Gov. Jim Justice is projected to win the seat currently held by Independent Joe Manchin, who is retiring.

Wisconsin. Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin is projected to win re-election. Hurrah!

Wyoming. Republican Sen. John Barrasso is projected to win re-election.

U.S. House Results

By 2:00 pm ET Saturday, the AP had called 213 seats for Democrats & 220 seats for Republicans. (A majority is 220 218.)

Trump is removing some members of the House & Senate to serve in his administration, which could -- at least in the short run -- give Democrats effective majorities.

Gubernatorial Results

Delaware: Democrat Matt Meyer is projected to win.

Indiana: Republican Sen. Mike Braun is projected to win.

Montana. Horrible person Republican Gov. Greg Gianforte is projected to win re-election.

New Hampshire. Republican Kelly Ayotte, a former U.S. Senator is projected to win.

North Carolina. Democrat Josh Stein is projected to win, besting Trump-endorsed radical loon Mark Robinson.

North Dakota. Republican U.S. Rep. Kelly Armstrong is projected to win.

Utah. Republican Gov. Spencer Cox is projected to win re-election.

Vermont: Republican Phil Scott is projected to win re-election.

Washington: Democrat Bob Ferguson, the Washington State attorney general, is projected to win.

West Virginia: Republican Philip Morrisey is projected to win.

Other Results

Colorado. NBC News projects that the abortions-rights constitutional amendment will pass.

Florida. NBC News projected the abortion-rights state constitutional amendment will fail.

Georgia. Fani Willis is projected to win re-election as Fulton County District Attorney.

Missouri. The New York Times projects that Missouri voters have passed a measure to protect abortion rights.

Nebraska. New York Times: "A ballot amendment prohibiting abortion beyond the first three months of pregnancy passed in Nebraska, according to The Associated Press, outpolling a competing measure that would have established a right to abortion until fetal viability."

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Washington Post: "Americans can again order free rapid coronavirus tests by mail, the Biden administration announced Thursday. People can request four free at-home tests per household through covidtests.gov. They will begin shipping Monday. The move comes ahead of an expected winter wave of coronavirus cases. The September revival of the free testing program is in line with the Biden administration’s strategy to respond to the coronavirus as part of a broader public health campaign to protect Americans from respiratory viruses, including influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), that surge every fall and winter. But free tests were not mailed during the summer wave, which wastewater surveillance data shows is now receding."

Help!

To keep the Conversation going, please help me by linking news articles, opinion pieces and other political content in today's Comments section.

Link Code:   <a href="URL">text</a>

OR here's a link generator. The one I had posted died, then Akhilleus found one, but it too bit the dust. He found yet another, which I've linked here, and as of September 23, 2024, it's working.

OR you can always just block, copy and paste to your comment the URL (Web address) of the page you want to link.

Note for Readers. It is not possible for commenters to "throw" their highlighted links to another window. But you can do that yourself. Right-click on the link and a drop-down box will give you choices as to where you want to open the link: in a new tab, new window or new private window.

Thank you to everyone who has been contributing links to articles & other content in the Comments section of each day's "Conversation." If you're missing the comments, you're missing some vital links.

New York Times: “Chris Wallace, a veteran TV anchor who left Fox News for CNN three years ago, announced on Monday that he was leaving his post to venture into the streaming or podcasting worlds.... He said his decision to leave CNN at the end of his three-year contract did not come from discontent. 'I have nothing but positive things to say. CNN was very good to me,' he said.”

New York Times: In a collection of memorabilia filed at New York City's Morgan Library, curator Robinson McClellan discovered the manuscript of a previously unknown waltz by Frédéric Chopin. Jeffrey Kallberg, a Chopin scholar at the University of Pennsylvania as well as other experts authenticated the manuscript. Includes video of Lang Lang performing the short waltz. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: The Times article goes into some of Chopin's life in Paris at the time he wrote the waltz, but it doesn't mention that he helped make ends meet by giving piano lessons. I know this because my great grandmother was one of his students. If her musical talent were anything like mine, those particular lessons would have been painful hours for Chopin.

New York Times: “Improbably, [the political/celebrity magazine] George[, originally a project by John F. Kennedy, Jr.] is back, with the same logo and the same catchy slogan: 'Not just politics as usual.' This time, though, a QAnon conspiracy theorist and passionate Trump fan is its editor in chief.... It is a reanimation story bizarre enough for a zombie movie, made possible by the fact that the original George trademark lapsed, only to be secured by a little-known conservative lawyer named Thomas D. Foster.”

Washington Post: “Comedy news outlet the Onion — reinvigorated by new ownership over this year — is bringing back its once-popular video parodies of cable news. But this time, there’s someone with real news anchor experience in the chair. When the first episodes appear online Monday, former WAMU and MSNBC host Joshua Johnson will be the face of the resurrected 'Onion News Network.' Playing an ONN anchor character named Dwight Richmond, Johnson says he’s bringing a real anchor’s sense of clarity — and self-importance — to the job. 'If ONN is anything, it’s a news organization that is so unaware of its own ridiculousness that it has the confidence of a serial killer,' says Johnson, 44.” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: I'll be darned if I can figured out how to watch ONN. If anybody knows, do tell. Thanks.

Washington Post: “First came the surprising discovery that Earth’s atmosphere is leaking. But for roughly 60 years, the reason remained a mystery. Since the late 1960s, satellites over the poles detected an extremely fast flow of particles escaping into space — at speeds of 20 kilometers per second. Scientists suspected that gravity and the magnetic field alone could not fully explain the stream. There had to be another source creating this leaky faucet. It turns out the mysterious force is a previously undiscovered global electric field, a recent study found. The field is only about the strength of a watch battery — but it’s enough to thrust lighter ions from our atmosphere into space. It’s also generated unlike other electric fields on Earth. This newly discovered aspect of our planet provides clues about the evolution of our atmosphere, perhaps explaining why Earth is habitable. The electric field is 'an agent of chaos,' said Glyn Collinson, a NASA rocket scientist and lead author of the study. 'It undoes gravity.... Without it, Earth would be very different.'”

The New York Times lists Emmy winners. The AP has an overview story here.

New York Times: “Hvaldimir, a beluga whale who had captured the public’s imagination since 2019 after he was spotted wearing a harness seemingly designed for a camera, was found dead on Saturday in Norway, according to a nonprofit that worked to protect the whale.... [Hvaldimir] was wearing a harness that identified it as “equipment” from St. Petersburg. There also appeared to be a camera mount. Some wondered if the whale was on a Russian reconnaissance mission. Russia has never claimed ownership of the whale. If Hvaldimir was a spy, he was an exceptionally friendly one. The whale showed signs of domestication, and was comfortable around people. He remained in busier waters than are typical for belugas....” ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Oh, Lord, do not let Bobby Kennedy, Jr., near that carcass. ~~~

     ~~~ AP Update: “There’s no evidence that a well-known beluga whale that lived off Norway’s coast and whose harness ignited speculation it was a Russian spy was shot to death last month as claimed by animal rights groups, Norwegian police said Monday.... Police said that the Norwegian Veterinary Institute conducted a preliminary autopsy on the animal, which was become known as 'Hvaldimir,' combining the Norwegian word for whale — hval — and the first name of Russian President Vladimir Putin. 'There are no findings from the autopsy that indicate that Hvaldimir has been shot,' police said in a statement.”

New York Times: Botswana's “President Mokgweetsi Masisi grinned as he lifted the diamond, a 2,492-carat stone that is the biggest diamond unearthed in more than a century and the second-largest ever found, according to the Vancouver-based mining operator Lucara, which owns the mine where it was found. This exceptional discovery could bring back the luster of the natural diamond mining industry, mining companies and experts say. The diamond was discovered in the same relatively small mine in northeastern Botswana that has produced several of the largest such stones in living memory. Such gemstones typically surface as a result of volcanic activity.... The diamond will likely sell in the range of tens of millions of dollars....”

Click on photo to enlarge.

~~~ Guardian: "On a distant reef 16,000km from Paris, surfer Gabriel Medina has given Olympic viewers one of the most memorable images of the Games yet, with an airborne celebration so well poised it looked too good to be true. The Brazilian took off a thundering wave at Teahupo’o in Tahiti on Monday, emerging from a barrelling section before soaring into the air and appearing to settle on a Pacific cloud, pointing to the sky with biblical serenity, his movements mirrored precisely by his surfboard. The shot was taken by Agence France-Presse photographer Jérôme Brouillet, who said “the conditions were perfect, the waves were taller than we expected”. He took the photo while aboard a boat nearby, capturing the surreal image with such accuracy that at first some suspected Photoshop or AI." 

 

Contact Marie

Email Marie at constantweader@gmail.com

Constant Comments

A nation of sheep will beget a government of wolves. -- Edward R. Murrow

Publisher & Editor: Marie Burns


Sunday
Dec132020

The Commentariat -- December 14, 2020

Late Morning/Afternoon Update:

Water Carrier Drops Bucket. Allie Malloy, et al., of CNN:"Attorney General William Barr resigned on Monday, ending a tenure in which the... Donald Trump loyalist carried the administration's 'law and order' message but ultimately dealt the most credible blow to Trump's unfounded claims that the 2020 election was littered with fraud. 'Just had a very nice meeting with Attorney General Bill Barr at the White House. Our relationship has been a very good one, he has done an outstanding job! As per letter, Bill will be leaving just before Christmas to spend the holidays with his family,' Trump tweeted.... 'Deputy Attorney General Jeff Rosen, an outstanding person, will become Acting Attorney General. Highly respected Richard Donoghue will be taking over the duties of Deputy Attorney General. Thank you to all!' Update: A Washington Post report is here. ~~~

     ~~~ Jake Tapper of CNN: Trump released Barr's resignation letter minutes after the Electoral College put Joe Biden over the top.

From the New York Times' live election updates Monday: "Joseph R. Biden Jr. was affirmed as the president-elect on Monday as members of the Electoral College pushed him past the 270 threshold to win the White House, all but ending a disruptive chapter in American history in which President Trump sought to use legal challenges and political pressure to overturn the results of a free and fair election." ~~~

~~~ The Washington Post's live election updates are here: "Joe Biden has amassed the electoral votes to secure his White House win. California and its 55 electoral votes put the president-elect over the top, despite President Trump's efforts to subvert the Nov. 3 election results. ~~~

~~~ "Following the [Electoral College votes], which will continue throughout the day, Biden plans to address the nation and say, 'The flame of democracy was lit in this nation a long time ago. And we now know that nothing -- not even a pandemic -- or an abuse of power -- can extinguish that flame,' according to excerpts of his speech. Trump has planned no public events but continues to tweet grievances about the election, which he claimed Sunday is 'under protest.'... Already, six of the states in which Trump contested his defeat -- Nevada, Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan -- have cast their electoral votes for Biden." Related AP stories are here (Biden's speech) and here (battleground state votes).

Josh Holder & others at the New York Times are updating the results of the Electoral College vote as the states submit their results. CNN's tracker is here. MB: When I first checked this morning, Biden had only seven votes & Trump had 38. Now (at 4:20 pm ET) Biden is ahead. How is that possible? There's only a one-in-a-bazillion statistical chance that could happen, absent rampant cheating. Trump wuz robbed! ~~~

Brett Samuels of the Hill: "President Trump's allies are preparing to send an 'alternate' slate of electors to Congress, senior White House adviser Stephen Miller said Monday, signaling Trump will drag out his efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election even after the Electoral College certifies Joe Biden as the winner. Miller, appearing on Fox News as a senior adviser to the Trump campaign, brushed off the idea that the Electoral College vote marked any kind of end to the process. 'The only date in the Constitution is Jan. 20. So we have more than enough time to right the wrong of this fraudulent election result and certify Donald Trump as the winner of the election,' Miller said on 'Fox & Friends.'... Nothing in the Constitution or state electoral processes allows for such an 'alternate' slate of electors. Miller also raised the idea of state legislatures stepping in to overturn the results or of Congress interceding."

Harper Neidig of the Hill: "Wisconsin's Supreme Court on Monday rejected a legal challenge from President Trump's campaign seeking to overturn President-elect Joe Biden's victory in the key battleground state. A majority decision from the state's high court said that the Trump campaign had failed to show that more than 220,000 votes were illegally cast and should be invalidated." MB: The court has a conservative majority. The one conservative justice who rejected Trump's claim, Brian Hagedorn, wrote the majority opinion.

Jake Tapper of CNN: "Rep. Paul Mitchell, Republican of Michigan, told CNN that his disgust and disappointment with ... Donald Trump's efforts to overturn the results of the election have led him to request that the Clerk of the House change his party affiliation to 'independent,' and to notify GOP leaders in a letter that he is withdrawing his 'engagement and association with the Republican Party at both the national and state level.' Mitchell, who is retiring at the end of this session of Congress, says he fears that the House GOP leadership's participation in the outgoing President's conspiracy theories and attempts to disenfranchise millions of American voters to overturn President-elect Joe Biden's victory could cause 'long-term harm to our democracy.' It is 'unacceptable for political candidates to treat our election system as though we are a third-world nation and incite distrust of something so basic as the sanctity of our vote,' Mitchell wrote in his letter, which was sent Monday."

AP: "The Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal from Kansas that sought to revive a law requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote. A federal appeals court had declared the law unconstitutional. Kansas had been the only state to require people to show a physical document such as a birth certificate or passport when applying to register to vote. The issue is distinct from state laws that call for people to produce driver licenses or other photo IDs to cast a vote in person. The law was championed by former Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who led ... Donald Trump's now-defunct voter fraud commission. Kobach was a leading source for Trump's unsubstantiated claim that millions of immigrants living in the U.S. illegally may have voted in the 2016 election. Roughly 30,000 people were prevented from registering to vote during the three years the law was in effect, and the state's own expert estimated that almost all of those were U.S. citizens who were eligible to vote." A Washington Post story is here.

Isabelle Khurshudyan & Robyn Dixon of the Washington Post: "A team of Russian state security agents poisoned prominent opposition activist Alexei Navalny in August [link fixed], the investigative website Bellingcat claimed in a report Monday, citing telecom and travel data that it says links Moscow with the attempt on Navalny's life and reveals how he has been under constant surveillance for three years. Bellingcat said the 'voluminous' data implicates eight members of a clandestine group of Russia’s FSB, a successor to the Soviet-era KGB responsible for domestic intelligence. The unit specializes in working with chemical weapons, Bellingcat said."

The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Monday are here: "The first shot was given in the American mass vaccination campaign on Monday morning, opening a new chapter in the battle against the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more people in the United States than in any other country. Shortly after 9 a.m. on Monday, the first vaccination took place in Long Island Jewish Medical Center in Queens. The pandemic has scarred New York State profoundly, leaving more than 35,000 people dead and severely weakening the economy. 'I believe this is the weapon that will end the war, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said at a news conference Monday morning, shortly before the shot was given to Sandra Lindsay, an intensive-care nurse. State officials said the shot was the first to be given outside of a vaccine trial in the United States." MB: Wow! A Black female ICU nurse in a Jewish hospital. Perfect. Plus, I hope this makes the head of a Queens man explode:

~~~~~~~~~~

It's Electoral College Day AND, appropriately enough, there's a total eclipse of the sun. You can view it if you happen to be in Southern Chile or Argentina and have the proper eyeware (don't do a Donald). Or you can tune in to the NASA TV channel beginning at 9:40 am ET. ~~~

The New York Times on what to expect as the Electoral College votes. ~~~

~~~ Lisa Lerer & Reid Epstein of the New York Times: "For decades, Electoral College voters have served as the rubber-stamping bureaucrats of American democracy, operating well below the political radar as they provided pro forma certification of a new president. Despite its procedural nature, the role has long been considered an honor, bestowed as a way to recognize political stature or civic service. This year..., as small-town electors face harassment and more prominent figures adapt to increased security measures, a duty long considered a privilege has also become a headache. Even as the electors prepared to vote on Monday, Mr. Trump on Sunday railed on Twitter against the 'MOST CORRUPT ELECTION IN U.S. HISTORY' and suggested that swing states could not certify 'without committing a severely punishable crime' -- further raising concerns about electors' personal security."

The Trumpidemic, Ctd.

Jack Healy, et al., of the New York Times: "Trucks and cargo planes packed with the first of nearly three million doses of coronavirus vaccine fanned out across the country on Sunday as hospitals rushed to set up injection sites and their anxious workers tracked each shipment.... The distribution of the first federally approved vaccine marked the start of the most ambitious vaccination campaign in American history, a critical, complicated feat that one top federal official compared to the Allied landings at Normandy during World War II.... On Sunday, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration commissioner disagreed with President Trump's claims that the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine could have been released a week ago. The commissioner, Dr. Stephen Hahn, said the F.D.A.'s decision on Friday to authorize the vaccine for emergency use was made as quickly as possible while still ensuring that it was safe and effective.

Some Are More Equal Than Others. Annie Karni & Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: "White House staff members who work in close quarters with President Trump have been told they are scheduled to receive injections of the coronavirus vaccine soon, at a time when the first doses of the vaccine are being distributed only to high-risk health care workers.... The hope is to eventually distribute the vaccine to everyone who works in the White House, but will begin with some of the most senior people who work around the president, one of the people said.... While many Trump officials said they were eager to receive the vaccine and would take it if it were offered, others said they were concerned it would send the wrong message by making it look like Trump staff members were hopping the line in order to protect a president who already had the virus and has bragged that he is now 'immune.'" (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Update. "President Trump said on Sunday night that he would delay a plan for senior White House staff members to receive the coronavirus vaccine in the coming days.... 'People working in the White House should receive the vaccine somewhat later in the program, unless specifically necessary,' Mr. Trump tweeted, hours after a National Security Council spokesman had defended the plan. 'I have asked that this adjustment be made. I am not scheduled to take the vaccine, but look forward to doing so at the appropriate time. Thank you!'" MB: So, um, Trump can be embarrassed?? If so, that's a first.

Remember way last week when we said the Biden team should send in teams wearing hazmat suits to fumigate the White House? According to the Daily Mail (not the most accurate journalistic enterprise), that's exactly what they're doing: ~~~

~~~ Caroline Graham of the Daily Mail: "A team in hazmat suits will spray the entire residence with disinfectant after Trump leaves and remove carpets, curtains and furniture. A member of the transition team added: "Mr Trump's administration has been riddled with the coronavirus. The Bidens are taking no chances. The entire property will be deep-cleaned down to replacing doorknobs and taking down soft furnishings. The virus can linger on hard surfaces so the entire residence and executive offices will be wiped clean with disinfectant to exorcise any trace of Team Trump.""

Mississippi. Keisha Rowe of the Clarion Ledger: "The surge of COVID-19 cases in Mississippi has left no intensive care unit beds available across the state and prompted the need for restrictions, State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs said Friday.... The Mississippi Department of Health is also anticipating many more hospitalizations as the increase in cases continues." --s

Brazil. Tom Phillips of the Guardian: "Jair Bolsonaro is facing a furious backlash over what critics are calling his 'homicidally negligent' failure to prepare a coherent coronavirus vaccination programme as Brazil's death toll again soars. More than 181,000 Brazilians have died from the disease the president calls 'a little flu', with Latin America's biggest economy now careering into a painful second wave.... Despite having the world;s sixth largest population, Brazil has yet to sign a contract with Pfizer and has eschewed the experimental Chinese vaccine CoronaVac for what many suspect are political motives.... Experts fear that strategy could cause thousands of unnecessary deaths by delaying vaccination.... Daniel Dourado, a public health expert and lawyer, agreed Bolsonaro's 'disastrous' reaction warranted immediate impeachment: 'It's one outrage after the next. Dilma Rousseff was removed for so much less.' But, remarkably, the public mood had yet to turn significantly against Bolsonaro[.]" --s

More Real News

David Sanger of the New York Times: "The Trump administration acknowledged on Sunday that hackers acting on behalf of a foreign government -- almost certainly a Russian intelligence agency, according to federal and private experts -- broke into a range of key government networks, including in the Treasury and Commerce Departments, and had free access to their email systems. Officials said a hunt was on to determine if other parts of the government had been affected by what looked to be one of the most sophisticated, and perhaps among the largest, attacks on federal systems in the past five years. Several said a series of national security-related agencies were also targeted, though it was not clear whether the systems contained highly classified material. The Trump administration said little in public about the hack, which suggested that while the government was worried about Russian intervention in the 2020 election, key agencies working for the administration -- and unrelated to the election -- were actually the subject of a sophisticated attack that they were unaware of until recent weeks." ~~~

~~~ Christopher Bing of Reuters: "Hackers believed to be working for Russia have been monitoring internal email traffic at the U.S. Treasury and Commerce departments, according to people familiar with the matter, adding they feared the hacks uncovered so far may be the tip of the iceberg. The hack is so serious it led to a National Security Council meeting at the White House on Saturday, said one of the people familiar with the matter." ~~~

~~~ Shelby Grossman & Khadja Ramali of Lawfare: "We are increasingly seeing state actors outsourcing their disinformation operations to [digital marketing firms]. Outsourcing an influence campaign to a private company has benefits for national governments. The primary advantage is that it gives the government a level of plausible deniability. If the operation is uncovered, government actors can claim that it was simply a rogue social media marketing agency, and that they had nothing to do with the activities. Similarly, if one firm gets banned from social platforms, governments can switch to working with a new one.... [M]any of these digital marketing firms are headed by individuals with one foot in the media marketing world and one in the government.... Understanding these practices and the intent behind them is necessary to identify and address them." --s

Martin Shulov of the Guardian: "The Trump administration is facing mounting calls to abandon threats to sanction Houthi rebels in northern Yemen to avoid an imminent danger of extreme famine in the country, where almost two-thirds of the population are in need of food aid. US state department officials are considering designating the Houthis as a terrorist group before the 20 January inauguration of Joe Biden, a move that would complicate the delivery of essential aid in large parts of the country, senior UN officials and NGOs have said." --s

Seung Min Kim & Annie Linskey of the Washington Post: "President-elect Joe Biden's decision to fill his White House and Cabinet with longtime colleagues has led to frustration from liberals, civil rights leaders and younger activists, who worry he's relegating racial minorities to lower-status jobs while leaning on Obama-era appointees for key positions. Biden's Cabinet process has also discomforted some allies on the Hill, who say senators from his own party have not been sufficiently consulted about picks, even though Biden will need influential Senate Democrats to help steer nominees through the confirmation gauntlet. Senior Democratic senators have gotten little or no advance warning about the president-elect's selections, according to a half-dozen senior congressional officials and others familiar with the process." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

Lauren Lumpkin of the Washington Post: "The incoming second gentleman has landed a new job at the Georgetown University Law Center, school officials announced. Doug Emhoff, husband to Vice President-elect Kamala D. Harris, announced last month he would leave his Los Angeles law firm by Inauguration Day.... Emhoff is probably the first vice-presidential spouse to work at Georgetown Law, said Tanya Weinberg, a spokeswoman for the school. His appointment -- along with incoming first lady Jill Biden's decision to return to teaching -- represents a modernization of the roles typically played by first and second spouses. Emhoff will serve as a distinguished visitor from practice when he joins the faculty in January, school officials said in a statement. He'll bring with him nearly three decades of expertise in intellectual property, entertainment and media law."

Real Election Results. Harry Enten of CNN: "One of the most notable early results on Election Night came from Florida's heavily Hispanic Miami-Dade county. President Donald Trump lost it to President-elect Joe Biden by just 7 points, after losing it by 29 points in 2016. A big question was whether Trump's improvement in Miami-Dade would be replicated in other majority Hispanic areas on the electoral map. The answer from coast to coast is a definitive yes. Trump did considerably better than he did in 2016 across an array of Hispanic areas." --s

The Last Days of the Mad Kaiser

Joe Who? John Bowden of the Hill: "President Trump refused to rule out the possibility of skipping his successor's inauguration in January during an interview that aired Sunday on Fox News. 'So would you show up at the inauguration?' [Brian] Kilmeade asked. 'I don't want to talk about that,' Trump responded. 'I want to talk about this. We've done a great job. I got more votes than any president in the history of our country. In the history of our country, right? Not even close -- 75 million far more than Obama, far more than anybody. And they say we lost an election. We didn't lose. If I got 10 million fewer votes, they say I couldn't have lost,' Trump added, repeating baseless claims revolving around election fraud and the 2020 race."

Tweeto. Darlene Superville of the AP: "... Donald Trump offered a new rationale Sunday for threatening to veto the annual defense policy bill that covers the military's budget for equipment and pay raises for service members: China. He did not outline his concerns. Republican and Democratic lawmakers say the wide-ranging defense policy bill, which the Senate sent to the president on Friday, would be tough on China and must become law as soon as possible. Both the House and Senate passed the measure by margins large enough to override a potential veto from the president, who has a history of failing to carry out actions he has threatened. 'The biggest winner of our new defense bill is China! I will veto!' Trump said in a new tweet." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)

** John Harwood of CNN: "... notwithstanding lies as promiscuous as the ones he tells about election fraud -- Trump will leave office in January with a historically bad record on the economy. That sounds discordant since many Americans believe the economic fable that Trump has repeated relentlessly throughout his term. But placing his bottom-line results alongside those of his predecessors paints a deeply unflattering portrait. Alone among the 13 presidents since World War Two, Trump will exit the White House with fewer Americans employed than when he started. He will have overseen punier growth in economic output than any of the previous 12 presidents. His throwback 'America First' agenda has failed to restore the old economic engine that powered an earlier era's prosperity. On Trump's watch, industrial production has fallen. The Federal Reserve says the manufacturing sector fell into recession in 2019 even before the coronavirus pandemic hit. Last week was the 38th in a row in which at least 700,000 Americans filed first-time claims for unemployment benefits. Holiday-season lines at food banks dramatize the scale of human suffering. More abstract measures, such as the US trade deficit and ratio of government debt to the size of the economy, have also worsened during Trump's term." Read on. ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Even very successful businesspeople who have built mega-corporations from scratch usually don't know much about macroeconomics and therefore, how to use the government to improve the economy. Trump, who was a failed businessman (and not even that great a grifter, at least in some cases), knows even less about economics. And since he is incapable of learning on the job, the U.S. economy went from bad to worse, thanks largely to his missteps & erratic, impulsive stunts & threats.

It's the Dopamine! James Kimmel in Politico Magazine: "... brain imaging studies show that harboring a grievance (a perceived wrong or injustice, real or imagined) activates the same neural reward circuitry as narcotics. This isn't a metaphor; it's brain biology. Scientists have found that in substance addiction, environmental cues ... cause sharp surges of dopamine in crucial reward and habit regions of the brain.... Recent studies show that similarly, cues such as experiencing or being reminded of a perceived wrong or injustice -- a grievance -- activate these same reward and habit regions of the brain, triggering cravings in anticipation of experiencing pleasure and relief through retaliation.... The hallmark of addiction is compulsive behavior despite harmful consequences. Trump's unrelenting efforts to retaliate against those he believes have treated him unjustly (including, now, American voters) appear to be compulsive and uncontrollable.... Reports suggest he has been doing this for much of his life. He seems powerless to stop. H also seems to derive a great deal of pleasure from it." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Trump seemed to recognize early on that he was prone to addiction. It's the reason he doesn't drink. Kimmel says we should have compassion for Trump because he's sick. Sorry, I guess I need to go to WhinersAnon, because I don't feel sorry for Trump. At all.

Marie: Yesterday, Trump did a flyover in Marine 1 to salute his Proud Boy fans, who took a brief break from protesting the election results, stabbing people & burning Black Lives Matter banners in D.C. to cheer on Trump. (Related stories linked yesterday & below.) Akhilleus, in today's Comments, dubs this taxpayer-funded maneuver the "Fat Fuck Flyover." Works for me. For some of us of a certain age, it's impossible not to speculate that Saturday's flyover may be a precursor to Trump's plans for a Grand Finale on January 20:

Washington, D.C. Peter Hermann, et al., of the Washington Post: "Nearly three dozen people were arrested during a night of unrest in downtown Washington that began Saturday with rallies supporting President Trump and descended into chaos and violence as a group with ties to white nationalism roamed the streets looking to fight. One of those arrested was 29-year-old Phillip Johnson of the District, who was charged with assault with a dangerous weapon in connection with at least one of four stabbings that occurred." ~~~

~~~ Jack Jenkins of Religion News: "People reportedly affiliated with the hate group Proud Boys tore down Black Lives Matter signs belonging to churches in Washington Saturday night (Dec 12), setting at least one aflame. The damage to the signs came as the city endured a wave of violence after supporters of ... Donald Trump flocked to the nation's capital to protest President-elect Joe Biden's election victory. In a pair of widely-shared Twitter videos, a group of people identified by conservative outlet Daily Caller as Proud Boys can be seen tearing down a Black Lives Matter sign -- which bears the logo of Asbury United Methodist church -- and then setting it on fire. The group of mostly white men, many adorned in the black-and-yellow colors often worn by Proud Boys, then begin to cheer and chant expletive-ridden anthems.... Another Washington church, Luther Place Memorial, claimed in a series of Instagram posts that their Black Lives Matter sign was stolen and replaced three times since Friday, when Trump supporters first began to arrive in the city." ~~~

     ~~~ Update. Allison Klein of the Washington Post: "A Black Lives Matter banner and sign were torn from two historic Black churches in downtown D.C. and destroyed during pro-Trump protests Saturday night. D.C. police said they are investigating the events as potential hate crimes." ~~~

~~~ Washington State. Craig Timberg of the Washington Post: "Police in Washington state have arrested an armed right-wing protester on charges of first-degree assault Saturday in Olympia, the state capital, on suspicion of shooting a left-wing protester during demonstrations fueled by baseless claims that President Trump had been wrongly denied reelection. Authorities identified the alleged shooter as a 25-year-old man from Shoreline, a city north of Seattle, but did not release a name. He remains in custody."

David Siders of Politico: "The down-ballot parroting of Trump's baseless claims of widespread voter fraud began right after the election. But in the weeks since, it has evolved into a self-sustaining phenomenon of its own. Republican candidates for House, legislative and gubernatorial races in more than half a dozen states are still refusing to concede. Echoing the president, these candidates are an early sign of what Republicans say will be a sustained, post-Trump effort to tighten voting restrictions and to reverse measures implemented in many states to make voting easier. They also may mark the beginning of a Trump-inspired trend of candidates who never fold -- they just fade away after weeks and months of unsubstantiated allegations of fraud." MB: This is something I missed completely; even candidates who lost by as much as 70 percent! are claiming fraud & "irregularities." As many have observed, the only "real votes" are votes for Republicans. (Also linked yesterday.)

Marie: Some conser-vo-tive pundits are beginning to suspect something may be amiss: ~~~

     ~~~ (1) Karl Rove, speaking on Fox "News" Sunday: Trump "is on the edge of looking like a sore loser."

     ~~~ (2) David French: "The frenzy and the fury of the post-election period has laid bare the sheer idolatry and fanaticism of Christian Trumpism. A significant segment of the Christian public has fallen for conspiracy theories, has mixed nationalism with the Christian gospel, has substituted a bizarre mysticism for reason and evidence, and rages in fear and anger against their political opponents -- all in the name of preserving Donald Trump's power."

Georgia. So Much Losing. AP: "... Donald Trump has lost his latest legal challenge seeking to overturn Georgia's election results, with the state Supreme Court's rejection late Saturday of a case from Trump's campaign and Georgia Republican Party Chairman David Shafer. The suit - similar to other Trump team legal challenges, which made baseless allegations of widespread fraud in Georgia's presidential election - was initially filed Dec. 4, then rejected by the Fulton County Superior Court because the paperwork was improperly completed and it lacked the appropriate filing fees. The case was subsequently appealed directly to the state Supreme Court, asking justices to consider the case before Monday's meeting of the Electoral College. In a brief order, justices wrote that 'petitioners have not shown that this is one of those extremely rare cases that would invoke our original jurisdiction.'"

The O'Briens' Excellent European Vacation. Glen Johnson of Axios: "National security adviser Robert O'Brien is taking his wife on a holiday tour of the romantic Mediterranean and European capitals, including seeking a private tour of the Louvre despite it being closed because of coronavirus restrictions, people familiar with the trip tell Axios.... The White House announced the Paris stop shortly after an inquiry from Axios, but the entirety of the trip -- which also includes stops in Tel Aviv, Rome and London -- is causing consternation among O'Brien's hosts and questions about the need for his wife to tag along. The White House announced today that O'Brien would be traveling to Paris on Monday to lead a U.S. delegation to the 60th anniversary of the signing of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development Convention. The release did not detail that O'Brien's wife, Lo-Mari, would be joining him."

Ramsey Touchberry & Naveed Jamali of Newsweek: "An investigation from the independent government watchdog that oversees the Department of Veterans Affairs concluded Thursday that a Republican member of Congress was involved in an orchestrated campaign by V.A. Secretary Robert Wilkie to disparage the reputation of a female veteran who alleged she was sexually assaulted at a V.A. facility. The 68-page report...stated that three witnesses said ... that Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-Texas) gave him information about the female veteran that could erode her credibility. Crenshaw, a former Navy SEAL, served in the same unit as the female veteran, Andrea Goldstein.... [Furthermore] V.A. Inspector General Michael Missal characterized the handling of Goldstein's allegations by Wilkie, an appointee of President Donald Trump, and other senior agency officials as 'troubling.'" --s

Georgia Senate Race. Sarah Polus of the Hill: "Sen. Kelly Loeffler's (R-Ga.) campaign on Sunday condemned the white supremacist with whom she took a photo and said the senator didn't know who he was at the time, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ... reported.... The photo in question, which was taken at a campaign event Friday, depicts the senator smiling next to Chester Doles, a reported former leader of the Klu Klux Klan who was sentenced to prison for the 1993 beating of a black man, according to The Baltimore Sun. The AJC reported that Doles also has ties to the Hammerskins, also known as Hammerskin Nation, defined as the 'best organized, most widely dispersed and most dangerous Skinhead group' by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Progressive Jewish advocacy group Behind the Arc ... shared the image to Twitter and condemned Loeffler. 'This is who @KLoeffler is proudly appealing to,' the group wrote alongside the photo."

Annals of "Journalism," Ha Ha. Marc Tracy of the New York Times: "The editorial page editor of The Wall Street Journal [Paul Gigot] accused strategists for President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. of instigating a coordinated response to an op-ed article published Friday evening that called on Jill Biden, Mr. Biden's wife, to refrain from referring to herself as 'Dr. Biden' because she is not a medical doctor, but rather holds a doctorate in education.... 'My guess is that the Biden team concluded it was a chance to use the big gun of identity politics to send a message to critics as it prepares to take power. There's nothing like playing the race or gender card to stifle criticism.'" MB: If confederates had a whining contests, like kindergarters, they would all get prizes. Maybe we should ask the brain-study guy James Kimmel if wingeritis is an early sign of grievance addiction .~~~

AND What About This, Paul? Zachary Petrizzo of Mediaite: “Wall Street Journal higher education reporter Melissa Korn ripped into her own publication's opinion side on Saturday, following the WSJ running an op-ed critical of soon-to-be First Lady Dr. Jill Biden using 'Dr.' ahead of her name. 'I cannot bring myself to include a link, because why give it more air? But that op-ed belittling Jill Biden, urging her to drop the Dr., mocking her research on community college, likening her degree to an honorary doctorate, is disgusting,' Korn stated via Twitter." MB: Wow! Biden isn't even president yet; still, he can make reporters cower, diss their own rag & do his bidding. Trump couldn't seem to do that when he was president*.

Beyond the Beltway

David Waldstein & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: "Following years of protests from fans and Native American groups, the Cleveland Indians have decided to change their team name, moving away from a moniker that has long been criticized as racist, three people familiar with the decision said Sunday. The move follows a decision by the Washington Football Team of the N.F.L. in July to stop using a name long considered a racial slur, and is part of a larger national conversation about race that magnified this year amid protests of systemic racism and police violence. Cleveland could announce its plans as soon as this week, according to the three people.... Cleveland spent much of the year before the 2019 season phasing out the logos and imagery of the cartoon mascot Chief Wahoo. One option that the team is considering, two of the people said, is moving forward without a replacement name -- similar to how the Washington Football Team proceeded -- then coming up with a new name in consultation with the public."

Way Beyond

China. Sky News (Australia): "A major leak containing a register with the details of nearly two million CCP [Chinese Communist Party] members has occurred -- exposing members who are now working all over the world, while also lifting the lid on how the party operates under Xi Jinping, says Sharri Markson[, a Sky News host]. Ms Markson said the leak is a register with the details of Communist Party members, including their names, party position, birthday, national ID number and ethnicity. 'It is believed to be the first leak of its kind in the world,' the Sky News host said.... Ms Markson said the leak demonstrates party branches are embedded in some of the world's biggest companies and even inside government agencies.... Ms Markson said the leak is a significant security breach likely to embarrass Xi Jinping.... Ms Markson said the data was extracted from a Shanghai server by Chinese dissidents, whistleblowers, in April 2016, who have been using it for counter-intelligence purposes." --s

Saturday
Dec122020

The Commentariat -- December 13, 2020

Afternoon Update:

Some Are More Equal Than Others. Annie Karni & Maggie Haberman of the New York Times: "White House staff members who work in close quarters with President Trump have been told they are scheduled to receive injections of the coronavirus vaccine soon, at a time when the first doses of the vaccine are being distributed only to high-risk health care workers.... The hope is to eventually distribute the vaccine to everyone who works in the White House, but will begin with some of the most senior people who work around the president, one of the people said.... While many Trump officials said they were eager to receive the vaccine and would take it if it were offered, others said they were concerned it would send the wrong message by making it look like Trump staff members were hopping the line in order to protect a president who already had the virus and has bragged that he is now 'immune.'"

Seung Min Kim & Annie Linskey of the Washington Post: "President-elect Joe Biden's decision to fill his White House and Cabinet with longtime colleagues has led to frustration from liberals, civil rights leaders and younger activists, who worry he's relegating racial minorities to lower-status jobs while leaning on Obama-era appointees for key positions. Biden's Cabinet process has also discomforted some allies on the Hill, who say senators from his own party have not been sufficiently consulted about picks, even though Biden will need influential Senate Democrats to help steer nominees through the confirmation gauntlet. Senior Democratic senators have gotten little or no advance warning about the president-elect's selections, according to a half-dozen senior congressional officials and others familiar with the process."

Tweeto. Darlene Superville of the AP: "... Donald Trump offered a new rationale Sunday for threatening to veto the annual defense policy bill that covers the military's budget for equipment and pay raises for service members: China. He did not outline his concerns. Republican and Democratic lawmakers say the wide-ranging defense policy bill, which the Senate sent to the president on Friday, would be tough on China and must become law as soon as possible. Both the House and Senate passed the measure by margins large enough to override a potential veto from the president, who has a history of failing to carry out actions he has threatened. 'The biggest winner of our new defense bill is China! I will veto!' Trump said in a new tweet."

It's the Dopamine! James Kimmel in Politico Magazine: "... brain imaging studies show that harboring a grievance (a perceived wrong or injustice, real or imagined) activates the same neural reward circuitry as narcotics. This isn't a metaphor; it's brain biology. Scientists have found that in substance addiction, environmental cues ... cause sharp surges of dopamine in crucial reward and habit regions of the brain.... Recent studies show that similarly, cues such as experiencing or being reminded of a perceived wrong or injustice -- a grievance -- activate these same reward and habit regions of the brain, triggering cravings in anticipation of experiencing pleasure and relief through retaliation.... The hallmark of addiction is compulsive behavior despite harmful consequences. Trump's unrelenting efforts to retaliate against those he believes have treated him unjustly (including, now, American voters) appear to be compulsive and uncontrollable.... Reports suggest he has been doing this for much of his life. He seems powerless to stop. He also seems to derive a great deal of pleasure from it." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Trump seemed to recognize early on that he was prone to addiction. It's the reason he doesn't drink. Kimmel says we should have compassion for Trump. Sorry, I guess I need to go to WhinersAnon, because I don't feel sorry for Trump. At all.

Yesterday, Trump did a flyover in Marine 1 to salute his Proud Boy fans, who took a brief break from protesting & stabbing people in D.C. to cheer him on. (Stories linked below.) For some of us of a certain age, it's impossible not to speculate that Saturday's flyover may be a precursor to Trump's plans for a Grand Finale on January 20:

David Siders of Politico: "The down-ballot parroting of Trump's baseless claims of widespread voter fraud began right after the election. But in the weeks since, it has evolved into a self-sustaining phenomenon of its own. Republican candidates for House, legislative and gubernatorial races in more than half a dozen states are still refusing to concede. Echoing the president, these candidates are an early sign of what Republicans say will be a sustained, post-Trump effort to tighten voting restrictions and to reverse measures implemented in many states to make voting easier. They also may mark the beginning of a Trump-inspired trend of candidates who never fold -- they just fade away after weeks and months of unsubstantiated allegations of fraud." MB: This is something I missed completely; even candidates who lost by as much as 70 percent! are claiming fraud & "irregularities." As many have observed, the only "real votes" are votes for Republicans.

~~~~~~~~~~~

The Trumpidemic, Ctd.

The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Sunday are here: "The first of nearly three million doses of the first Covid-19 vaccine were packed in dry ice and put on trucks at a Pfizer plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., on Sunday morning, destined for hundreds of distribution centers in all 50 states, the most ambitious vaccination campaign in American history. Workers applauded as the first shipment left the plant for loading on the trucks.... The first injections are expected to be given by Monday to high-risk health care workers.... The total number of U.S. cases [is] more than 16 million, by far the most in the world, less than a week after the country surpassed 15 million."

Frances Sellers, et al., of the Washington Post: "The initial distribution of 2.9 million doses, a sliver of what was initially anticipated and intended only for health care workers and residents and staff of long-term care facilities, will arrive at hospitals battling climbing case counts and mounting deaths. Immunization in its early phases will not curtail intensifying outbreaks, experts cautioned, underscoring the need for continued public-health precautions. But the vaccine's clearance on Friday night from the FDA, followed by backing on Saturday from a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory group, set into motion one of one of the most complicated logistical missions in U.S. history, marking a new phase of the pandemic." ~~~

~~~ Lena Sun & Isaac Stanley-Becker of the Washington Post: "A federal advisory panel voted overwhelmingly Saturday to recommend the nation's first coronavirus vaccine for people 16 and older.... The advisory panel to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that the benefits of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which has been shown to be 95 percent effective at preventing illness after two shots, far outweighed side effects, including sore arms, fatigue, headaches, muscle pain and chills that resolved within a few days.... The vote was 11 in favor, with three members not voting because of conflicts of interest.... While [the panel's chairperson Beth] Bell applauded the huge scientific achievement of developing a vaccine, she and others noted the stark imbalance between the $10 billion of taxpayer money used to fund vaccine development and the lack of funding -- only 'hundreds of millions' -- for the enormously complicated and challenging distribution and vaccination effort rolling out across the country during the next year.... 'We are not going to be able to protect Americans if we don't have a way to deliver the vaccine to them.'" MB: IOW, Trump demands "credit" for developing a vaccine he didn't develop, but actually getting shots in arms was not his concern.

The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Saturday are here: "At a news conference on Saturday, Gen. Gustave F. Perna, the chief operating officer of Operation Warp Speed, the federal effort to bring a vaccine to market, said that boxes [of Pfizer's vaccine] were being packed at Pfizer's plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., and would be shipped to UPS and FedEx distribution hubs, where they would be dispersed to 636 locations across the country. Pfizer said shipping would start early Sunday morning. Mr. Perna specified that 145 sites would receive the vaccine on Monday, 425 on Tuesday and 66 on Wednesday." (Also linked yesterday.)

Florida. Kirby Wilson of the Tampa Bay Times: "A White House Coronavirus Task Force report about the state of the pandemic in Florida made public Saturday urges state leaders to take immediate action to slow the virus' spread. Officials should close or severely limit indoor dining, limit capacity at bars and issue stronger policies around mask wearing, the report states. Those are the same public health measures that Gov. Ron DeSantis has publicly assailed for months as ineffective. While he was making the case for no new business restrictions, DeSantis' office refused to publicize reports from the task force which recommended a more robust public response.... Earlier this week, the Orlando Sentinel and South Florida Sun Sentinel sued the governor's office to release the reports. The governor's office had not released any of the weekly reports issued during the month of November, the suit alleged."

Ronald Shafer in the Washington Post on the time in 1776 when future First Lady Abigail Adams had herself & her four children inoculated against smallpox. "... the procedure was considered so dangerous that a number of states eventually banned it."


Michael Balsamo & Eric Tucker
of the AP: "A subpoena seeking documents from Hunter Biden asked for information related to more than two dozen entities, including Ukraine gas company Burisma, according to a person familiar with a Justice Department tax investigation of President-elect Joe Biden's son. The breadth of the subpoena, issued Tuesday, underscores the wide-angle lens prosecutors are taking as they examine the younger Biden's finances and international business ventures." ~~~

     ~~~ Molly Jong-Fast in Vogue: "The rebirth of the Hunter Biden story made the right wing media giddy.... But is Hunter Biden the presidential offspring we really need to worry about? How about those two grifters-in-chief, Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner? Hunter Biden is no Boy Scout.... But he had no official role in his father's campaign. He will not join his father's administration in any capacity. Ivanka and Jared, on the other hand, work in the White House!"

Sarah Rumpf of Mediaite: "A Wall Street Journal op-ed Saturday drew swift backlash for not just criticizing soon-to-be First Lady Dr. Jill Biden for using the title denoting her doctorate, but for what many viewed as a condescending and sexist tone. The piece, written by Joseph Epstein..., kicks off the insults right away. 'Madame First Lady -- Mrs. Biden -- Jill -- kiddo,' is how Epstein began his written tirade encouraging Biden to abandon the honorific that she earned. '"Dr. Jill Biden" sounds and feels fraudulent, not to say a touch comic.' He also demeans her dissertation topic.... Unsurprisingly, Epstein's view met with some fierce criticism.... Many commenters criticized Epstein for the sexist tone, and CNN's Jake Tapper also highlighted a passage where Epstein complained about Black women receiving honorary doctorates." A New York Times story is here.

The Last Days of the Mad Kaiser

Anti-Democracy Republicans Plot to Overturn Election. Nicholas Fandos & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: "... as the president continues to refuse to concede, a small group of his most loyal backers in Congress are plotting a final-stage challenge on the floor of the House of Representatives in early January to try to reverse Mr. Biden's victory.... The looming battle on Jan. 6 is likely to culminate in a messy and deeply divisive spectacle that could thrust Vice President Mike Pence into the excruciating position of having to declare once and for all that Mr. Trump has indeed lost the election.... The effort is being led by Representative Mo Brooks, Republican of Alabama, a backbench conservative. Along with a group of allies in the House, he is eyeing challenges to the election results in five different states -- Arizona, Pennsylvania, Nevada, Georgia and Wisconsin.... Under rules laid out in the Constitution and the Electoral Count Act of 1887, their challenges must be submitted in writing with a senator's signature also affixed. No Republican senator has yet stepped forward to say he or she will back such an effort, though a handful of reliable allies of Mr. Trump, including Senators Ron Johnson of Wisconsin and Rand Paul of Kentucky, have signaled they would be open to doing so.... Once an objection is heard from a member of each house of Congress, senators and representatives will retreat to their chambers on opposite sides of the Capitol for a two-hour debate and then a vote on whether to disqualify a state's votes. Both the Democratic-controlled House and Republican-controlled Senate would have to agree to toss out a state's electoral votes -- something that has not happened since the 19th century."

Toluse Olorunnipa & Cleve Wootson of the Washington Post: "President Trump's push to overturn his election loss has been repeatedly defeated and rebuffed by the courts.... But the campaign has also served another purpose -- rallying Republicans across the country to back Trump's assault on democratic principles and further cementing his control over the party even as he prepares to leave the White House.... Through public displays of support and lengthy silences, the vast majority of elected Republicans chose to back Trump. Nearly two-thirds of House Republicans and 18 state attorneys general signed their names to the failed Supreme Court lawsuit seeking to have justices overturn the will of voters in multiple states. Others have gone on television to parrot the president's baseless conspiracy theories about vote-rigging. Some are using rhetoric reminiscent of the Civil War to express their fealty to the president's cause." ~~~

~~~ Jim Rutenberg & Nick Corasaniti of the New York Times: "The Supreme Court repudiation of President Trump's desperate bid for a second term not only shredded his effort to overturn the will of voters: It also was a blunt rebuke to Republican leaders in Congress and the states who were willing to damage American democracy by embracing a partisan power grab over a free and fair election.... Much of the G.O.P. leadership now shares responsibility for the quixotic attempt to ignore the nation's founding principles and engineer a different verdict from the one voters cast in November.... With direct buy-in from senior officials like Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and the Republican leader in House, Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the president's effort required the party to promote false theory upon unsubstantiated claim upon outright lie about unproved, widespread fraud -- in an election that ... officials agreed was notably smooth given the challenges of the pandemic. And it meant that Republican leaders now stand for a new notion: that the final decisions of voters can be challenged without a basis in fact if the results are not to the liking of the losing side, running counter to decades of work by the United States to convince developing nations that peaceful transfers of power are key to any freely elected government's credibility." (Also linked yesterday.)


Hailey Fuchs, et al., of the New York Times: "Incensed by a Supreme Court ruling that further dashed President Trump's hopes of invalidating his November electoral defeat, thousands of his supporters marched in Washington and several state capitals on Saturday to protest what they contended, against all evidence, was a stolen election. In some places, angry confrontations between protesters and counterprotesters escalated into violence. There were a number of scuffles in the national capital, and the police declared a riot in Olympia, Wash., where one person was shot. In videos of a clash in Olympia that were posted on social media, a single gunshot can be heard as black-clad counterprotesters move toward members of the pro-Trump group, including one person waving a large Trump flag. After the gunshot, one of the counterprotesters is seen falling to the ground, and others call for help. In one video, a man with a gun can be seen running from the scene and putting on a red hat.... A spokesman for the Washington State Patrol, said that one person was in custody in connection with the episode.... Mr. Trump flew over the protesters in Marine One on his way to attend the Army-Navy football game at West Point." ~~~

~~~ Emily Davies, et al., of the Washington Post: "Thousands of maskless rallygoers who refuse to accept the results of the election turned downtown Washington into a falsehood-filled spectacle Saturday.... The crowds cheered for recently pardoned former national security adviser Michael Flynn, marched with conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and stood in awe of a flyover from what appeared to be Marine One. But at night, the scene became violent. At least four people were stabbed near Harry's Bar at 11th and F streets NW, a gathering point for the Proud Boys, a male-chauvinist organization with ties to white nationalism.... In helmets and bulletproof vests, Proud Boys marched through downtown in militarylike rows.... They became increasingly angry as they wove through streets and alleys, only to find police continuously blocking their course with lines of bikes." The Guardian's story is here.

Andrew Solender of Forbes: "Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.) on Friday urged House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to refuse to seat any of the 126 Republican House members who signed an amicus brief supporting a lawsuit aimed at overturning the results of the presidential election.... Pascrell cites Section 3 of the 14th amendment -- which states that anyone who 'engaged in insurrection or rebellion' cannot serve in federal office -- claiming the lawsuit seeks to 'obliterate public confidence in our democratic system' and that those who signed it committed 'unbecoming acts that reflect poorly on our chamber.'... Pelosi herself has signaled firm opposition to the Trump-backed effort, calling it 'an act of flailing GOP desperation, which violates the principles enshrined in our American Democracy' in a letter to Democratic colleagues."

Maggie Haberman & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: "President Trump on Saturday excoriated Attorney General William P. Barr, castigating him on Twitter for not violating Justice Department policy to publicly reveal an investigation into President-Elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.'s son.... Mr. Trump benefited from [the DOJ's] policy [of not discussing ongoing inquiries] himself in 2016, when officials kept quiet the inquiry into possible conspiracy between his campaign and Russian officials.... In the weeks after the election, Mr. Barr refused to refute Mr. Trump's specious claims of widespread voter fraud. But this month, after Mr. Trump raised the prospect that the Justice Department and F.B.I. may have been involved in tipping the election to Mr. Biden, Mr. Barr ... said that he saw no examples of widespread voter fraud that could have meaningfully affected the election." (Also linked yesterday.)~~~

~~~ Kevin Liptak of CNN: "... Donald Trump raised the prospect of firing Attorney General William Barr in a meeting on Friday, but it's unclear whether he'll choose to dismiss Barr before the end of his term next month. A person familiar with the matter told CNN that Trump was furious in the meeting with advisers at the White House that Barr had worked to keep the federal investigation into Hunter Biden's taxes from becoming public before the November election. Trump was also upset at reports Barr was considering departing the administration before January 20, believing the leaks to be self-serving. Trump told officials he is serious about replacing Barr, but whether he actually goes ahead with the move remains in question. He has been encouraged by advisers over the past several months not to do so." (Also linked yesterday.)

Tweets So Bad.... Celine Castronuova of the Hill: "Twitter on Saturday prevented users from liking and replying to a series of tweets from President Trump in which he repeated false claims that he won the election and that the race was 'stolen' from him, though the company later reversed the move. In three separate tweets Saturday morning, Trump responded to the Supreme Court's decision to throw out a lawsuit from Texas aiming to nullify President-elect Joe Biden's win in Wisconsin, Michigan, Georgia and Pennsylvania..... 'This is a great and disgraceful miscarriage of justice,' Trump wrote. 'The people of the United States were cheated, and our Country disgraced. Never even given our day in Court!' In separate tweets limited by Twitter, the president claimed that he 'won the election in a landslide' and that Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R) allowed votes to be 'stolen' from him." (Also linked yesterday.)

Wisconsin. Another Trump-Appointed Judge Tosses a Trump Lawsuit. Alan Feuer of the New York Times: "A federal judge in Milwaukee on Saturday tossed out President Trump's latest effort to overturn the election results in Wisconsin, dismissing the case and ruling that it had failed 'as a matter of law and fact.' In a strongly worded decision, Judge Brett H. Ludwig, a Trump appointee who took his post only three months ago, shot down one of the president's last remaining attempts to alter the results of a statewide race.... Judge Ludwig's ruling was especially significant because after the Supreme Court's terse decision Friday night, Mr. Trump complained that courts around the country have thrown out dozens of his lawsuits based on technicalities, and have not given him a chance to fully present his legal arguments. Judge Ludwig, however, held a daylong hearing on Thursday and still found that Mr. Trump's claims were lacking. He dismissed the case with prejudice, meaning Mr. Trump cannot refile it in the same court."

Ronald Shafer in the Washington Post on how Southerners plotted to overturn the 1960 presidential results and deprive the winner, John Kennedy, of the presidency. Thanks to Ken W. for the link.

News Lede

Guardian: "John le Carré, who forged thrillers from equal parts of adventure, moral courage and literary flair, has died aged 89. Le Carré explored the gap between the west's high-flown rhetoric of freedom and the gritty reality of defending it, in novels such as The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and The Night Manager, which gained him critical acclaim and made him a bestseller around the world." The New York Times obituary is here.

Friday
Dec112020

The Commentariat -- December 12, 2020

Late Morning/Afternoon Update:

The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Saturday are here.

Jim Rutenberg & Nick Corasaniti of the New York Times: "The Supreme Court repudiation of President Trump's desperate bid for a second term not only shredded his effort to overturn the will of voters: It also was a blunt rebuke to Republican leaders ... who were willing to damage American democracy by embracing a partisan power grab over a free and fair election.... Much of the G.O.P. leadership now shares responsibility for the quixotic attempt to ignore the nation's founding principles and engineer a different verdict from the one voters cast in November.... With direct buy-in from senior officials like Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and the Republican leader in House, Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the president;s effort required the party to promote false theory upon unsubstantiated claim upon outright lie about unproved, widespread fraud -- in an election that ... officials agreed was notably smooth given the challenges of the pandemic. And it meant that Republican leaders now stand for a new notion: that the final decisions of voters can be challenged without a basis in fact if the results are not to the liking of the losing side, running counter to decades of work by the United States to convince developing nations that peaceful transfers of power are key to any freely elected government's credibility."

Maggie Haberman & Michael Schmidt of the New York Times: "President Trump on Saturday excoriated Attorney General William P. Barr, castigating him on Twitter for not violating Justice Department policy to publicly reveal an investigation into President-Elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.'s son.... Mr. Trump benefited from [the DOJ's] policy [of not discussing ongoing inquiries] himself in 2016, when officials kept quiet the inquiry into possible conspiracy between his campaign and Russian officials.... In the weeks after the election, Mr. Barr refused to refute Mr. Trump's specious claims of widespread voter fraud. But this month, after Mr. Trump raised the prospect that the Justice Department and F.B.I. may have been involved in tipping the election to Mr. Biden, Mr. Barr ... said that he saw no examples of widespread voter fraud that could have meaningfully affected the election." ~~~

~~~ Kevin Liptak of CNN: "... Donald Trump raised the prospect of firing Attorney General William Barr in a meeting on Friday, but it's unclear whether he'll choose to dismiss Barr before the end of his term next month. A person familiar with the matter told CNN that Trump was furious in the meeting with advisers at the White House that Barr had worked to keep the federal investigation into Hunter Biden's taxes from becoming public before the November election. Trump was also upset at reports Barr was considering departing the administration before January 20, believing the leaks to be self-serving. Trump told officials he is serious about replacing Barr, but whether he actually goes ahead with the move remains in question. He has been encouraged by advisers over the past several months not to do so."

Tweets So Bad.... Celine Castronuova of the Hill: "Twitter on Saturday prevented users from liking and replying to a series of tweets from President Trump in which he repeated false claims that he won the election and that the race was 'stolen' from him, though the company later reversed the move. In three separate tweets Saturday morning, Trump responded to the Supreme Court's decision to throw out a lawsuit from Texas aiming to nullify President-elect Joe Biden's win in Wisconsin, Michigan, Georgia and Pennsylvania..... 'This is a great and disgraceful miscarriage of justice,' Trump wrote. 'The people of the United States were cheated, and our Country disgraced. Never even given our day in Court!' In separate tweets limited by Twitter, the president claimed that he 'won the election in a landslide' and that Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp (R) and Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey (R) allowed votes to be 'stolen' from him."

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The Trumpidemic, Ctd.

** Katie Thomas, et al., of the New York Times: "The Food and Drug Administration authorized Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use on Friday, according to three people with knowledge of the decision.... The action means millions of highly vulnerable people will begin receiving the vaccine within days.... With the decision, the United States becomes the sixth country -- in addition to Britain, Bahrain, Canada, Saudi Arabia and Mexico -- to clear the vaccine. Other authorizations, including by the European Union, are expected within weeks. The action followed an extraordinary sequence of events on Friday morning when the White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, told the F.D.A. commissioner, Dr. Stephen Hahn, to consider looking for his next job if he didn't get the emergency approval done on Friday.... Dr. Hahn then ordered vaccine regulators at the agency to do it by the end of the day." ~~~

~~~ Josh Dawsey & Laurie McGinley of the Washington Post: "White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows on Friday told Stephen Hahn, the commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, to submit his resignation if the agency does not clear the nation's first coronavirus vaccine by day's end.... The White House actions once again inject politics into the vaccine race, potentially undermining public trust in one of the most crucial tools to end the pandemic...." In a tweet, Trump ordered Hahn to "get the dam vaccines out NOW." No, Trump cant spel. ~~~

~~~ The New York Times' live updates of Covid-19 developments Friday are here: "The Food and Drug Administration is accelerating the timeline for issuing an emergency authorization for Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine, aiming to issue it by Friday evening after planning as recently as Thursday night to finalize the move on Saturday. On Friday morning, President Trump lashed out at the F.D.A. in a tweet, attacking the agency's commissioner, Dr. Stephen M. Hahn, by name for not approving a Covid-19 vaccine faster. Continuing his practice of publicly upbraiding subordinates with whom he is displeased, Mr. Trump told Dr. Hahn to 'stop playing games and start saving lives!!!' He called the F.D.A. 'a big, old, slow turtle,' flush with funds but mired in bureaucracy. On Friday morning Mr. Trump's chief of staff, Mark Meadows..., told Dr. Hahn that he may as well start working on his next job if Dr. Hahn didn't get it done on Friday.... The timing of the announcement appears unlikely to speed up the shipment of the initial doses of the vaccine..., raising questions about the purpose of expediting the authorization." (MB: the "purpose," of course, is to make Trump thinks it appears he is doing something, which he isn't. Trump thinks "yelling at people" & "humiliating subordinates" is the same as "doing something." ~~~

~~~ Earlier That Same Day: "Barring last-minute snags, the F.D.A. is expected to issue an emergency authorization [for Pfizer's coronavirus vaccine] on Saturday. And that means the first Covid-19 vaccinations to be administered in the U.S. outside the confines of an experiment are likely to begin early next week. First in line to get it are health care workers and nursing home residents." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ The Washington Post's live updates of Covid-19 developments Friday are here: "The Trump administration announced Friday that it will purchase an additional 100 million doses of a Moderna vaccine that will be issued to all Americans free of charge, when approved, upping the expected number of vaccines in the federal government's arsenal to 300 million. U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said in a news release that the new purchase expands the stock of doses as part of Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administration's program for helping create a vaccine and distributing it as fast as possible."

DHS: Partying to Make the U.S. Less Secure. Maria Sacchetti of the Washington Post: "The Department of Homeland Security hosted a holiday party on Thursday, with acting secretary Chad Wolf mingling indoors with other Trump administration appointees despite warnings from federal and local health authorities that such gatherings could spread the coronavirus. Wolf, who frequently appears on social media without a mask, did not publicize the party.... DHS Chief Financial Officer Troy Edgar, one of the few leading department officials who has been confirmed by the Senate, posted a photograph of himself, Wolf and chief information officer Karen Evans on Twitter. All three were smiling while standing in proximity. None were wearing masks." A spokesperson called the party a "meeting"; MB: frankly, these yokels don't know the difference.

Gina Colata of the New York Times: "The coronavirus is more prevalent in minority communities, and infections, illnesses and deaths have occurred in these groups in disproportionate numbers. But the new studies do suggest that there is no innate vulnerability to the virus among Black and Hispanic Americans, Dr. [Gbenga] Ogedegbe [of New York University] and other experts said. Instead, these groups are more often exposed because of social and environmental factors.... Among many other vulnerabilities, Black and Hispanic communities and households tend to be more crowded; many people work jobs requiring frequent contact with others and rely on public transportation. Access to health care is poorer than among white Americans, and rates of underlying conditions are much higher. The toll on Black and Hispanic Americans 'could easily have been ameliorated in advance of the pandemic by a less threadbare and cruel approach to social welfare and health care in the U.S.,' [said epidemiologist Jon Zelner]." ~~~

     ~~~ Marie: Early in the pandemic, an acquaintance asked me, more or less rhetorically, why Black people were more likely to get Covid-19. His implication was that they "weren't careful enough." I disabused him of that idea by giving him exactly the reasons the study found. You can bet there are millions of white Americans who still believe what my acquaintance did: that Black people are "too lazy" to take precautions. This makes me crazy.

More Real News

Catie Edmondson of the New York Times: "The Senate overwhelmingly passed a sweeping military policy bill on Friday that would require that Confederate names be stripped from American military bases, clearing the measure for enactment and sending it to President Trump's desk in defiance of his threats of a veto. The 84-13 vote to approve the legislation reflected broad bipartisan support for the measure that authorizes pay for American troops and was intended to signal to Mr. Trump that lawmakers, including many Republicans, were determined to pass the critical bill even if it meant potentially delivering the first veto override of his presidency.... The scene that played out on the Senate floor on Friday underscored how Republicans, who have been reluctant to challenge the president on any other issue during his four years in office, have been extraordinarily willing to break with Mr. Trump over one of the party's key orthodoxies -- projecting military strength." Politico's story is here. (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Jeanne Whalen of the Washington Post: "A groundbreaking measure to ban anonymous shell companies in the United States cleared Congress on Friday as the Senate joined the House in passing a defense-spending bill with a veto-proof margin. The Corporate Transparency Act, which was tacked onto the defense bill, would require corporations and limited liability companies established in the United States to disclose their real owners to the Treasury Department, making it harder for criminals to anonymously launder money or evade taxes. The rule applies to future and existing entities alike.... Tolerance of anonymous shell companies has long helped drug- and human- traffickers, organized crime groups and foreign kleptocrats launder their ill-gotten gains through the U.S. financial system, supporters of the legislation say. It took Michael Cohen, President Trump's former lawyer, only a few days to set up and use an anonymous Delaware LLC to pay hush money to Stormy Daniels, in violation of campaign finance laws." ~~~

~~~ Caitlin Emma, et al., of Politico: "The Senate cleared a one-week government funding bill on Friday by voice vote, forestalling the threat of a government shutdown at midnight and capping off hours of drama after several senators threatened to hold up the resolution. The last-minute agreement to fast-track the short-term funding fix came after a handful of senators dropped efforts to tack on other provisions.... Earlier Friday, Sen. Rand Paul dropped his opposition to the stopgap spending bill and annual defense policy legislation." (Also linked yesterday.)

Li'l Randy Has Not Been Getting Enough Attention. Andrew Desiderio, et al., of of Politico: "Rand Paul is at it again. And his moves could force another brief government shutdown. The Kentucky Republican is objecting to swift passage of the annual defense policy bill, forcing senators to remain in Washington for an extra day as he filibusters the $740 billion legislation. But the government needs to be funded past Friday -- and the short one-week spending bill can't be passed before then without agreement from all 100 senators to vote.... Other senators are also seeking to use the shutdown deadline to push their priorities. Conservatives want votes on legislation to prevent government shutdowns, and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is pushing for a vote on a new round of stimulus checks.... Republicans are hopeful that Paul will, at most, stretch things out right up to the Friday shutdown deadline." Thanks to Akhilleus for the link. See his commentary in yesterday's thread. MB: Maybe if the Senate would pass by unanimous consent an agreement to purchase a little plastic trophy that said, "Rand Paul -- Best Senator Ever," they could get on with the real business at hand. (Also linked yesterday.)

The Last Days of the Mad Kaiser

** Supremes to Trump, Paxton, et al.: Adios, Mo-fos. Adam Liptak of the New York Times: "The Supreme Court on Friday rejected an audacious lawsuit by Texas that had asked the court to throw out the presidential election results in four battleground states captured by President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. The court, in a brief unsigned order, said Texas lacked standing to pursue the case, saying it 'has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another state conducts its elections.' The move, coupled with a one-sentence order on Tuesday turning away a similar request from Pennsylvania Republicans, signaled that the court has refused to be drawn into President Trump's losing campaign to overturn the results of the election last month. There will continue to be scattered litigation brush fires around the nation from Mr. Trump's allies, but as a practical matter the Supreme Court's action puts an end to any prospect that Mr. Trump will win in court what he lost at the polls." ~~~

     ~~~ Nina Totenberg & Barbara Sprunt of NPR: "Justice Samuel Alito, joined by Justice Clarence Thomas, wrote that in their view the court does 'not have discretion to deny the filing of a bill of complaint in a case that falls within our original jurisdiction.' But the two said that while they would have allowed the filing of the complaint, they would not have granted Trump or Texas, any of the relief they sought." MB: IOW, all nine justices agreed that the case was without merit. ~~~

~~~ Josh Gerstein & Kyle Cheney of Politico: "The decision brings an abrupt, unceremonious end to Trump's legal effort to essentially scrap the democratic process in order to preserve his presidency, a six-week-long crusade in which he has spread false conspiracies about voter fraud to drive up distrust of the U.S. election system. Trump dubbed the Supreme Court gambit 'the big one' and had publicly pressed the justices to rule for him to 'save America.'... Texas's audacious legal move, lodged by its scandal-plagued attorney general Ken Paxton, won Trump's endorsement and the backing of 126 Republican members of the House, including GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy. However, the attempt also prompted an angry reaction from the targeted states and led many Democrats and some GOP officials to denounce the effort as a dangerous assault on the foundation of American democracy." ~~~

~~~ Burgess Everett & Melanie Zanona of Politico: "Not a single GOP senator signed a 'friend of the court' brief for the long-shot Texas lawsuit to throw out other states' results in a bid to keep ... Donald Trump in power. And there was no coordinated effort to get Republicans on board, according to interviews with more than a half-dozen Republican senators before the Supreme Court rejected the case Friday night.... While some had hedged on whether they supported the lawsuit, and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas had even offered to argue the case, a serious Senate companion to House Republicans' jaw-dropping effort never emerged.... The split screen between the two chambers was hardly surprising. For instance, House members in gerrymandered districts are far more fearful of a 2022 primary challenge if they don't go with Trump than the senators who serve entire states in six-year terms."

Trump's Last Act. Marie: Thursday, we had a discussion in the Comments about how the Congress could alter the presidential election results. I relied on a WashPo story to attempt to explain it. However, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), a constitutional scholar by trade, explains the Congress's role in more detail & somewhat differently from the WashPo's explanation. He does conclude, as I did, that it's very unlikely Congress will overturn the election:

Bill Chappell & Vanessa Romo of NPR: "Hours after a Wisconsin lower court rejected another of President Trump's attempts to overturn his loss to President-elect Joe Biden on Friday, the state Supreme Court agreed to hear arguments in the case over the weekend. The decision by the conservative-controlled court on Friday means Trump's case will skip over the Wisconsin Court of Appeals as the president pursues his quest to invalidate more than 221,000 ballots. That reversal could win him an additional 10 electoral votes, but Trump would still trail Biden, who would have 296. Biden currently has 306 electoral votes to Trump's 232. Electoral College votes are set to be cast on Monday."

Sidney Powell's "Expert Intelligence Analyst" Is Just Some Guy. Emma Brown, et al., of the Washington Post: "The witness is code-named 'Spyder.' Or sometimes 'Spider.' His identity is so closely guarded that lawyer Sidney Powell has sought to keep it even from opposing counsel. And his account of vulnerability to international sabotage is a key part of Powell's failing multistate effort to invalidate President-elect Joe Biden's victory. Powell describes Spyder in court filings as a former 'Military Intelligenc expert,' and his testimony is offered to support one of her central claims.... Spyder, it turns out, is Joshua Merritt, a 43-year-old information technology consultant in the Dallas area.... Records show that Merritt is an Army veteran and that he enrolled in a training program at the 305th Military Intelligence Battalion.... But he never completed the entry-level training course, according to Meredith Mingledorff, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Army Intelligence Center of Excellence, which includes the battalion. 'He kept washing out of courses,' said Mingledorff, citing his education records. 'He's not an intelligence analyst.'"

Jamelle Bouie of the New York Times: "We have learned that the Republican Party, or much of it, has abandoned whatever commitment to electoral democracy it had to begin with. That it views defeat on its face as illegitimate, a product of fraud concocted by opponents who don't deserve to hold power. That it is fully the party of minority rule, committed to the idea that a vote doesn't count if it isn't for its candidates, and that if democracy won't serve its partisan and ideological interests, then so much for democracy. None of this is new -- there is a whole tradition of reactionary, counter-majoritarian thought in American politics to which the conservative movement is heir -- but it is the first time since the 1850s that these ideas have nearly captured an entire political party. And while the future is unwritten, the events of the past month make me worry that we're following a script the climax of which requires a disaster." (Also linked yesterday.) ~~~

~~~ Ruth Marcus of the Washington Post: "Republicans have gone beyond the indulge-the-toddler-while-he-cries-it-out phase of this debacle to a dangerous new stage: Incentivize the toddler. Reward his bad behavior. Encourage his belief, as poisonous to democracy as it is delusional, that the election was stolen. And they are laying the predicate for a contentious new phase ... in which election results ... are no longer accepted. Instead they merely open the door for a second phase of legal and political guerrilla warfare in which no tactic, no lie, no baseless claim is off-limits. Democracy cannot function this way." Marcus names them all. MB: IMO, Democrats should start running ads now, branding the miscreants in their home bases, as the anti-patriotic, anti-voter assholes they are. Probably an ad-writer can state the case more effectively. The ads should never stop till these jerks are out of office. ~~~

~~~ Orlando Sentinel Editors: "We apologize to our readers for endorsing Michael Waltz in the 2020 general election for Congress. We had no idea, had no way of knowing at the time, that Waltz was not committed to democracy. During our endorsement interview with the incumbent congressman, we didn't think to ask, 'Would you support an effort to throw out the votes of tens of millions of Americans in four states in order to overturn a presidential election and hand it to the person who lost, Donald Trump?' Our bad.... Waltz, to our horror, was one of the 10 Florida Republican members of Congress who, on Thursday, signed up to support a lawsuit brought by Texas in the U.S. Supreme Court that attempted to throw out the election results in Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania -- all states where Donald Trump lost to Joe Biden.... Our nation has been teetering on the edge of constitutional disaster, thanks to the likes of Waltz and the Florida members of Congress who also signed up to support the lawsuit brought by Texas...." ~~~

~~~ James Wigderson of RightWisconsin: "In a January 20 editorial..., RightWisconsin made several errors in describing Tom Tiffany, then a candidate in Wisconsin's 7th Congressional District. In the endorsement editorial, editor James Wigderson described Tiffany as 'a solid conservative legislator.'... Tiffany was also described as 'the only candidate deserving of Republican votes in the February 18 GOP primary.' However, a review of the facts of Tiffany's brief time in Congress leads us to believe those statements were made in error.... Tiffany recently signed onto a statement supporting a federal lawsuit to overturn the November 3 presidential election in Wisconsin and three other states: Pennsylvania, Georgia and Michigan. The federal lawsuit, filed by the ethically challenged Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, would disenfranchise Wisconsin's voters, including those in the 7th Congressional District, if successful. A 'conservative' political leader would understand that Paxton&'s lawsuit is ... a naked attempt at preserving power for a president that lost the November 3 election (even as Tiffany won re-election in his district)."


William Rashbaum
, et al., of the New York Times: "State prosecutors in Manhattan have interviewed several employees of President Trump's bank and insurance broker in recent weeks, according to people with knowledge of the matter, significantly escalating an investigation into the president that he is powerless to stop. The interviews with people who work for the lender, Deutsche Bank, and the insurance brokerage, Aon, are the latest indication that once Mr. Trump leaves office, he still faces the potential threat of criminal charges that would be beyond the reach of federal pardons. It remains unclear whether the office of the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., will ultimately bring charges."

Adam Goldman, et al., of the New York Times: "As federal investigators in Delaware were examining the finances of Hunter Biden during his father's campaign for president, a similar inquiry ramped up this year in Pittsburgh, fueled by materials delivered by President Trump's personal lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani. Attorney General William P. Barr had asked the top federal prosecutor in Pittsburgh, Scott W. Brady, to accept and vet any information that Mr. Giuliani had on the Biden family, including Hunter Biden. Mr. Brady hosted Mr. Giuliani for a nearly four-hour meeting in late January to discuss his materials. The arrangement immediately raised alarms within the F.B.I. and the Justice Department.... Some prosecutors and agents in Pittsburgh regarded Mr. Brady as a Trump loyalist who was thought to be angling to run for office, and they expressed concern that Mr. Brady was wielding the F.B.I. as a weapon to damage Mr. Biden's candidacy.... Mr. Brady has not brought any criminal charges, and Mr. Barr has not publicly discussed the investigation's status since revealing in February that the department would accept Mr. Giuliani's material.... The president-elect is not under investigation."

Leo Shane of the Military Times: "A day after the Veterans Affairs Inspector General blasted VA Secretary Robert Wilkie for his handling of a sexual assault allegation at a department hospital, most of the country's major veterans organizations called for his immediate firing, citing a lack of confidence in his leadership. 'Secretary Wilkie and several members of his executive staff violated the trust of a fellow veteran who came forth with serious allegations of sexual assault,' said Veterans of Foreign Wars Executive Director B.J. Lawrence in a statement Friday night. 'Instead of taking this veteran's allegations seriously, the Secretary and his key staff sought to discredit and vilify the veteran. We will not tolerate this behavior at our VA.'" MB: Sorry, folks. Trump pretends to care about veterans from time to time, but there is no way he will fire a Cabinet member for covering up an (alleged) sexual assault against a female veteran.

News Lede

New York Times: "Charley Pride, a son of sharecroppers who rose to become country music's first Black superstar with hits including 'Kiss an Angel Good Mornin' and 'Is Anybody Goin' to San Antone,' died on Saturday in hospice care in Dallas. He was 86."