I’m pleased to announce that my friend John Judis is joining TPM as an Editor-at-Large.
John, who’s currently at work on his next book, will become a presence in the Editor’s Blog and involved in our coverage of the 2016 election and other topics in a variety of ways. Mainly, I’m just terribly pleased to add John to our masthead because there are few political journalists or writers in the last several decades who’ve more ably and insightfully fused historical erudition with journalistic reporting to illuminate and explain the great issues of politics, economics and public life in the United States.
Cruz cancels school visit in the Bronx after students threatened walk-out.
A disillusioned ex-staffer explains how Wisconsin Republicans were giddy at how their voter ID law would knock down minority and youth voting in their state. This is what this is about. “It just really incensed me that they started talking about this particular bill, and one of the senators got up and said, ‘We really need to think about the ramifications on certain neighborhoods in Milwaukee and on our college campuses and what this could do for us.” Read it here.
You know Trump’s fading when he starts telling rally supporters not to assault the protestors as they’re being dragged out of the arena.
As you no doubt saw, last night Bernie Sanders launched a pretty blistering attack on Hillary Clinton, calling her unqualified to be president because of various past positions, relationships and votes. The attack was premised on Sanders’ claim that Clinton had said that he was unqualified to serve as president. Only she didn’t say that. The sorry tale tracks back to what was simply a false story in The Washington Post. The Post published a story that put together various Clinton interviews and recent statements and summed it up as ‘Clinton questions whether Sanders is qualified to be President.’ As I said last night, I’m willing to believe, actually assume that Sanders was told the story was true. But the fact is that it wasn’t.
Trump’s new delegate capo Paul Manafort says he reports directly to Trump, not nominal wartime campaign manager Corey Lewandowski.
New Jersey patriot may be fined $2k for flying Trump flag on his lawn.
After a few days that gave Dems plenty of heartburn, there’s more positive news from the Republican side of the aisle. The appointment of Charles Manafort to run the delegate operation for the Trump campaign strikes me as an unqualified plus for the Democrats. Manafort is a storied, decades-long player in high level GOP politics. He’s close to Trump advisor/gadfly/eminence semi-grise Roger Stone and actually Stone’s former business partner. The idea is that Corey Lewandowski is still Trump’s campaign manager and still running strategy. But that seems like a stretch given how central the delegate wrangling process has now become and how total Manafort’s hold on that process appears to be. In any case, it’s not clear to me that Lewandowski has ever been ‘campaign manager’ in any real sense. To the extent anyone is really calling the shots in Trump’s campaign it seems to be Trump. I am not familiar with any major national campaign where the campaign manager traveled with the candidate and acts like a body man. In any case, Manafort is now a big player in the operation and here’s why that’s good news for the Dems.
TPM is hiring a Social Media Editor. Is it you? Check out listing below the fold. And spread the word.
A few of you have written to me recently about this post from last Fall. So I thought I’d reup it here in the blog: my post about building a small sailboat by hand.