Readers Respond on Dignity Wraiths and Democracy #1

From TPM Reader EA

You are totally correct that Trump’s style of dominance politics demands that everyone around him surrender their dignity. But it’s wrong to call him a strongman, because his demand is really a sign of his utter weakness. I have never seen a more psychically fragile, pathetic U.S. President, and doubt if there was ever a weaker one.

Continue reading “Readers Respond on Dignity Wraiths and Democracy #1”

Idaho GOP Becomes Latest To Embrace Fetal Personhood, Threatening Access To IVF

The Idaho Republican Party expanded its anti-reproductive health efforts last week during a party convention, affirming its support for the fetal personhood ideology and proclaiming that they oppose “the destruction of human embryos,” a reference to the common practice in in vitro fertilization treatments of creating more embryos than are needed, and discarding those that are not viable or are not used.

Continue reading “Idaho GOP Becomes Latest To Embrace Fetal Personhood, Threatening Access To IVF”

2020 Conspiracy Theorists Are Being Held Accountable, But Damage They’ve Done Remains

Late last month, right-wing broadcaster Salem Media Group announced that it would stop distributing 2020 election conspiracy film “2,000 Mules,” part of an effort to settle a defamation lawsuit brought by a Georgia man that the supposed documentary wrongly accused of voter fraud. The company posted a statement to its website, apologizing to the man for the way in which the film portrayed him, which — like so many 2020 election conspiracy theories — resulted in an innocent person and their family facing a deluge of violent threats. 

One by one, the conspiracy theorists and election deniers who, four years ago, thrust American democracy into chaos, are being held accountable for their actions, despite leaving a trail of destruction behind. 

Whether or not this serves as a deterrence for future damage ahead of 2024 remains to be seen. In the meantime, their baseless ideas live on. 

“I think that accountability is mostly a personal win for those who seek justice,” said Yotam Ophir, a professor of communication at the University at Buffalo who focuses on misinformation and extremism. “I can’t see how it’s going to change the big picture of the influence misinformation is going to have on the 2024 elections.”

Earlier this year, True the Vote, the group whose claims formed the basis of “2,000 Mules,” separately told a judge it had no evidence to support other false claims it made of ballot stuffing. 

That same month, misinformation purveyor Project Veritas publicly admitted that it had no evidence of voter fraud in Erie, Pennsylvania, after settling a lawsuit from an Erie postmaster who said the claims spread by the group forced him to flee his home and destroyed his reputation.

In April of this year, the right-wing website Gateway Pundit filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the midst of a defamation lawsuit from Georgia election workers Shaye Moss and Ruby Freeman and a separate defamation lawsuit from a former employee at Dominion Voting Systems.

Slowly, but surely, years after injecting chaos into the election system and, in some cases, ruining the lives of innocent election workers, some of 2020s loudest election deniers are being hauled into court — and foundering.

“These are all necessary elements of starting to restore sanity and reality to our perception of our democracy,” David Becker, executive director and founder of the nonpartisan Center for Election Innovation and Research, told TPM. 

But although voting experts agree that accountability for conspiracy theorists, even years later, is crucial, especially ahead of the 2024 election, a significant number of voters still believe the election was illegitimate. 

That is, in part, because the conspiracy theories live on, boosted in many cases by former president and current candidate Donald Trump himself, even after those who crafted them face accountability. At the Conservative Political Action Conference earlier this year, Trump told the audience that the election was “rigged” and that “they cheated like dogs.” And as recently as last month, during an interview with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Trump repeated the lie that he won Wisconsin — a state Joe Biden won by more than 20,000 votes. 

According to polling from The Washington Post and University of Maryland, published in January of this year, close to one third of adults in the U.S. think that Biden was not legitimately elected in 2020. Similarly, CNN polling from last year shows that 71 percent of Republican voters think Biden’s win was illegitimate. 

“Exposing grifters as grifters is always a good thing,” Becker said. But, he noted, there’s always a market for grifters.

“It exists to enrich the few people who run it and at the expense of those who might be sincerely misled by them,” Becker said of one of the conspiracy theorizing organizations, True the Vote. “So they will continue the grift. They will double and triple down on the grift over and over and over again.”

Election Integrity Consultant David Levine similarly noted that these defamation lawsuits are indeed helpful, but they in and of themselves are not enough in terms of accountability. They can demonstrate, he said,  that “bringing weak cases on the merits can have real repercussions,” but he emphasized too that election denial has proved to be a “cash cow,” and that he will not be surprised to see a new wave of election lies in 2024. 

Even though justice is working, albeit slowly, the tremendous damage these election lies have caused has already been done — not just to democracy, but on an individual level. 

Freeman and Moss said in their lawsuit against the Gateway Pundit that the lies the company spread about them both “devastated their personal and professional reputations” and “instigated a deluge of intimidation, harassment, and threats” that caused them to fear for their safety. And the Erie postmaster, Robert Weisenbach, similarly said he received death threats because of the lies spread by Project Veritas. 

“There is I guess some optimism to have here, but at the same time, I mean to a large degree, the damage was already done,” said Ophir. “It’s not clear to me that these sporadic cases will be enough to dissuade others from participating in the next wave of misinformation.”

The 2024 Election Will Be A Referendum On Jan. 6

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

Republicans Are Baldly Turning Jan. 6 Into A Rallying Cry

Let me set the scene here briefly.

On Thursday, Donald Trump was welcomed back to the scene of his greatest crime by elected Republicans in thrall of his power over the party’s base. No one on the Hill was more gushy about Trump that day than Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA). Here she is in an on-camera interview with my former TPM colleague Lauren Fox:

As I noted at the time, it felt like the whitewashing of Jan. 6 was complete. But I may have undersold it. Republicans aren’t just minimizing Jan. 6 as a tourist incident or a legal assault on hapless MAGA adherents ushered into the Capitol by complicit police. They’re baldly using it as a rallying cry now. Yeah, we did it. So what? What are you going to do about it?

Two days after Trump’s scandalous return to the Hill, Greene spoke at a Turning Point Action event in Detroit and doubled down on all things Jan. 6.

“Anyone that wants to continue to shame us for January 6th can go to hell,” Greene told a raucous audience.

Greene’s election opponent this year posted an extended excerpt of her Michigan speech where she was bragging about her role on Jan. 6, based on her belief that Trump had won her home state of Georgia, despite no evidence to that effect:

Note her initial line there: A civil war started on Election Day 2020 when Democrats stole the presidency from Trump. A lot about the last four years can be encapsulated by the notion that one side in American politics is fighting a cold civil war, and the other side is totally bewildered by it. That’s not what war fighters mean when they refer to an asymmetric battlefield, but the asymmetry is stark as hell.

In some ways, none of this is new. Trump himself is out there claiming every week that the 2020 election was stolen, so his followers are only following his cue. But if you thought elected Republicans might memory hole Jan. 6 for the duration of the 2024 campaign, or downplay it, or try to sidestep it, nope.

Consider how powerful it will be in the MAGA mind for Trump to win this time. It would vindicate — to them — their 2020 election theft claims. It would set up years of investigations of those supposedly responsible for the theft. Trump would of course follow through on his promise to pardon J6 defendants. But beyond that it would empower him and Hill Republicans to rewrite the history of Jan. 6 and commemorate it in ways that boggle the mind. Think: memorial plaque where Ashli Babbitt was shot.

If Trump wins in November, we may very well be living in a world where Jan. 6 is a national holiday. Let that sink in.

Real Accountability For Jan. 6 Is Slipping Sway

Katherine Miller: The System Isn’t Built for Jan. 6, and Neither Are We

Steve Bannon Not Eligible For Club Fed

Steven Bannon’s pending criminal trial in the “We Build The Wall” fraud case renders him ineligible for cushiest level of federal prison, the minimum security “Club Fed,” CNN reports. So he’ll be reporting instead to a low-security prison in Danbury, Connecticut, to serve his four-month sentence for contempt of Congress. He is due to report by July 1.

Just Saying …

Morning Memo is not claiming any credit for a headline change at the NYT yesterday, but within a couple of hours of MM’s critique of its headline about a new Biden campaign ad hanging Trump’s criminal conviction around his neck, the headline was changed.

Before and after:

Trending …

One of those occasions where the coincidence of similar stories with the same basic thrust landing on the same day helps to reinforce the point:

  • WSJ: Antiabortion Lawsuits Leaned on Discredited, Disputed Research
  • NYT: Case after case challenging gun restrictions cites the same Georgetown professor. His seemingly independent work has undisclosed ties to pro-gun interests.

Power Play By Conservative Federal Judges In Texas

In a move that will make venue-shopping easier in the conservative Northern District of Texas, judges there approved a new rule that will automatically “stay for 21 days any decisions to transfer civil cases to courts outside of the jurisdiction of the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,” Reuters reports.

For The Record

In a new ruling — that starts with “There are two sexes: male and female” — a federal judge blocked the Biden administrations new Title IX rules intended to protect transgender students from going into effect in Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, Virginia and West Virginia. A Louisiana federal judge last week similarly blocked the new rules in Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana and Idaho.

Quote Of The Day

But let’s be crystal clear: if Democrats take the coward’s way out and sign our names to a half-baked deal that lets the wealthy off the hook, it will be a huge failure — and one the American people cannot afford.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), on how to handle the 2025 expiration of the Trump tax cuts

Double Norcrossed

I don’t know South Jersey politics very well, and so I’ve always wondered whether George Norcross was the real deal or a character that journalists needed because we love throwing around descriptions like powerbroker, political boss, kingmaker, and machine pol. But his indictment yesterday by the state attorney general on racketeering charges (which also ensnared his brother, his lawyer, a former Camden mayor, a trucking company executive and a real estate developer) paints a picture of Norcross that was everything news accounts have conveyed over the years and more. The cherry on top was Norcross personally showing up at the attorney general’s press conference announcing the indictment and plopping down on the front row:

Bob Menendez Corruption Trial Is Grinding Along

WaPo: Five memorable moments in the corruption trial of Bob Menendez

2024 Ephemera

  • VA-05: Rep. Bob Good (R-VA) is trying to survive a primary challenge today from a Trump-backed MAGA candidate, all the result of Good (who himself is crazy conservative) initially backed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) over Donald Trump in the GOP presidential primary.
  • Philip Bump: Trumpworld keeps overstating Trump’s support among Black voters

High On Their Own Supply

I wrote a little bit yesterday about the inanity of presidential debates — and to be fair I only focused on mainstream news coverage. Meanwhile, over in wackadoodle land:

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If You Already Hated Presidential Debates, Wait Til Next Week!

Ed. Note: Nicole Lafond will be back to helming Where Things Stand soon.

Next week, the 2024 presidential campaign will hit one of its predictable low points. The two major party nominees will meet in a nationally televised debate — and everything we know from watching these two men in public life for the last 40-50 years and our lived experience of their presidencies for the past nearly eight years will be thrown out window.

Continue reading “If You Already Hated Presidential Debates, Wait Til Next Week!”

Ouch

We talk a lot, rightly, about how Democrats are often instinctively cautious about going on the political attack. I just got a mass-email press release from the Biden campaign that is part of their “felon” push and the jousting in the lead up to the debate. I don’t have anything particular to add beside, jeez, this is intense stuff, by which I mean not “intense” in the slangish mean of “good” but intense. Like totally going off. One needs to do this with a full spectrum approach, in press conferences, ads, surrogates etc. But if this press release is any measure, they’re not holding back.

Text after the jump … (links are the ones that came embedded in the email).

Continue reading “Ouch”

Dignity Wraiths, Resilience and Democratic Character

I’ve been reading through your emails about your favorite Editors’ Blog posts, and among the maybe dozen that are most often mentioned, there are three themes I wanted to highlight, because they each relate to a central dimension of our politics today.

The first is the post on “bitch-slap politics” which I wrote in 2004; I later began referring to the concept I described in it as “dominance politics”.

The second is the post I wrote the day after the 2016 presidential election about optimism as an ethic, a posture toward life rather than a set of predictions about the future. It was actually a post with a series of bullet-pointed observations. But that one bullet point — about optimism — resonated with people. A lot of you wrote in about it. And in recent years it’s probably the thing I hear about from people most.

I’ll return to those two topics in a moment.

The third theme is not really any individual post but a stream of posts and tweets over several years about “dignity loss” and “dignity wraiths” and like things, a whole bespoke vocabulary or a running gag about this pattern we’re all aware of in which Trump demands of people an ever escalating series of humiliations, dignity losses and more. Trump requires it — that part alone isn’t hard to understand. It’s that people give it … lavishly and fulsomely. Soon you’ve got some guy you may not have agreed with but seemed like a reasonably self-possessed adult, and they’re saying “thank you, sir, may I have another” each time Trump comes up with a new insult name for them, praising his far-reaching intellect and encyclopedic knowledge of history, clapping obediently on his approach. Trump somehow casts a spell over these people and soon they’re like a desiccated dignity husk. It’s like he’s a dignity black hole that no one can re-emerge from.

Continue reading “Dignity Wraiths, Resilience and Democratic Character”

North Carolina Supreme Court Secretly Squashed Discipline of Two GOP Judges Who Admitted to Violating Judicial Code

This article first appeared at ProPublica. ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one in your inbox.

Last fall, out of public view, the North Carolina Supreme Court squashed disciplinary action against two Republican judges who had admitted that they had violated the state’s judicial code of conduct, according to three sources with direct knowledge of the decisions.

One of the judges had ordered, without legal justification, that a witness be jailed. The other had escalated a courtroom argument with a defendant, which led to a police officer shooting the defendant to death. The Judicial Standards Commission, the arm of the state Supreme Court that investigates judicial misconduct by judges, had recommended that the court publicly reprimand both women. The majority-Republican court gave no public explanation for rejecting the recommendations — indeed, state law mandates that such decisions remain confidential.

The sources spoke to ProPublica on the condition of anonymity because many of the actions and decisions of both institutions are confidential and because the sources said they feared retaliation.

When it comes to disciplining judges, North Carolina is one of the most secretive states in America, according to data from the National Center for State Courts’ Center for Judicial Ethics. Over half of states make disciplinary proceedings against judges public once charges are filed with their judicial ethics commission. Another dozen make them public if they reach the state’s supreme court. North Carolina is one of only three states, in addition to the District of Columbia, to release information only at the last possible stage of the process — after the Supreme Court orders discipline.

Stephen Gillers, a professor emeritus at New York University’s law school who specializes in legal and judicial ethics, said that making some parts of disciplinary cases against judges confidential can be necessary to protect private or personal information. But North Carolina goes too far, he added. “While secrecy has a place in judicial discipline, it can be used to conceal wrongdoing,” Gillers said. “Once there is a finding of wrongdoing by a disciplinary commission, the case should become public.”

The North Carolina Supreme Court’s decisions not to publicly discipline the two judges, which have not previously been reported, appear to be the only instances in more than a decade in which the Supreme Court did not follow the commission’s recommendation to issue punishment. Those decisions come at a time of accusations and recriminations about politics influencing North Carolina’s high court. Last year, Justice Anita Earls, a Democrat, sued the commission after it launched an investigation into comments she made suggesting that Republican justices were influenced by conservative ideology, remarks that she defended as free speech. And a Republican justice personally attacked Earls in a Supreme Court order in September. In addition, the year before, outside groups sought recusals of more than half of the court’s justices over various conflict-of-interest accusations.

Spokespeople for the North Carolina Supreme Court and the Judicial Standards Commission declined to comment or respond to a detailed list of questions.

Asher Hildebrand, a professor of public policy at Duke University, explained that in the 2010s, North Carolina had policies designed to keep the judiciary above the political fray, such as nonpartisan judicial elections. However, the gradual dismantling of these policies by the Republican-controlled legislature has driven the court’s polarization, according to Hildebrand.

“While we might long for the days when courts were perceived as being above politics, courts are very much a partisan battleground,” he said.

Bob Orr, a former Republican justice, said partisan disputes over the judicial standards process have intensified in recent years.

“The judicial standards process needs a major overhaul in that I don’t think it was set up to deal with the current political atmosphere that judges have been embroiled in,” said Orr, who back in the early 2000s was investigated and received a private warning from the then-Democratic-controlled commission over comments that it deemed to be an impermissible political endorsement. He left the Republican Party in 2021 after being a vocal critic of former President Donald Trump.

Orr added, “It’s important for all the decision-makers in the judicial standards process — the commission, its staff and the Supreme Court — to act in a nonpartisan way to increase trust in the judicial system.”

Since 2011, North Carolina’s Judicial Standards Commission has referred 19 cases to the Supreme Court for judicial discipline, according to the court’s annual reports. In that time, the court has issued 17 public disciplinary orders, ranging from reprimands to suspensions without pay.

Had the Supreme Court followed the commission’s recommendations in the cases of the two Republican judges, it would have meant publicly reprimanding them ahead of elections for both in 2024. Judge Lori Hamilton, a longtime Republican, had campaigned with the slogan, “the ideal conservative.” Judge Caroline Burnette had previously been a Democrat — but she switched her registration before her case got to the Supreme Court, according to public records.

In September 2021, Burnette was conducting a trial when she got into a shouting match with the defendant, Christopher Vaughan, who was facing charges of false imprisonment. Court recordings later published by WRAL News captured a three-minute argument, which escalated after Burnette told Vaughan to “shut up.” When Burnette ordered the bailiff to “take him,” Vaughan rushed Burnette. The bailiff blocked him, the two grappled, and the bailiff shouted that Vaughan had his gun. A police officer who was in the courtroom to testify shot Vaughan in the head, killing him, an incident that was widely reported.

The commission’s work is confidential, but sources say that it soon began investigating Burnette, who had potentially violated multiple parts of the judicial code, including the requirements that a “judge should maintain order and decorum in proceedings” and a “judge should be patient, dignified and courteous.” Burnette declined to comment. A spokesperson for the state court system said Burnette would not respond to ProPublica’s detailed list of questions.

Not long after, in November 2021, Hamilton was overseeing the trial of a man charged with sex crimes against minors. According to court transcripts, Hamilton accused the victims’ mother of bringing them to court late and previously being uncooperative with the state’s lawyers. “I’m going to take you into protective custody to ensure your appearance here at trial,” Hamilton told the mother, ordering that she be handcuffed, detained throughout the trial and denied an attorney. Hamilton also said that the victims should be turned over to Child Protective Services. Court staff were so unsure of how to execute their orders that the bailiff explained to Hamilton that they “don’t know how to book” the mother.

The mother of the victims, whose name is being withheld to protect the identities of her children, said she spent her four days of incarceration worrying about her daughters, crying and asking court staff, “How can you hold me if I’m not charged with nothing?”

The commission soon launched an investigation into Hamilton, sources say. She had potentially violated multiple canons, including that “a judge should uphold the integrity and independence of the judiciary” and that a “judge should be faithful to the law and maintain professional competence in it.” In response to a detailed list of questions from ProPublica, Hamilton answered only one, which asked if she thought that her political affiliation had anything to do with the conservative majority of the Supreme Court going against the commission’s recommendation. “No, I do not,” she replied.

During the commission’s investigations and hearings process, both Hamilton and Burnette stipulated that they had violated the judicial code, according to sources. Those sources said that the commission sent the cases to the Supreme Court to determine final discipline and that the commission recommended that the court give them public reprimands. When the commission determines there to be minor violations, it issues a letter of caution or a verbal warning, which remains private. The vast majority of disciplinary action falls into these categories. But all judicial discipline serious enough to be issued by the Supreme Court becomes public, according to the rules of the commission.

Months after the Supreme Court decided in the fall of 2023 to let Hamilton and Burnette off without public consequences, it issued its most recent disciplinary order. In March 2024, the court concurred with the commission’s recommendation for punishment of Angela Foster, a Black Democratic judge who had pressured a court official to reduce a bond for her son and had taken over a courtroom reserved for other court officials, thereby delaying over 100 cases. The Supreme Court suspended her without pay for 120 days.

At the same time as the court was considering how to handle the two white Republican judges, the commission was weighing another fraught matter.

In March 2023, Earls, the Supreme Court’s lone Black justice and a Democrat, received a letter from the commission informing her that she was under investigation. The letter stated that Earls had been accused of disclosing “confidential information concerning matters being currently deliberated in conference by the Supreme Court.” If the commission found evidence of a serious violation, it could send the case to the Supreme Court, which would make a final determination and could go as far as to expel her.

At the center of the anonymous complaint was the allegation that Earls had told lawmakers and state bar members at two different meetings about proposed rule changes that would give more power to the Republican justices. The complaint, which was made after WRAL News published an article describing the meetings, also alleged that she’d provided confidential information to a reporter.

In her response to the letter, which later was filed in court, her lawyer argued that it had been standard practice for justices to discuss the court’s rule changes with affected parties and that no information had been leaked. Earls’ lawyer also wrote that if the matter proceeded to a hearing, Earls planned to make the investigation public and subpoena “current and former Justices” about their “actions.” In May, the commission dismissed the complaint, providing Earls with verbal and written warnings “to be mindful of your public comments,” according to court documents.

In June, Earls, the only person of color on the court, gave an interview to Law360 in which she criticized Chief Justice Paul Newby and other conservative justices for refusing to address the lack of diversity in the state’s court system. She revealed that Newby had effectively killed its Commission on Fairness and Equity by not reappointing its members and that he had ended implicit bias trainings for judges, which Earls had helped set up. Much of the interview was framed around a Law360 analysis and an outside study that found that the vast majority of state appellate court judges, and the attorneys arguing before them, were white and male. In reference to the findings, Earls said that “our court system, like any other court system, is made up of human beings and I believe the research that shows that we all have implicit biases.” She said that her five Republican colleagues “very much see themselves as a conservative bloc” and that “their allegiance is to their ideology, not to the institution.”

In August, Earls received another letter from the commission alerting her that it had “reopened” the former investigation. The letter warned: “Publicly alleging that another judge makes decisions based on a motivation not allowed under” the code, such as racial or political biases, without “definitive proof runs contrary to a judge’s duty to promote public confidence in the impartiality of the judiciary.”

Rather than letting the investigation proceed in secret again, Earls sued the commission in federal court, seeking an injunction to stop “an on-going campaign” by the commission to “stifle the First Amendment free-speech rights of Justice Earls and expose her to punishment.”

Two weeks after the lawsuit was filed, Democratic state lawmakers held a press conference to call the investigation into Earls “a political hit job” — and one state representative accused Newby of pushing it, though he said he could not reveal his sources. Four sources knowledgeable about Newby’s or the commission’s actions told ProPublica that the chief justice encouraged the investigation. The sources requested anonymity because the inner workings of the commission are confidential and because they feared retaliation.

Newby and Earls declined to comment through a North Carolina Supreme Court spokesperson. Neither responded to questions submitted to the North Carolina Judicial Branch.

The lawsuit led to public outcry, which was fiercely critical of the investigation and which was partially fueled by the fact that Newby had himself made remarkably similar statements alleging that his Democratic colleagues were biased. In the summer of 2019, when Newby was a justice campaigning to become chief justice, he made a speech, first reported by WRAL News, in which he called Earls an “AOC” — referencing progressive U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. He also accused Earls of wanting “to cause social change through our judicial branch,” suggested that she was part of a Democratic strategy to “sue till you’re blue” and warned, “See what kind of judicial activism occurs on your North Carolina court.”

After the speech, the commission, which at the time was under a Democratic court, fielded complaints about Newby. The existence of those complaints has not been previously reported. According to multiple sources, the commission issued Newby a confidential verbal warning, emphasizing he should not so overtly criticize his fellow justices again.

At the time, experts told news outlets that Newby’s statements about Earls were probably protected by the fact that he was campaigning, as the code allows justices greater leeway when seeking reelection. However, in 2023, Earls was also technically in campaign mode and subject to the same protections as Newby. According to Earls’ lawsuit, she had declared her candidacy for her next election many years in advance, as had become standard practice among justices.

Two sources with direct knowledge of the investigations into both Newby and Earls said that Earls faced more scrutiny in terms of both the length and depth of the investigative process. One of those sources, however, said that “there was no bias” in the treatment of Earls. The source chalked up the difference between the two investigations to the fact that in the intervening years, the commission had intensified efforts to rein in the justices as they became more openly contentious about their differing political views.

In January 2024, as Earls’ lawsuit barreled toward a trial, the commission abruptly dropped its investigation. It did not recommend the Supreme Court take any disciplinary action against her.

Biden Takes Aim At Felon Trump And Out-of-Control Supreme Court

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.

Call Him What He Is

A new Biden campaign ad titled “Character Matters” focuses on Donald Trump’s felony conviction (and his losses in his civil fraud and E. Jean Carroll cases):

What Are We Doing Here?

The NYT write-up of the new Biden ad takes on the kind of weird distancing that political reporting sometimes offers up as objectivity.

The headline — “Biden Campaign Ad Paints Trump as a Felon” — suggests maybe it’s an open question whether Trump is a felon. Sure, the Biden campaign is painting him that way, but who is to say, really?

The story’s lede continues with that weird posture:

President Biden’s campaign on Monday began its most aggressive effort to brand former President Donald J. Trump a felon, with the introduction of a new television advertisement that focuses on the presumptive Republican presidential nominee’s criminal conviction.

It mentions the criminal conviction explicitly, but what is up with the ascribing the branding of Trump as a felon to the Biden campaign? Why does that have to be hedged as a Biden campaign effort rather than an established fact?

It’s damned if you do, damned if you don’t situation. Fail to highlight Trump’s criminal conviction and you’re rightly treated like a damn fool. But highlight it, and suddenly it becomes a he said-he said contest.

Late update: The NYT changed its headline since Morning Memo was published. It now reads: “Biden Campaign Ad Calls Attention to Trump’s Felon Status”

Gloves Off

President Biden used a big fundraising event in LA to place the Supreme Court at the center of the campaign. Among Biden’s comments:

  • Trump getting to appoint a predicted two more justices is “one of the scariest parts” of Trump II presidency.
  • “He’s going to appoint two more [justices] flying flags upside down.”
  • “This has never been a court that’s so far out of step.” 

About The Decline Of Local News

The laments about the hollowing out of local news across the country over the past two decades are totally well-founded but are often focused on the shuttering, consolidating, and weakening of existing news outlets — but that’s just one side of the problem. The other important related issue is simply how bad — by design — the outlets that are left often are.

Take this story out this morning from Judd Legum on the propaganda campaign being run by Sinclair Broadcast Group, which is notorious for piping disinformation and right-wing partisan talking points through its network of “185 television stations in 86 markets affiliated with all the major broadcast networks.”

This month, Sinclair Broadcast Group has flooded a vast network of local news websites with misleading articles suggesting that President Biden is mentally unfit for office. The articles are based on specious social media posts by the Republican National Committee (RNC), which are then repackaged to resemble news reports. The thinly disguised political attacks are then syndicated to dozens of local news websites owned by Sinclair, where they are given the imprimatur of mainstream media brands, including NBC, ABC, and CBS. 

Sounds bad, right? It’s quite a bit worse than that. As Judd points out, the kinds of material Sinclair has been pumping through it local stations are the most rancid of the attacks on Biden’s age and mental fitness. I’m talking about things like Biden “pooping” on stage during the D-Day commemoration, supposedly “freezing” during other public appearances (according to deceptively edited videos), and his slurring or stuttering of words.

This flood of disinformation is nonstop, it’s still often under the radar, and it’s saturating millions of American homes.

The Resistance Girds For Trump II

NYT: “A sprawling network of Democratic officials, progressive activists, watchdog groups and ex-Republicans has been taking extraordinary steps to prepare for a potential second Trump presidency, drawn together by the fear that Mr. Trump’s return to power would pose a grave threat not just to their agenda but to American democracy itself.”

Ground Rules Set For First Presidential Debate

The candidates and CNN have finalized the ground rules for the June 27 presidential:

  • The microphone of each candidate will be muted until it’s his turn to speak;
  • No props or pre-written notes will be allowed, just a pen, pad, and bottle of water.
  • No studio audience;
  • 90 minutes long with two commercial breaks, during which the candidates may not interact with their staffs.

2024 Ephemera

We’re Going To be Spending A Lot Of Time On This

The expiration of the Trump tax cuts at the end of 2025 would normally be a campaign-defining issue, but it has taken a back seat to that piddling little concern about whether democracy will survive a Trump II.

Still, it’s happening regardless of who wins the White House and will be a major issue throughout 2025.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), probably keenly aware that tax debates often get framed in one-sided and unhelpful ways, is taking an early stab at setting the terms of the debate with a speech today in Washington.

Things Going Great At The WaPo!

New WaPo publisher Will Lewis and his incoming executive editor Robert Winnett faced two more major news stories over the weekend about the baggage they bring to the jobs from their long careers working in the British press — including an exposé of Winnett’s past work by the very same WaPo newsroom he will lead after the November election:

  • NYT: Washington Post Publisher and Incoming Editor Are Said to Have Used Stolen Records in Britain
  • WaPo: Incoming Post editor tied to self-described ‘thief’ who claimed role in his reporting

Pot Pardons

Maryland Gov. Wes Moore (D) is issuing a blanket pardon for low-level marijuana possession that will impact about 100,000 people in the state.

What To Even Say … 🤦‍♂️

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Site Update

A quick update on our weekend site upgrade (see posts below). We’ve got the new system up and running. Thank you so much for your indulgence over the weekend. We really appreciate it. We’re still working to get the comments widget on the story pages back up and running. That should be up soon. Otherwise, on the reader end, everything should be back to the way it was and, under the hood, much better than it was.

Thanks again for your patience.