Just one Senate term into the political career of a once-promising young politician, a series of self-inflicted, often baffling, missteps left her with no choice but to announce her impending departure.
Continue reading “Kyrsten Sinema Drove Herself Out Of Politics “Biden Polling: A Guide for the Perplexed (and the Freaked Out)
Over the weekend, Democrats or Dem-adjacent persons watching polling of the 2024 presidential election got knocked over the head with a metaphorical anvil: a batch of polls collectively showing Joe Biden 2 to 4 points behind Donald Trump. I’ve gotten a lot of questions about these polls and polling generally, ranging from the technical, to the what does it mean, to please talk me off the ledge. So I wanted to try to address them here.
First: Are these polls accurate? In an age when no one answers their cell phones let alone landlines, how do we know whether these polls are representative. Who has a landline? etc.
This is a complicated question. Without getting into deep technical details, yes, the pollsters definitely get that landlines are old news and most people don’t even answer unknown numbers on their cell phones. The same applies to text requests for political surveys. Response rates — or, rather, non-response rates — are awful. But pollsters know all of that and they’ve come up with pretty smart ways to deal with it. Without getting too far into the weeds, it comes down to increasingly sophisticated ways of modeling the electorate, using those models to weight the results, and in so doing backing out a representative sample from the data.
Continue reading “Biden Polling: A Guide for the Perplexed (and the Freaked Out)”Feds Slap 12 New Counts On Bob ‘Gold Bars’ Menendez
For the third time in six months, federal prosecutors have brought charges against Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), tacking on to his indictment 12 counts including new allegations of obstruction of justice and failure to register as a foreign agent.
Continue reading “Feds Slap 12 New Counts On Bob ‘Gold Bars’ Menendez”The Ghost of Super Tuesday Past
On March 3, 2020, a fluid and dynamic Democratic primary was calcified.
Continue reading “The Ghost of Super Tuesday Past “The 5 Most Pressing Threats To The 2024 Election
The last presidential election flipped democracy on its head after conspiracy theories and Trump’s desperation to stay in power helped fuel a violent insurrection, an attempted legal coup and the spread of election disinformation at a national and local level. Heading into 2024, experts who spoke to TPM warn those same threats, and more sinister outgrowths of them, will plague this year’s presidential election too.
Continue reading “The 5 Most Pressing Threats To The 2024 Election”In The Winter Of Our Trump Discontent, Things Look Bleak
A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo. Sign up for the email version.
Have We Hit Rock Bottom Yet?
The Supreme Court is enabling and abetting Donald Trump. The prospect of Trump facing legal accountability for his criminal culpability is shrinking by the day. A slew of national polls show Trump consistently leading Biden ahead of the November election. Trump world is “literally popping champagne.”
We may look back on this late winter-that-wasn’t stretch as the low ebb in the fight for democracy … if we’re lucky.
The grimness of the moment was brought home by the normally upbeat Dahlia Lithwick and Rick Hasen in a piece titled “It’s Past Time to Quit Hoping the Courts Are Going to Stop Trump:
We need to stop deluding ourselves that a majority of the Supreme Court sees the same political emergency that many of us do in terms of the threat Trump poses to American democracy. Whether it understood or even accounted for the consequences of the decision to delay the criminal case against him and to expedite its decision to keep him on the ballot, the high court ensured this past week that Trump is extremely unlikely to have a jury decide if he engaged in election subversion before voters cast their ballots for the next U.S. president this fall.
Stopping Trump is a necessary but insufficient condition to saving democracy. We need the civic fabric to be tightly knit, with all of the elements of a healthy democracy woven together to endure and persist. Independent courts defending and sustaining the rule of law are only one part of that pattern, but an extremely important part.
It’s not going well.
See Ya, Disqualification Clause
Yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling that keeps Trump on the ballot in Colorado was expected. All that remained to be seen was how they did it. And they did it in a way that renders the Disqualification Clause a dead letter. Unlike some observers, I didn’t think this was an easy call, with an obvious outcome that the conservative supermajority simply ignored. The ruling makes good points. This is a complicated issue.
But the concurrence by the three liberal justices rightly notes that the majority decision creates an absurd result: Under the Disqualification Clause, it takes a two-thirds vote of Congress to remove the disability, but under the ruling a majority of Congress can wipe away the constitutional provision entirely. It’s actually worse than that. Any one chamber can nullify the Disqualification Clause. In the Senate, it can be nullified by the filibuster. In fact, it can be nullified by mere inaction. No enabling legislation? No Disqualification Clause.
It is, in the words of the concurrence, a “special rule” carved out “to insulate this Court and petitioner from future controversy.”
The Coverage
- WaPo: Supreme Court ruling darkens critics’ hopes for a judicial curb on Trump
- Politico: The glaring omissions and telling fractures in the Trump ballot ruling
- Lawfare: Section 3 Disqualification Answers—And Many More Questions
The Reaction
- Joyce Vance: “The phrase ‘oathbreaking insurrectionist’ appears four times in the concurrence. It seems to be a synonym for Donald Trump.”
- Heather Cox Richardson: “There is, perhaps, a larger story behind the majority’s musings on future congressional actions. Its decision to go beyond what was required to decide a specific question and suggest the boundaries of future legislation pushed it from judicial review into the realm of lawmaking.”
- Former Judge Michael Luttig: “[T]he five-Justice majority effectively decided not only that the former president will never be subject to disqualification, but that no person who ever engages in an insurrection against the Constitution of the United States in the future will be disqualified under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Disqualification Clause — as the concurrence of Justices Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson witheringly explain.”
American Autocracy Threat Tracker
Sign of the times much? The folks at Just Security have a new tool for tracking the promises, plans, and proposals of a Trump II presidency.
Chesebro Is A Piece Of Work
Trump 2020 lawyers Ken Chesebro and Jim Troupis reached a settlement in the civil lawsuit over their fake electors scheme in Wisconsin. As part of the settlement, they were required to release their communications from the time of the scheme – many of which TPM had previously revealed last month in our series on the The Chesebro Docs. The new release contained some new gems from when Chesebro was in the vicinity of the Capitol on Jan. 6 to bear witness to his handiwork.
Trump Opposes Gag Order In Hush Money Case
Ahead of the March 25 trial in the hush money case in New York, Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg is seeking a gag order on Trump, which Trump is now opposing.
The Perjury Weisselberg Copped To
A look at the perjury case against former Trump CFO Allen Weisselberg, who pleaded guilty yesterday but is still refusing to cooperate against his former boss.
What The Supreme Court Hath Wrought
In the years since the Supreme Court gutted the pre-clearance provisions of the Voting Rights Act in the landmark 2013 Shelby case, the gap in turnout between white and nonwhite voters has grown the fastest in those areas previously covered by Section 5, according to a new report from the Brennan Center.
It Never Stops
TPM’s Kate Riga on the right-wing stealth attack on Obamacare that played out in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday.
Where IVF Is Under Threat
At least 13 states have pending personhood legislation that would deem embryos as people under the law.
Super Tuesday Alert
A good reminder on what the next wave of GOP members of Congress might look like: crazy on top of crazy.
WANTED: Majid Dastjani Farahani
Semafor: “The U.S. government is intensifying a manhunt for an Iranian intelligence operative who the Federal Bureau of Investigation believes has been plotting to assassinate current and former American officials, including one-time Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.”
How Was YOUR Monday?
Still piecing together the details, but in first 24 hours of #Iditarod24: a musher punched an aggressive moose in the face, the next musher had to shoot it (which means stopping to field dress it, according to official rules); then third musher's team ran into the carcass https://t.co/b6fhvAfQo4
— MJ (@MeganJBradley) March 4, 2024
Fact check: Pretty much true.
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Dems Leap To Respond To SCOTUS Decision On DQ—Even If It Won’t Go Anywhere In This House
The Supreme Court decided on Monday that the question of Donald Trump’s disqualification from the ballot under the 14th Amendment — blocking those who “engaged in insurrection” from holding federal office — falls on Congress to answer.
Continue reading “Dems Leap To Respond To SCOTUS Decision On DQ—Even If It Won’t Go Anywhere In This House”‘History is Made’: Top Trump Lawyers Texted Gleefully Throughout Attempt To Reverse 2020 Loss
Minutes before a violent mob smashed through barricades set up around the Capitol on Jan. 6, Trump attorney Ken Chesebro held out hope that his plan to halt certification was beginning to work. Members of Congress had objected to electors from Arizona, the first of seven swing states in which Chesebro organized slates of fake electors.
Continue reading “‘History is Made’: Top Trump Lawyers Texted Gleefully Throughout Attempt To Reverse 2020 Loss”Right-Wing Lawyer Feigns Skepticism At Extreme Relief He’s Seeking In Affordable Care Act Attack
Star right-wing lawyer Jonathan Mitchell — of Texas bounty-hunter abortion law fame — argued Monday that the recent tendency of conservative justices to stymy government action for the whole country has gone too far.
This would be more believable a) if Mitchell and ideologically aligned attorneys didn’t consistently seek out this result and b) if Mitchell wasn’t seeking it out in this very case.
Continue reading “Right-Wing Lawyer Feigns Skepticism At Extreme Relief He’s Seeking In Affordable Care Act Attack”Texas v. Garland: Another Attack On Women And Democracy From A Radical Judiciary
This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis.
The tune is getting frustratingly familiar — yet another hyper-extreme federal judge in Texas handed down a dangerous and dramatic decision restricting reproductive rights with national implications. Only this time, instead of putting limits on a safe and long-used medication or lifesaving emergency health care, the target is the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA), a new bipartisan federal law that protects the health and safety of pregnant people in the workplace.
Continue reading “Texas v. Garland: Another Attack On Women And Democracy From A Radical Judiciary”