SCOTUS Is Helping The Christian Right Undermine The Force Of Anti-Discrimination Law

This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis. It was originally published at The Conversation.

When the Supreme Court ruled in 303 Creative v. Elenis in 2023 that a businessperson could not be compelled to create art that violates their religious beliefs – specifically, a wedding website for a same-sex ceremony – supporters of the decision celebrated it as a victory for freedom of religion and expression.

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Exxon, Apple And Other Corporate Giants Will Have To Disclose All Their Emissions Under California’s New Climate Laws

This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis. It was originally published at The Conversation.

Many of the world’s largest public and private companies will soon be required to track and report almost all of their greenhouse gas emissions if they do business in California – including emissions from their supply chains, business travel, employees’ commutes and the way customers use their products.

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Maybe This Is Really Going to Happen?

You’re starting to have pretty key members of the House saying the Republicans can’t elect a Speaker. Period. Rep. Steve Womack of Arkansas said last night that the effort is “hopeless” and that they’ll need Democrats help to end the “fiasco.”

“There’s not a person in our conference, not a person in American that can get 217 votes out of this group.”

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We Don’t Talk About Leonard: The Man Behind the Right’s Supreme Court Supermajority

This article was originally published at ProPublica, a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom.

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’ decadeslong friendship with real estate tycoon Harlan Crow and Samuel Alito’s luxury travel with billionaire Paul Singer have raised questions about influence and ethics at the nation’s highest court.

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The State of the Speaker Debacleship Going into the Weekend

Just a short update on doings in the GOP House caucus.

Today was the day for Jim Jordan’s one day Speakership. Jordan hasn’t thrown in the towel, as Scalise did. But if I’m reading things right it’s as over for him as it was for Scalise.

Today, with Scalise out, Jordan scrambled to pull together 217 votes. He failed. At mid-day Rep. Austin Scott of Georgia, who I’d literally never heard of before, decided that he might as well run. So in the afternoon the GOP caucus held another vote and it was Jordan 124 to Scott’s 81. (Needless to say, Scott was functioning as a stand-in for opposition to Jordan.) Jordan then asked for another vote where the question was not whether members supported him but whether they would vote him on the floor of the House since he was the GOP nominee. He got 152 votes — 55 votes short. The House eventually decided they’d put in a hard day’s work and recessed until Monday.

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Poll Shows Catastrophic Drop Off in Support for Netanyahu

One issue we’ve discussed since Saturday’s attacks is what effect the Hamas attacks and subsequent Israel-Hamas war would have on public opinion in Israel. Specifically, would there be a rally round the flag boost for the government of Benjamin Netanyahu? As I’ve tried to argue, it was not at all clear this would be the case. There’s been a great deal of anecdotal and reported evidence to the contrary. If you watch Israeli media there’s clearly been a vast upsurge of social solidarity and support for retaliation against Hamas (that civilians in Gaza will pay a heavy price for). But there’s been very, very little evidence of any surge in support for Netanyahu or his government. Indeed, we see signs of a volcanic anger against his government over its responsibility for the events of last weekend. There have been a number of viral videos of members of the coalition heckled in public or shouted down or forced to leave events in response to public anger.

Now we have one of the first polls and it appears to confirm all of that, a vast sea of public anger and catastrophic loss of support for Netanyahu’s government.

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Aileen Cannon Is At It Again

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

Around And Around We Go

After inexplicable delays, U.S District Judge Aileen Cannon finally began Thursday to consider the conflicts of interest that some of the defense attorneys have in the Mar-a-Lago documents case – and then abruptly cut short the second of two hearings, adding further delay in a matter that could have been resolved weeks ago.

The Trump-appointed Cannon admonished prosecutors from the bench, claiming they were raising new arguments at the hearing that they had not previously briefed. That seems like a spurious and inaccurate complaint given how extensively Special Counsel Jack Smith’s team had briefed the issues. It also leaves the misimpression that the conflicts of interest issue is entirely the responsibility of prosecutors to raise and address. In fact, the court has its own obligations and imperatives in this matter.

A quick rundown:

  • Cannon first took up the conflicts of co-defendant Carlos De Oliveira’s attorney John Irving. De Oliveira repeatedly waived any conflict Irving had from previously representing three witnesses in the case. Cannon ruled that Irving could remain in place.
  • In a hint of what was to come, Cannon told prosecutors that their ask for Irving not to be allowed to cross examine those witnesses was not something they’d argued in their filings. In this instance, Irving reportedly said he was fine not conducting those cross examinations at trial.
  • When Cannon took up the conflicts of co-defendant Walt Nauta’s attorney Stan Woodward, things really went off the rails. Woodward previously represented Yuscil Taveras, who has since changed his grand jury testimony and begun cooperating with prosecutors and is a crucial witness in their case.
  • Woodward protested that he couldn’t respond until prosecutors made clear exactly what they wanted the court to do, and Cannon flipped that back on prosecutors. “I do want to admonish the government for frankly wasting the court’s time,” she said, and kicked the can down the road to another hearing still to be scheduled.

Keep in mind that a “win” here for prosecutors doesn’t necessarily have to involve the conflicted attorneys being limited in what they can do. It can simply mean that all of the issues have been fairly and openly addressed by the court in way that precludes any of the defendants from raising these conflicts on appeal. In other words, they want to keep the defendants from having it both ways: disregarding the conflicts of interest now and then later complaining they were victimized by those conflicts.

Tick, tick, tick …

Menendez Hit With Superseding Indictment

Prosecutors tacked on a fourth count against Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ): conspiracy for a public official to act as a foreign agent.

In this case the allegation is that Menendez and two co-defendants conspired to have Menendez act as a foreign agent for Egypt and Egyptian officials in a way that would have required him to register under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.

Scalise Lasts Mere Hours As Speaker Nominee

Rep. Steve Scalise’s stunning withdrawal as candidate for speaker only hours after winning his party’s nomination thrust the House GOP into even greater turmoil and inched the country closer to a constitutional crisis in which one chamber of the legislature is unable to perform its most basic functions for an extended period of time.

  • Josh Marshall: The Deeper Meaning of Scalise’s One Day Speakership (No Really…)
  • Punchbowl: Scalise is out. Can Jordan win?
  • NYT: Scalise Withdraws as Speaker Candidate, Leaving G.O.P. in Chaos
  • WaPo: Steve Scalise drops speaker bid as House devolves into further turmoil

GOP Rep: House GOP Is A Threat To America

Israel Warns Gazans To Evacuate

UN pleads with Israel to rescind the order.

‘Absolutely Gobsmackingly Bananas’

Zeke Hausfather: I’m a Climate Scientist, and September’s Warmth Freaked Me Out a Little

Whoa, You Guys!

I was utterly overwhelmed by your comments and emails in response to yesterday’s Morning Memo about the accident. The community of Morning Memo readers and TPM supporters writ large rose up as one with kindness, support and empathy. I haven’t made it through all of the emails yet, let alone started responding, but let me offer a huge thank you now.

On top of all the thoughtful and caring responses, I was reminded again of the reach that TPM has. Readers who hail from the small port town where the accident occurred reached out to see if I was still there and needed assistance; readers in DC reached out offering to help out; and readers who knew others involved in the accident reached out to commiserate.

More broadly, readers who have suffered trauma in their own lives candidly shared their own experiences and the lessons they’d drawn from them. You struck common themes of resilience, taking it slow, giving yourself time, and not pushing too hard to race back. I’m making my way slowly through your outpouring of support and drawing strength from it.

So many of you insisted that Morning Memo could suffer in the short term if it meant me getting a chance to rest and recuperate that I felt like I had your permission to cut today’s installment a bit short. I appreciate those nudges toward self care.

My kids and I are so grateful for your support. It also helps to give shape and meaning to the work we all do at TPM. You have my eternal gratitude.

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The Deeper Meaning of Scalise’s One Day Speakership (No Really…)

Just moments ago news broke that Steve Scalise had withdrawn his bid to be Speaker of the House. This is a genuinely stunning development, even though I semi-predicted it earlier today. I said it half in jest. But we live in an age when half-jokes often come to pass rapidly.

I had a conversation this evening that allowed me to clarify some of my own thinking about these developments. After Scalise won the caucus Speakership vote you had a slow trickle of members saying “I’m still for Jim Jordan.” Then later you had news reports asking, “Can Steve Scalise get to 217?”

There’s a category, conceptual breakdown here that is kind of hiding in plain view. What do these members mean they’re still for Jim Jordan? He lost. It’s over. Scalise is the Republican Speaker candidate. End of story.

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With Other Authoritarian Schemes Cooking, Wisconsin GOP Backs Off Protasiewicz Impeachment

After receiving less-than-enthusiastic feedback from a former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice on proceeding with impeachment plans against Justice Janet Protasiewicz, it appears GOP state legislators are dropping the gambit for now.

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