No Labels, Georgia Edition

It’s certainly not an unprecedented move, but it’s notable. Greg Bluestein of The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that Georgia Governor Brian Kemp is skipping this year’s Georgia GOP party convention. He’s set up a funding committee structure that will essentially operate as his own party apparatus, separate from the state GOP. They don’t want him and he doesn’t need them.

Continue reading “No Labels, Georgia Edition”

Ron’s Fatal Flaw?

I wanted to share TPM Reader JL’s note because it reveals a key blindspot. I think it’s mine. But I’m actually not sure whether it’s mine or JL’s. In any case, the point is that Ron DeSantis’s campaign makes a lot more sense if you assume Donald Trump either wasn’t going to run in 2024 or was going to mount what amounts to a placeholder campaign to help as part of his legal strategy.

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Biden To Announce Re-Election Bid Same Day Trump Rape Trial Begins

A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo.

Don’t Lose Your Sense Of The Absurd

President Biden is expected to make the formal announcement of his re-election campaign tomorrow, the same day that the civil trial of Donald Trump on charges he raped E. Jean Carroll in the 1990s is set to begin.

It is as remarkable a tableau in American politics as you’ll see.

The former president, once defeated by the current president and still widely expected to be the GOP nominee against him in 2024, facing a rape and defamation civil trial in federal court in New York while also under criminal indictment in New York state court.

The challenge in our politics since circa 2015 has been to try to preserve some internal sense of what “normal” is. Without a baseline against which to measure the deviations from the norm, it’s easy to get lost. Frankly, even with a baseline it’s been easy to get lost.

During this era, I’ve reverted to two different baselines, neither perfect, but each useful in its own way: (i) what might we have expected in politics 10 or 20 years ago; and (ii) how will historians view today 100 years from now.

By either measure, the week ahead presents an astonishing departure from anything resembling normal.

2024 Ephemera

  • Biden expected to tap Julie Chavez Rodriguez as his 2024 campaign manager
  • A bipartisan group of political operatives has formed Mission Democracy PAC to target far-right Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), Matt Gaetz (R-FL), and Lauren Boebert (R-CO) among others.
  • Mike Pence is set to testify in Special Counsel Jack Smith’s Jan. 6 probe but he won’t say when.

Bragg and Jordan Settle Subpoena Dispute

Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg and House Judiciary Chair Jim Jordan have reached a settlement in their dispute over Jordan’s subpoena of former prosecutor Mark Pomerantz. Under the reported terms of the agreement, Pomerantz’s testimony to the committee will be allowed, a win for Jordan, but an attorney from Bragg’s office will be allowed to be present.

The settlement came after Bragg lost badly in the district court in his attempt to block the House subpoena. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals had put the lower court decision on hold and agreed to consider the case, but Bragg and Jordan told the appeals court late Friday that they had reached an accommodation.

Pomerantz’s deposition is now scheduled for May 12.

Remember though: This is all part of Jordan’s broad effort to undermine, delegitimize and interfere with Bragg’s prosecution of Trump in the Stormy Daniels hush money case. That effort will continue.

Boris Epshteyn Grilled For Second Day

Trump adviser Boris Epshteyn spent a second day Friday being interview by Special Counsel Jack Smith’s team, ABC News reported:

  • “The second day of questioning was planned in advance.”
  • “Sources say that Smith personally sat in on a portion of Epshteyn’s interview Thursday, but did not participate in any of the questioning.”
  • “The interview was largely focused on the efforts by former President Donald Trump and his allies to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss.”

This Could Get Interesting

CNN: “In mid-January 2021, two men hired by former President Donald Trump’s legal team discussed over text message what to do with data obtained from a breached voting machine in a rural county in Georgia, including whether to use it as part of an attempt to decertify the state’s pending Senate runoff results.”

Alito Dissent Was Classic Alito

The conservative Supreme Court showed there are some limits to how far it will go in imposing its favored policy positions, putting on hold late Friday the outrageous abortion pill rulings out of Texas. While a majority of the court hewed to the rule of law, Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas dissented, with Alito authoring his own dissent. It was classic Alito: bitter, intemperate, small-minded.

Correction: This item originally left the impression that Thomas joined Alito’s written dissent. He did not.

John Roberts Easily Blows Off Dick Durbin

Chief Justice John Roberts responded to Senate Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin’s request to investigate Clarence Thomas’ financial disclosure lapses by referring the request to the Judicial Conference, the policy-making body of the federal courts.

Asked Sunday why he hasn’t subpoenaed Clarence Thomas to come before his committee, Durbin said Thomas would have just ignored him. Oh …

More Kacsmaryk Disclosure Issues

U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk, the Amarillo abortion pill judge, “redacted key information on his legally mandated financial disclosures, in what legal experts described as an unusual move that conceals the bulk of his personal fortune,” CNN reports.

The “Administrative Office of the United States Courts approved the redaction after reviewing the relevant rules and applicable threats,” Kacsmaryk said in a statement to CNN.

This revelation is on top of his previous failure to disclose to the Senate Judiciary Committee during his confirmation process two provocative Christian talk radio interviews he did and his authorship of a controversial law review article.

The Week Ahead

Speaker Kevin McCarthy is trying to bring his debt-ceiling hostage-taking bill to a floor vote as early as Wednesday. Not clear whether he has the votes in his own conference, but the consensus of the reporting from the Hill is that his prospects look better than they did last week.

You Gotta Be Kidding

Everything that’s wrong with the debt-ceiling coverage … in one headline: “Biden is running out of time to avoid calamitous debt ceiling outcomes”

Credit Where Due

Good headline from WaPo: “Trump touts authoritarian vision for second term”

Must Read

Colin Woodard takes the premise of landmark book – American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America – and combines it with a decade’s worth of CDC data on homicides and suicides and is able to definitively say: “Gun Violence Is Actually Worse in Red States. It’s Not Even Close.”

It’s Not Just Trump

The on-the-ground manifestations of the country’s slide toward authoritarianism are at least as alarming as what’s happened to the Republican Party under Trump:

Shasta County, California: “A California journalist documents the far-right takeover of her town: ‘We’re a test case’”

Ottawa County, Michigan: “In a thriving Michigan county, a community goes to war with itself”

Good Read

WaPo: The Florida sheriff vs. the neo-Nazi ‘scumbags’

Jury Selection Begins In Tree Of Life Massacre Trial

The federal hate crime trial of Robert Bowers for the 2018 Tree of Life synagogue massacre begins today in Pittsburgh. The feds are seeking the death penalty in the case.

Rough Weekend For Elon

The surviving folks behind New Coke must be rejoicing these days that the Swiftest Brand Damage in History Award has been swiped by Elon Musk with his Twitter play.

If you missed it, the blue checkmark fiasco played out over the weekend in hilarious and unexpected ways. If only Elon Musk’s dignity was a stock you could short …

Great Scoop

The conservative campaign to rewrite child labor laws is being backed by the Foundation for Government Accountability, a Florida-based think tank and lobbying group which drafted state legislation to strip child workplace protections, WaPo reports.

Coolness

The powerful geomagnetic storm overnight enabled folks as far south as Missouri and Virginia to see the aurora:

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Pence (Briefly) Previews His Upcoming Testimony In DOJ Jan. 6 Probe

Former Vice President Mike Pence said he’ll “tell the truth” and “obey the law” when he testifies in special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into former President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election. 

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Senate Committee Probes Top Universities, Museums Over Failures To Repatriate Human Remains

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

More than a dozen senators are pressing for the museums and universities that hold the most Native American remains to explain why they’ve failed for decades to return thousands of them to tribes as required by federal law.

Continue reading “Senate Committee Probes Top Universities, Museums Over Failures To Repatriate Human Remains”

Amid Expulsion Vote In House, Tennessee Sen Quietly Names April ‘Confederate History Month’

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

The ghost of the Confederacy hangs heavily over the Tennessee Legislature.

Justin Jones, one of two Black members expelled from the state’s House of Representatives in April 2023, had run afoul of House leadership before. In 2019, as a private citizen, he was arrested following his actions in protesting a bust in the state capitol honoring Nathan Bedford Forrest, a Confederate general and later Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.

While the expulsion of Jones and his colleague, Justin J. Pearson, riveted the nation’s attention, a curious and related event in the Legislature’s other branch, the Tennessee Senate, passed nearly unnoticed.

On Feb. 3, 2023, two state senators issued a formal proclamation commemorating April 2023 as and encouraging “all Tennesseans to increase their knowledge of this momentous era in the history of this State.”

Continue reading “Amid Expulsion Vote In House, Tennessee Sen Quietly Names April ‘Confederate History Month’”

Thomas Replaced Thurgood Marshall’s Vision With One More Amenable To The Powerful Than The Powerless

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

As public attention focuses on Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas’ close personal and financial relationship with a politically active conservative billionaire, the scrutiny is overlooking a key role Thomas has played for nearly three decades on the nation’s highest court.

Continue reading “Thomas Replaced Thurgood Marshall’s Vision With One More Amenable To The Powerful Than The Powerless”

When GOP Attorneys General Embraced Jan 6, Corporate Funders Fled. Now They’re Back.

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

An atmosphere of conviviality greeted Republican attorneys general arriving in New Orleans for their recent winter conference. It was Mardi Gras, and tourists traipsed through the lobby of the historic Roosevelt Hotel wearing colorful beaded necklaces and clutching cocktails.

Continue reading “When GOP Attorneys General Embraced Jan 6, Corporate Funders Fled. Now They’re Back.”

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Supreme Court Freezes Lower Court Rulings While Mifepristone Case Plays Out

The Supreme Court ruled Friday to pause lower court rulings that would have imposed restrictions on mifepristone, keeping the drug accessible while the case proceeds.

Continue reading “Supreme Court Freezes Lower Court Rulings While Mifepristone Case Plays Out”