Feinstein Announces She Will Not Run For Reelection in 2024

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) announced on Tuesday she will not run for reelection in 2024, but will complete her existing term.

“I am announcing today I will not run for reelection in 2024 but intend to accomplish as much for California as I can through the end of next year when my term ends,” Feinstein wrote in a Twitter post. “Even with a divided Congress, we can still pass bills that will improve lives.”

Her announcement is not all that surprising. The 89-year-old trailblazing senator has faced some questions around her cognitive health recently, raising speculation about a possible upcoming retirement. 

In anticipation, announcements of Senate bids for her seat have been pouring in from California Democrats in the past couple of weeks.

Early last month, Rep. Katie Porter (D-CA) launched a Senate campaign for Feinstein’s seat. Her announcement was surprising as it came before any official announcement from the longtime senator.

Just a day later, Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA) told lawmakers she is running for Senate in a closed-door Congressional Black Caucus meeting. She hasn’t made an official announcement for her bid but one is expected soon. 

Similarly, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) has indicated he will consider a bid “over the next few months.”

And in late January, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) announced he will also be running for Senate in 2024. Within a matter of days, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said she would support Schiff in his bid if Feinstein decided to retire next year. 

It was an important endorsement for Schiff in what is expected to be a crowded and fiercely contested Senate race.

Feinstein was first elected to the US Senate in 1992. During her 30 plus years in the chamber, she fought for gun control, civil rights, and abortion access — including passing the 1994 federal assault weapons ban and chairing the committee that produced the 2014 CIA torture report.

Feinstein’s announcement emphasized she will stay committed to passing crucial legislation during her final year in office.

“I also remain focused on passing commonsense legislation to fight the epidemic of gun violence, preserving our pristine lands and promoting economic growth – especially to position California for what I believe will be the century of the Pacific,” Feinstein wrote. “And I will use my seniority on the Appropriations Committee to ensure California gets its fair share of funding.”

Current Beneficiaries Aren’t Safe Either

I’m not sure I’d advise the political strategy TPM Reader JA suggests here. But he does get at a point I alluded to this morning. Current beneficiaries aren’t safe in GOP plans either. On paper, this is what they claim. No cuts for anyone over, say, 55. But Social Security is an inter-generational compact. Once you tell younger workers they will get lower benefits for the same tax contribution, you weaken support for current beneficiaries. If you’re 30 today, how do you feel about working the next 35 years at the current tax rate to support current beneficiaries when your own benefits will be cut dramatically?

One of the interesting things that never gets discussed in debates about Social Security (and Medicare) and cutting benefits for people below a certain age threshold is how maintaining higher benefits is likely not sustainable for the older beneficiaries either, unless the cuts are limited to raising the age thresholds. 

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RonJohn Backs Scott In His Feud With McConnell Over Social Security Cuts

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL) have been sparring publicly over whether Republicans support cuts to Social Security and Medicare – and now Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) and other hardline conservatives are getting involved in the fight.

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Three-Quarters of House GOPs Endorsed Social Security Cuts Last Year

With Republicans telling us, collectively, “Who are you going to believe? Us or your lyin’ eyes?” the work of de-bamboozling is never done. Don’t thank me now. Just remember to sign up to become a member.

As we noted earlier, Republicans are now aghast that anyone would be claiming they want to cut Social Security. But last year the Republican Study Committee — a House caucus which includes about 75% of all House Republicans — released a proposed 2023 budget which included basically every kind of Social Security cut on offer.

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Mike Pence Will Fight Jack Smith Subpoena–But Not On Executive Privilege Grounds

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

Expect A Long Legal Battle

Former Vice President Mike Pence is expected to announce publicly as soon as Wednesday during a pre-campaign stop in Iowa that he will fight a grand jury subpoena arising from Special Counsel Jack Smith’s Jan. 6 investigation, Politico reports.

But rather than contesting the subpoena on executive privilege grounds, Pence is expected to seek refuge in the Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause, arguing that he was acting in his capacity as president of the Senate, a legislative branch role, according to the Politico report out this morning. The Speech or Debate Clause protects members of Congress from undue intrusion by the executive branch.

  • Legal experts tell Politico there’s an arguable basis for Pence’s Speech or Debate Clause defense but that it remains an unsettled area of law, meaning a court fight could drag on for some time.
  • The Justice Department itself has previously argued that the vice president in his role as Senate president is covered by the Speech or Debate Clause, but the exact scope and contours of the legislative immunity it offers remain unclear and largely untested.
  • Pence’s lawyer is Emmet Flood, who represented then-Vice President Dick Cheney in the Valerie Plame affair. Cheney was of course renowned for exploiting the unique dual-hat role of the vice presidency as an executive and legislative branch official to secure and maximize his power.

Fending off Smith’s subpoena carries obvious political advantages for Pence, who is expected to seek the GOP nomination for president in 2024. It allows Pence to avoid testifying against Donald Trump and sidesteps getting entangled with Trump in raising executive privilege arguments.

Aside from the legal and political vagaries, the move to fight a grand jury subpoena would be another example of the extreme lengths Pence has gone to try to finesse his complicated relationship with Trump and his own personal political ambitions. The not-so-delicate dance has yielded a wandering and inconsistent response to Trump’s efforts to subvert the 2020 election: While Pence was hailed as a hero for not acquiescing to Trump’s demands to throw out the Electoral College count on Jan. 6, there remain suspicions that Pence played along well after Election Day with the efforts to overturn the result. Similarly, while Pence wrote a memoir that did confront Trump and offered some details about their fight over Jan. 6, Pence refused to testify to the Jan. 6 select committee.

Pence’s willingness to write about Jan. 6 in his book also may have had the effect of waiving some of his potential executive privilege defenses to the Smith subpoena: You can’t publicly speak about confidential executive branch deliberations on the one hand, and then refuse to divulge them to a grand jury on the other. It’s not clear that such a waiver would apply in the context of the Speech or Debate Clause, or whether Pence individually can waive a privilege of the legislative branch.

To be clear, I’ve barely skimmed the surface of the constitutional issues potentially at play here. The key takeaway is that Pence has found a viable legal defense that serves his political purposes and that could take Jack Smith quite some time to litigate, while the clock continues to tick toward the 2024 election.

Fani Willis Won’t Appeal Order To Partially Release Grand Jury Report

The Atlanta district attorney mostly won her battle to keep a report from her special grand jury from being released publicly before she has secured indictments, so she will not be appealing the judge’s order Monday to partially release the report. The state judge overseeing the grand jury’s work ordered the introduction, conclusion and a section dealing with suspected perjury by grand jury witnesses to be released this Thursday. But the remaining parts of the report will not be released for now, mainly on due process grounds.

Michigan State Shooting Leaves 3 Dead, 5 Critically Wounded

A 43-year-old man with no known ties to Michigan State University allegedly killed three people and wounded five others on campus before taking his own life Monday night in an all-too-familiar scene.

Biden Cans Comically Corrupt Architect Of The Capitol

Even Republicans couldn’t countenance the ridiculous levels of alleged corruption coming from Trump appointee J. Brett Blanton.

GOP Whines Over Biden Social Security Attacks

It’s a sure sign Biden has hit a soft spot and his attacks are working.

Let’s say it again though for those in the back: Republicans have been targeting Social Security since its inception! As Paul Krugman puts it:

But, of course, many Republicans do want to eviscerate these programs. To believe otherwise requires both willful naïveté and amnesia about 40 years of political history.

2024 Ephemera

Nikki Haley this morning became the first Republican to officially enter the 2024 presidential race against Donald Trump.

Nothing Surprises About George Santos

NYT: George Santos and the Case of the Missing $365,000

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Sure hope you didn’t forget.

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Where Things Stand: DeSantis Is Using His GOP State Legislature To Fix Problems He’s Creating

Alternate headline: Florida State GOPers Are Legislating DeSantis’ 2024 Bid Into Existence

As I was editing my colleague Kaila Philo’s piece here today on the College Board’s biting response to the DeSantis administration’s “PR stunt,” this bit struck me:

“They provided these AP courses for a long time, but you know, there are probably some other vendors who may be able to do that job as good or even a lot better,” the governor said at a news conference in Naples, Florida. He also said that he’s spoken with Florida House Speaker Paul Renner about potential legislation to “re-evaluate how Florida’s doing that.”

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State GOP Bill That’ll Make It Easier To Prosecute Voters Lands On DeSantis’s Desk

A GOP-led bill expanding statewide prosecutors’ jurisdiction in Florida just made it to Gov. Ron DeSantis’s desk. The proposal aims to make it easier to prosecute those arrested by DeSantis’s sham election crimes police force, and critics worry it could dissuade some residents from voting.

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