Waiting for the Ref

From TPM Reader JB

It seems like it is another time to discuss how the democrats get the coverage they ask for. Axios can leave out the republican damaging portion because democrats answer questions and republicans use the opportunity to frame news as bad for dems. Democrats are still waiting for that moderator in the sky to say that they are right and then feel ok. Life doesn’t work that way on the playground or battlefield or boardroom or bar. If you stand for something, you don’t wait for other people to validate you, you don’t look back for approval, you say out loud and proud that you are right. Let’s practice, “Anyone not voting to reduce insulin prices is killing patients and impoverishing their families. You can’t go to heaven if you are knowingly killing people.”

Continue reading “Waiting for the Ref”

Fox Distances Itself From Trump’s Twitter Knockoff Despite Verified Account

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

Hey Man, We’re Not A Part Of This

Fox News wants to make it clear that it has nothing to do with Trump’s TRUTH Social app, even though there’s a verified Fox News account on the app.

  • That might break TRUTH Social CEO and former dairy farmer Devin Nunes’ heart, who had posted a screenshot of the verified Fox account and wrote “Great to have RSS feed for @FoxNews now LIVE here on TRUTH!”

See, I’d like to post screenshots of the account that allegedly doesn’t belong to Fox and of Nunes’ victory lap, but I can’t do that because I have to stand in line behind (allegedly) more than 1.5 million people before I can enjoy the full TRUTH Social experience for myself–even though Nunes told Americans desperately seeking the TRUTH that the app would be “fully operational” by the end of March.

Alas:

(Screenshot: TRUTH Social)

RNC Officially Ditches Presidential Debate Organization

The RNC has decided to take its ball and go home after failing to bully the Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) into meeting the GOP’s demands on the structure of future debates: The RNC voted unanimously to withdraw from the CPD on Thursday, the RNC’s final salvo against the organization that Republicans (Trump, specifically) accuse of being unfairly biased against them.

  • RNC chair Ronna McDaniel vowed after the vote that her group would find “newer, better debate platforms” to “ensure that future nominees are not forced to go through the biased CPD in order to make their case to the American people.”
  • The RNC also passed a resolution requiring GOP presidential candidates to pledge in writing that they won’t participate in any debates that haven’t been “sanctioned” by the party. Anyone who refuses to make the pledge or participates in a non-sanctioned debate will be banned from future sanctioned debates, according to the resolution.
  • The RNC will figure out its criteria for sanctioned debates based on, among other things, “input from presidential campaigns,” in the Wall Street Journal’s words (“approval from Daddy Trump” in my words).

Elon Musk Admits His Doubts About Being Able To Buy Twitter

Tesla CEO Elon Musk, speaking publicly for the first time on his $43 billion offer to buy Twitter on Thursday, said during a TED event that he was “not sure” if he’ll “actually be able to acquire” the social media giant.

  • The billionaire claimed to have a Plan B if Twitter turns down his bid. He didn’t explain what that plan was.
  • Twitter employees really don’t want Musk at the helm, according to the Washington Post.

Trump-Endorsed Candidate Accused Of Groping By Eight Women

Eight women, including a GOP Nebraska state senator, alleged on Thursday that Charles Herbster, a Republican gubernatorial candidate in Nebraska who’s been backed by Trump, groped them between 2017 and this year.

  • State Sen. Julie Slama alleged that Herbster reached up her skirt and touched her during a Republican event in 2019.
  • Six of the women (not including Slama) said that Herbster groped their buttocks during political events or beauty pageants. A seventh woman told the Nebraska Examiner that the gubernatorial candidate had forcibly kissed her after privately cornering her.
  • Herbster denied the accusations on Thursday, with his campaign claiming that the accounts were a “political hit-piece built on 100% false and baseless claims.”

Russia Admits Flagship Has Sunk

Russia partially confirmed on Thursday Ukraine’s report that Russia’s largest ship in the Black Sea has sunk. However, Russia claimed that it went under due to “stormy conditions” and the ship “losing stability due to hull damage from a detonation of ammunition stores during a fire,” not because Ukraine had shot missiles at it.

DeSantis Dives Into GOP Abortion War

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a 15-week abortion ban on Thursday that doesn’t make exceptions for rape or incest, only if the pregnancy is a “serious risk” to the pregnant person.

  • DeSantis’ signing ceremony, complete with child props, came several hours after Kentucky’s GOP-controlled legislature overrode Gov. Andy Beshear’s (D) veto on its abortion ban, which (unlike other red states’ bans) is effective immediately.

Stephen Miller Testifies In Front Of Jan. 6 Committee

The House Jan. 6 Committee questioned former White House senior adviser and white nationalist propaganda aficionado Stephen Miller for eight hours on Thursday. The session got heated several times, according to the New York Times.

FDA Authorizes First COVID Breath Test

On Thursday, the Food and Drug Administration granted emergency use authorization to the first COVID-19 test that detects the virus through breath samples. The equipment, which is called “the InspectIR COVID-19 Breathalyzer,” can provide results in less than three minutes, according to the FDA.

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Judge Rips Trump In Jan. 6 Trial: ‘Democracy Is In Trouble’ Because Of ‘Charlatans’ Like Trump

A federal judge reportedly rebuked former President Trump’s election fraud falsehoods while delivering the verdict in the trial of a Jan. 6 insurrectionist who claimed he was following “presidential orders” when storming the Capitol and endangering lawmakers’ lives.

Continue reading “Judge Rips Trump In Jan. 6 Trial: ‘Democracy Is In Trouble’ Because Of ‘Charlatans’ Like Trump”

Where Things Stand: DeSantis Joins Mad Dash To Make Abortion Illegal Before Doing So Is Even Legal

As he has with most trendy right-wing political stunts, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) refused to be left out of the abortion-banning race.

Continue reading “Where Things Stand: DeSantis Joins Mad Dash To Make Abortion Illegal Before Doing So Is Even Legal”

Ohio Supreme Court Strikes Down GOP Legislative Maps For A *Fourth* Time. Will It Matter?

By now, you may know the story: The Ohio Supreme Court, with three Democrats and its Republican chief justice making up a majority, has rejected a proposed state legislative map drawn by the GOP-dominated redistricting commission. 

Continue reading “Ohio Supreme Court Strikes Down GOP Legislative Maps For A *Fourth* Time. Will It Matter?”

Trump Set To Endorse JD Vance After Ohio GOPer Spent Months Repenting For Anti-Trump Past

Former President Trump is reportedly set to endorse Ohio Senate candidate J.D. Vance, the once anti-Trump “Hillbilly Elegy” author who has almost cartoonishly tripped over himself to gain the former president’s approval in the past year, according to NBC News.

Continue reading “Trump Set To Endorse JD Vance After Ohio GOPer Spent Months Repenting For Anti-Trump Past”

Has Ron DeSantis Been Chatting With Clarence Thomas About Redistricting?

Wednesday’s news of Gov. Ron DeSantis’ proposed congressional maps — which are heavily slanted in Republicans’ favor and likely to be approved by the GOP-controlled legislature — raised an interesting question. 

Have the governor and Justice Clarence Thomas been in touch? And if so, what about? 

After all, emails revealed in February — from Thomas’ wife Ginni Thomas to DeSantis’ scheduling office in June last year — seem to indicate as much. 

“[M]y husband has been in contact with him too on various things of late,” Ginni Thomas wrote then, requesting the governor’s presence at an event she was organizing. 

Then, last month, NBC News quoted an unnamed Republican source who added a data point: “The source said DeSantis is in regular email contact with U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, a leading opponent of racial set-asides, which the conservative-leaning court has scaled back in recent years,” journalist Marc Caputo reported. 

DeSantis’ office hasn’t replied to TPM’s request for comment, but the governor seems eager for a legal fight over his districts.

“You look at what’s happened in the U.S. Supreme Court over the last four or five years,” DeSantis said Tuesday, hinting at the court’s conservative turn with the addition of three Trump-appointed justices, and how it’s decided voting rights and gerrymandering cases in recent years. A series of recent Supreme Court rulings have taken aim at the Voting Rights Act and scaled back the tools advocates for voting rights have at their disposal when challenging gerrymanders and restrictive voting laws.

It all raises the question: Are Justice Thomas and DeSantis actually in touch, as Ginni Thomas claimed? And if so, did they discuss Florida’s impending gerrymandering fight? 

At the time Ginni Thomas mentioned DeSantis and Justice Thomas’ contact about “various things of late,” on June 10, 2021, the impending redistricting fight was certainly in the air: In April of that year, U.S. Census figures showed that Florida’s population had grown enough to earn a 28th congressional district.

The following month, on May 6, DeSantis signed a now-infamous voter suppression package, SB 90, during a Fox News appearance. (A federal judge recently struck down parts of that law in a lengthy ruling that focused on Florida’s history of racist voter suppression. The state has said it will appeal to the ruling.) 

Also in May, articles in Politico and Axios flagged the arrival of a new Florida-focused, conservative redistricting group, “Democracy Now,” led by the former Trump administration official (and, before that, Florida legislator) Carlos Trujillo. 

Noting that the Florida Supreme Court had “turned over” in the previous decade — DeSantis has appointed three judges — Trujillo told Axios, “our hope is the maps that are presented — as long as they’re in compliance with the state constitution and the federal Voting Rights Act — should be ratified by a nonactivist Florida Supreme Court.”

DeSantis Clearly Wants A Legal Fight

Obviously, none of this confirms what Thomas and DeSantis discussed, if, in fact, they’ve spoken at all. Still, Florida’s governor has been eager for a legal fight over his proposed congressional maps, which would likely give Florida Republicans 20 congressional districts to Democrats’ eight, a dramatic shift from the 16-11 status quo. 

“I think our dispute very well may lead to saying that Florida’s redistricting amendments are not consistent with the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause,” DeSantis said in March. (The redistricting amendments in question, approved overwhelmingly by Florida voters in 2010, were intended to prohibit overly partisan gerrymandering.) 

“It is designed to potentially lead to a legal challenge of Florida’s redistricting amendments,” DeSantis said of his then-proposed map, Florida Politics reported. (Their coverage has been great in general.) 

He added: “I think if you look at how those amendments are crafted, some of the case law that came in the middle of the last decade — which is what … the Legislature followed and I understand why they did that — it’s our view that if you honestly take that text history and stricture seriously, that that’s much broader than what would be countenanced under the 14th Amendment.”

Later, while vetoing a map from the legislature, DeSantis flagged his desire for the fight to go to the federal courts: “[In] their I-guess-understandable zeal to try and comply with what they believe the Florida Constitution requires, they forgot to make sure what they were doing complied with the 14th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution,” he said. 

Amid the scuffle between legislature Republicans and the governor, Florida House Speaker Chris Sprowls referred to DeSantis’ idea as a “novel legal theory.” Now, the legislature is apparently being led by DeSantis into a court battle that will test that theory.