Judge Strikes Down Parts Of Florida’s Anti-Voting Law

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

A (Fleeting?) Win For Voting Rights

Several major components of Florida’s Republican-driven restrictive voting law were gutted by a federal district judge in Tallahassee on Thursday. In a blistering opinion that pulled no punches, the judge ruled that the law intentionally targeted Black voters to hurt voter turnout for Democrats.

  • The judge threw out several portions of the law, including its limit on drop boxes for mail-in ballots, ban on giving food and water to people waiting in line to vote and new requirements for third party voter registration groups.
  • In his most dramatic move in the ruling, the judge also prohibited Florida from making changes in voting laws involving those components for the next 10 years without approval from the court.
  • Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) accused the judge of “performative partisanship.” DeSantis had signed the legislation into law during a Fox News appearance.
  • The ruling’s likelihood of surviving appeal appears slim, however. The conservative-leaning Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit and U.S. Supreme Court will likely overturn the district judge’s decision, as the New York Times points out.
  • More from the Election Law Blog.

In Newly Unearthed Video, Ginni Thomas Talks About Her Cult Phase

Newly revealed video appears to show Ginni Thomas talking about her post-cult experience not long after she left Lifespring in the ’80s. Lifespring was accused of being an abusive cult, and Thomas left to pursue anti-cult activism.

Author Steven Hassan, an expert on cults, posted a video apparently showing Thomas discussing Lifespring:

New York Dems’ District Map Thrown Out By Judge

A New York judge struck down the new congressional district map draw by the state’s Democrat-controlled legislature, ruling that the map had been gerrymandered to favor Democrats.

  • The judge ordered the legislature to go back to the drawing board and create “bipartisanly supported maps.”
  • He gave lawmakers a deadline of April 11, which could delay the Empire State’s primary on June 28 if his ruling survives appeal.

Ukraine Allegedly Strikes Back At Russia Amid Kremlin’s Brutal Invasion

  • The Guardian: “Ukraine accused of helicopter attack on oil depot inside Russia”
  • Al-Jazeera: “Russia alleges Ukrainian helicopters struck Belgorod fuel depot”
  • The New York Times: “Ukrainian helicopters strike an oil depot in Russia, an official there says.”

Wisconsin AG Candidate Tried To Decertify 2020 Election And Wants To Sue Docs Who Don’t Offer Horse Meds To Treat COVID

Meet Karen Mueller, a Republican attorney who thought it was possible to get the 2020 election results decertified (it’s not) and is now running for attorney general in her state on the platform of suing doctors who don’t prescribe ivermectin, an anti-parasitic generally given to horses, as treatment for COVID-19. This is in spite of the fact that the Federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has warned people not to take ivermectin to treat COVID, and a new study found that the drug doesn’t treat the virus.

Fox Hires Caitlyn Jenner As Contributor

Failed GOP California gubernatorial hopeful and former Olympic champion Caitlyn Jenner is now a paid contributor at Fox News because according to Fox News Media CEO Suzanne Scott, Jenner, who is a transgender woman, is a “trailblazer in the LGBTQ+ community.”

  • It’s definitely not because Jenner’s used her platform to validate conservatives’ war on transgender female athletes who want to participate in women’s sports.
  • They’re definitely not bringing her on to give Republicans anti-LGBTQ+ legislation like Florida’s “Don’t Say Gay” law a veneer of approval from a trans per-oh look, Jenner did exactly that during her first appearance on Sean Hannity’s show last night:

Several Fetuses Found In Anti-Abortion Activist’s House

The feds raided an anti-abortion activist’s home in D.C. on Thursday, where they found five fetuses, WUSA9 reports. Five.

  • The raid came after the activist, who calls herself a “Catholic anarchist,” had been indicted for felony conspiracy involving an incident in which she and eight other activists allegedly stormed an abortion clinic and blockaded it in October 2020.
  • The fetuses were apparently kept in coolers inside the house. The activist had refused to tell WUSA9, which was at the scene during the raid, what was in the coolers when the feds carried them out of her house, saying only that “people would freak out when they heard.”

Sen. Cassidy Eyeing Gubernatorial Bid

Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA) told Politico that he’s considering running for the governorship in his state, which is currently being held by conservative Democrat Bel Edwards, in 2023, and will make a final decision by the end of this year. 

  • The question is, how much support would Cassidy get from his fellow Louisiana Republicans? The senator was one of the seven Republicans who convicted Trump in his second Senate impeachment trial, and he was quickly censured by the Louisiana GOP as a result.

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Correction: This article has been corrected to note that Louisiana Gov. Bel Edwards is term-limited and cannot run again in 2023.

WH Finds Trump’s Call For Kremlin Dirt On Biden Family ‘Absolutely Disgusting’

White House chief of staff Ron Klain on Thursday took aim at former President Trump’s vocal praise of Russian President Vladimir Putin amid Russia’s unprovoked and deadly invasion of Ukraine, following the former president’s demand for Putin to help him dig up dirt on Hunter Biden.

Continue reading “WH Finds Trump’s Call For Kremlin Dirt On Biden Family ‘Absolutely Disgusting’”

Reality Can Be Boring

I find myself agreeing with a lot of what TPM Reader PT says here about “Ukraine on the Verge of Defeat” …

As I mentioned, I’ve seen a fair number of different variations on the theme of “Vladimir V. Putin, SUPER-GENIUS” over the last few days; I’m sure you have as well. A thing they all seem to have in common is a presumption that Putin’s real goal in all of this was to acquire more territory in Ukraine’s east, or get a more firm grip on territory there that they already hold. I get the sense that they’re all taking a not-really-applicable analogy — making an opening bid in a negotiation that’s much bigger than what you actually expect to achieve — and applying it in a comically-inappropriate manner (specifically: ignoring the distinction that when you open with an overlarge ask it doesn’t actually cost anything to anyone, while Putin’s war in Ukraine has in fact cost Russia vastly more than if they’d just pursued additional conquest of territory in eastern Ukraine). 

Continue reading “Reality Can Be Boring”

Readers Reply on Abortion #2

From TPM Reader SS

I want to follow-up on reader JJ’s thoughts. I’m aware of people like the “older Catholic guy” he describes. I’ve met some. But anytime we decide to label entire people groups with a stereotype that might be true for a subset, we are in danger. Any analysis that lacks nuance and complexity is often misguided.

I grew up in right-leaning evangelical subculture in the 1980’s in a highly conservative part of the country. My parents stood out in our circles as the token liberals. But they really were just people who left this area for a period and had lived both overseas and in California, and knew the world and the issues of the world were more complex.

Continue reading “Readers Reply on Abortion #2”

Readers Reply on Abortion #1

From TPM Reader AE

This may horrify you, but I am a pro-life leftie who has been a TPM-prime member for quite a while.  (I don’t remember exactly how long – I am sure that you have records.)  I thought your post “Traditionalism and Aggression” was horribly unfair.

I recognize of course that TPM is 100% pro-choice, and I still support you.

Continue reading “Readers Reply on Abortion #1”

Where Things Stand: Another Far-Right Rep Is Bringing Another Fake Grievance Issue To DC

The domino effect is playing out much quicker than I expected.

I wrote just yesterday about far-right Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) bringing an on-its-face small potatoes issue to Congress, introducing a resolution — co-sponsored by 20 other Republicans — that would recognize the second place finisher of an NCAA women’s swimming tournament as the first place winner. Both of the impressive athletes are women. The first place winner is a trans women. Hence the discriminatory and socially backwards uproar.

On the same day, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) reportedly announced her plans to write a federal version of Florida’s homophobic “Don’t Say Gay” bill.

Continue reading “Where Things Stand: Another Far-Right Rep Is Bringing Another Fake Grievance Issue To DC”

Is The Justice Department Finally Going After The Insurrection’s Big Fish?

The news that the Justice Department’s Jan. 6 investigation is reaching beyond the Capitol rioters has added fuel to a long-running debate about the pace of the investigation. 

One side has criticized the Justice Department for not investigating Donald Trump and his inner circle for subverting the 2020 election. The lack of any public signs of a broader, more aggressive investigation for over a year, they say, shows a troubling lack of urgency. 

On the other hand, a vocal group of institutionalists has urged some perspective: Complex federal investigations take years, not months, and prosecutors are probably slowly working their way up from the rioters to bigger fish, following the facts where they lead. The relative lack of leaks from Attorney General Merrick Garland’s Justice Department, they contend, may actually be a sign of a serious, vigorous prosecutorial effort.

Team Where’s DOJ? 

To Laurence Tribe, an emeritus professor at Harvard Law School, the recent reports of Trump-adjacent investigations brought welcome news — if slightly belated. 

“It’s obviously better late than never,” he said, acknowledging that the grand jury activity reported by The Washington Post and New York Times may have started sooner than the reports let on.

“Memories can fade, people can adjust their testimony in light of interim discoveries,” Tribe said. “It would be ideal if this had not waited as long as it apparently has.” 

Another critic is Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), a member of the House Jan. 6 select committee. Reacting Wednesday night to The Washington Post’s reporting — that a grand jury has subpoenaed “officials in former president Donald Trump’s orbit” who helped with the rally that day — Schiff downplayed the development. 

“It’s a little late, but I’m glad they’re doing it,” Schiff said. “But they also need to look at these multiple lines of effort to overturn the election, and they need to look at anyone who was involved. No one gets a pass. Not a former president, and not someone who’s never held office before.” 

Former FBI agent Peter Strzok, himself the target of years of attacks from Trump and his supporters, said he didn’t doubt that the DOJ can handle the investigation. But time — particularly the approaching 2022 midterms — is a crucial factor, he said.

Strzok imagined a Republican-controlled Congress with committees led by figures like Reps. Jim Jordan (R-OH) and Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), “whose entire existence is devoted to gumming up any DOJ and FBI investigation.”

“I don’t think anybody can predict what they might do,” he said. “What if they start bringing in people, and immunizing 40, 50, 60 people to have them testify? There are any number of creative, malicious ways that Congress traditionally would never do.”

Team Trust The Process

The reports of high-level activity in the Jan. 6 investigation might have been big news, but to some observers they were just confirmation of what they assume has been going on all along. 

“I think that from Day 1 — from Jan. 7 — DOJ has been investigating anyone at any level,” said Barbara McQuade, the former U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan.

While developments like subpoenas aimed at high-level officials might find their way to newspaper reports, she said, Justice Department investigators can take lots of action — including securing search warrants for phone records and emails, and reviewing witnesses’ testimony to the Jan. 6 committee — without the public knowing. 

“It’s probably been going on all along,” she said. “I think they’ve probably just done so covertly.” 

Randall Eliason, a former assistant U.S. attorney in the District of Columbia, has pleaded publicly for “armchair quarterbacks” to stop questioning the pace at which Garland’s Justice Department is handling the investigation. 

In an email Thursday, he stressed that in a case like the Jan. 6 investigation, “you want to take the time to do it right.” 

“Garland has said all along that they will start at the bottom, build any cases that are there, and work their way up. That appears to be exactly what they are doing. But that process is not quick,” Eliason said. 

Plenty Of Decisions Left To Make

There’s plenty of middle ground in the debate: News reports, for example, are just peeks into what is largely a closed-door decision-making process among Justice Department officials. And just because they’ve taken investigative steps doesn’t mean indictments will follow. 

“It still could be the case, as some critics have said, that they’re actually not going to do anything,” said Harry Sandick, a former assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York. 

He compared the current investigation to that of former Special Counsel Robert Mueller: “I think to some extent people are concerned that the institutional conservatism of the attorney general may parallel that of Mueller, and that they are not really fully digging in.”

Still, there are signs that the Justice Department is “getting really serious,” McQuade said — including a recent budget request for $34 million to hire more than 130 new lawyers to help with the investigation. 

She also pointed to progress in the criminal cases that have been charged: Joshua James, for example, this month became the first Jan. 6 defendant to reach a plea deal for a seditious conspiracy charge. Now, he’s required to cooperate with investigators. James, a member of the Oath Keepers, was seen shepherding Trump confidante Roger Stone around D.C. in a golf cart the day before the attack. 

In other words, McQuade said: “Let’s hear about what Joshua James has to say about Roger Stone, before we charge Roger Stone.” 

Wisconsin GOP Assembly Leader Held In Contempt For Withholding Sham Audit Records

A Wisconsin county judge held Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos (R) in contempt of court on Wednesday for refusing to release records of the sham audit of the 2020 election results that he had contracted.

Continue reading “Wisconsin GOP Assembly Leader Held In Contempt For Withholding Sham Audit Records”

Pelosi Ups Pressure On Thomas Recusal: ‘I Don’t Think He Should’ve Ever Been Appointed’

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) on Thursday took congressional Democrats’ demands for Justice Clarence Thomas’ recusal from Jan. 6-related cases up a notch, following revelations of his wife’s pro-coup texts.

Continue reading “Pelosi Ups Pressure On Thomas Recusal: ‘I Don’t Think He Should’ve Ever Been Appointed’”