McCarthy Again Threatens To Strip Dems Of Committee Seats If He Becomes Speaker

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) in an interview with right-wing outlet Breitbart News doubled down on his threat to remove Democrats from their committee assignments if he becomes House speaker following the midterm elections.

McCarthy has been boosting that plan and others that might appeal to his conference’s right-most members as he seeks to win Freedom Caucus support for his speakership.

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Readers on Schools #4

TPM Reader GE‘s emails started with a headline “pandemic of the working class” and then referenced a tweet that referenced the same argument …

I am a 69 year old physician who my hospital “aged” me out of in-patient care at beginning of pandemic. I still have frightening outpatient exposures, and I saw/see my younger colleagues recover after they get sick, despite vaccines.  I also have 4 children, 2 of whom are in-classroom teachers, and grandchildren attending in-person classes.   There is a huge element of unfairness in the workforce today, and I foresee a future bitterness that could explode.

I had a back and forth with GE over this to try to frame the point. What we’re describing here isn’t ‘working class’ precisely, a phrase usually defined in occupational and educational terms while also signifying a set of cultural values. After all, a physician is definitionally not ‘working class’. What we’re describing here is a stark divide between people who can relocate their work and in most cases work from home and those who – in the nature of the work – cannot. In that sense, physicians and really all health care workers, educators and various caregiving and mission-driven jobs fall on the ‘in person’ side of this divide – even though some are highly educated and highly paid. However you define it or what labels you use it is a stark divide in terms of how people have experienced the pandemic, what life or political lessons they’ve drawn from it and how those views impact the future.

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Trump Blasts GOP Senator As ‘Woke’ After He Calls 2020 Election ‘Fair’

Former President Trump on Monday blasted out a tirade aimed at Sen. Mike Rounds (R-SD) after the GOP senator said during an interview that the 2020 presidential election was “fair” and that Trump’s bogus claims of election fraud are, indeed, false.

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Readers on Schools #3

From TPM Reader CN

I wanted to respond to your recent email from a reader LF, published in your editorial piece “Warzone Workplace.”

First, some background on myself – I taught third grade during the pandemic at a private school in the SF Bay Area. When the pandemic hit in March of 2020, like public schools across the state, we immediately were mandated to stop meeting in-person. Unlike California’s public schools, however, our administration pursued an aggressive policy of returning to in-person teaching as soon as we were allowed to do so, and we were back meeting in person in September of 2020, six weeks into the new school year, for those who were comfortable with it, while those who were not attended an online program we also offered. I and the other instructors asked to teach in person did our best, and at the end of the 2020-2021 school year our campus was recognized as a National Blue Ribbon School.

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Readers on Schools #2

From TPM Reader EA

I’m sure you’re getting a lot of good responses. I think that mostly the problem here is Twitter and when you actually talk to most people you get a lot more nuance in the conversation on both sides.

Big Amen to your writer. I think he/she articulates a completely just and fair position. There’s nothing really to disagree with.

The “other side” of this debate is me – I am a parent of two young kids and I desperately need them to be in school. Even if I were to concede that remote and in-person education are equivalent developmentally (I wouldn’t concede that – they are not), there’s still the matter of how the hell am I supposed to do my job?

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Wisconsin Republican Who Stood Up To Trumpy Election Lies Will Not Seek Another Term

A Wisconsin state senator who stood up to attacks on the 2020 election results from other Republicans announced Friday that she will not seek another term in office.

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Jim Jordan Will Not Tell Jan. 6 Panel About His Insurrection-Day Call(s) With Trump, Thank You Very Much

A lot of things happened. Here are some of them.

Jim Jordan Tells Jan. 6 Committee To Pound Sand

As 2021 was winding down, the Jan. 6 Committee asked Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) to voluntarily cooperate by providing it with information. Now it has Jordan’s unsurprising response: Nope.

  • “As you well know, I have no relevant information that would assist the Select Committee in advancing any legitimate legislative purpose,” Jordan declared in a letter to chair Bennie Thompson (D-MS) released Sunday.
  • But then: “Even if I had information to share with the Select Committee, the actions and statement of Democrats in the House of Representatives show that you are not conducting a fair-minded and objective inquiry.”
  • Jordan and another member of Congress, Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA), were only asked to cooperate — not subpoenaed — unlike a wide range of Trump administration officials, far-right activists and Jan. 6 organizers.
  • Jordan spoke to Trump on the day of the insurrection — potentially multiple times, potentially while it was ongoing. He’s been incredibly squirrely about the details of the call(s).
  • A Jan. 6 Committee spokesperson confirmed to Bloomberg News Sunday that those calls are among the material that is of interest. “He spoke directly to President Trump on January 6th and is thus a material witness,” the spokesperson said.
  • The committee will now consider “appropriate next steps,” the spokesperson told Bloomberg.
  • Perry said last year he, too, would not cooperate, after receiving a similar request from the committee. Perry played a role in Trump’s attempts to get the DOJ to cast doubt on the election results.

RonJohn Is Sticking Around

There’s been speculation for months about whether the conspiracy-theory friendly Wisconsin U.S. senator would retire at the end of his term. Johnson, who was swept into the Senate as part of the 2010 Tea Party wave, had promised to serve no more than 12 years — putting his retirement in 2022. But he announced over the weekend that he’s not going anywhere.

  • In his own words: “I believe America is in peril. Much as I’d like to ease into a quiet retirement, I don’t feel I should. Countless people have encouraged me to run, saying they rely on me to be their voice, to speak plain and obvious truths other elected leaders shirk from expressing—truths the elite in government, mainstream media and Big Tech don’t want you to hear.”
  • That means we’re going to hear a lot more about Wisconsin this year, as Democrats try to unseat the senator and keep their narrow grip on the chamber.

A Series Of Unfortunate Events

Saturday’s edition of Politico Playbook misidentified a woman having dinner at a fancy D.C. restaurant with top Democrats: it was Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the outlet erroneously said, seated alongside Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Democratic whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN). The person in question, it turned out, was not Sotomayor: It was Schumer’s wife, Iris Weinshall.

  • Conservative news outlets, of course, immediately went hog-wild with the not-news.
  • They were already directing their outrage machine at Sotomayor, who had been outspoken about Omicron’s potential to make children ill during Friday’s Supreme Court arguments on the Biden administration vaccine mandates, and exaggerated the number of children who were in the hospital during her questioning.
  • The Playbook “scoop” seemed to be the cherry on top of that outrage cycle: While the justice decried the transmissible new variant, she was going out to eat — with powerful Democrats! But it wasn’t true.
  • Playbook corrected the newsletter online but didn’t send a follow-up newsletter with the correction until the following day.

What Ifs

Nebraska state senator Tom Briese (R) commemorated Jan. 6 by introducing a bill to make voter fraud a felony.

  • The logic, apparently: There was no voter fraud, but the perception that people are getting away with voter fraud can cause insurrections.
  • “I don’t think it’s the purview of the legislature to regulate people’s perceptions,” Sen. John Cavanaugh, a Democrat, told Fox42 Omaha.

Those Insurrectionists Getting Light Sentences

Maybe it’s a good thing, writes the New Republic’s Jason Linkins.

  • “One of the last things we need is to create, from this abundance of potential defendants, a huge population of martyrs that an authoritarian movement can mythologize for its own illiberal ends.”

Speaking Of Political Martyrdom

Paul Manafort, apparently, has a new memoir: POLITICAL PRISONER.

  • It will be published by Skyhorse, home of many Trump-world authors and other controversial or unsavory figures, and distributed by Simon & Schuster.
  • The book promises: “A riveting account of the HOAX that sent a presidential campaign chairman to solitary confinement because he wouldn’t turn against the President of the United States.”
  • It’s due out in August. 
  • This news prompted me to reread TPM’s 2019 profile of Skyhorse publishing which includes, among other things, an interview with the author of the Skyhorse-published “Around The World In 80 Lays.”

Omicron Reads

NYT: Early Data Hints at Omicron’s Potential Toll Across America

CNN: Nearly a quarter of hospitals are reporting a critical staff shortage as Omicron drives a rise in Covid-19 cases

We Hear You, Anonymous Source

An unnamed, grumpy person who has been involved with efforts to pin Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) down on the filibuster gripes to Axios that doing so is “like negotiating via Etch A Sketch.”

  • “You think you’re just about there. You think you’ve got an agreement on most of the things and it’s settling in. And then you come back the next morning and you’re starting from scratch,” one individual told the outlet’s Alayna Treene, explaining the Etch A Sketch analogy.
  • Build Back Better, meanwhile, appears more or less dead. Manchin laid out a $1.8 trillion offer for the White House before Christmas, but at the moment he is not even negotiating on that, per the Washington Post’s Jeff Stein

Have thoughts on Morning Memo? Let us know!

Raskin: Ex-Trump Aide Grisham Listed ‘A Lot Of Names’ During Interview With Jan. 6 Committee

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) on Sunday shed light into the information former White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham provided to the Jan. 6 committee during her interview with the panel last week.

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Kinzinger Says Jan. 6 Committee Has A ‘Powerful And Substantive Narrative’ Ready To Go

Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-IL), who serves on the Jan. 6 committee, on Sunday expressed confidence in the panel’s progress thus far in its investigation of the events surrounding the deadly Capitol insurrection.

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Raffensperger Rips ‘Double Minded’ Trump-Endorsed Challenger Who Boosts Big Lie

Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger (R) on Sunday took aim at his challenger Rep. Jody Hice (R-GA), who was endorsed by former President Trump after Raffensperger rebuffed his election fraud falsehoods, for boosting the Big Lie of a “stolen” election.

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