Reposted by Dave Weigel
this is a brilliant point that I was struggling to articulate.
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I honest-to-god think Biden is a better abortion messenger than liberals admit. The Groups abandoning "safe, legal, and rare" messaging in 2016 was a mistake.
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One factoid about the LBJ precedent - his approval rating surged after he bailed out of the 1968 race. Dipped again over the chaotic summer but we'll never know what the dynamic would have been if Biden was going out as a one-term elder statesman.
www.presidency.ucsb.edu/statistics/d...
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In the world where Biden bowed out in June 2023, and VP Harris won a contested primary, how's the party doing rn?
Better? Worse? I tend to think better. Rs still running against the admin but the principal is able to do lots of public events/interviews and defend the record/attack Trump.
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idk - fun hypothetical.
Had Trump lost, Rs would have dropped three in a row, and the money in the party would have blamed Trump's crazy nativism and isolationism.
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I think this was the Ramesh Ponnuru position. Cede 2016, lose the Scalia seat, but come back with an R supermajority in 2020.
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I haven't watched all the coverage there but I think Keir Starmer has had to answer two questions - would you have served in a Corbyn cabinet, and can women have a penis - at least 1000 times.
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Rs were convinced that Ron Johnson would lose, too.
They were bracing for a Hillary win and 50-50 Senate, in which obviously Clinton would have filled the seat. I'm just imagining a world where Rs overperform but Hillary wins MI/WI/PA anyway.
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I don't dispute the overall "Dems are wimps" critique, just being pedantic when people suggest that there was no way Clinton could have confirmed Garland to the Scalia seat.
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That was Ted Cruz, and I'm the guy he said it to.
I noted in that piece that Grassley, the committee chair, had promised to hold a vote if Clinton won.
www.washingtonpost.com/news/post-po...
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Had Trump lost, McConnell's big bet wouldn't have paid off. He got the conference to commit to "let the voters decide," and Flake/Alexander/Corker/Graham/Collins/Murkowski weren't ready for four years of "actually uhhh best two out of three?"
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I'm not naive, and Rs are more committed now to blocking every Dem judge than they used to be - the days of an R senate waving in Stephen Breyer are over.
But Rs kicking and screaming and refusing to confirm any justice for four years wouldn't have been feasible.
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No offense, but the McConnell mythmaking has convinced a lot of people that a 52-48 R majority would have refused to seat a Dem justice for four years.
I am very skeptical of this and did reporting around the time on it - there were enough Rs who were willing to confirm Garland if HRC won.
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I was doing reporting on this at the time.
Had the election gone the same way but Clinton won, Rs would have had 52-48 majority. Some Rs (led by Cruz) wanted that majority to block a judicial vote for four years. But several were on record for a vote if Clinton won, enough to do it.
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No, open Scalia seat. Hillary wins, appoints her judge, 5-4 liberal court.
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If you want to turn SCOTUS into a weak House of Lords, that's its own thing. If you want a liberal SCOTUS you elect Dem presidents until Thomas and Alito die.
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Dems were one Comey letter away from a 5-4 liberal court!
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The Gabbard paradox is that she's "telegenic" in the euphemistic meaning of the word - but is absolute death on the mic. Monotone, moralizing, repetitive. I remember watching the energy evaporate when she'd give speeches introducing Bernie in 2020.
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The iron law of anonymity - words said in public are less newsy than words said behind the veil!
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Link to article here. I think a big tell was the Heritage call with reporters (my colleague was on it, I was in transit) where they hurriedly sketched out legal challenges in case the Dems switched out Biden.
www.vox.com/politics/358...
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You're misremembering. Cite a source.
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I'm not bashing him! The opposite - I anticipated some eye-rolling at the platform he was getting, but he is very influential, people can't just ignore him.
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For example, they locked media out of most stuff at a key 2022 meeting, but the big headline that came out of it was a resolution saying Jan 6 was "legitimate political discourse."
Media never saw the debate over it but had the story
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One of those days where I'm getting a text every time I try to write a sentence. Not complaining! There are much harder jobs than reporting, I like doing it. But I never participate in those inbox/text shame games... you are simply dive-bombed all day by stuff you have to triage bc there's no story.
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For the first time in decades, the RNC won't allow cameras/media into its platform meeting. Further evolution of the Trump-era RNC's aversion to the press - they see only downsides for transparency, though this hasn't prevented damaging stories when reporters dig in
www.semafor.com/article/07/0...
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The robust conservative media infrastructure has retconned 2016: The scandal accusations against Trump were, in retrospect, attempts to steal the election of the legitimate president.
The candidate who kept getting whacked by the FBI and hackers? Yeah she tried to rig it
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He wasn't a median voter but I remember Doug Schoen, a Clinton hanger-on who hasn't done anything real in decades, going on Fox to say that the Comey letter clinched it: He could not possibly vote for Clinton.
If she won nobody would remember the Comey letter! It didn't lead to shit!
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I keep thinking of the medium-info swing voter in 2016 who, at the last minute, decided not to go for Hillary bc she'd be consumed by scandals and investigations.
The "actually it's defying the constitution and will of the voter to investigate the president" CW came too late!
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(Post inspired by listening to “Good Luck, Babe!!” again, Roan effortlessly zooming up and down her range)
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She’s a good songwriter who writes vocal lines out of her range, it’s too bad!
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
Bill Clinton must feel like a real schmuck for doing that plea bargain
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It’s a great book; I don’t usually like young person loss memoirs but she has the gift.
Every song I heard, though, ruined by her writing something she can’t sing, just brutal
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Feels like we’ve moved on, as a society, from Japanese Breakfast. Sad but inevitable — unsteady combo of smart, charismatic star, good melodies, and the flattest vocals you’ve ever heard in your life.
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Good morning, Tuesday morning www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSIM...
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
Oh boy, $150,000!
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I don't endorse it! Sometimes I just share the lousy stuff I see out there.
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Randall Terry having a lot of fun as the Constitution Party presidential candidate. (He's holding events but is clear that the campaign is a vehicle to put gruesome anti-abortion ads on TV). www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAlr...
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Maher is by far the most famous anti-woke liberal in media, right?
Other people have this “I want to beat the Rs but my party is obsessed with pronouns” take but he’s in that position where his monologues make the news.
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
In breaking news from the Supreme Court, they’ve upheld my book’s subtitle.
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
Me: "Mr President, I'd like to give you a bribe and commit some treason together."
President: "Hold on, lets move this conversation to the Oval Office and bring in some White House aids so we are sure all this gets immunity."
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
"You can't make me certify election results" lawsuit from Georgia county official may serve to create a welcome court precedent that yes ma'am, you do have to certify [Derek Muller]
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
Well, now it's up to federal judges to closely examine and decide what to do with "fecal soup."
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
Trump is right: We don't have a country anymore. All that's left is immaculate water. Welcome to water world
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
We had so much immaculate H20, it was incredible, there was so much oxygen in the water, it became a gas
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Reposted by Dave Weigel
There have been many attempts to explain why rural Americans consistently vote for Republicans. The scathing response to a new, best-selling book shows how a tightknit group of scholars are clamoring for more empathetic political analyses of rural Americans.
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