2022 elections. The steady march for sanity continues.

mooray

Well-Known Member
I just want a "show your work" section on every bill...

What is the issue?
How did it come to your attention?
How did you verify the issue?
How will your proposed change address the issue?
What are the results of a peer review?

Every grade schooler in America has to show their work, but if you're fat/rich/white enough, then you get to enjoy meritless rewards.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Democrat Stansbury wins special election for Haaland's House seat
New Mexico state Rep. Melanie Stansbury (D) on Tuesday defeated New Mexico state Sen. Mark Moores (R) in the special election to fill the House seat formerly held by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland. The Associated Press called the race at 10:04 p.m. ET.

The special election in New Mexico’s 1st Congressional District was seen as an early test of both parties’ strengths ahead of the 2022 midterm elections.

Stansbury, an environmental consultant who was elected to the state House in 2018, leaned heavily on her science background to cast herself as a champion for New Mexico’s natural resources.

But the race also spotlighted an issue that Democrats fear could emerge as a weak point for them next year: crime. Throughout the race, Moores repeatedly painted Stansbury as unsupportive of law enforcement and campaigned against surging crime rates, including the rising homicide rate in Albuquerque.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
yep, Abbott is being a dick........

he'll support this, but won't support Cannabis reform....smh
because he hasn't properly figured out how to benefit; can't overlook any opportunity that may be left on the table therefore, it's on hold.

meanwhile Colorado makes BILLIONS we are a wealthy as fvck state not like that shit in east or west texas.

we need Ann Richards back because she probably rolling in her grave.

1622647053907.png
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member

printer

Well-Known Member
Texas GOP says it will adjust rule in election bill accused of impacting Black churchgoers
Texas GOP lawmakers say they will be making changes to their proposed restrictions to early voting on Sunday after critics argued the move disproportionately affected the Black community.

The measure, which voting advocates said would have harmed "souls to the polls" events popular with Black churches, is part of the latest statewide elections overhaul package that Democrats have characterized as being a thinly veiled attempt at voter suppression.

In an interview on NPR this week, Texas state Rep. Travis Clardy (R), said the starting time for voting to begin on Sunday in the proposed legislation had been a typo. Clardy said the starting time was meant to 11 a.m., but had mistakenly been written as 1 p.m.

“That's one of the things I look forward to — with fixing the most. Call it a scrivener's error, whatever you want to. I talked to our team yesterday, kind of regrouping of what happened. That was not intended to be reduced,” Clardy told NPR’s Steve Inskeep.

Citing reports from the Texas Tribune, Axios noted that despite this two-hour difference, no Republicans raised any issues with the apparent starting time as it was written during the final debate over the bill, and one lawmaker even defended the 1 p.m. starting time.
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
because he hasn't properly figured out how to benefit; can't overlook any opportunity that may be left on the table therefore, it's on hold.

meanwhile Colorado makes BILLIONS we are a wealthy as fvck state not like that shit in east or west texas.

we need Ann Richards back because she probably rolling in her grave.

View attachment 4914737
oh that woman was mean...lol.....she didn't take crap from anyone....
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member


The talking head guy did make a mistake.

There has been bi-partisanship in the last decade, but it was because the Democrats came in to save Trump's mess from impacting American's even more a couple times over the last 4 years. He would have been more correct to say virtually no bi-partisanship has came from the Republican party. Because they are trying to survive their working with foreign nations to destroy our democracy.

The filibuster needs to be changed back so that people who want to filibuster actually have to do it. Let them melt their respectability if they suck ass and just spew nonsense for hours, or shine if they have a legit reason to try to stop something from passing. I don't think it is in our benefit to end it completely because the Republicans would use it if/when they get power again so that they would be able to do the same shit they are pulling on the state level with the Federal level.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/06/14/rand-paul-offers-an-accidentally-useful-jim-crow-analogy-rationalizing-his-partys-illiberal-shift/
Screen Shot 2021-06-14 at 12.55.04 PM.png
One of the most important lessons for Americans to take from the 2020 presidential election is the extent to which the will of voters is subject to revision. There are always checks on the power of the electorate, of course, including judicial review of measures passed by legislatures or directly by the people. The past year, though, has shown how elected officials, generally overt partisans, can similarly redirect the will of voters.

An underrecognized example comes from Missouri. Last year, voters in the state approved an expansion of Medicaid eligibility by a six-point margin, with 82,000 more votes in support of the measure. The Republican-led legislature, though, simply declined to fund the proposal. Last month, Gov. Mike Parson (R) withdrew his framework for the expansion.

That decision probably will end up in court, but it’s instructive: Legislators disagreed with the majority of voters, so they stymied them.

There were no such complaints about the results in Missouri when Donald Trump defeated Joe Biden by nearly half a million votes there in November. Instead, such objections played out more forcefully elsewhere with Republican legislators and officials across the country trying earnestly to reject results in places that had preferred Biden, at times by fairly narrow margins.

It was an interesting evolution since 2016, when Trump’s popular-vote loss was waved away because of his victory in the electoral college vote. That victory was presented as a triumph of an equalizing system, a demonstration of How the System Was Meant to Work, leveling out the power of more populous states.

When Trump also lost the electoral vote four years later, the importance of the electoral college was revised somewhat. Now, instead of simply being a way to balance power, the electoral college was presented as a sort of fail-safe point at which state legislatures were empowered — if not mandated — to review how the public had voted. Despite the complete absence of any credible suggestion of rampant voter fraud, such claims were the predicate for those efforts to move electors from the political left to the political right. The electoral college gave Republicans a way to try to shift the results, an opportunity they embraced and, in fact, cast as some sort of solemn duty.

It’s the difference between winning a championship on a referee’s controversial decision and responding to losing a championship by demanding that the results be thrown out because of objections to the rule book that was used in the first place.

This effort culminated on Jan. 6, both in the illegal effort to physically block Congress from counting the cast electoral votes and in efforts by Congress to somehow force states to reconsider their decisions. More than half of the Republican caucus in the House joined more than half a dozen Republican senators to try to block the results in several states, even after a violent mob overran the Capitol.

In the months since, a number of states with Republican-led legislatures have passed efforts to make it easier in the future to reject the results of elections. In Georgia, where a handful of Republican officials including the secretary of state stood by the vote results despite pressure from their party to deliver a victory for Trump, the legislature gave itself more power to adjudicate election tallies. In Texas, legislators proposed an expansion of the allowable rationales for overturning an outcome. A law introduced in Arizona (where Biden also won) would make it easier to challenge the results of an election, including by giving state legislatures ways to simply reject the certified results.

What’s important about these shifts is that they seek to formalize and facilitate what we saw in the months after the 2020 election. It isn’t simply about trying to work the refs or about bending the rules to suit political ends. It’s about changing the rules at the outset to make a rejection of the popular will something that’s part of the legal process.

Those changes are occurring as part of other efforts to restrict voting in the same states, changes generally tied to the same unfounded fraud claims but that would often disproportionately affect Democratic voters. These changes generally have been rationalized using the same claims of rampant fraud and, at times, apparently been offered as ways to placate a Republican electorate convinced that such fraud occurred. At times, though, they have been rationalized in ways that more directly reflect their effects: as limiting the involvement of the public in decision-making.

Speaking to the New York Times about the Republican Party’s shifting tactical approach to election results, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) offered just such an argument.

“The idea of democracy and majority rule really is what goes against our history and what the country stands for,” Paul said. “The Jim Crow laws came out of democracy. That’s what you get when a majority ignores the rights of others.”

Jim Crow laws — laws instantiating public racial segregation and, importantly, curtailing the voting power of Black Americans — were, in fact, reflections of the rule of the majority. But that “majority” was not itself a reflection of the actual population, given the extent to which Blacks were excluded from participation. That's not to say that universal Black participation in voting in the Jim Crow South would have given them a majority, but it almost certainly would have reshaped power dynamics. Which, of course, was why Black voting was discouraged.

Paul’s argument is offered in service to the idea that there should be a check on the power of the population and he uses Jim Crow as an example of why that’s necessary. But Jim Crow actually serves as a more useful analogy to the way in which Republican officials are hoping to maintain power despite votes that might be cast in support of policies and candidates with whom they disagree.

Some have argued that the voting changes being proposed are themselves explicitly analogous to Jim Crow-era policies (given the undeniable racial overtones of some of the proposals, such as ones that sought to curtail Sunday voting). That’s not my point here. Instead, I’m pointing out that Jim Crow was a reflection of how those in power could work to maintain that power by changing the rules by creating laws that made it legal, if not moral, for them to hold power in the way that they wanted to.

We’re further down this path than we need to be. Paul’s argument that democracy “goes against our history” is … dubious, to put it generously. It’s an effort to give primacy to the check on power instead of the power itself. But because the Republican Party is increasingly feeling frustrated by the voters’ expressed will, it’s becoming more useful to argue that the will of the voters was never what the United States was about, really.

Consider Missouri state Rep. Justin Hill (R). Hill was part of the legislative majority that opposed expanding Medicaid in the state. He also introduced a measure in the legislature to challenge the results of the presidential election — not in Missouri but in six states that were the focus of the Trump campaign.

Oh, he also missed his own swearing-in in January because it fell on the 6th — and he was at the Capitol.

Hill in March rationalized his opposition to the Medicaid expansion in remarkable terms.

“Even though my constituents voted for this lie, I’m going to protect them,” he said. “I am proud to stand against the will of the people.”

According to Rand Paul, this is how the system is supposed to work.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
The article describes some incredibly anti-democratic actions by Republican-controlled legislatures:

In the months since, a number of states with Republican-led legislatures have passed efforts to make it easier in the future to reject the results of elections. In Georgia, where a handful of Republican officials including the secretary of state stood by the vote results despite pressure from their party to deliver a victory for Trump, the legislature gave itself more power to adjudicate election tallies. In Texas, legislators proposed an expansion of the allowable rationales for overturning an outcome. A law introduced in Arizona (where Biden also won) would make it easier to challenge the results of an election, including by giving state legislatures ways to simply reject the certified results.

What’s important about these shifts is that they seek to formalize and facilitate what we saw in the months after the 2020 election. It isn’t simply about trying to work the refs or about bending the rules to suit political ends. It’s about changing the rules at the outset to make a rejection of the popular will something that’s part of the legal process.


Is that even valid under our Constitution? It's time to pick a "protect our voting rights" PAC and pony up. ACLU, perhaps.
 

CCGNZ

Well-Known Member


The talking head guy did make a mistake.

There has been bi-partisanship in the last decade, but it was because the Democrats came in to save Trump's mess from impacting American's even more a couple times over the last 4 years. He would have been more correct to say virtually no bi-partisanship has came from the Republican party. Because they are trying to survive their working with foreign nations to destroy our democracy.

The filibuster needs to be changed back so that people who want to filibuster actually have to do it. Let them melt their respectability if they suck ass and just spew nonsense for hours, or shine if they have a legit reason to try to stop something from passing. I don't think it is in our benefit to end it completely because the Republicans would use it if/when they get power again so that they would be able to do the same shit they are pulling on the state level with the Federal level.
I'm sure hoping AG Garland can find some legal fault w/these states changing voting requirements, what a transparent in your face response to losing a fair election on top of the fact mostly Reps were in charge in these states during ballot counts, what? gerrymandering isn't enough of a finger on the scale.Joe Manchin are you taking note of all this hanky panky. Ramming Sup. Court appointees through w/3months bef. election but no to 10 months w/a Dem Pres., Justice Dept as a tool for the Pres., Jan. 6, Qanon devotees in Congress,etc. etc. and Joe still believes in bi-partisanship, your 73 yo Joe grow some balls and let go of your past experiences of working w/the other party, presently due to personnel and circumstances it no longer exists.ccguns
 

Dryxi

Well-Known Member
I'm sure hoping AG Garland can find some legal fault w/these states changing voting requirements, what a transparent in your face response to losing a fair election on top of the fact mostly Reps were in charge in these states during ballot counts, what? gerrymandering isn't enough of a finger on the scale.Joe Manchin are you taking note of all this hanky panky. Ramming Sup. Court appointees through w/3months bef. election but no to 10 months w/a Dem Pres., Justice Dept as a tool for the Pres., Jan. 6, Qanon devotees in Congress,etc. etc. and Joe still believes in bi-partisanship, your 73 yo Joe grow some balls and let go of your past experiences of working w/the other party, presently due to personnel and circumstances it no longer exists.ccguns
Isn't democracy actually not a thing when we completely give up on working with all sides? Whether Republicans are wrong or not, giving up on bi-partianship seems like giving up on democracy as well. Joe is doing it right by wanting to work with them.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
McConnell warns he's willing to intervene in 2022 GOP primaries
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) warned on Monday that he and his allies are willing to step into Republican Senate primaries to try to prevent a candidate they view as unelectable in November 2022 from advancing.

McConnell, during an interview with conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt, was asked if he and the Senate Leadership Fund, an outside group closely aligned with the Kentucky Republican, would be willing to intervene in 2022 Republican primaries.

"If necessary," McConnell told Hewitt about their willingness to get involved in Republican primaries.

"There's no question that in order to win ... you have to appeal to the general election audience," McConnell added. "I'll be keeping an eye on that. Hopefully we won't have to intervene, but if we do, we will."
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Florida congressional candidate says opponents conspiring to kill her
A Florida congressional candidate has obtained a stalking injunction against one of her likely opponents in the race, claiming he conspired with two other potential candidates to kill her.

The Tampa Bay Times reports that Anna Paulina Luna, who is running in the Republican primary for the seat being vacated by Rep. Charlie Crist (D) as he seeks the governor's mansion, obtained a temporary injunction against William Braddock, who has previously stated his plans on running against her.

“I received information yesterday (at midnight) regarding a plan (with a timeline) to murder me made by William Braddock in an effort to prevent me from winning the election for FL-13,” Luna wrote in her petition for an injunction.

“I feel and fear that this is an orchestrated attempt on my life being organized and carried out by William Braddock and he claims he is working together with Ms. Makki and Mr. Tito,” she added.

“Ms. Luna has no comment at this time due to multiple ongoing law enforcement investigations of this matter,” a spokesperson for Luna told the Times. “Those investigations are based upon Mr. Braddock’s own threats and actions, and we are confident the facts will be public at the appropriate time.”
 
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