The Commentariat -- June 10, 2016
Presidential Race
Paul Krugman: "... the G.O.P. was able to serve the interests of the 1 percent by posing as the defender of the 80 percent -- for that was the white share of the electorate when Ronald Reagan was elected. But demographic change ... has brought the non-Hispanic white share of the electorate down to 62 percent and falling. Republicans need to broaden their base; but the base wants candidates who will defend the old racial order. Hence Trumpism.... [Donald Trump] represents little more than the rage of white men over a changing nation. And he'll be facing a woman -- yes, gender is another important dimension in this story -- who owes her nomination to the very groups his base hates and fears." -- CW
Francis Wilkinson of Bloomberg: "In a few weeks, at the Democratic convention in Philadelphia, [President Obama] will symbolically hand over leadership of the party [to Hillary Clinton].... This transition is structured, anticipated, consistent, orderly and boring. Which is one way of saying that the Democratic Party is a coherent, well-functioning political institution that bears little resemblance to the cascading disasters that define the Republican Party and yielded Donald Trump as its likely presidential nominee." CW: Wait, wait. You're wrecking the "Democratic party in disarray" conventional storyline.
The Party Steps on Bernie's Last Hurrah. John Wagner of the Washington Post: "Making a last stand as a Democratic presidential candidate, the senator from Vermont was set to meet with President Obama and other leading Democrats and stage a show of his continuing ability to draw throngs of supporters at an outdoor rally near RFK Stadium. Only all that was eclipsed -- much like his upstart presidential campaign itself -- by Hillary Clinton and the muscle of the Democratic establishment. Shortly after Sanders emerged from his meeting with Obama, word got out that the president was going to trumpet an endorsement of his former secretary of state in a video. And then it became clear that Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), a darling of the political left and Sanders's ideological soulmate, had also chosen Thursday to throw her support behind Clinton." CW: Stupid move, people. Whoever orchestrated this (Hillary Clinton/Debbie Wasserman Schultz) is one nasty piece of work. ...
... Annie Karni of Politico: "Hillary Clinton on Thursday said she has no doubt that Sen. Elizabeth Warren would be qualified to serve as her vice president -- but she refused to say the same of Bernie Sanders." CW: Hmmm, I guess Clinton didn't listen to her good friend Ed Rendell, who said the other day that Clinton would never choose Warren because Warren is "not in any way, shape, or form ready to be commander-in-chief."
... Carrie Dann of NBC News: "Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren ..., a hero to liberal progressives ideologically aligned with Bernie Sanders' anti-Wall Street rhetoric, endorsed ... Hillary Clinton Thursday night on MSNBC's the Rachel Maddow Show." Includes video. -- CW ...
... Julie Davis of the New York Times: "President Obama on Thursday formally endorsed Hillary Clinton and called her the most qualified candidate to seek the White House, imploring Democrats to come together to elect her after a bruising party primary." -- CW (Also linked yesterday.)
Everett Rosenfeld of CNBC: "President Barack Obama officially endorsed former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for president on Thursday, saying he is 'fired up' for the presumptive Democratic candidate. In a prerecorded video released Thursday, Obama latched onto the Clinton campaign's slogan, letting his supporters know that 'I'm with her,' and pledging to campaign for the presumptive nominee. The president's endorsement comes eight years and two days after Clinton did the same for him." -- Akhilleus (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...
I didn't hear a single word about him trying to change the fact that she's the nominee. I think he's accepted that. -- Harry Reid, on Bernie Sanders, after a meeting yesterday
Bernie is not worn down. He's not bitter. He's not angry. He wants to make sure that issues he's pushed for have vitality. -- Chuck Schumer, after meeting with Sanders yesterday
I remember when he first left. It was kind of everybody with a real smile and put their arm around him and said, "Good luck, Bernie." And then we watched as he put together an incredible campaign, not just in the fundraising but in the way that he lit up so many Democrats and even independents who came to his side. He became a force, a political force, and a positive one as far as I'm concerned. I think our party can learn from his candidacy and I think we're going to count on him to bring us across the finish line with a victory in November. -- Dick Durbin, yesterday
Compare these Senators' remarks with Hillary Clinton's performance yesterday. Clinton walked all over Sanders. The Senators made positive remarks. At the very least, Clinton is tone-deaf. But I think it's more that she's a mean girl. She enjoys kicking people when they're down, & she can't helping doing so, even when it's an impolitic thing to do. There's a difference between being forceful and being a bully. -- Constant Weader
The Bern Cools Down? Clare Foran in The Atlantic: "Bernie Sanders isn't ready to back down yet -- but the end of his campaign is in sight. Speaking outside of the White House on Thursday after meeting with President Obama, Sanders confirmed he would compete in Washington, D.C.'s Democratic primary next week. But he signaled a willingness to work with Hillary Clinton to ensure that Democrats win the White House. 'I look forward to meeting with her in the near future to see how we can work together to defeat Donald Trump and create a government, which represents all of us and not just the one percent,' Sanders said." -- Akhilleus (Also linked yesterday afternoon.) ...
Dave Weigel & Paul Kane of the Washington Post: "Vice President Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) delivered a one-two punch Thursday to Donald Trump in speeches that signaled the increasingly coordinated effort by Democrats to push the presumptive Republican presidential nominee and his restive GOP allies on Capitol Hill." -- CW ...
... CW: One reason Clinton might want to choose Warren as her running mate: Warren pulls no punches in attacking Trump, Mitch McConnell, Paul Ryan, et al. She's damned good at it, too:
Joshua Green & Tim Higgins of Bloomberg: "According to Kantar Media, Clinton and Sanders aired 206,528 spots between them this year — and not one was deemed 'negative' by the analysts in Kantar's Campaign Media Analysis Group (CMAG). 'In an open presidential primary, this is probably unprecedented,' says Elizabeth Wilner, senior vice president for political advertising at Kantar.... Donald Trump ... faced roughly $62 million in attack ads during the primaries. Most of the spots were aired by fellow Republicans." CW: Which is unfaaair.
From the Facebook page of an old friend:
Ryan Lizza of the New Yorker: Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said "that she has not ruled out supporting Clinton. 'I worked very well with Hillary when she was my colleague in the Senate and when she was Secretary of State,' Collins said. 'But I do not anticipate voting for her this fall. I'm not going to say never, because this has been such an unpredictable situation, to say the least.'" -- CW
** Donald the Deadbeat. Steve Reilly of USA Today: "Donald Trump often portrays himself as a savior of the working class who will 'protect your job.' But a USA Today Network analysis found he has been involved in more than 3,500 lawsuits over the past three decades -- and a large number of those involve ordinary Americans ... who say Trump or his companies have refused to pay them. At least 60 lawsuits, along with hundreds of liens, judgments, and other government filings ... document people who have accused Trump and his businesses of failing to pay them for their work. Among them: a dishwasher in Florida. A glass company in New Jersey. A carpet company. A plumber. Painters. Forty-eight waiters. Dozens of bartenders and other hourly workers at his resorts and clubs.... Real estate brokers who sold his properties. And, ironically, several law firms that once represented him in these suits and others. Trump's companies have also been cited for 24 violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act since 2005 for failing to pay overtime or minimum wage.... In addition to the lawsuits, the review found more than 200 mechanic's liens -- filed by contractors and employees against Trump, his companies or his properties...." -- CW
CW: The Washington Post editors demand Donald Trump release his tax returns, which he has refused to do, relying on "nothing but flimsy excuses." Expect a steady drumbeat of such demands. As the Post editors, suggest Trump has something to hide. So I'm wondering if Trump will eventually fill the need to answer his critics by releasing fake tax returns -- showing him to have a huuuge income, to have made huuuge tax payments & to have given huuuge amounts to charity -- just as he wrote a fake doctor's report. And if his reports are fake, who would out him? Not the IRS.
With friends like these. Nick Gass of Politico: "Former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke defended Donald Trump on his radio show earlier this week from criticism of his comments about Judge Gonzalo Curiel, blaming 'the Jews' in the media for propagating a long-running negative agenda against the presumptive Republican nominee. The white supremacist radio host dropped the names of Fox News' Chris Wallace, along with Jake Tapper and Wolf Blitzer on CNN, who Duke said he had 'exposed ... as a Jewish agent.' Jeff Zucker, the current president of CNN Worldwide, is 'another Jewish extremist,' he remarked. 'And more recently, Fox News, the shabbat goy shiksa Megyn Kelly, 'cause they love to have some gentiles doing it.'" --safari ...
...Sasha Abramsky of The Nation: "For days now, prominent Republican Party figures have been trying to work out how to respond to Trump's racially toxic denunciations of federal judge Gonzalo Curiel.... Trump,Gingrich told CNN yesterday in response to the uproar, was a 'gifted amateur' who was learning the ropes as a candidate for the most powerful job on earth incredibly quickly...Let's call that out for the cretinous gibberish it so obviously is.... How much more of this 'amateur' verbal knife play will it take before Newt Gingrich and Trump's other GOP apologists realize that they are supporting not a well-meaning amateur but a very professional, and very dangerous, shit-smearer?" --safari
Jim Newell of Slate: "Plenty of people have vaguely surmised that Donald Trump's nomination marks the end of the Republican Party as we knew it. But what is even the mechanism for that? Is there some sort of vehicle through which the death of one of America's two major parties is processed? Of course there is: bankruptcy.... Profound financial mistakes are going to be made with the money Trump is able to siphon from wealthy GOP donors. And that's most likely how the GOP goes out of business." --safari...
...safari note: Trump has perfected the art of ripping off the little man, but it hadn't occurred to me that now he's positioned himself to sucker in the GOP big rollers to blow their own ill-gotten gains on his ego trips, too. World's greatest conman?
Tim Egan: "Trump lies about big things (there is no drought in California) and small things (his hair spray could not affect the ozone layer because it's sealed within Trump Tower). He lies about himself, and the fake self he invented to talk about himself. He's been shown to lie more than 70 times in a single event. Given the scale of Trump's mendacity and the stakes for the free world, it's time that we go into the fall debates with a new rule -- an instant fact-check on statements made by the candidates onstage.... It's up to the debate commission, as they set the rules for the fall, to ensure that truth has a place on the stage." ...
... CW: This is a good idea. When the candidates haggle about the terms of the debate, Clinton should insist upon it. I would, however, definitely recommend the use of a buzzer each time the factcheckers catch a candidate in a lie.
Greg Grandin of The Nation: "Is Donald Trump a fascist? It's an interesting question that has generated insightful commentary over the past few months, with the best answers situating Trumpian illiberalism within America's long history of racial oppression, slavery, Jim Crow apartheid, and the ongoing backlash to the loss of white privilege. But a key concept is missing from this discussion: empire." --safari note: I'm not entirely convinced, but it's a thought I haven't seen brought up yet...
...Jonathan Chait: "Donald Trump has attained his wild popularity among Republicans by tapping into their pervasive feeling of racial victimization. The right-wing view of Obama as a crafty manipulator of racial tension comes through in Ben Shapiro's column in National Review. While rejecting Donald Trump's argument that only white men are fit to judge his fraud trial, Shapiro insists that Trump is merely recapitulating Obama's sin of 'tribalism.'... That the first black president could proclaim over and over that his country can (and has, and will continue to) progress toward racial harmony, and yet be portrayed in the elite conservative media as a hectoring prophet of racial doom, tells you everything you need to know about why Trumpism has prevailed." --safari
Blast to the Trump Past. Max Rosenthal of Mother Jones: "Believe Donald Trump, folks: There is an anti-asbestos conspiracy. In his 1997 book, The Art of the Comeback, Trump warned America not to buy the crusade against 'the greatest fire-proofing material ever used.' He claimed the movement to remove asbestos -- a known carcinogen -- was actually the handiwork of the mafia.... Polish construction workers who worked on the construction of Trump Tower sued Trump, with some telling the New York Times that 'they often worked in choking clouds of asbestos dust without protective equipment.' The contracting company used by Trump hired the Poles -- undocumented immigrants were working off the books -- at only $4- to $5-an-hour..." --safari
What about the kids? Rory Carroll of the Guardian: "Tracey Iglehart, a teacher at Rosa Parks elementary school in Berkeley, California, did not expect Donald Trump to show up on the playground.... That has not stopped some children from channeling and adopting ... [Trump]'s xenophobic rhetoric in playground spats and classroom exchanges. 'They said things like "you'll get deported", "you weren't born here" and "you were born in a Taco Bell",' said Iglehart, 49. 'They may not know exactly what it means, but they know it's powerful language.'" --safari
Other News & Views
Derek Thompson of The Atlantic: "A new report from the Congressional Budget Office on household income since 1979 reaches two stark and significant conclusions. Inequality is growing. But so are government efforts to combat it -- and they're working. First, the bad news. The distribution of income in the United States has been more unequal under Obama's presidency than any time since the 1930s, according to the Gini Index, a conventional measure of the inequality.... The upshot is that the federal government is doing more to correct inequality right now than at any time in the last 35 years. The five years when tax and transfer policies took the biggest bite out of inequality were the first five years of Obama's presidency." --safari ...
... safari note: Great news for just about everybody, except for old, xenophobic white males that want to "take their America back(wards)".
Craig Whitlock of the Washington Post: "In a plea deal with prosecutors, Rear Adm. Robert Gilbeau ... pleaded guilty Thursday to a felony charge of lying to federal investigators in the wide-ranging 'Fat Leonard' corruption scandal, marking an exceptionally rare instance of a flag officer being criminally prosecuted for actions while in uniform." -- CW
Sanity at Last. Tal Kopan of CNN: "A federal appeals court ruled on Thursday that there is no Second Amendment protection for concealed weapons -- allowing states to prohibit or restrict the public from carrying concealed firearms. The en banc opinion by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals could set up a new showdown on gun rights at the Supreme Court. At issue was California's law on concealed weapons, which requires citizens to prove they have 'good cause' to carry concealed firearms to get a license. Plaintiffs challenged guidelines in San Diego and Yolo counties that did not consider general self-defense to be enough to obtain a license." (Also linked yesterday afternoon.)
... Akhilleus: Finally a court of law decides that Second Amendment rights are not absolute and unconditional. The loons will be out in force after this ruling. Foxbots are oiling their vocal cords for days and nights of incessant caterwauling. Don't overlook the fact that this ruling was delivered en banc. Had Scalia still been around that probably wouldn't have mattered much, since everyone needs a gun on their hip, but the current court makeup could make it less likely that this ruling would be overturned. NRA sociopaths must be swinging from the chandeliers. The ones made out of Colt .45s.
New York Times Editors: "The Republicans' blockade of Judge [Merrick] Garland is shameful, but it is only the most glaring example of what has been a historic slowdown in filling federal court vacancies across the country. This has been enormously damaging to the district courts, which deal with hundreds of thousands of cases annually, and where backlogs drag out lawsuits and delay justice. It also harms the appeals courts, whose rulings are the final word in nearly all litigation, since the Supreme Court hears only about 75 cases a year.... This disgraceful and destructive behavior extends well beyond the judiciary. The current Senate has approved the fewest civilian nominees by a president in 30 years, according to an analysis by the Congressional Research Service. One nominee [-- Cassandra Butts --] for an ambassadorship died recently after waiting more than two years for a confirmation vote that never came." -- CW
Sarah Burris of RawStory: "The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) requires all persons flying a small unmanned aircraft register their craft before flying it. But now one student is challenging that requirement after the FAA came after him for two drones he created -- one that shoots a gun as it flies and one that has a flamethrower attached to it." --safari
Shell-Shocked. Robert Worth of the New York Times: Pilot studies suggest that PTSD may be more physiological than psychological. "Much of what has passed for emotional trauma may be reinterpreted, and many veterans may step forward to demand recognition of an injury that cannot be definitively diagnosed until after death." -- CW
Beyond the Beltway
Sarah Burris: "A small bomb detonated in a women's bathroom at a Target store in Evanston, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, Wednesday afternoon. Officials are not yet sure if the bomb was related to the right-wing wrath the company has endured as a result of their bathroom policy, but investigators are looking into it." --safari
Alejandro Davila Fragoso of Think Progress: "The Bay Area has long been a bastion of environmental action, but this week locals outdid themselves when they approved an unprecedented, first-of-its kind tax to remove pollution from their bay and create habitats to fight sea level rise." --safari
Joanna Walters, et al., of the Guardian: "The judge in the Stanford sexual assault case allowed defendants accused of gang-raping a 17-year-old high school student to show the jury photographs of her wearing a revealing outfit when he presided over another controversial case involving college athletes. Judge Aaron Persky, who is under fire for his lenient sentencing of Brock Turner, a former Stanford swimmer convicted of sexual assault, made several controversial rulings in a 2011 civil trial stemming from the alleged gang rape by members of the baseball team at De Anza Community College in Cupertino, California." -- CW ...
... Tom Namako of BuzzFeed: "Vice President Joe Biden penned an open letter to the Stanford sexual assault survivor who read a powerful message to her assailant in court detailing the effects of his actions on her." The article includes the full text of the Vice President's letter. ...
... Nicole Auerbach of USA Today: "Former Stanford swimmer Brock Turner ... is not and will not be eligible to compete at any USA Swimming-sanctioned events (which includes Olympic Trials), USA Swimming confirmed Monday afternoon." -- CW
... Elizabeth Dwoskin & Susan Svrluga of the Washington Post: "... in Palo Alto, the impact is visceral. Inboxes and social media are full of links to petitions: People demanding better support from the university for sexual assault victims, calling on Stanford officials to apologize and pay for the victim's therapy, and asking the judge in the case to step down. A protest is planned for Sunday at an annual commencement event. 'Everyone on campus is talking about it,' said Dulcie Davies, a graduating sorority member who plays field hockey. 'Everyone is sharing everything on Facebook.'" -- CW
Way Beyond
Patrick Wintour & Chris Stephen of the Guardian: "Libyan forces claim to have reached the centre of the coastal city of Sirte, Islamic State's key stronghold, meaning the jihadi group may have lost all territorial control in the country. The speed of the apparent rout of Isis after three weeks of heavy fighting is extraordinary given US intelligence was suggesting only two months ago that the group had 6,000 fighters in the city and was starting to pose a threat to neighbouring Tunisia." --safari
News Lede
New York Times: "Gordie Howe, one of the greatest and most durable players in the history of hockey, who powered his Detroit Red Wings teams to four Stanley Cup championships and was 52 years old when he officially retired from playing the sport, died on Friday, the Red Wings announced. Howe -- Mr. Hockey to the sports world -- was 88."