Wednesday, June 16, 2021

RSN: Al Franken | Tax the Rich! Also the Very Affluent! But Mainly the Rich!

 


 

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16 June 21

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FUNDING RSN IS ABOUT TO GET HECTIC — At the pace we are on, we realistically have no chance of paying the bills. We will not stand pat under those circumstances. We understand that some of you will depart. We wish you well. We need to focus now on those who see and have seen what this organization is capable of socially. Who can make a donation today? / Marc Ash • Founder, Reader Supported News

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Al Franken | Tax the Rich! Also the Very Affluent! But Mainly the Rich!
Sen. Al Franken. (photo: Getty)
Al Franken, Rolling Stone
Excerpt: "Republicans say tax cuts pay for themselves. They never do. How about we try something that actually does work?"
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Israel Resumes Bombing of Gaza With Strikes Overnight
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "The raids early on Wednesday come less than a month after Israel's 11-day bombardment of Gaza in May and followed a march in occupied East Jerusalem by Jewish nationalists that drew Palestinian condemnation and anger."
READ MORE

Jonathan Chait | Rand Paul GOP Senator Says Democracy, Majority Rule Aren't What Our Country Stands For
Jonathan Chait, New York Magazine
Chait writes: "One of the edifying side effects of the Trump era has been that, by making democracy the explicit subject of political debate, it has revealed the stark fact many influential conservatives do not believe in it."
READ MORE

Biden Wants to End For-Profit Immigrant Detention. His Administration Isn't So Sure
Joel Rose, NPR
Rose writes: "Biden has doubled down on his campaign promise to end privately-run detention centers, including those that detain immigrants, but immigrant rights advocates are getting impatient."
READ MORE

The Inside Story of How de Blasio Promised, Then Thwarted NYPD Accountability
Eric Umansky and Jake Pearson, ProPublica
Excerpt: "Years ago, before he was mayor, Bill de Blasio laid out the essence of any effort to reform the country's largest police department. New York City needed true civilian oversight."
READ MORE

Saudi Arabia Executes 26-Year-Old Man for Protesting Against the Government When He Was a Teen
Natalie Musumeci, Business Insider
Musumeci writes: "Al-Darwish's family received no advance notice of his death and only learned that he had been executed by reading the news online, the UK-based non-profit organization said."
READ MORE

Banks Increased Deforestation-Linked Investments by $8B During Covid-19: Report
Mongabay
Excerpt: "The world's 50 largest financial institutions increased their investments in deforestation-linked commodity companies."
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POLITICO NIGHTLY: Biden’s unpleasant welcome-home gift

 


 
POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MICHAEL GRUNWALD

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LEFT HOOK — As President Joe Biden returns from his tense summit with Vladimir Putin to try to cobble together a bipartisan infrastructure agreement, progressive Democrats will greet him with a frustrated message: No Climate, No Deal.

These Democrats in Congress see climate change as an emergency for humanity, and while they cheered the clean energy investments in Biden’s $2.5 trillion American Jobs Plan, they’re pressuring him not to sacrifice those climate priorities to secure Republican support for a more modest bricks-and-mortar bill.

“There is little appetite in our caucus for an infrastructure plan that ignores the greatest crisis, the most existential crisis that we face,” Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) said last week.

This is the headache that awaits the president after he gets back from Europe, and there’s no simple political Excedrin that can relieve it.

The climate crisis may be urgent, but like the Covid crisis and the democracy crisis and the border crisis and anything else that politicians deem a crisis, addressing it through legislation requires rounding up the votes.

That’s not so easy to do when Democrats have such tiny majorities in Congress. The all-powerful centrist Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has been just as adamant about a bipartisan process as Heinrich and other liberals have been about a climate-conscious outcome. Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) has demanded “an absolute unbreakable guarantee that climate has to be at the center of any infrastructure deal that we cut,” but if Manchin doesn’t want to give that guarantee, there isn’t much that Markey or Biden or anyone else can do about it.

The problem, of course, is that climate change is a real crisis. Atmospheric carbon levels just hit the highest level in recorded human history, and the International Energy Agency just warned that humans need to end oil and gas exploration now, sales of fossil-fueled boilers by 2025 and sales of internal combustion engines by 2035 to reach the emissions targets of the Paris accord. The climate didn’t care about congressional gridlock when President Barack Obama failed to pass a climate bill in 2009, and it doesn’t care now.

Crises do not have the power to force politicians to solve them. But they do have the power to force politicians to reveal their priorities. President Donald Trump often talked about America’s infrastructure crisis, but it clearly wasn’t a top priority for him or his party, because Republicans never did anything about it when they were in power, despite the Trump administration's series of comically overhyped “Infrastructure Weeks.” By contrast, Trump really did care about his border wall, so much so that when Congress refused to fund it, he diverted billions of dollars from the Pentagon to the wall.

Climate is clearly a priority for Biden. He’s set far-reaching climate targets, hired a Dream Team of climate hawks, and made a series of aggressive climate announcements.

But it’s not yet clear whether it’s as urgent a priority for him as restoring bipartisanship, or fixing more traditional infrastructure, or indulging Joe Manchin. And no matter how loud the left screams, he might not have a path to a climate bill that doesn’t require him to let the elaborate Washington choreography of bipartisan negotiations play out until Republicans find an excuse to drop out. Then Manchin and other jittery Democrats might agree to pass something green — or at least greenish.

Progressives talk a lot these days about learning the lessons of 2009, by which they mean Biden shouldn’t compromise his ambitions the way they think Obama did. But when I interviewed Biden a decade ago about the lessons of 2009, he said the left was crazy to blame Obama for failing to get a bigger stimulus or a more generous health care bill. He thought he and Obama had moved the ball down the field, taking what the defense had given them. He believed they had made things better, and better was better than worse. Perfect wasn't on the menu, so they had tried for good.

“Give me a break,” he told me. “I’ve been doing this my whole career. I’m going to say something outrageous: I don’t know anybody who counts votes better than me in the Senate. I love the left saying, Oh, you could’ve done better. Come on. You tell me how you get the votes!”

When Biden comes home from Switzerland, he’ll have to try to get the votes again. Whether the bipartisan negotiations on the Hill produce a deal, whether Democrats pursue their own bill that requires only 50 votes, the president won’t get everything he wants for the climate.

But it’s quite likely that he’ll get something. And then the left will have to decide whether that’s better than nothing.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. If you’re opening this the second it hits your inbox (and we know you are), go here to tune into the second half of the NYC Democratic Mayoral Debate, co-moderated by POLITICO’s own Sally Goldenberg . We’ll have analysis from our New York team running alongside. Reach out with news, tips and ideas for us at mgrunwald@politico.com, or on Twitter at @MikeGrunwald.

Programming note: Nightly won’t be publishing Friday, June 18. We’ll be back and better than ever on Monday, June 21.

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AROUND THE WORLD

Nightly video player of President Joe Biden in Geneva, Switzerland

NO CUSSIN’, LIL’ FUSSIN’, SOME BACKTALKIN’ — Aviators and a crystal bison. “Stable and predictable.” Tolstoy quotes. There was a little something for everyone on the shores of Lake Geneva, as the U.S.-Russia summit capped Biden’s European trip.

— ‘This is not about trust’: Biden and Putin both described their highly anticipated meeting as an amicable and constructive affair, but they offered few signs of progress in the U.S.-Russia relationship and made clear there was little trust between the two countries, Anita Kumar and Quint Forgey write. At a pair of solo news conferences, Biden and Putin claimed to have gotten along fairly well during their hours of conversation with senior aides. Still, Biden emphasized that only Russia’s future actions would prove whether Putin heard the message the American president traveled to Geneva to deliver.

“It was important to meet in person so there could be no mistake about or misrepresentations about what I wanted to communicate. I did what I came to do,” Biden said. “This is not about trust. This is about self-interest and verification of self-interest,” he added, later citing an expression to paraphrase his post-summit outlook: “The proof of the pudding is in the eating. We're going to know shortly.”

— Hack back tack for future cyber whack? Biden said he warned Putin that the U.S. would use offensive cyber operations in the future unless the Kremlin clamps down on cyber strikes against the U.S., including ransomware attacks and election interference.

— ‘That’s a ridiculous comparison’: Biden flatly rejected Putin’s attempt to deflect from Russia’s treatment of human rights by pointing out America’s perceived shortcomings at home and abroad. Following the hourslong meeting with Biden, Putin dodged a question about Russia’s jailing and unsparing treatment of political dissidents by pointing to the months of unrest last summer in the wake of George Floyd’s murder at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer.

— Paging embassy cleaning crews: The U.S. and Russia said they would return their ambassadors to Moscow and D.C. , respectively, following the summit. The ambassadors’ return was an anticipated topic of discussion at the summit in Geneva. Russia’s U.S. ambassador, Anatoly Antonov, was called back by the Kremlin in March after Biden called Putin a “killer.” The U.S. ambassador to Russia, John Sullivan, left Moscow in April, publicly stating that the reason for his return to the U.S. was “consultations” with American officials. His departure from Russia came after the U.S. imposed sanctions on Russia and expelled 10 Russian diplomats — and Russia, in turn, expelled 10 U.S. diplomats.

 

DON'T MISS THE MILKEN INSTITUTE FUTURE OF HEALTH SUMMIT: POLITICO will feature a special edition of our Future Pulse newsletter at the 2021 Milken Institute Future of Health Summit. The newsletter takes readers inside one of the most influential gatherings of global health industry leaders and innovators who are turning lessons learned from the past year into a healthier, more resilient and more equitable future. Covid-19 threatened our health and well-being, while simultaneously leading to extraordinary coordination to improve pandemic preparedness, disease prevention, diversity in clinical trials, mental health resources, food access and more. SUBSCRIBE TODAY to receive exclusive coverage from June 22-24.

 
 
FROM THE HEALTH DESK

THE MAINSTREAMING OF ANTI-VAXXERS — Before the pandemic, anti-vaxxers were mostly fringe groups, falsely claiming that shots could cause autism in children. Now, Covid culture wars and red state laws to restrict vaccine mandates are reinvigorating the anti-vaccine movement nationwide — and that's a problem for ending the pandemic, Lauren Gardner reports in the latest POLITICO Dispatch.

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Manchin privately strategizes with GOP on his party's stalled elections bill: As progressives hammer Manchin for opposing Democrats’ ethics and election reform bill, the West Virginian is busy working behind the scenes. Manchin organized a Zoom meeting on Monday with civil rights groups and a handful of Republican senators to discuss his party's proposals on voting rights and policing, both of which are currently stuck in the upper chamber as Democrats search for the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster.

— DOJ watchdog: Marshals Service has ‘inadequate’ resources to protect judges: The U.S. Marshals Service doesn’t have the resources it needs to keep federal judges safe, according to a new report from an internal watchdog. The agency doesn’t have sufficient capabilities to monitor threats made on social media, the report found, and the home security system it provides for its protectees offers “limited or outdated equipment.”

— Senate will vote to repeal Iraq War authorization, Schumer says: Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced his support for repealing the 2002 war authorization for Iraq , vowing to hold a vote on scrapping the outdated measure later this year. The announcement from Schumer comes as the House is expected to pass Rep. Barbara Lee’s (D-Calif.) bill on Thursday that would repeal the 2002 law, which served as the legal basis for several military operations in Iraq.

— EU to open up travel to unvaccinated US citizens: Restrictions on travel to Europe from the United States are set to be eased after EU ambassadors reached an agreement on additions to the EU’s approved travel list, national officials told POLITICO. Countries today agreed to expand the list to include the U.S., North Macedonia, Serbia, Albania, Taiwan and Lebanon, with a formal sign-off expected at the end of the week.

 

SUBSCRIBE TO "THE RECAST" TODAY: Power is shifting in Washington and in communities across the country. More people are demanding a seat at the table, insisting that politics is personal and not all policy is equitable. The Recast is a twice-weekly newsletter that explores the changing power dynamics in Washington and breaks down how race and identity are recasting politics and policy in America. Get fresh insights, scoops and dispatches on this crucial intersection from across the country and hear critical new voices that challenge business as usual. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE . Thank you to our sponsor, Intel.

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

25 million

The number of interactions involving critical race theory on Facebook, according to a DNC analysis. The academic concept of civil rights scholars was barely a blip on social media in 2020. The increase in interest illustrates how rampant disinformation has become during the Biden era.

PARTING IMAGE

New York mayoral candidate Eric Adams

Eric Adams in Cadman Plaza in Brooklyn. | Mark Ostow for POLITICO Magazine

SCENES FROM A SURREAL MAYOR’S RACE — Coming Thursday in POLITICO: For five days, photographer Mark Ostow followed some of the top New York City mayoral contenders as they pressed their case to voters, block by block. His intimate, almost off-the-cuff style, and his knack for catching politicians and the people around them in unguarded moments, seemed perfectly suited to this most unusual campaign — and to capturing every corner of the city, from Broadway to Brooklyn bodegas. This first look for Nightly readers is of Eric Adams, who has topped most recent polls, in Brooklyn’s Cadman Plaza this past weekend.

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Accused Capitol Rioter Gets Schooled By NBC Reporter On TV

 



MSNBC's Brian Williams shares the tale of Jason Riddle who stands accused of participating in the Trump-incited Capitol insurrection. Riddle recently spoke to Katherine Underwood with Boston's NBC10 about his political ambitions -- but didn't know the candidate he wanted to defeat was a member of the U.S. House rather than the Massachusetts or New Hampshire state house. 




Celebrate

 



On Donald Trump's birthday, let's remember all of the people who didn't get to see their's this year.


How Trump Gets Back To The White House





 

Barr, Giuliani, Murdoch and the Arrest of Lev Parnas | The MeidasTouch Podcast

 



Why did Bill Barr meet with Rupert Murdoch on the day Lev Parnas was arrested? Congress must investigate!




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IN SPITE OF MY ATTEMPT TO UNSUBSCRIBE, THE RNC IGNORED MY REQUESTS & FRANKLY MANY OF US ARE ENJOYING THE MUZZLING OF THE COMBOVER CALIGULA WHO HAD LITTLE OF VALUE TO OFFER. 

AND THE RNC CAN'T EVEN GET THE NAME RIGHT! 

NO SANE PERSON WANTS A RETURN OF HATE, LIES, ATTACKS, RACISM, VIOLENCE, DIVISIVENESS, AUTHORITARIANISM FROM THE WANNABE DICTATOR. 

PUTIN'S PUPPET! 

EACH DAY PROVIDES A REVELATION OF CORRUPTION ABUSE OF POWER, CRIMES. 

THIS IS DESPERATION OF THE RNC! 

THIS IS WHERE RIGHT WING REPUBLICANS SEEK TO TAKE THE NATION - JUST ANOTHER BANANA REPUBLIC WITH A DICTATOR....



PRESIDENT BIDEN GOT IT RIGHT WHEN HE SAID: 




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RSN: FOCUS: Branko Marcetic | The Democrats Aren't Powerless to Flip Joe Manchin

 

 

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16 June 21

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FOCUS: Branko Marcetic | The Democrats Aren't Powerless to Flip Joe Manchin
Joe Manchin (D-WV) speaks during a Senate hearing on June 10, 2021. (photo: Alex Wong/Getty)
Branko Marcetic, Jacobin
Marcetic writes: "Democratic leaders claim to be powerless against the handful of conservative Democrats blocking progressive reform. Yet when it comes to government surveillance or funding war, those Democrats always know how to force rank-and-file lawmakers to fall in line."

he Democratic Party, and the country as a whole, are in a unique dilemma. Democrats, liberals, and even the center seem to have finally woken up to just how dangerously extreme the modern GOP is, with Republicans openly working around the country to suppress the vote and, if that fails, ensure they can overturn the result if it doesn’t go their way.

Democrats could theoretically head this off with the voting rights bills they have vowed to pass. But to do so, they’d have to first abolish or drastically reform the Senate filibuster, and that idea is opposed by two conservative senators: Kyrsten Sinema and, especially, West Virginia’s Joe Manchin.

Reportedly, President Joe Biden, who was sold to the electorate as the experienced insider and consummate dealmaker who could make Washington finally work, has no plan to induce Manchin to switch. In fact, despite pledging to “fight like heck with every tool at my disposal” to get the voting rights bill passed, Biden has instructed civil rights groups not to pressure Manchin in private meetings. This is because, according to the Atlantic’s Ronald Brownstein, and in line with the suspicions of frustrated voting rights groups, the White House doesn’t see that legislation as a priority. Rather, a senior official told Brownstein, they see the most viable path to defeating the GOP’s antidemocratic plans as passing Biden’s agenda in order to “win elections in 2022, so we keep control of the House and Senate.”

Yet that plan is also stalled for the same reason: Manchin refuses to back Biden’s infrastructure bill, demanding it have GOP buy-in. So, for weeks now, nothing has happened, as Biden engages in fruitless negotiations with Republicans who will never support his legislation, offering to cut more and more from the bill to get them on board, and jeopardizing what might very well be the last chance to do anything meaningful on climate change for a long time, as well as undermining future economic recovery.

This is in line with what Brownstein’s White House source told him: that the agenda Biden’s team sees as key to letting the party hold on to Congress in 2022 is about “working to mitigate political conflict and compromising with Republicans.” Unfortunately, you’d be hard-pressed to find a Democratic voter or party activist who shares this interpretation of the Democratic agenda they voted for, as even hard-core partisans are admitting.

So, much like Obama’s agenda twelve years ago, Biden’s is stuck thanks to obstinate congresspeople, and the ritual sacrificing of progressive priorities that results is all but certain to produce the same thing as last time: a midterm shellacking that leaves the country ungovernable for two more years and puts the GOP in the driver’s seat. But this scenario is even more alarming in the post-Trump world, with Republicans certain to not just further rig the rules in their favor but, at best, do nothing about the accelerating threat of climate change.

If only there was something, anything, that could be done to stop it — but there isn’t. That seems to be the attitude of Democratic officials, who have simply given up on passing their voting rights legislation.

Not An Option

As Jacobin’s Luke Savage has pointed out, this kind of fatalism is strange given the stakes. Democratic rhetoric, whether it’s from Biden, Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer, or Stacey Abrams, is lately replete with warnings of democracy under threat and impending authoritarianism. Yet despite controlling the White House and Congress, Democrats seem to feel all their options have been exhausted.

It’s a stark contrast to the GOP, which has responded to its electoral troubles with typical determined ruthlessness. But it’s also a change from years past, where, when something was a big enough priority, a president and a party have typically done everything possible to find the votes.

Think back to 2010 and the passage of the Affordable Care Act, which had been all but left for dead after a period of GOP time-wasting in which the Republicans used the same techniques they’re now employing on Biden. The bill was resuscitated at the last moment by President Obama and House speaker Nancy Pelosi, who were determined to ram it through. What followed was a full-court press from the White House (“He would do anything, he will call anyone, meet with anyone. He will speak anywhere. He will do whatever it takes,” Obama’s communications director later recalled) and Democratic leadership. Both Obama and Pelosi relentlessly lobbied reluctant members, with the speaker simply refusing to accept failure:

We will go through the gate. If the gate is closed, we will go over the fence. If the fence is too high, we will pole-vault in. If that doesn’t work, we will parachute in. But we are going to get health care reform passed.

In her initial quest for votes, Pelosi had done everything from adding provisions to making promises to take up specific members’ issues, to getting a former university president to pressure his local representative. True, to get the bill over the line, Obama had to resort to an executive order to restrict abortion funds, while Pelosi had to give up on the public option. But, all things considered, she was relatively uncompromising, refusing to break the bill into parts as some White House advisors wanted.

As Gary Andres, then a lobbyist and later a top Republican staffer, explained at the time, a range of options was available to the president for the vote-whipping operation: promises to help members fundraise, spending earmarks, recruiting interest groups to step up pressure, and offers of committee assignments (and threats of punishment).

“The White House has its own ‘candy store’ it can bestow on lawmakers’ districts or by making other policy changes through the power of the executive branch,” he wrote then.

After all, the stakes were high: with health care stalled and no other major legislative achievements, Obama openly warned his entire presidency hinged on the effort.

Pelosi didn’t always do this for progressive ends. When, in the wake of the Edward Snowden leaks in 2013, reining in the NSA’s mass-surveillance program became a top priority for both the US public and Congress, Obama worked furiously with the agency’s director to peel votes away from the effort. Key was Pelosi, who “aggressively lobbied wayward Democrats to torpedo the amendment,” and whose efforts had “a much bigger effect on swing Democratic votes against the amendment than anything [the director] had to say,” a committee aide told Foreign Policy at the time. The bill went down by a narrow 205-217 vote.

Pelosi had been just one of the players years earlier in 2008, when both Democratic and Republican leaderships worked overtime to get that year’s hated bank bailout over the line. After failing in September after a weekend of negotiations, party leadership launched a flurry of lobbying while adding sweeteners: a few extra provisions around tax incentives and disaster aid, and a promise from then-candidate Obama to black lawmakers that he would back foreclosure relief legislation (a promise he swiftly broke). Needing twelve House members to switch, they managed fifty-eight instead — thirty-three Democrats and twenty-five Republicans.

It’s instructive to look at Lyndon Johnson, the master Senate legislator to whom Biden has been repeatedly likened by pundits. Johnson, who refused to water down civil rights legislation in the face of a wall of Southern obstruction and a mountain of procedural obstacles, was no doubt a singular figure, famously able to harangue and flatter lawmakers into voting his way. But he was also willing to dispense with tradition and procedure and play hardball, when the time called for it, to aggressively push his priorities.

As recounted in Robert Caro’s The Passage of Power, upon ascending to the presidency and finding long odds for civil rights, tied up as they were in the Rules Committee, he took a rarely used measure that, in the New York Times’ words, “offends traditionalists”: launching a discharge petition in the House to wrench control of the bill from the committee and send it to the floor. Johnson didn’t even have to get a majority of the House to sign: once the number of signatures got close, the chairman, wanting to avoid embarrassment, did it himself voluntarily.

Modern Democrats know how to play hardball, too, to whip their own members, as they did to progressives in 2009. Five months into his presidency, Obama sidestepped his promises to leave Iraq and Afghanistan and requested more funding to escalate US involvement in the latter, hitting a wall of dozens of antiwar House Democrats. In many ways, the holdouts had the advantage, with public opinion heavily on their side.

They were soon met with a wave of lobbying from both Democratic leadership and various White House officials to get them to flip. One House member, Lynn Woolsey, charged that the White House went so far as to threaten freshmen they’d leave them hanging come reelection if they didn’t vote the president’s way. “We’re not going to help you. You’ll never hear from us again,” she recounted them saying at the time. It was enough to peel off nineteen votes, and the measure passed.

On Friday, I asked Woolsey, who represented a central California district for twenty years and played a key role in forcing the first vote on ending the war in Iraq, whether she thinks a similar threat could be made to push someone like Manchin now.

“Isn’t that what politics is all about — give and take?” she says. “I mean, what good is Manchin to the Democratic Party if he only votes with Republicans? It’s common sense, I think. Personally, I think he’s being given too much room already.”

Woolsey says she has faith in Biden’s efforts to restore the country post-Trump. She believes he first needs to know he did as much as reasonably possible to get GOP support for his program before moving forward on a partisan basis. She notes that Biden may be applying pressure behind the scenes, but confesses some frustration that more apparently isn’t being done, pointing to Trump’s continued ability to push Republicans while no longer even in politics.

“And what are the Democrats doing to Manchin? Nothing,” she says.

One point of leverage could be the West Virginian governor’s mansion. According to the Intercept’s Ryan Grim, Manchin still longs for the office he held in 2005–2010 and considered running for it in 2020. Could the very possible prospect of losing a small but significant and disgruntled slice of the state’s Democratic vote for his gubernatorial bid be enough to force Manchin’s hand?

It’s true that the problem runs deeper than Manchin, who is being used as a human shield by other Democrats unwilling to take the heat he’s getting. Yet their very reluctance to withstand that kind of pressure suggests that flipping Manchin could prove to be the proverbial levee whose breach brings the party’s Senate members on board.

Perhaps such moves are already in the works and everyone involved is playing their cards close to their chest. But, if not, it will be difficult for voters to swallow the idea that the Democrats were simply unable to flip a far smaller number of members than they’ve managed to in times past when their agenda hinged on it. The stakes have never been higher.

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RSN: FOCUS: Edward Snowden | Eight Years Ago, My Life Began


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FOCUS: Edward Snowden | Eight Years Ago, My Life Began
Whistleblower Edward Snowden. (photo: Guardian UK)
Edward Snowden, Continuing Ed
Snowden writes: "I was a climbing careerist in the American Intelligence Community, a former CIA officer and NSA contractor, until I discovered that my work - and the work of my generation - had, in secret, been turned toward the construction of history's first truly global system of mass surveillance."
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The GOP just tried to kick hundreds of students off the voter rolls

    This year, MAGA GOP activists in Georgia attempted to disenfranchise hundreds of students by trying to kick them off the voter rolls. De...