Monday, March 25, 2024

COMMON CAUSE: Petition: Overturn Citizens United

 
Let's join together and stop ANONYMOUS BIG MONEY from buying elections!

We have work to do in order to make ALL Americans' lives better....the 
WEALTHY don't represent Americans! 




SIGN NOW: Congress must put an end to Big Money’s grip on our democracy >>

Fourteen years ago the 5-4 Citizens United ruling by the Supreme Court opened the floodgates for unrestricted Big Money spending in our elections. 

And right now, we’re seeing the consequences: Corporations, special interest groups, and some of the wealthiest people in the country are spending billions of dollars to influence the 2024 elections. 

When they get this kind of power over our elections, we all pay the price – with decaying infrastructure, inaction on guns and climate, and tax giveaways to the ultra-rich. 

But it doesn’t have to be this way. Congress can overturn the disastrous Citizens United decision and pass common-sense reforms like the Freedom to Vote Act and the DISCLOSE Act, which would limit Big Money’s influence in our democracy and empower everyday Americans to have a stronger say.

If you believe, like I do, that government should be of, by, and for the people – then please join me in calling on Congress to END the Citizens United era.

2024 will likely be the most expensive election in history, with spending expected to top $10.2 billion. [1] 

That’s because the Citizens United decision has not just allowed, but encouraged, the wealthy and powerful to buy access to politicians and contribute unrestricted sums of money – effectively drowning out the voices of everyday Americans. 

This is NOT how our democracy is supposed to work. We the People should call the shots when it comes to the issues that impact our everyday lives, not a shadowy network of wealthy special interests. 

We must urge Congress to overturn Citizens United v. FEC and pass the Freedom to Vote Act and the DISCLOSE Act. These crucial reforms would help shine a light on secret political spending, get big money out of politics, and establish small-dollar citizen funded elections – giving ordinary Americans a greater say in our democracy. 

Sign the petition to Congress: We need a democracy where all voices can be heard. Overturn Citizens United now!

I hope you’ll join me and take action today. 

Thanks for all you do, 

Devon Bhakta, Digital Campaigns Manager
and the team at Common Cause 

[1] https://adimpact.com/2024-political-spending-projections-report/ 





COMMON DREAMS: Top News: Draft UN Report Finds Israel Has Met Threshold for Genocide

 


DON'T FORGET TO REVIEW THE OPINIONS BELOW!


Monday, March 25, 2024

■ Today's Top News 


Federal Court Rules Major Wyoming Oil and Gas Lease Sale Illegal for Ignoring Climate Impacts

"This is a huge victory for the protection of our public lands," said Friends of the Earth.

By Julia Conley



Draft UN Report Finds Israel Has Met Threshold for Genocide

"Israel's genocide on the Palestinians in Gaza is an escalatory stage of a long-standing settler colonial process of erasure."

By Brett Wilkins



Boeing CEO's Voluntary Departure Is Not Accountability for Corporate Crime: Watchdog

"For real and lasting change to occur," said Public Citizen's Robert Weissman, "Boeing must now be held criminally accountable."

By Jake Johnson



US Abstains as UN Security Council Demands 'Immediate Cease-Fire' in Gaza

"This resolution must be implemented," said U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres. "Failure would be unforgivable."

By Brett Wilkins



'Death Sentence for Thousands': Israel Bars UNRWA Food Aid to Northern Gaza

"By preventing UNRWA to fulfill its mandate in Gaza, the clock will tick faster toward famine and many more will die of hunger, dehydration, and lack of shelter," UNRWA's commissioner-general said.

By Olivia Rosane



'Beyond Comprehension': Medical Team Reports Starvation, Infections at Gaza Hospital

"We're doing everything we can, navigating through critical shortages and working with very limited resources, to save lives amidst this dire situation."

By Jake Johnson


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VIEW ALL NEWS

■ Opinion


UN Security Council's Gaza Cease-Fire Resolution Is Not Enough—But It's a Start

Despite weaknesses and false U.S. claims that the resolution is nonbinding, it demands an end to the bombing and a massive influx of humanitarian aid. And that means the possibility of saving lives.

By Phyllis Bennis


Dead Planet Walking: From Trump's Blood Bath to War World III

If you thought what was once proudly dubbed "the American Century" couldn't get any worse, you clearly haven't been paying attention.

By Tom Engelhardt


Death Culture: When 1,000 in Hollywood Proclaim Support for Gaza Slaughter

What filmmaker Jonathan Glazer said in scarcely one minute at the Oscars retains profound moral power that no distortions can hide.

By Norman Solomon

Last week, Variety reported that “more than 1,000 Jewish creatives, executives and Hollywood professionals have signed an open letter denouncing Jonathan Glazer’s ‘The Zone of Interest’ Oscar speech.” The angry letter is a tight script for a real-life drama of defending Israel as it continues to methodically kill civilians no less precious than the signers’ own loved ones.

A few ethical words from Glazer while accepting his award provoked outrage. He spoke of wanting to refute “Jewishness and the Holocaust being hijacked by an occupation, which has led to conflict for so many innocent people,” and he followed with a vital question: “Whether the victims of October the 7th in Israel or the ongoing attack on Gaza, all the victims of this dehumanization, how do we resist?”

Those words were too much for the letter’s signers, who included many of Hollywood’s powerful producers, directors and agents. For starters, they accused Glazer (who is Jewish) of “drawing a moral equivalence between a Nazi regime that sought to exterminate a race of people, and an Israeli nation that seeks to avert its own extermination.”

Ironically, that accusation embodied what Glazer had confronted from the Academy Awards stage when he said that what’s crucial in the present is “not to say, ‘Look what they did then,’ rather, ‘Look what we do now.’”

But the letter refused to look at what Israel is doing now as it bombs, kills, maims and starves Palestinian civilians in Gaza, where there are now 32,000 known dead and 74,000 injured. The letter’s moral vision only looked back at what the Third Reich did. Its signers endorsed the usual Zionist polemics—fitting neatly into Glazer’s description of “Jewishness and the Holocaust” being “hijacked by an occupation.”

The crimes against humanity committed by Nazi Germany against Jews are in no way exculpatory for the crimes against humanity now being committed by Israel.

The letter even denied that an occupation actually exists—objecting to “the use of words like ‘occupation’ to describe an indigenous Jewish people defending a homeland that dates back thousands of years.” Somehow the Old Testament was presumed to be sufficient justification for the ongoing slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza, most of whose ancestors lived in what’s now Israel. The vast majority of 2.2 million people have been driven from their bombed-out homes in Gaza, with many now facing starvation due to blockage of food.

Israel’s extreme restrictions on food and other vital supplies are causing deaths from starvation and disease as well as enormous suffering. In early March, a panel of U.N. experts issued a statement that declared: “Israel has been intentionally starving the Palestinian people in Gaza since 8 October. Now it is targeting civilians seeking humanitarian aid and humanitarian convoys.” (So much for the anti-Glazer letter’s claim that “Israel is not targeting civilians.”)

Last weekend, on Egypt’s border at the crossing to Rafah, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said: "Here from this crossing, we see the heartbreak and heartlessness of it all. A long line of blocked relief trucks on one side of the gates, the long shadow of starvation on the other. That is more than tragic. It is a moral outrage."

But there is not the slightest hint of any such moral outrage in the letter signed by the more than 1,000 “creatives, executives and Hollywood professionals.” Instead, all the ire is directed at Glazer for pointing out that moral choices on matters of life and death are not merely consigned to the past. The crimes against humanity committed by Nazi Germany against Jews are in no way exculpatory for the crimes against humanity now being committed by Israel.

What Glazer said in scarcely one minute retains profound moral power that no distortions can hide. Continuity exists between the setting of “The Zone of Interest” eight decades ago and today’s realities as the United States supports Israel’s genocidal actions:

Our film shows where dehumanization leads, at its worst. It shaped all of our past and present. Right now we stand here as men who refute their Jewishness and the Holocaust being hijacked by an occupation, which has led to conflict for so many innocent people. Whether the victims of October the 7th in Israel or the ongoing attack on Gaza, all the victims of this dehumanization, how do we resist?

Much of the movie’s focus is on the lives of a man and a woman preoccupied with career, status and material well-being. Such preoccupations are hardly unfamiliar in the movie industry, where silence or support for the Gaza war are common among professionals—in contrast to Jonathan Glazer and others, Jewish or not, who have spoken out in his defense or for a ceasefire.

“What he was saying is so simple: that Jewishness, Jewish identity, Jewish history, the history of the Holocaust, the history of Jewish suffering, must not be used in the campaign as an excuse for a project of dehumanizing or slaughtering other people,” the playwright and screenwriter Tony Kushner said in an interview with an Israeli newspaper days ago. He called Glazer’s statement from the Oscars stage “unimpeachable and irrefutable.”

Yet even without signing the open letter that denounced Glazer’s comments, some in the entertainment industry felt compelled to assert their backing for a country now engaged in a genocidal war. Notably, a spokesperson for the financier of Glazer’s film, Len Blavatnik, responded to the controversy by tellingVariety that “his long-standing support of Israel is unwavering.”

How many more Palestinian civilians will Israel murder before such “support for Israel” begins to waver?


From the River to the Sea, Not a Single Palestinian is Free

Israel has put in place a complex system of laws, policies, and regulations that fundamentally curtail the rights and freedoms of nearly every Palestinian and Arab in Gaza, the occupied West Bank, East Jerusalem, and even among its own citizens.

By Manal A. Jamal


Can the Democrats Change Their Failing Playbook Before It’s Too Late?

The party shows the same old obsession with raising record amounts of money at the expense of presenting an authentic, vibrant agenda that will motivate millions of voters to vote for Democratic candidates.

By Ralph Nader


VIEW ALL OPINION





POLITICO Nightly: The collapse of New Jersey’s political machine

 


POLITICO Nightly logo

BY MIA MCCARTHY

 Tammy Murphy talks to reporters.

New Jersey first lady Tammy Murphy talks to reporters at the Bergen County Democratic convention in Paramus, New Jersey on Monday, March 4, 2024. Murphy suspended her campaign for Senate on Sunday. | Seth Wenig/AP

THE SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE — It was the week that blew up New Jersey’s political machine.

First came a legal filing from the state’s attorney general conceding that New Jersey’s infamous ballot design was unconstitutional. Then, embattled Bob Menendez, the state’s senior senator and a fixture in Congress for over 30 years, announced he would not run in the Democratic primary — but kept the door open for an independent run.

On Sunday, came the final blow: First Lady Tammy Murphy dropped her bid for Senate , capping a series of events that did more to break the state’s notoriously reform-resistant, party-boss-driven political culture than any other effort in decades. Long recognized for its tradition of corruption and its all-in-the-family politics, New Jersey finally took a step toward the modern era.

All of it traces back to September, when Menendez and his wife were indicted for accepting bribes in the form of cash, mortgage payments and gold bars. A defiant Menendez refused to resign his seat; a day later, Democratic Rep. Andy Kim — a relative political outsider in the state — announced he would challenge Menendez in the primary. Murphy officially joined the race nearly two months later.

On paper, Murphy was assumed to be the frontrunner. She had money, name recognition and the blue state’s ossified Democratic establishment quickly fell in line behind her.

That meant she was likely to receive New Jersey’s equivalent of a coronation — the so-called “party line’ position on the ballot that is unique to the state. The system places county chair-endorsed candidates together in a row on primary ballots so that it appears more prominently on the ballot. Studies have found there is an advantage to this favorable ballot placement, making the local party-endorsed candidates more likely to win.

But her campaign faltered amid the bad political optics of her candidacy. Though accomplished in her own right, the spectacle of party leaders greasing the path to the Senate for the wealthy governor’s wife led to widespread grumbling among grassroots party activists. Polls showed she was failing to gain traction against Kim, an unassuming, mild-mannered congressman who campaigned on changing the New Jersey machine.

Kim had gone so far as to file a lawsuit in federal court against the ballot design back in February — he is seeking a preliminary injunction to eliminate the party line from ballots ahead of the June primary — but just days before the ballot line got its first hearing in court, state Attorney General Matt Platkin conceded that the state laws that enforce the county-line system are unconstitutional — and his office would not defend them in court .

It was a blow to the line system and to Murphy’s campaign: Platkin got his start on Gov. Phil Murphy’s first campaign for governor, before Murphy appointed Platkin as the state’s top attorney.

After that, the dominoes began to fall fast. Facing near-impossible odds in a Democratic primary, Menendez announced Thursday he won’t run as a Democrat. He left the door open for an independent bid, however — it wouldn’t be his first time running while facing an indictment.

As for Murphy, she bowed out of the race on Sunday, on the eve of New Jersey’s filing deadline, saying that “continuing in this race will involve waging a very divisive and negative campaign, which I am not willing to do.”

That much was true, though her stunning decision was also a reflection of the troubled nature of her campaign. The resistance she faced often seemed as much about the insider-dominated political system that enabled her candidacy as about Murphy herself.

With Menendez in legal jeopardy, the governor and his wife politically bruised and the county line system under siege, New Jersey may be at a turning point. And the biggest change is yet to come, with Kim — the political outsider the establishment sought to steamroll — now on a glide path to the Democratic Senate nomination in a very blue state.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at mmccarthy@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @Reporter_Mia .

 

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WHAT'D I MISS?

— Trump’s first criminal trial is now set for April 15: Donald Trump will face his first criminal trial on April 15 , the judge overseeing the former president’s hush money case ruled today after having allowed a several-week delay so Trump’s lawyers could review last-minute documents relevant to the case. The Manhattan trial, over a payment Trump authorized in the final weeks of the 2016 election to silence porn star Stormy Daniels’ claims of a sexual encounter with him, had been set to start March 25. But after federal prosecutors handed over hundreds of thousands of pages of documents related to the case in recent weeks, Justice Juan Merchan agreed earlier this month to postpone the start of proceedings.

— Trump no longer needs to post full $454M bond in civil fraud case, court rules: A panel of state appeals judges gave Donald Trump a significant reprieve today by lowering the amount of the bond he must post to stop enforcement of a $454 million civil judgment for corporate fraud. Trump can post a bond of just $175 million while he appeals the verdict, the five-judge panel ruled in a terse order, after the former president said he couldn’t obtain a bond to cover the full judgment.

— Judge dismisses Musk’s lawsuit against nonprofit researchers tracking hate speech on X: A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit by Elon Musk’s X Corp. against the nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate , which has documented the increase in hate speech on the site since it was acquired by the Tesla owner. X, formerly known as Twitter, had argued the center’s researchers violated the site’s terms of service by improperly compiling public tweets, and that its subsequent reports on the rise of hate speech cost X millions of dollars when advertisers fled. Today, U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer dismissed the suit, writing in his order that it was “unabashedly and vociferously about one thing” — punishing the nonprofit for its speech.

NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

GAS MONEY Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who built his public profile as an environmental activist and crusader against polluters, earned tens of thousands of dollars from an oil and gas rights leasing company , reports POLITICO. The independent presidential candidate reported the earnings on his financial disclosure form filed last June from Arctic Royalty Limited Partnership, which leases land for oil and gas extraction in Oklahoma, Texas and other states.

PAYBACK — Former President Donald Trump wants a Republican to mount a primary challenge to Rep. Laurel Lee , the lone member of Florida’s congressional delegation to endorse Gov. Ron DeSantis in his unsuccessful bid for president. Lee, who won a crowded GOP primary two years ago in a safe red district, served as Florida’s top election official under DeSantis and resisted calls by a faction of vocal Republicans and Trump supporters to do a complete audit of the 2020 election in the state. DeSantis at the time also rejected calls for an audit of the results that showed that Trump defeated now-President Joe Biden by three percentage points in the state.

VEEP FAIL — With Robert F. Kennedy Jr. set to unveil his running mate on Tuesday, an unforeseen hiccup has emerged in Nevada , complicating the long-shot independent’s path to gaining ballot access in the Silver State, CBS News reports. Kennedy’s vice presidential pick comes as he needs a running mate to qualify for the ballot in multiple states. And despite the campaign’s announcement earlier this month celebrating amassing 15,000 signatures in Nevada, which exceeds what’s needed to get on the ballot in November, the campaign could be forced to start its signature collection from scratch in the state because it failed to name a running mate when it filed Kennedy’s petition, according to documents filed by Kennedy.

Nevada’s presidential candidate’s guide states that independent candidate petitions must include both the presidential and vice presidential candidates’ names on the petition in order to be valid, the Nevada secretary of state’s office confirmed.

SPAC ATTACK — Donald Trump’s fledgling social media venture will begin trading as a public company on Tuesday , setting the former president up for a potentially massive payday if all goes to plan, reports POLITICO. Trump Media & Technology Group is slated to debut on Nasdaq under the ticker “DJT,” according to a securities filing released today. The company, which operates Truth Social, will take over the listing of Digital World Acquisition Corp., a blank-check entity that has been scrambling for much of the past two years to complete a $300 million merger with Trump Media. Shareholders approved the deal Friday.

AROUND THE WORLD

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant leaves the State Department after meeting with Secretary of State Antony Blinken at the State Department.

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant leaves the State Department after meeting with Secretary of State Antony Blinken at the State Department today. | Roberto Schmidt.AFP via Getty Images

WAVED THROUGH — The U.N. Security Council passed a resolution today explicitly calling for a cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war after the U.S. declined to exercise its veto power, POLITICO reports.

Israel responded by canceling a visit this week by Israeli officials and top advisers to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Washington, adding to the tensions between the two longtime allies amid Israel’s military operations in the Gaza strip.

The passage of the resolution, led and presented by the non-permanent members of the United Nations’ most powerful body, comes after a series of resolutions addressing the Israel-Hamas war failed because of vetoes from the United States, China and Russia because of disagreements over the phrasing of calls for a cease-fire.

The decision of the U.S. to abstain, rather than veto the resolution, is also Washington’s sharpest action to date at the United Nations against its ally. It also came ahead of an expected trip from top advisers to Netanyahu and Israeli government officials to Washington, as Israel and the U.S. find themselves at odds over a looming invasion of the southern Gazan city of Rafah.

Israeli media reported ahead of the vote that Netanyahu threatened to cancel his officials’ trip to Washington to discuss, among other things, humanitarian aid, the release of hostages and plans for protecting civilians in a planned operation in Rafah if the U.S. failed to veto the resolution. Shortly after the vote, Netanyahu’s office announced that “In light of the change in the American position, Prime Minister Netanyahu has decided that the delegation will not travel to the U.S.”

NEW BLOOD — A former Senegalese prime minister today conceded the presidential election to the opposition candidate based on preliminary results a day after the vote, according to a statement by his campaign, reports The Associated Press.

Amadou Ba said he congratulated Bassirou Diomaye Diakhar Faye and wished him success. Faye’s expected victory reflected frustration among youth with high unemployment and concerns about governance in the West African nation. Faye, backed by popular opposition leader Ousmane Sonko, has vowed to protect Senegal from corruption and interference from foreign powers like former colonial master France.

 

Access New York bill updates and Congressional activity in areas that matter to you, and use our exclusive insights to see what’s on the Albany agenda. Learn more .

 
 
NIGHTLY NUMBER

$6 billion

The amount of money that the Biden administration announced in funding today for projects designed to slash emissions from the industrial sector — the largest ever U.S. effort to decarbonize domestic industry.

RADAR SWEEP

ROLLING THUNDER — In late February, an executive in Nassau County — on New York’s Long Island — signed an executive order that banned transgender women and girls from competing in women’s and girls’ sports. It was the first order of its kind in New York, though these bans have dotted the country of late. The order has yet to come into play, as no one involved with its drafting has noted any transgender women actually attempting to compete in women’s sports leagues. But it’s still driving political questions in the state, and now has an interesting challenger in court : A women’s roller derby league. In Hell Gate, Katie Way talked to the (maybe aptly named) Roller Rebels who are bringing the charge.

PARTING IMAGE

On this date in 1911: The Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire in New York kills 146 garment workers — because the doors to the exits were locked, workers were trapped as the fire began. Pictured are family members attempting to identify the dead victims of the fire.

On this date in 1911: The Triangle Shirtwaist factory fire in New York kills 146 garment workers — because the doors to the exits were locked, workers were trapped as the fire began. Pictured are family members attempting to identify the dead victims of the fire. | AP

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