Yesterday’s Supreme Court decision requiring Wisconsin to go ahead with in-person voting today is one of the worst in a recent series of ignominious rulings. Its five member Republican majority is playing its partisan role—suppressing votes for a party that cannot command a majority in fair elections. As Heather Cox Richardson explains in today’s Letters…
Our Lack of Preparedness is Killing Us
From inadequate testing to a widespread shortage of personal protective equipment, the United States government’s response to COVID-19 has been plagued by a series of critical missteps. And while it is premature to pinpoint the exact cause of all of these failures, one thing is abundantly clear: Chronic underinvestment in emergency preparedness has undermined the…
Twitter’s Suggestions: Evidence of Right Wing Social Media Superiority
Last summer I read an interview with Sociologist Jen Schradie about her book, The Revolution That Wasn’t. Schradie’s surprising thesis was that conservatives, not progressives, have become the dominant political activists on the internet. With far greater financial resources and a base much more focused on political power than policy specifics, conservative activists have been…
Politics of Coronavirus: Democracy or Oligarchy?
Never listen to anyone tell you to put aside politics in a time of crisis. The politics of coronavirus provides another battleground in the American contest between oligarchy and democracy, a fight oligarchs have been winning for decades. This is on my mind today having just finished reading Heather Cox Richardson’s How the South Won…
Trump and Voter Suppression
An odd byproduct of Donald Trump being extremely stupid is that he sometimes says the quiet parts out loud. He did that the other day when he all but admitted that Republican electoral prospects depend on voter suppression. From the Washington Post’s Aaron Blake: In an interview on “Fox…
The Masks Roll In, The Masks Roll Out . . .
Two big stories greet us this morning in coronavirus politics and government. Let’s take a look at images of these stories and see what we can make of it: The masks roll in, the masks roll out. In this tradeoff, America only comes out 279 million masks down. As Heather Cox Richardson points out in…
Coronavirus Politics: Follow the Money
Politics doesn’t recede in times of crisis it accelerates, because crisis provides ideologues and interests the opportunity to advance their pet policy prescriptions. Just scrolling down Twitter this morning provides a sense of this. Read this retweet from that unmatched source of education information in Massachusetts, Tracy Novick: OMG, taxes on…
Coronavirus and Charlie Baker’s Party Problem
Back in the serene days of fall 2019 some in the Massachusetts political class were discussing whether Governor Charlie Baker should remain a Republican, go Independent, or even start a new party. The coronavirus crisis has exposed an even knottier conundrum for Baker. That has to do with the state’s need for federal aid. In…
Politics is the Treatment not the Disease
“Politics ought to be the part-time profession of every citizen who would protect the rights and privileges of free people and who would preserve what is good and fruitful in our national heritage.” President Dwight Eisenhower We are living through a real time, real world, global collective action problem. If you think the way…
‘The beauty of the 501(c)(4)’: Why We Should Care About Dark Money
“I think the play here is to set up an independent expenditure committee for your re-election, specifically with a goal of raising two million or something. . . . the beauty of the IE, it’s a 501(c)(4) corporate donations are allowed and they’re unlimited. . . . I can put in a million or two…