2022 elections. The steady march for sanity continues.

printer

Well-Known Member
Nashville council votes down draft agreement to host Republican convention
Nashville city council members have voted down a draft agreement to host the 2024 Republican National Convention, effectively handing the event to Milwaukee, Wis.

The Tennessean reported Wednesday that a progressive majority council voted down hosting the event, 10-22, with the rest of the 40-member council abstaining or not present. The naysayers reportedly cited concerns about security and the cost of hosting.

Milwaukee is the only other city seeking to host.

The two cities became finalists in March, after the Republican National Committee (RNC) received bids from several cities, including Salt Lake City and Pittsburgh, according to a representative.

In mid-July, a panel of the RNC voted to recommend Milwaukee over Nashville.

Milwaukee was set to host the 2020 Democratic National Convention before the COVID-19 pandemic pushed the event online.

The city pitched again last year to host the Democrats’ 2024 convention, as well as making a pitch this year for the 2024 RNC convention.

If selected, Milwaukee would become the first city to host consecutive national conventions since the 1976 and 1980 Democratic National Conventions, both held in New York City.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I think Joe's problem is he's too mild mannered, people at perceived war or under threat want a strong leader, not so much a steady, strategic thinker like Joe. His accomplishments will be many by election day, Vlad broken and on the run, the economy booming, inflation slowed major legislative moves even the ice on guns is broken. Joe needs an image makeover, or more correctly to show himself more for who he really is with a major military victory in Ukraine and Zelenskiy coming for an October surprise and a medal.

The republicans are screwing up mightily with primary picks and their abortion laws are damaging them, they are like the dog that finally caught the car and it ran him over. I dunno how bad it will get for the republicans, but Donald and the democrats will make it as bad as it can possibly be by November. The GOP with Mitch at the helm and a discontented and mutinous crew has entered the perfect storm and Donald is busy drilling holes in the bottom of the ship and telling the crew there is no storm, in the midst of 50 foot waves breaking over the bow.

It is looking better for November, the polls are kinda funny, one thing I think though, in this election, Joe won't cost the democrats a single vote and could help to gain some. Statehouses are up for grabs too, including a few red and swing ones. If this keeps up state wide offices in Texas will be democratic and only gerrymandering can save the house. Places like Nevada, Pennsylvania and Michigan could flip.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dems Pick Up Lead Over Republicans In Generic Ballot Polling
7,329 views Aug 4, 2022 When asked which party's candidate they prefer for the midterms, more voters the Democratic candidate in new Monmouth polling. Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., weighs in on the numbers.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
So how is it gonna go when red state legislatures flip that are controlled by election deniers?
Wanna bet almost all the Trumpers with the cash whine and go to court?
Think they will get the local broadcast news stations to agree with their narrative, when the courts do not?
All politics is local and what might work nationally with foxnews and all the rest, locally it could be a disaster.
Many election deniers are key players in state republican politics, were part of the fake electors scheme and might be busy with legal matters in the fall.

Add to that the results of the Kansas referendum and especially how it drove turnout, must be worrying the republicans, at least those not planning to steal the election outright and the republicans are filled with crazy people these days, stay tuned.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Seven days in July: America's moment of political climate change

This summer we are experiencing the effects of global climate change at an accelerating pace, but the political climate can change more rapidly still.

Three weeks ago, I wrote here about "Seven Days in June," a right-wing coup carried out without violence, but with considerable malice aforethought by the Supreme Court in the final week of its term. At that point, and for some days thereafter, most political observers still foresaw a Republican midterm landslide in the House this November, and many believed the GOP might also win a majority in the Senate. That changed dramatically in the last week of July.

Hints of a political climate change began almost immediately after the court's coup. The brazen reversal of women's right to control their own bodies produced a significant turn toward the Democrats. The average of six generic congressional polls taken before and after the court's Dobbs decision — which struck down the 49-year-old precedent of Roe v. Wade — found a gain of three points for the Democrats. Then, gleeful right-wing zealots in several states declared, in effect, Yes, we do favor forcing 10-year-old rape victims and women whose lives are endangered by a pregnancy to carry fetuses to term—and we're proud of it! The turn away from Republicans began to pick up more steam. A Suffolk University/USA Today poll conducted between July 22 and 25 found that abortion had risen to the second most important issue to registered voters.

The Seven Days in July began with the July 21 primetime hearing of the House Jan. 6 select committee, by far the most devastating yet for the former guy and his followers. Seeing what Donald Trump did and didn't do while an insurrection in his name was ongoing, which he refused to condemn, had a major impact. Two leading Murdoch-owned papers, the Wall Street Journal and New York Post, denounced Trump's behavior. A CNN poll released on July 24 found that 79 percent of Americans now believe that Trump acted "illegally or unethically" in his "efforts to remain president for another term after the 2020 presidential election." Trump's former advisers are tripping over each other as they jump ship and offer to testify — and it now seems likely, or at least plausible, that the Justice Department is building a case against the former occupant of the White House.

In a rambling talk at the Turning Point USA conference in Tampa on the evening of July 23, Trump said he "kinda liked" it that the head of the Taliban had called him "Your Excellency." At the same rightwing conference, Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., launched into a repulsive misogynistic rant against women he doesn't find attractive. Then Gaetz, who is reportedly under investigation for child sex trafficking, joined with 19 other Republicans to vote against reauthorizing an anti-sex trafficking law.

Meanwhile, House Republicans were also voting by huge margins against federal legislation that would protect women's right to control their bodies and the doctors who provide care for them (99% of Republicans voted no), the right to use contraception (96%), and same sex marriage (77%), and even against a bill that would guarantee a woman's right to cross state lines to obtain health care (97%). In each case, Republicans were planting their flag in opposition to rights that are overwhelmingly popular among Americans.

On Wednesday, things really took a turn for the worse for Republicans. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had said he would not allow a vote on the CHIPS Bill, to fund a massive program for computer chips to be manufactured in the U.S., until he was assured that Democrats would not use reconciliation to push through legislation on such issues as climate change, prescription drug prices, corporate taxation and so on. Thinking that Sen. Joe Manchin, the recalcitrant West Virginia Democrat, had ended that possibility, McConnell allowed Republicans (including himself) to vote for the CHIPS bill. Shortly after it passed, Manchin and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer announced that they had reached a deal on a remarkably progressive reconciliation bill that will do far more to fight climate change than anything previously enacted by Congress ("I struggle to find enough superlatives to describe this deal," said Sam Ricketts, co-founder of Evergreen Action), impose a 15% minimum tax on large corporations, reduce prescription drug prices, extend Affordable Care Act subsidies and much more.

To top it off, the Democrats, who have been notoriously horrible at messaging and naming, are calling the package the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, meaning that almost all Republicans will go on record not only having voted against the popular components of the bill, but (at least nominally) against reducing inflation. It was stunning. As an Atlantic headline put it, "Democrats in … Array?"

McConnell had been McConnelled.

The Republican response was stupidity on steroids. They immediately took to acting like grade-school brats, reversing themselves to vote against veterans by killing the Promise to Address Comprehensive Toxics (PACT) bill they had previously supported. Not one to be out-undone by his Senate counterpart, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy whipped his members to reverse themselves and vote against the CHIPS bill.

Having already come out as opposed to women's rights, indifferent to rape, unwilling to protect access to contraception, and negative on a host of other popular positions, Republicans decided to stand foursquare against veterans, against the nation's heroes, against the economy, against America — and, in effect, for China.

At this point, the midterms seem to be moving away from a referendum on Joe Biden and toward being a referendum on the no-longer-Republican Party — an election about the soul of America, which would be enormously to the Democrats' advantage.

As Heather Cox Richardson concluded in her Thursday letter, she was tempted to agree with a tweet earlier that day from Ian Millhiser of Vox: "This was a good week for the United States of America and I may be coming down with a case of The Hope."
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
I think Joe's problem is he's too mild mannered, people at perceived war or under threat want a strong leader, not so much a steady, strategic thinker like Joe. His accomplishments will be many by election day, Vlad broken and on the run, the economy booming, inflation slowed major legislative moves even the ice on guns is broken. Joe needs an image makeover, or more correctly to show himself more for who he really is with a major military victory in Ukraine and Zelenskiy coming for an October surprise and a medal.

The republicans are screwing up mightily with primary picks and their abortion laws are damaging them, they are like the dog that finally caught the car and it ran him over. I dunno how bad it will get for the republicans, but Donald and the democrats will make it as bad as it can possibly be by November. The GOP with Mitch at the helm and a discontented and mutinous crew has entered the perfect storm and Donald is busy drilling holes in the bottom of the ship and telling the crew there is no storm, in the midst of 50 foot waves breaking over the bow.

It is looking better for November, the polls are kinda funny, one thing I think though, in this election, Joe won't cost the democrats a single vote and could help to gain some. Statehouses are up for grabs too, including a few red and swing ones. If this keeps up state wide offices in Texas will be democratic and only gerrymandering can save the house. Places like Nevada, Pennsylvania and Michigan could flip.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dems Pick Up Lead Over Republicans In Generic Ballot Polling
7,329 views Aug 4, 2022 When asked which party's candidate they prefer for the midterms, more voters the Democratic candidate in new Monmouth polling. Rep. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., weighs in on the numbers.
it would be pretty ostentatious of us to give Zelensky a medal...
i think a grand round of political events and rallys, a state dinner, and perhaps a sister city program would be nice...then they can start working on fixing a lot of the social inequality issues that kept them out of NATO to begin with.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
it would be pretty ostentatious of us to give Zelensky a medal...
i think a grand round of political events and rallys, a state dinner, and perhaps a sister city program would be nice...then they can start working on fixing a lot of the social inequality issues that kept them out of NATO to begin with.
A medal for defending liberal democracy and as an example of national leadership under severe crises. I figure Zell will be doing the grand tour of European capitols collecting medals, ribbons, degrees and maybe even a Nobel peace prize, so it won't seem ostentatious at all, compared to everybody else laying shit on his shoulders and kisses his cheeks. Great PR and will make Vlad look like shit all at once, besides, Zell will need a break and a change for a spell and once they have Russia on the run, him and the wife might take a week or two to collect some bling.

Will it help with the election in November? Will they have the Russians on the backfoot by then and unable to advance?
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
The headline disguises the main point of this article, which is, Republicans are in serious decline in Arizona.

Republicans outnumber Democrats in battleground Arizona, new statistics show
The GOP holds its largest registration edge in the state since 2018.

Arizona isn’t a blue state. Far from it.

New voter registration statistics from the secretary of state’s office, first reported by ABC15, show Republicans outnumbering Democrats by nearly 4 percentage points among active voters, 34.5% to 30.9% — or approximately 150,000 voters.

It’s the GOP’s widest registration advantage in the state since 2018, ABC15 adds.

Unaffiliated voters represent 33.7% of the state’s active voters — slightly behind the GOP but ahead of Democrats.

Here's the breakdown of July 2022 voter registration numbers in the state per the Arizona Secretary of State (active voters):

  • Republican: 1,433,650 (34.5%)
  • Other: 1,399,954 (33.7%)
  • Democratic: 1,284,651 (30.9%)
  • Libertarian: 32,506 (0.8%)
Two developments have helped Democrats win in Arizona — first Sinema in 2018, then Joe Biden and Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., in 2020 — despite that GOP registration advantage.

One, Sinema (50%-47%), Biden (53%-44%) and Kelly (55%-45%) all won the independent voters, according to NBC News’ exit polls.

And two, all three candidates peeled off about 10% of Republican voters, while holding on to almost all Democratic voters (96%-97%).

Bottom line: Arizona is a purple state, where Democrats need independents and disaffected Republicans to win — in a state where the GOP holds the registration advantage.


Not saying the Republican Party will lose control of the state in the upcoming election. Gerrymandering ensures they will win control of that state and probably the delegation sent to the House this election. Statewide elections are another thing altogether. Democrats are winning more often than not in statewide elections because the Republican Party is split and Independents narrowly favor Democrats. That's the rub. Republican policies no longer represent the majority. Due to Gerrymandering they can hold on for a while at state level but that can't last. Not the way right wing radical policies turn the majority away from them. They still hold power in Arizona. Too bad for them that they are wasting their advantage on culture wars and re-fighting the 2020 election.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/michigan-ag-details-trump-backers-conspiracy-to-break-into-voting-equipment/Screen Shot 2022-08-08 at 12.58.38 PM.png
(Reuters) - Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel is alleging that her Republican political opponent in the November elections orchestrated a conspiracy with a state lawmaker and a lawyer to break into voting equipment in a hunt for evidence to prove former president Donald Trump’s false voter-fraud claims.

The charge that Nessel’s Republican challenger, Matt DePerno, was involved in a potential felony is outlined in a petition filed by Nessel, a Democrat, seeking the appointment of a special prosecutor to continue the investigation. The petition notes that DePerno has emerged as “one of the prime instigators of the conspiracy,” creating a conflict of interest for her office to take the case further.

Reuters exclusively reported on Sunday that DePerno led a team that gained unauthorized access to voting equipment in Richfield Township. The news organization linked the Trump-backed Republican candidate to the incident by matching the serial number on the compromised machine to a photograph in a report submitted by DePerno in a failed lawsuit alleging voter fraud.

The Richfield tabulator is among five such machines that the attorney general said were accessed without authorization, including a separate incident in Roscommon County and other breaches in Missaukee County’s Lake Township and Barry County’s Irving Township. The incidents occurred between early March and late June of 2021, the attorney general said.

DePerno did not respond to requests for comment, but said on Twitter that Nessel’s investigation was politically motivated. His tweet included a fundraising plea for donations to help him “fight back.”

“My opponent called for me to be arrested for the ‘crime’ of investigating voter fraud in 2020,” DePerno said in a tweet. His campaign called Nessel’s actions “unethical” in a statement.

Nessel declined a request for an interview and her communications director, Amber McCann, did not answer questions about when DePerno became a suspect in its investigation and why the office did not request a special prosecutor earlier. McCann said in a statement that the office "reviews facts and follows evidence" during investigations.

It remains unclear when the conflict of interest emerged. DePerno announced his candidacy against Nessel in July 2021 and received the Republican Party’s endorsement in April. Nessel announced her investigation into voting breaches in February.

The investigation into a Republican attorney general candidate in a voting-system breach comes amid a national effort by backers of Trump’s stolen-election falsehoods to win state offices that could prove critical in deciding any future contested elections.

Nessel’s petition says DePerno plotted to illegally access voting equipment with Republican State Rep. Daire Rendon and Stefanie Lambert, a lawyer who helped high-profile Trump allies file an ultimately unsuccessful lawsuit seeking to overturn Michigan’s election results. The trio “orchestrated a coordinated plan to gain access to voting tabulators” in three township offices and a county office, the petition said. In one case, Rendon allegedly told the Roscommon County clerk, falsely, that the state House of Representatives was conducting an investigation into election fraud.

The machines were taken to “hotels and/or AIRBNB’s” in Oakland County, in metropolitan Detroit. There, technical experts “broke into the tabulators and performed ‘tests’ on the equipment,” the petition says. In at least one instance, the petition notes, DePerno “was present at a hotel room during such ‘testing.’”

Rendon and Lambert did not respond to requests for comment.

The attorney general’s petition listed a series of crimes for potential prosecution, including malicious destruction of property, fraudulent access to a computer, and conspiracy. A conspiracy charge could be punished with up to five years in prison under Michigan state law.

The attorney general's petition said her office had sought approval for criminal charges from the state Criminal Trials and Appeals Division. The office asked that a special prosecutor take over the handling of that request and any subsequent prosecutions. The Prosecuting Attorneys Coordinating Council, an autonomous entity within the attorney general’s office, will decide if a special prosecutor is warranted.

Nessel’s petition also names Dar Leaf, the sheriff in rural Barry County, as a participant in the scheme, alleging that he asked the Irving Township clerk to cooperate with “investigators” involved in the conspiracy. In a story last month, Reuters detailed the alleged involvement of Leaf, a far-right backer of Trump’s stolen-election falsehoods and a prominent figure in the extremist “constitutional sheriffs” movement. He said in an interview that no one in his department was involved in taking the tabulator and that he did not authorize anyone to do so.

Leaf did not respond to a request for comment on Nessel’s allegations.

The technical team that examined the voting equipment removed from government offices included James Penrose, a former analyst for the National Security Agency who has assisted prominent Trump allies in their efforts to overturn the 2020 election results, the attorney general’s petition said. It also included Doug Logan, head of Cyber Ninjas, the now-defunct company hired to do a widely criticized partisan audit of the 2020 voting results in Maricopa County, Arizona. Others involved in examining the machines were Jeff Lenberg, a computer security consultant, and Ben Cotton, founder of the digital forensics firm CyFIR LLC.

Penrose, Lenbert and Cotton all worked with DePerno on his lawsuit alleging election fraud in Michigan's Antrim County. None responded to requests for comment. Logan also did not respond to a request for comment.

Nessel’s petition names all four members of the technical team as targets for possible charges, along with DePerno, Rendon, Lambert and Leaf, the Barry County sheriff. Another person named as a target is Ann Howard, a Michigan lawyer who allegedly coordinated the printing of fake ballots to be run through the tabulators during their examination.

Howard declined to comment.

Nessel’s allegations mark a dramatic turn in an investigation that the attorney general launched in February at the request of Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, who had received information on at least two of the breaches. Benson, a Democrat, said in a statement to Reuters: “There must be consequences for those who broke the law to undermine our elections in order to advance their own political agendas.”
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
It's not just shifting demographics, it's also shifting attitudes among younger white voters, as the liberalizing effects of media and the internet are felt in society while the republican brand is destroyed. Covid helped a lot of people to retire early, it also caused a lot of older republicans to die earlier too and every cycle old voters go and are replaced by younger ones who are influenced by the larger culture more.

Turn out is the name of the game and a good ground game using a database that identifies every voter in the district is the key to that, along with lot's of motivated volunteers. So the democrats need money, technology and enthusiastic volunteers, use policy achievements and goals on the ground with volunteers. Dividing the republicans and running clever ads helps, but the ground game and turning out the vote is where the action is and Stacey Abrams trained many people in how that is done these past 5 years.


Factoring In Racial Demographic Information In Election Predictions
9,661 views Aug 7, 2022 Steve Phillips joins Jonathan Capehart to debut the "New Majority Index" which incorporates racial demographic data into election data, which could be a game changer in predicting election outcomes as the racial majority in America continues to shift.
 
Last edited:

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Nashville council votes down draft agreement to host Republican convention
Nashville city council members have voted down a draft agreement to host the 2024 Republican National Convention, effectively handing the event to Milwaukee, Wis.

The Tennessean reported Wednesday that a progressive majority council voted down hosting the event, 10-22, with the rest of the 40-member council abstaining or not present. The naysayers reportedly cited concerns about security and the cost of hosting.

Milwaukee is the only other city seeking to host.

The two cities became finalists in March, after the Republican National Committee (RNC) received bids from several cities, including Salt Lake City and Pittsburgh, according to a representative.

In mid-July, a panel of the RNC voted to recommend Milwaukee over Nashville.

Milwaukee was set to host the 2020 Democratic National Convention before the COVID-19 pandemic pushed the event online.

The city pitched again last year to host the Democrats’ 2024 convention, as well as making a pitch this year for the 2024 RNC convention.

If selected, Milwaukee would become the first city to host consecutive national conventions since the 1976 and 1980 Democratic National Conventions, both held in New York City.
Nobody wants to host because, you know.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/tim-scott-pregnancies-are52-weeks/?cx_testId=6&cx_testVariant=cx_undefined&cx_artPos=2&cx_experienceId=EXC93HV4HK4I#cxrecs_sScreen Shot 2022-08-08 at 6.13.43 PM.png
Another Republican man is being humiliated publicly after they revealed that they have no idea about the biology of female humans.

For years, Republicans, men, in particular, have been ridiculed for bizarre ideas they have about biology that are not only false but laughably so. Todd Akin, who ran for the U.S. Senate in Missouri, infamously said that women can't get pregnant from rape because if it is a "legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down." That's false.

Over the weekend, Indiana state Rep. John Jacob (R) claimed, "The body inside of the mom's body is not her body. Let me repeat that: The body inside of the mom's body is not her body. Not her body, not her choice."

Rush Limbaugh infamously decided to shoot all women who sought an abortion. "You know how to stop abortion? Require that each one occur with a gun," he announced.

Similarly, Rep. Steve Stockman (R-TX) tweeted his idea in 2013, "If babies had guns, they wouldn't be aborted."

Conservative blogger Erick Erickson, who now has his own radio show, told women in 2013 that they should bookmark a website where they can buy clothes hangers to perform their own abortions.

Now Sen. Tim Scot (R-SC) can now be added to the list.

Huffington Post reporter Amanda Terkel reported that Scott thinks women carry a fetus for longer than 52 weeks and that Democrats want abortions up to 52 weeks.

The comment came in a Monday fundraising email saying, "If we don’t take back the Senate, Dems will pack the courts, give DC statehood, grant abortions up to 52 weeks, and Republicans will never win again."

Dr. Meera Shah, chief medical officer of Planned Parenthood Hudson Peconic, told Terkel, "It is not logical or medically accurate to say that people can be pregnant at 52 weeks ― let alone be seeking an abortion. It is comments like this one that underscore exactly why medical decisions should not be made by politicians."

Read the full report at the Huffington Post.
Screen Shot 2022-08-08 at 6.14.43 PM.png

Screen Shot 2022-08-08 at 6.16.14 PM.png
 
Top