[ Posted Monday, April 24th, 2023 – 15:58 UTC ]
It looks like it's going to be a very cable news sort of week this week. Today two prominent cable news personalities lost their jobs, for different reasons. Most of the astonishment this generated in the media world is likely to be overshadowed tomorrow by two developments in the presidential race. President Joe Biden is rumored to have picked tomorrow to formally announce his candidacy for re-election -- four years to the day after he announced last time. Meanwhile, Donald Trump is going to go on trial in New York -- which could prove to be the first of many times he'll have to defend himself in court. So it's going to be a pretty momentous week all around on cable news, that's my guess at any rate.
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[ Posted Friday, April 21st, 2023 – 17:53 UTC ]
We admit using that subtitle dates us in a way, since we are indeed old enough to remember the popular song of the same name -- but we couldn't resist, since this week started out with Fox News caving at the last possible moment as a civil defamation trial was set to begin against them. First the trial was delayed a day and then came the bombshell news that Fox had settled with Dominion Voting Systems for a jaw-dropping $787.5 million. To state the patently obvious, you don't settle a case you fully expect to win. Fox knew it was in danger of not just losing the case (Dominion had sued for $1.6 billion, a little more than twice what Fox settled for) but having the network's dirty laundry exposed in even more painful fashion than it already had been (through releases of internal communications between executives and network personalities that were already embarrassing enough). Fox was indeed on the run, to the tune of over three-quarters of a billion dollars.
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[ Posted Thursday, April 20th, 2023 – 16:25 UTC ]
There have been two legal developments this week which might go a long way toward proving that creating a business model out of peddling lies to unsuspecting people is maybe not the best plan of action -- unless, of course, your name happens to be Donald Trump. Trump is the king of all election-denying grifters, and so far nobody's scratched his Teflon coating -- although even Trump may eventually have to face some sort of music for monetizing falsehoods. One of the things the special counsel investigating Trump is reportedly looking into is how Trump made pitches to donors big and small between the 2020 election and January 6th. Trump raised a lot of money promising that it would be used to fight to "Stop The Steal," but he never actually created such a fund. But for the time being at least, Trump has been able to skate away from any consequences for gaslighting his supporters. This is now no longer true for others who jumped on the stolen-election bandwagon. Both Fox News and Mike Lindell are now having to pay for their lies, and this could just be the start of both of them -- and others -- having to cough up to pay for the damage they have done.
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[ Posted Wednesday, April 19th, 2023 – 15:55 UTC ]
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has finally made his opening bid, in the showdown with President Joe Biden (and the Democratic Senate) over raising the nation's debt ceiling. Today McCarthy released a proposal he thinks he will get 218 Republican votes and actually pass the House. It remains to be seen whether that's even true or not -- a vote won't be held until at least next week, and to say that not everyone in the GOP caucus is on board yet is an understatement. But at least he's finally put some numbers down on paper for all to see.
To be certain, this is still somewhat of a bare-bones effort. McCarthy and his fellow Republicans are attempting to tie the debt limit increase to the annual federal budget. But while President Joe Biden has released his full budget proposal (he did so weeks ago), McCarthy still has yet to even come up with an overview of the actual Republican budget. That would be a separate bill from what he introduced today, and then later a full budget bill (or bills; by regular order there should be 12 appropriations bills) would have to pass as well. While today's bid begins the process, the Republicans are still precisely nowhere on their actual budget itself, it bears pointing out.
Biden's position up until now has been a firm one: he is demanding a "clean" debt ceiling hike, with no conditions or strings tied to the budget (since the budget is an entirely separate process). Biden will negotiate with the Republican House, in other words, but only through the regular budget talks. The debt ceiling is so important that it must get done on time with no threat of a national default.
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[ Posted Tuesday, April 18th, 2023 – 16:21 UTC ]
After their first 100 days in power, the cracks are beginning to show in the Republican majority in the House of Representatives. Speaker Kevin McCarthy is going to try to pass a bill with a bare-bones summary of a budget within the next few weeks, but at this point no bill has actually been written and no GOP consensus has emerged about what that bill should (or shouldn't) contain. It is still unclear whether any plan is going to get the 218 votes to pass. Factionalism within the Republican conference is a tough hurdle to get over, what with the razor-thin majority McCarthy has to work with. But the debt ceiling looms, so it is now "put up or shut up" time for McCarthy's Republicans.
McCarthy, up until now, has attempted to paint the entire crisis as somehow being President Joe Biden's fault. McCarthy complains that Biden won't come to the table to negotiate. This is laughable, because until McCarthy actually puts a few numbers on paper, there simply is nothing to negotiate about. Biden has released his budget -- a full budget, hundreds of pages long, with specific numbers for everything in the federal budget. McCarthy is desperately trying to come up with a summary of the Republican budget -- a short overview with general spending guidelines but no detailed specifics (other than the ones McCarthy chooses to include, as part of his agenda). But until McCarthy does put his cards on the table, there is no reason for Biden to negotiate, because there isn't anything to negotiate about yet.
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[ Posted Monday, April 17th, 2023 – 15:41 UTC ]
We may get to a crossroads this week over the situation Senator Dianne Feinstein's absence in Washington has created. But that's not the same thing as the problem actually being resolved, which could take longer. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer is reportedly going to call for a vote on temporarily replacing Feinstein on the Senate Judiciary Committee, while still allowing her to keep her Senate seat. Not having Feinstein in Washington impacts the Democrats' ability to round up enough votes -- but not in a critical way -- for Senate floor votes. Not having Feinstein on the Judiciary Committee, however, has meant the halt of Biden judicial nominees getting expedited committee votes to move their nominations to the floor. That is a much more serious matter.
What seems likely to happen next is that Schumer will call for "unanimous consent" to approve the temporary committee assignment shuffle. However, any single senator can block this move, and two Republicans have already indicated they are going to do so (Tim Cotton and Marsha Blackburn). Which means the motion for unanimous consent will fail.
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[ Posted Friday, April 14th, 2023 – 18:07 UTC ]
There's a new reality in American politics, and one political party is reaping the benefits of it while the other is trapped in a downward spiral of ever-increasing extremism. Some Republicans are beginning to understand the power of the sleeping giant they have awoken, but there's really no easy way out from the conundrum they have created for themselves. Abortion is going to be a potent political issue for at least the next few elections, and Republicans' only answer so far is to double down, triple down, or quadruple down on forcing the most extreme positions they can come up with on as many of the American people as they possibly can.
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[ Posted Thursday, April 13th, 2023 – 15:55 UTC ]
The ranks of the 2024 Republican presidential field just grew by one. Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina is the new entrant, but at this point (with the exception of Ron DeSantis) it really looks for all the world like nothing more than a race to be Donald Trump's vice-presidential pick. I say that for two reasons -- the fact that so far no one else other than DeSantis has gotten any sort of traction at all in the polls, and the fact that none of the candidates have really directly taken on Trump in any meaningful way. To put it another way: there still isn't an "anti-Trump" candidate in the running.
Officially, there aren't that many people actually running yet. Scott, for instance, didn't even announce that he was about to officially announce his bid -- instead he merely indicated that at some unspecified point in the future he would probably be making an announcement about his upcoming official announcement. In Washington-speak, he "formed a presidential exploratory committee." Which is official enough, for our purposes -- it's more than some others have done yet.
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[ Posted Wednesday, April 12th, 2023 – 15:34 UTC ]
Senator Dianne Feinstein is not back at work. This means that since February, the citizens of California have only been represented in the Senate by a single senator. Which, in a 51-49 Senate, is starting to become a problem. Feinstein has already said she will be retiring instead of seeking re-election in 2024, but she had planned on finishing her term before stepping down. Three prominent Democrats have already begun campaigning for her seat. But if she doesn't finish her term, then it's going to upset the entire Senate election applecart.
Even though I live in California, I hadn't really realized how long Feinstein's absence has been. She was diagnosed with shingles (which I have heard is a particularly painful disease to contract), and she was hospitalized for treatment. She is now out of the hospital and resting at her home in San Francisco. And she is 89 years old.
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[ Posted Tuesday, April 11th, 2023 – 17:26 UTC ]
You can choose your metaphor for the bind the Republican Party has created for itself on the issue of abortion. The most popular (since it seems to be the most fitting) is that they are the dog who finally caught the car and now don't know what to do with it. Or maybe they've painted themselves into a corner and are now trapped on a shrinking piece of political real estate. But I'm going to start this off with a different one: Republicans riding down a very slippery slope on a toboggan.
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