ChrisWeigant.com

Alaska's Goldilocks Ballot Reforms

[ Posted Monday, June 6th, 2022 – 15:06 UTC ]

After a break for the holiday week, primary season will resume tomorrow. But rather than diving into the details of any of the seven states which will vote tomorrow (California, Iowa, Mississippi, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, and South Dakota), I'm more interested in seeing what happens later in the week, when Alaska holds a special election primary this Saturday. Because Alaska will be test-driving a new hybrid system which incorporates two ballot reforms at once: the "jungle" primary and ranked-choice voting.

Alaskans, for the first time, will face all the candidates from all parties on a single ballot, in a special House primary necessitated by the death of a state political icon. This seat -- which represents the whole state, since Alaska only has one House member -- hasn't been open for almost half a century, so it will be a free-for-all contest that hasn't been seen in generations. Alaskan voters will have a whopping 49 candidates to choose from on their ballots, from all parties. One of those candidates is ex-half-term-governor Sarah Palin, which should generate lots of media interest ("You betcha!"). Also on the ballot is a man whose legal name is Santa Claus, who hails from the town of North Pole (you just can't make this stuff up, folks). So it'll be an interesting race, one assumes.

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Friday Talking Points -- Enough!

[ Posted Friday, June 3rd, 2022 – 17:25 UTC ]

Last night, President Joe Biden gave only the second evening address (not counting speeches to joint sessions of Congress) of his presidency. The last time he did so was over a year ago. The subject of his speech this time was a grim one: the recent massacres of innocents in Buffalo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas. And all of the others which didn't receive quite as prominent media coverage, as well. He urged Congress to act, in the strongest possible terms. He pointed out that Republicans are the ones obstructing any progress whatsoever, and pleaded for some bipartisanship in the Senate.

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Biden To Give Televised Address To Nation

[ Posted Thursday, June 2nd, 2022 – 15:36 UTC ]

President Joe Biden is about to give an evening speech on national television. This shouldn't be all that rare an event, but with Biden it sadly has been. Last March, he gave such a speech on the COVID-19 pandemic response. Last March. Biden himself has reportedly been frustrated by his inability to get his message out, but he really bears a goodly portion of the blame for this himself. Where was the speech to the nation on the Russian invasion of Ukraine? How about a primetime address on inflation? Or the infant formula bottleneck? Or gas prices? Maybe he shouldn't have given a speech on each and every one of these important issues, but it would have been nice to see at least one or two of them addressed by the president, or perhaps a few within just one speech.

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Televised January 6th Hearings To Begin Next Week

[ Posted Wednesday, June 1st, 2022 – 15:25 UTC ]

Next Thursday, if all goes according to schedule, the nation will finally start to see what the House Select Committee on January 6th has uncovered during its lengthy investigation of the worst attack on the United States Capitol since 1814. This won't be a one-time show either -- there will be at least eight installments of this miniseries in June, with some of them appearing in primetime.

The date for the first hearing is not set in stone (there are no hearings currently scheduled on the committee's official web page), but this does seem to be the target for the kickoff:

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Second-Class Adulthood

[ Posted Tuesday, May 31st, 2022 – 15:26 UTC ]

In the political debate over possible restrictions on gun ownership that has followed the massacre in Uvalde, Texas, one idea has popped up which seems pretty reasonable on the face of it: don't let 18-year-olds buy assault rifles -- make them wait until they are 21 instead. But this opens up a much wider debate, one that few are talking about or even considering. Because the trend, over time, seems to be to slowly and incrementally raise the age of being considered an adult from 18 to 21 years old. If you are 18, 19, or 20, you are a sort of second-class adult, allowed to do certain things which could have life-altering consequences, but barred from doing others for another three years. Sooner or later two questions are going to have to be dealt with in a fundamental way, and so far they aren't on a lot of people's radars: "Is this even constitutional?" and: "Should we just raise the age of being considered an adult to 21 for everything?" Doing so would be a lot more legally consistent, but it would also be an enormous change for tens of millions of Americans and would probably not be very politically feasible (to say the least).

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From The Archives -- Memorial Day For Flu Victims

[ Posted Monday, May 30th, 2022 – 16:28 UTC ]

Program Note: I wrote the following article 13 years ago, for Memorial Day. It was a historic look back that was mostly prompted by a visit to Cobh, Ireland. But then it branched off into a different subject related to World War I. I ran this article again two years ago, and had really hoped that by now we'd have all moved on. Unfortunately, we're not completely out of the woods yet, so I thought it was worth running one more time. Hope everyone has a happy and safe Memorial Day, and I'll see you all back here tomorrow when new columns will resume.

 

Originally published May 25, 2009

On a lonely hill outside the small town of Cobh, Ireland (pronounced: "cove"), is a mass grave marked by three somber headstones. As mass graves go, it's a fairly small one; holding not tens of thousands or even thousands, but merely a few hundred bodies. But the relative size of the grave on the scale of human misery is beside the point -- because while few, their deaths had monumental consequences for America. The dead were civilians, not soldiers (more on them in a minute). But their deaths deserve memorializing today just as much as those we remember who wore the uniform of our country. Because this is the final resting place of the people onboard the Lusitania.

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Friday Talking Points -- This Is Shameful

[ Posted Friday, May 27th, 2022 – 17:01 UTC ]

Last week, America experienced a racist extremist shooting up a grocery store, in an effort to kill as many Black people as he could. This week, America had to once again watch as innocent schoolchildren age 10 or under were massacred for no reason whatsoever. This is who we are, and it is shameful.

It is not, however, who we want to be. The public wants more and tighter gun safety laws, by an overwhelming margin. But even in the wake of the horrors of yet another slaughter of innocents, most people who follow politics don't expect much of anything to change. No new laws will pass the Senate, or if something does manage to be worked out, it will be weak and watered-down and likely ineffective at stopping such outrages from regularly happening.

The Senate and the House are already on vacation, showing that they too know that any efforts to do anything meaningful are quite likely futile. This is not just shameful, it is an absolute disgrace.

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From The Archives -- A Sad New Normal

[ Posted Thursday, May 26th, 2022 – 15:55 UTC ]

Here we are again. That, as you'll see below, is how I started an article written five years ago, after the Las Vegas slaughter. Because I find I cannot write yet another one of these articles, when nothing has changed and nothing is likely to change any time soon.

Politico just put out some new poll numbers, from an insta-poll taken after the Uvalde, Texas school massacre. They show pretty much where the American public has stood for quite some time now: gun control measures are either popular or overwhelmingly popular. By the numbers:

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Trump Humiliated By Georgia Voters

[ Posted Wednesday, May 25th, 2022 – 15:37 UTC ]

There's an old adage that says success has many fathers, but failure is an orphan. Last night's election results in Georgia, however, did indeed have a single clear father, and his name is Donald Trump. Not that he'll admit this fact, even with the proof of a paternity test. But perhaps I'm stretching the metaphor a bit too far, so let's begin again, shall we?

After Georgia's primary, many are today proclaiming that Trump is now a paper tiger within the Republican Party and that it is safe for candidates to buck both him and his toxic Big Lie that the last election was somehow stolen from him (spoiler alert: it wasn't). This may be overstating the case, but it is undeniable that Trumpism suffered a big and humiliating body blow last night.

Trump had a singular focus on Georgia, where he hand-picked candidates for: U.S. senator, governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, attorney general, and (why not?) insurance commissioner. Only two out of Trump's six candidates won their GOP primaries (for senator and lieutenant governor), but the big embarrassment was that the ones Trump really wanted to win lost -- badly. They got absolutely spanked, in fact.

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Massive Election Fraud Uncovered -- Guess Which Party It Would Have Helped?

[ Posted Tuesday, May 24th, 2022 – 15:02 UTC ]

Finally, a truly massive amount of election fraud has been uncovered! You'd think all of the blind adherents to Donald Trump's Big Lie conspiracy theory would be overjoyed, but that's likely not going to be the case. Because -- as has indeed happened repeatedly in the recent past -- the exposed fraud was intended to benefit Republicans. Strange how this all seems more and more like just a massive case of projection, eh?

The fraud at hand didn't involve actual votes or actual ballots, this time. It involved signatures on petitions for candidates. But unlike most of the GOP fraud that has been exposed in the past year or so, this one was a concerted effort and involved tens of thousands of signatures -- not a ballot here and a ballot there, filled out in some recently-dead relative's name, in an attempt to boost Donald Trump's vote. Here is the story, as Salon reports:

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