MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
Activists in Maine opposed to the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court are trying to put pressure on Susan Collins, the state’s Republican senator. If Collins votes for Kavanaugh, they say, they will donate substantial sums to her opponent in the next election.
Whatever you think of Kavanaugh, this is surely a legitimate tactic: Donors and activists try to influence politicians’ votes all the time, often by warning of adverse electoral consequences if the politicians make what the activists consider the wrong choice. Last year, for example, major Republican donors openly threatened to withhold contributionsunless the party gave them a big tax cut.
But now Collins, other Republicans and conservative activists are describing the pressure over Kavanaugh as “bribery,” “extortion” and “blackmail.” And some of those claiming that normal political activism is somehow illegitimate are the very same big donors who warned Republicans to pass tax cuts or else.
Calling this about-face hypocrisy is fair, but feels inadequate. We’re looking at something much bigger and more pervasive than mere hypocrisy: We’re talking about bad faith on an epic scale.
Comments
Krugman nails it again.
by AmericanDreamer on Tue, 09/18/2018 - 10:18am
Thanks to whoever for reposting this, my clipboard had copied the whole thing, was too lazy to shorten it up..
Question is, what does the Democratic Party do when the GOP is a bad faith Party, and the GOP Base not only doesn't care, but approves this or any pernicious behavior as long as they think they are "winning"?
by NCD on Tue, 09/18/2018 - 2:55pm
Several candidates have won Democratic primaries by energizing Democrats who gave up on voting and by attracting Independents. Democrats won in Alabama because the Republican was flawed. Chris Collins is back on the ballot so there may be an opportunity there.
by rmrd0000 on Tue, 09/18/2018 - 3:14pm
Collins was indicted for insider trading. GOP Job One - loot the country.
by NCD on Tue, 09/18/2018 - 5:24pm
We are in a Constitutional crisis. Both parties are not responsible for The Constitutional crisis. The Republicans stole a Supreme Court seat from the Democrats. Now Trump wants to put a man on the Supreme Court who would make a decision as to whether Trump can be compelled to testify before Mueller, etc. Republicans will block any attempt to impeach Trump no matter the evidence. The evil is within the GOP. This not a Liberal or Progressive problem. This is not the fault of identity politics. This is the unlawful behavior of the Republican Party.
Orrin Hatch lied in a tweet that the FBI cannot investigate the allegations against Kavanaugh. Bob Corker says that if Professor Ford doesn’t show up on Monday, the vote on Kavanaugh should go forward. The Republicans don’t care if Kavanaugh attempted a rape.
There is no honor among Congressional Republicans. We have to get people who usually don’t vote out to the polls.
by rmrd0000 on Tue, 09/18/2018 - 10:29pm
It was a crime against justice and democracy by McConnell to throw out the 60 vote rule for the supreme court justices. As the last highest court in the land without bipartisan support the court becomes a dispenser of partisanship not justice.
Dems may have to pack the court in the future to force a crisis and a fair resolution to GOP SCOTUS chicanery.
by NCD on Wed, 09/19/2018 - 12:47am
Oh but only a short while ago, back on the Fukuyama/Appiah thread, you gave the strong impression that you didn't give a damn about creeds like the Constitution, just another damn white male creed imposed on minority tribes. You consistently play all sides of games, that is the only consistent thing about your commentary. To my mind: you don't usually know what you are talking about and you don't understand the real benefits nor the downsides of what you support. It increasingly appears that your approach is that you like romantic heroes and will flog any ideology that the hero appears to have at the time. Is ironic because that involves individualism apart from tribe.
by artappraiser on Wed, 09/19/2018 - 3:09pm
Pls no mixing threads again.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 09/19/2018 - 3:19pm
I think it behooves to keep in mind that many crucial swings in 2016 were not choosing the establishment GOP nor were they even choosing the TeaParty/Freedom caucus types. They chose Trump after choosing Obama and it also behooves to remember when campaigning he was dissing most of the GOP as well as the Dems as "the swamp".
Well enough of these are apparently switching back to Dems for now. But what will they be looking for after that?
Recall that Trump promised a great health care plan in campaigning, better than Obamacare, promised to fix Obamacare at the very least. And health care is still at the top of all the polls I see on issues.
by artappraiser on Tue, 09/18/2018 - 6:18pm
Seems to me Trump doesn't give a shit about the fortunes of the GOP except for those who show not just loyalty but earnest support and fandown:
In infrequent less delusionary moments he probably realizes that he needs them as a Dem Congress will impeach, sure. And in such moments an adviser tells him: you need to endorse this guy or that guy, and he files that in the back of his mind and when the time comes he executes that support as just a thing he's supposed to do. But for the most part it's back to: he's king of the world and works alone. And nobody gets his glory and if there's no glory accruing to him, he'll just invent some (such as the recent tweet that steel plants are opening allover the country and producing jobs jobs jobs.) No need for them, really. Congress is the enemy, the whole Congress, whatever party.
by artappraiser on Tue, 09/18/2018 - 9:54pm
Trump is a demagogue.
Approximately 90% of the Republican base are lapping it up, and are OK with his wanna be authoritarianism and his constant lies.
Congress isn't his enemy, the truth and the rule of law are his enemy. Anyone in government not a boot licking loyal quisling is his enemy. Since McCain died the GOPers not in that category are zero.
by NCD on Wed, 09/19/2018 - 12:41am