And here's my overview. Basically: the political environment is quite bad for Dems, but the GOP has enough bad candidates (inexperienced, scandal-plagued, 1/6 endorser, views outside mainstream) to keep D hopes alive in the Senate & some key gov races. https://t.co/8pXjNo4s5c
You can follow the Congressional horse race for fun as if it is a football season, as long as you keep REALITY IN MIND AS WELL:
State and local elections are absolutely critical with this SCOTUS. They are shifting the balance of power more to the states, pay attention to your local races, study the candidates and their positions and statements, vote for your own interests.
Every time Dems blame Manchin and Sinema they lose voters. Not people on Twitter but people in real life. They view that as weak and feckless lacking leadership. Don’t yell at me. I’m just the messenger.
— I’m NotDevinsMom Moron (@NotDevinsMom) July 2, 2022
Most Independents actually probably like the honesty of it. And if you're doing Yang-style ranked choice voting, there's not much of a problem. But if you're gonna be one of two main political parties, angry hatred within doesn't look appealing. Is the same thing with current divisions in the GOP, calling other members RINOS, attacking Crenshaw or Romney or whatever. (I'd put participation on the Jan. 6 committee as a special case, as most of GOP sends a unified message on that, that they don't want to do it.)
the PA Senate race is all the rage on Twitter, I see lots of activists for Fetterman and against Oz tweeting away, BUT ran across this one which has me kind of mesmerized off topic. Aren't these 3 kids of his the nicest, most good looking kids you ever did see?!!! I realize the pic is him just getting out of the hospital so they are glad their dad made and is alive. BUT STILL! I mean they are so much better looking than either of their parents. And so wholesome and friendly looking GEEZ. If any of them were running for something, they would surely win
Pennsylvania next senator John Fetterman and his family. Born and raised in Pennsylvania. Lives and serves in Pennsylvania. Works and raises his family right beside mine, right here in Pennsylvania. John Fetterman and his family believes in Pennsylvania and we believe in him. pic.twitter.com/iiZPXu5zkZ
— Danielle Candela (@DanielleCandela) July 3, 2022
According to recent polling, Senator Mike Lee is the only Republican candidate who would beat Evan McMullin comfortably in a head-to-head match-up.https://t.co/BIEeSftFjr
My polling concern is which Dems show any competence and draw for people. Not that the. bozos the Republicans run have any real attraction as troglodytes, but somehow they can make their party vote for them.
In addition to trolling DeSantis in the ad running on Fox News and joining Trump’s Truth Social, feel like people missed this IG of Newsom brandishing an AR-15 to talk about gun control. pic.twitter.com/iH139DEAv0
just being the messenger here, don't know it's smart or not
NJ governor weighs in on Newsom attacking DeSantis in Florida: "I like it." So do sane Floridians. Keep it up and feel free to join in, @PhilMurphy! #RemoveRonhttps://t.co/Jk9M6X2DCJ
— Lesley Abravanel (@lesleyabravanel) July 5, 2022
what I do know: my bicoastal CA (Santa Monica)/FL(Ft. Lauderale) brother, a centrist businessperson who will give an angry denial if you call him a Republican, much much much prefers the results of government by DeSantis to that of Newsom. He's not at all interested in culture wars stuff. And he strongly believes that Newsom and his ilk have ruined California, describes it as a paradise lost, feels much more comfortable in Ft. Lauderdale now. Likes to text pics of how horrible the L.A. area now looks and how tortuous life is there, ala Bill Maher.
Well, California builds stuff - Florida is the playground of retirees and vacationers, so 20% is living off their social security & pensions, banked dollars, while the state feeds itself on room & restaurant taxes, plus spending out of military bases.. What are the high ranking FL schools? FL has about 0.5% use of solar energy, fewer solar panels than Vermont. Besides Disney, what's their creative factor?
Only 15% of the population is over 65. Florida has 15 deep water ports that have been modernized to handle all types of shipping. Most of them operate 24/7 and shut down for Christmas and New Years. Lakeland has a very large rail yard and a new round house to handle the rail shipping from the ports. They could not expand the Port of Miami so they built a new port in the everglades to handle the over flow. Most of the shipping is Panamanian class ships and bulk shipping. You should see all the super large warehouses in Lakeland. At Tampa Air Port there is a morning rush hour of heavy planes from UPS, Prime and Fed EX.leaving.
New industry has moved in along the I-4 corridor and on the east coast. Some of them came from California. We have the Space industry that is expanding. Florida built a new college on I-4 that is a STEM college. Florida Polytechnic to be near all the tech growth that is going on.
Disney's free ride is over with. They no longer have their own courts, laws and law enforcement. They have to pay Florida taxes and permits. Their operation was illegal under Florida constitution. DeSantis put a stop on it. They have to let the state inspect them and follow state laws.
If I lived in a house, Florida would help pay for solar panels. I am in a trailer. My electric bill fell 60% in the last 3 years. It has gone up a little this year but is no where near what it was
Florida has a good education system. Since I moved here 35 years ago, They have built half of the universities and colleges that the state now has. It is a much younger system. University of South Florida in Tampa has the largest student body in the country. Hmm....Where did all these kids come from?
P.P. You are welcome to come and see for yourself.
Florida seems to have moved up in education, CA down, tho Cali handles a ton more students.
All of FL's ports handle $67 billion in cargo ($20b each for the 3 largest). LA Harbor is over $300 billion, Long Beach over $200 billion
Seriously, Florida's like playing in the minors in so many areas - if ppl didn't come there with pockets already filled it'd be a different matter. Nice if you're already retiring... (17.3% are 65+ per 2020 census, tho Trump gamed that to help and back, so who knows...)
perhaps what you're running into there is the reason people initially wanted to live in both of those states - you label it a retirement mindset, but what others see as a laid back lifestyle. Not looking for dog-eat-dog capitalist growth. Certainly that's the complaint I've seen about what tech bros & venture capitalists did to the Bay area. I know both of my brothers moved to LA when they were young for that very reason, they are very active and outdoorsy and dreamed of retiring EARLY, like in their 40's, and not having to work hard. I know that's what the one means by saying it was "a paradise" in the past, that it was laid back, that it didn't give him anxiety but calmed him down. But without all the shit that comes along with a conservative rural area.
Of course, Steve Martin clearly notes his decision in order to succeed in comedy, #1 was to move where comedy was tops, not try to be the best in the Catskills. Of course once he's made his mark, he can live where he wants. Lots of Brits moved to Gibraltar and southern coast of Spain - retirement. A bit of business popped up as well for the few who want to work & augment income, but mostly it's golf, beach, sailing. But I'm not going to compare New York mayor's with Miami's that's focused on salsa bands, best piña coladas, and keeping the beaches in good shape - sure, the residents like it, but NYC can't live like that, so it's a false metric. Cannes and Monte Carlo are great as well I hear. As for Florida IT & manufacturing & what-not, meh. Yes, Disney was a magnet for VR and other tech. Not much spinoff from Florida's military bases. A few things in Tampa, but a long time since i heard anything big and promising (defense related primarily).
Martin gets it because he famously makes his protagonist character in LA Story as a bored-to-tears weatherman having not just the job of reporting great weather day after day but dying for action of any kind. And yes, personally he likes to wander around NYC but has the luxury of having country places; whenever I see one of his banjo videos, it has a woodsy background.
I think most talented creatives crave intellectual life, and that's why they joke about the shallowness of LA and FL, but then there are many who don't want to deal with it 24/7, hence the tradition of a "country house" in the crowded northeast. Then go back to people like my brothers and they don't ever crave an intellectual life (nor a political one, for that matter) and I think most people are like them. I do think it's related that the screeching of passionate extremists left and right turn those most people off. (And furthermore, the initial popularity of Trump is probably related too, while you may see him dragging conservative rule in with him, he was not really passionate about anything except as bitching about politically correct extremists.)
Wait, did we move past flyover country as the rugged Bundy individualist defending our rights and real farm patriotic inspirations to "i just need a quiet cottage in the country to chill"? I mean sure, pretty much everyone likes a weekend bungalow - let's pass an amendment, heal the divide.
and a few items that prolly didn't make your "things to consider" list
(for AA 6:00 & 8:30 for Crime aspects, 1:10 for possible Bernie Sanders sighting)
LOL...A lot of people have moved here from Ca. And they think they have died and gone to heaven. It is not just your brother. When the lock downs started the snow birds didn't go home. Then decided to make this home and move family here. They do like DeSantis. With all of the influx of new people, Florida is no longer a swing state.
really like getting your input on this, momoe, even just for personal reasons, as I do wonder on DeSantis whether my brother is going crazy or the left is. The spin against him on social media by liberal activist groups is so extra virulent! (The "fascist' thing I posted, that's not the first time.) Almost to the point that I think someone on his staff wants that to happen and knows how to draw that out. Meantime the actual citizens of Florida seem not to care much about any of that because they either like or are okay with what he's doing as governor.
At the same time, I was initially very impressed by Newsom when I learned about him, he seemed like the neo-liberal manager type I tend to like. But more and more I see complaints from Californians who see him very cynically as just out for himself and not at all happy with his leadership.
My point is mainly that DeSantis has a much smaller, easier job to do than Newsom - the state is largely a holiday park, keep it running that way. BTW, from Feb 2022, Consumer Affairs:
Florida has the highest percentage of senior citizens (21%), followed by Maine (20%).
If the LA ports stop running, the country's in a world of hurt. If Miami harbor shuts for a few days, ho-hum, Bahamas cruises suffer. (yes, CA has San Diego & SF/Oakland and other ports)
As for Covid, Texas & Florida can greatly outpace California per capita in infections and deaths (half the population) and the locals don't seem to give a shit, angrier about wearing a mask and missing parties. Paradise? I assume old folks homes got hit hard in FL, but DeSantis just quit keeping extensive up-to-date records - problem solved.
articles like this are so helpful, not more on culture wars shit actually intended to distract, but telling you about the people who really do the stuff:
Meet the GOP deal-makers-in-waiting who Dems may find essential in 2023: If Republicans flip at least one chamber this fall as expected, the fate of policy on multiple fronts will rest with a handful of House members. https://t.co/AbHQLDMQnh
— Top U.S. & World News (@USRealityCheck) July 5, 2022
Do you remember how we said some of the commercials in this article were controversial because they were both opposed and supported at the same time? Frito Lay's "Frito Bandito" commercials are a prime example. Running from the mid-1960s until the early 1970s, these advertisements featured an impish animated character who was a bit too stereotypical in a negative way for some people's tastes. The Frito Bandito was voiced by Mel Blanc, the same voiceover artist who lent the voice of Speedy Gonzalez. He employed nearly the exact same voice and intonations for the Bandito. The character also had a decidedly scruffy appearance, carried a heavy amount of ammunition at all times, and could turn on a time from friendly to murderous. Consequently, it's not hard to see why some people found the character to be offensive and called for his removal. The National Mexican-American Anti-Defamation Committee was one of the most notable objectors.
Still, the lovable-if-offensive Frito Bandito did have his supporters. A survey conducted toward Hispanic Americans in the states of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, revealed that 85% of those questioned liked the Bandito and viewed him as a funny caricature rather than an offensive figure. Frito-Lay tried to tone down the character, though it wasn't a huge effort. They removed the Bandito's gold tooth and scraggly facial hair, but otherwise he changed little. Eventually, they did remove the artillery from his act as well. The company was hesitant to abandon this character, but ultimately did. He was replaced by the very forgettable Muncha Buncha Cowboys. Who? Exactly.
I'm not sure about the presidential rumors, but it stood out to me that in a poll, 41 percent of Virginia Democrats say they approve of Gov. Glenn Youngkin https://t.co/lP11DjjqPN
Georgians are not buying what Stacey Abrams is selling, and Warnock better watch himself too
Data for Progress, a left-wing pollster, finds Walker barely leading Warnock and Kemp crushing Abrams. Now that's a #Gapol twist. https://t.co/YRAXddQ6IG
Clearly they do like Kemp standing up to Trump so I am guessing that they only have to learn more Walker and those numbers will fall. But they know Abrams by now, and don't like her.
Some perspective, pls - a black female Democrat running in Georgia down by 9% *against the incumbent* is rather respectable - 44% of the electorate seems to be buying what she's selling, which obviously isn't enough (short of a 3rd party candidates), but better than many contested seats, & she's also been a target of MAGA hats for years in ways that Warnock hasn't had to face. (and she hasn't held much in the way of a gov position, Georgia House/minority leader, which doesn't help her). Oh, and Warnock's running against a total cretin dumbass lunatic scandal-ridden sportsstar who has no clue about any gov issue and still Warnock's down by 2.
Congrats, it's also the 2nd time Kemp's running for governor plus once as Secretary of State (you generally get more press as a top level state official or even Governor rather than a minority party member in a state legislature or an ex- minority legislator.
Not sure what the map shows me - the great surprise that urban areas are more likely to vote Dem than rural areas? That since 2018 Trump (+Tucker/Fox) helped consolidate kneejerk MAGA support behind Republicans (tho actual Trump- supported candidates are now slipping) giving Dems worse problems in the South? My Mom gets all her news from Fox - no surprise which way she'll lean on any issue or candidate, and yes, she's gotten worse the last 6 years.
I don't know how many times it has to be repeated, but if economic conditions were mechanically causing Biden to become unpopular, then previous presidents, presiding over dramatically worse conditions, should have been EVEN MORE unpopular. But they weren't! It's not even close!
This to me is the biggest story in American politics. Unfortunately much of political media keeps missing it because it puts people into preconceived boxes. https://t.co/Op5xNX2WdX
Democrats now have a bigger advantage among white college graduates than they do with nonwhite voters, Axios' Josh Kraushaar writes from aNew York Times/Siena College poll.
Why it matters: We're seeing a political realignment in real time.
Democrats are becoming the party of upscale voters concerned more about issues like gun control and abortion rights.
Republicans are quietly building a multiracial coalition of working-class voters, with inflation as an accelerant.
What's happening: House Republicansboast this year's class of new candidates is the most diverse in history.
The NRCC notes that 29 of its 75 House targets have a Hispanic population over 15%.
In the Times/Siena poll, Ds hold a 20-point advantage over Rs among white college-educated voters — but are statistically tied among Hispanics.
President Biden's job approval sank to 33%.
Between the lines: Dems' fortunes are bolstered by a slice of well-off socially liberal voters who disapprove of Biden's performance — yet reliably support Democrats for other races.
Hispanic voters backed Democrats by a nearly 50-point margin in the 2018 midterms. In the 2016 congressional elections, Dems lost white voters with a bachelor's degree.
But Ds and Rs are in a statistical tie on the congressional ballot.
Nonwhite and working-class Democrats worry more about the economy, while white college graduates focus more on cultural issues like abortion rights and guns.
By Nate Cohn @ NYTimes.com, July 13, 2022, 3:00 a.m. ET
With President Biden’s approval rating mired in the 30s and with nearly 80 percent of voters saying the country is heading in the wrong direction, all the ingredients seem to be in place for a Republican sweep in the November midterm elections.
But Democrats and Republicans begin the campaign in a surprisingly close race for control of Congress, according to the first New York Times/Siena College survey of the cycle.
Overall among registered voters, 41 percent said they preferred Democrats to control Congress compared with 40 percent who preferred Republican control.
Among likely voters, Republicans led by one percentage point, 44 percent to 43 percent, reflecting the tendency for the party out of power to enjoy a turnout advantage in midterms.
The results suggest that the wave of mass shootings and the recent Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade have at least temporarily insulated the Democrats from an otherwise hostile national political environment while energizing the party’s predominantly liberal activist base.
But the confluence of economic problems and resurgent cultural issues has helped turn the emerging class divide in the Democratic coalition into a chasm, as Republicans appear to be making new inroads among nonwhite and working-class voters — perhaps especially Hispanic voters — who remain more concerned about the economy and inflation than abortion rights and guns.
For the first time in a Times/Siena national survey, Democrats had a larger share of support among white college graduates than among nonwhite voters — a striking indication of the shifting balance of political energy in the Democratic coalition. As recently as the 2016 congressional elections, Democrats won more than 70 percent of nonwhite voters while losing among white college graduates.
With four months to go until the election, it is far too soon to say whether the campaign will remain focused on issues like abortion and gun control long enough for Democrats to avoid a long-expected midterm rout. If it does, a close national vote would probably translate to a close race for control of Congress, as neither party enjoys a clear structural advantage in the race. Partisan gerrymandering has slightly tilted the map toward Republicans in the House, but Democrats enjoy the advantages of incumbency and superior fund-raising in key districts.
Recent unfavorable news for Democrats, in the form of Supreme Court rulings, and some tragic news nationally might ordinarily mean trouble for the party in power, but that’s not what the results suggest.
The survey began 11 days after the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, when cellphones were still buzzing with news alerts about the mass shooting in Highland Park, Ill.
In an open-ended question, those who volunteered that issues related to guns, abortion or the Supreme Court were the most important problem facing the country represented about one in six registered voters combined. Those voters preferred Democratic control of Congress, 68 percent to 8 percent.
Some of the hot-button cultural issues thought to work to the advantage of Republicans at the beginning of the cycle, like critical race theory, have faded from the spotlight. Only 4 percent of voters combined said education, crime or immigration was the most important issue facing the country.
The Times/Siena survey is not the first to suggest that the national political environment has improved for Democrats since the Supreme Court overturned Roe. On average, Democrats have gained about three points on the generic congressional ballot compared with surveys taken beforehand.
In the wake of the court’s ruling, the poll finds greater public support for legal abortion than previous Times/Siena surveys. Sixty-five percent of registered voters said abortion should be mostly or always legal, up from 60 percent of registered voters in September 2020.
The proportion of voters who opposed the court’s decision — 61 percent — was similar to the share who said they supported Roe v. Wade two years ago.
Democrats are maintaining the loyalty of a crucial sliver of predominantly liberal and highly educated voters who disapprove of Mr. Biden’s performance but care more about debates over guns, democracy and the shrinking of abortion rights than the state of the economy.
Voters who said issues related to abortion, guns or threats to democracy were the biggest problem facing the country backed Democrats by a wide margin, 66 percent to 14 percent.
For some progressive voters, recent conservative policy victories make it hard to stay on the sidelines.
Lucy Ackerman, a 23-year-old graphic designer in Durham, N.C., said Mr. Biden had repeatedly failed to live up to election promises. She recently registered with the Democratic Socialists of America. Nonetheless, she has committed herself to getting as many Democrats elected this fall as possible.
She says the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe made politics personal: She and her wife married after the decision leaked, out of fear that the court might roll back same-sex marriage rights next.
“The recent events have given me this push to do more,” she said. “I’ve gotten more involved in political efforts locally. I’ve helped sign friends up to vote.”
The liberal backlash against conservative advances in the court appears to have helped Democrats most among white college graduates, who are relatively liberal and often insulated by their affluence from economic woes. Just 17 percent of white college-educated Biden voters said an economic issue was the most important one facing the country, less than for any other racial or educational group.
Over all, white college graduates preferred Democratic control of Congress, 57-36. Women propelled Democratic strength among the group, with white college-educated women backing Democrats, 64-30. Democrats barely led among white college-educated men, 46-45.
Although the survey does not show an unusually large gender gap, the poll seems to offer some evidence that the court’s abortion ruling may do more to help Democrats among women. Nine percent of women said abortion rights was the most important issue, compared with 1 percent of men.
The fight for congressional control is very different among the often less affluent, nonwhite and moderate voters who say the economy or inflation is the biggest problem facing the country. They preferred Republican control of Congress, 62 percent to 25 percent, even though more than half of the voters who said the economy was the biggest problem also said abortion should be mostly legal.
Just 74 percent of the voters who backed Mr. Biden in the 2020 election, but who said the economy or inflation was the most important problem, said they preferred Democratic control of Congress. In contrast, Democrats were the choice of 87 percent of Biden voters who said abortion or guns was the most important issue.
The economy may be helping Republicans most among Hispanic voters, who preferred Democrats to control Congress, 41-38. Although the sample size is small, the finding is consistent with the longer-term deterioration in Democratic support among the group. Hispanics voted for Democrats by almost a 50-point margin in the 2018 midterms, according to data from Pew Research, then President Donald J. Trump made surprising gains with them in 2020.
No racial or ethnic group was likelier than Hispanic voters to cite the economy or inflation as the most important issue facing the country, with 42 percent citing an economic problem compared with 35 percent of non-Hispanic voters.
Republicans also appear poised to expand their already lopsided advantage among white voters without a college degree. They back Republicans by more than a two-to-one margin, 54-23. Even so, nearly a quarter remain undecided compared with just 7 percent of white college graduates.
As less engaged working-class voters tune in, Republicans may have opportunities for additional gains. Historically, the party out of power excels in midterm elections, in no small part by capitalizing on dissatisfaction with the president’s party.
Only 23 percent of undecided voters approved of Mr. Biden’s job performance.
Silvana Read, a certified nursing assistant who lives outside Tampa, Fla., is one of the Hispanic voters whom Republicans will try to sway to capitalize on widespread dissatisfaction with Mr. Biden.
An immigrant from Ecuador, she despised Mr. Trump’s comments about women and foreigners, but voted for him because her husband convinced her it would help them financially. Now she and her husband, 56 and 60, blame Mr. Biden for their falling 401(k)s.
“My husband, he sees the news on the TV, he says, ‘I don’t think I can retire until 75,’” she said. “We can’t afford to finish paying the mortgage.”
Still, her allegiance to the Republican Party does not extend far beyond Mr. Trump. She offered no preference in the fight for control of Congress.
Biden'a been in for 18 months. These people are fucking delusional to think he ruined their 401k's or did anything but manage COVID and the economy including jobs reasonably well while responding to a Russian invasion. Trump was there 4 years, and did so much deficit spending that of course the economy would be out of whack. I can't help it the population is fucking stupid and easily led around by its nose these days. A party that's run on dumbing down government the last 40 years (Gordon Norquist, Reagan, Fox...) has succeeded, taking the populace with it. Modern economy with Middle Ages comprehension - strange combo.
Desire for structural changes cuts across both parties, a Times/Siena College poll found, but for starkly different reasons. Even Democrats now question if the government is a force for good.
Trust in U.S. democracy across nearly all demographics and ideologies is wavering as voters believe their system of government does not work, a New York Times/Siena poll found. Almost 60% of voters say the system needs reform. https://t.co/3sk3kpSwvV
More cold water from Manchin after inflation report: "No matter what spending aspirations some in Congress may have, it is clear to anyone who visits a grocery store or a gas station that we cannot add any more fuel to this inflation fire.”
I just found out about this. Yay, GO STEVE ROBERTS! Helping to hopefully see one less bullshit woke DSA member among Dems in The House being as unhelpful to the president as they can (not to mention her habit of being as racially divisive as she can
Hey everyone, @CoriBush is in a tight primary race against a very corporate democrat. We already have plenty of them, and there is only one Cori Bush fighting for the rest of us. Let’s all chip in and send her some funding love.https://t.co/7KJzf0iG5E
St. Louis Public Radio | By Sarah Kellogg Published March 29, 2022 at 12:25 PM CDT
Democratic state Sen. Steve Roberts, D-St. Louis, is challenging Congresswoman Cori Bush, D-St. Louis County, to represent Missouri’s 1st Congressional District.
Roberts submitted his paperwork on Monday, the second-to-last day of candidate filing to run for the seat.
Roberts said he didn’t intend to run for Congress when he was initially elected to serve in the Missouri Senate, but Bush’s actions changed that.
“It's become pretty apparent to me that Congresswoman Cori Bush is not interested in serving as a U.S. Representative,” Roberts said.
He added: “She made a comment that she wanted to defund the Pentagon. The NGA (National Geospatial Intelligence Agency) is a multimillion-dollar project that's in my Senate seat, in the 1st Congressional [District], those folks don't have a voice.”
In a statement after Roberts’ announcement, Bush’s office said the people of St. Louis have a clear choice inthe election.
“Their Congresswoman who loves them and delivered hundreds of millions of dollars to St. Louis, and a host of ego-driven men who seem to think all that Black women leaders do is never good enough,” the written statement said.
Anita Manion, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, said seeing a more establishment candidate isn’t that surprising.
“Representative Bush has made some choices on votes that haven't always sort of toed the Democratic Party line. So, I don't think it's surprising that there would be a challenger in that district,” Manion said.
In the statement Monday announcing the campaign, Roberts’ spokesman Ryan Hawkins spoke against Bush’s voting record, including her vote against President Joe Biden’s infrastructure plan.
Rep. Emanuel Cleaver of Kansas City, Missouri's other Democratic member of Congress, voted yes on the bill, as did outgoing Republican Sen. Roy Blunt.
“Voting NO on so many issues that affect families in the 1st district like fixing our roads and bridges, clean air, clean water, support for Ukraine during a time of war, and Capitol security after January 6, for nothing more than political theater, clearly shows the Congresswoman is only concerned about Twitter likes and seeking the celebrity status,” Hawkins said in a written statement.
In a statement released after she voted against the bill, Bush said a vote for the infrastructure plan jeopardized any leverage on the Build Back Better Act.
"Each and every one of my votes here in D.C. has been in the interest of saving lives. And tonight was no different," Bush said.
Bush first ran for Congress in 2018, losing to longtime incumbent Lacy Clay in the primary. Bush challenged Clay again in 2020 and won before going on to win the seat in the general election. She is running her first reelection campaign.
Manion says Roberts is fashioning himself as a more moderate candidate.
“He's going to be looking for maybe an older voter, a more traditional voter, but I think he's going to have to figure out how to get the enthusiasm to have them turn out in a Democratic primary,” she said.
Manion still believes Bush has the advantage in the primary.
“I think she has a lot of enthusiasm in her base. And that'll be really difficult for Senator Roberts to overcome, particularly in a Democratic primary,” Manion said.
Roberts served in the Missouri House from 2016 through 2020, when he was elected to the Senate. He is currently in his second year as a Missouri state senator.
Before his term in the House, Roberts was accused by fellow freshman lawmaker Cora Faith Walker, who died this month, of drugging and sexually assaulting her. Prosecutors did not press charges against Roberts, and both Walker and Roberts dropped their lawsuits against each other.
Manion says Walker’s recent death has brought more attention to the allegations.
“I think that makes it a more of an uphill battle for him. And particularly when we know that Black women are the core of the Democratic Party in St. Louis and elsewhere. And in a primary election, it's about energy and turnout,” Manion said.
The statement from Bush’s office mentioned Roberts’ assault allegations, saying, “Such men do not belong in public service, much less representing the incredible people of St. Louis in Congress.”
Roberts’ post on Twitter about his candidacy was met mostly with criticism; most replies and interactions to the tweet called for support of Bush or referenced the assault allegations.
“They can try to distract voters from her indefensible voting record by recycling old false stories about me, but I don't think it's gonna work,” Roberts said.
According to candidate filing information, Roberts is the fifth person in the primary other than Bush. Three Republicans have also filed for the race, though the district is considered a safe Democratic seat and is protected by the Voting Rights Act.
As to why he waited until near the end of filing to run, Roberts said he was waiting to see how the 1st Congressional District map was going to turn out.
However, neither Bush nor Roberts know whom exactly they are running to represent, as the Missouri Legislature has yet to pass a congressional redistricting map.
p.s. there is some evidence on her Twitter page that she doth protest too much that she's not in it for the celebrity as he accuses; this is pinned at the top:
I’m thrilled to share the cover of my forthcoming memoir, THE FORERUNNER, out 10.4.22 from @aaknopf!
Biden got a lot of COVID relief, an infrastructure bill, a gun bill, and had a progressive Supreme Court justice confirmed and didn't have too many problems with his cabinet nominations. All with a 50-50 Senate. The narrative about how his legislative agenda failed is dumb. https://t.co/nFwOJSVxZg
What’s most intriguing about @MayraFlores2022 is Democrats lack the vocabulary to define or categorize her. They have yet to make sense of what happened in 2016 and what is happening now. She’s deeply flawed, to be sure, but not in the ways her political foes imagine. https://t.co/78Tkp4FQHp
As a general matter, if you tell progressives there are Republicans who embrace workers' rights and legal immigration, they assume that's a pose. They do not grasp that a paradigm shift has taken place on the right.
I know I should mostly be worried about the normalization of violence in American society and our politics, but this is an all-time hall of famer in the category of politicians posing awkwardly with firearms. What a dork. Look at that optic! Is it set to 64x? pic.twitter.com/Yfv14ixVN3
In both 2016 and 2020, Democrats made choices that were clearly wrong ex-post but *at the time* they seemed like good ideas because based on the available information they were cruising to landslide wins. https://t.co/yYWeD1Qlg0
it is clear that some political consultant is suggesting that trolling The Squad about Joe is a good tactic:
Democratic Rep. Cori Bush of Missouri wouldn't commit to supporting President Joe Biden for reelection in 2024 when pressed by a local news station. https://t.co/a3axUQ3bkm
Comments
by artappraiser on Sat, 07/02/2022 - 5:55pm
You can follow the Congressional horse race for fun as if it is a football season, as long as you keep REALITY IN MIND AS WELL:
by artappraiser on Sat, 07/02/2022 - 6:25pm
I agree:
Most Independents actually probably like the honesty of it. And if you're doing Yang-style ranked choice voting, there's not much of a problem. But if you're gonna be one of two main political parties, angry hatred within doesn't look appealing. Is the same thing with current divisions in the GOP, calling other members RINOS, attacking Crenshaw or Romney or whatever. (I'd put participation on the Jan. 6 committee as a special case, as most of GOP sends a unified message on that, that they don't want to do it.)
by artappraiser on Sat, 07/02/2022 - 7:06pm
the PA Senate race is all the rage on Twitter, I see lots of activists for Fetterman and against Oz tweeting away, BUT ran across this one which has me kind of mesmerized off topic. Aren't these 3 kids of his the nicest, most good looking kids you ever did see?!!! I realize the pic is him just getting out of the hospital so they are glad their dad made and is alive. BUT STILL! I mean they are so much better looking than either of their parents. And so wholesome and friendly looking GEEZ. If any of them were running for something, they would surely win
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/03/2022 - 9:32pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/03/2022 - 10:22pm
My polling concern is which Dems show any competence and draw for people. Not that the. bozos the Republicans run have any real attraction as troglodytes, but somehow they can make their party vote for them.
by PeraclesPlease on Mon, 07/04/2022 - 1:14am
That's it, Peracles. It's not a matter of who, it's one of why.
by barefooted on Mon, 07/04/2022 - 10:38am
by artappraiser on Mon, 07/04/2022 - 2:26am
@ Twitter trending, more at link
by artappraiser on Mon, 07/04/2022 - 6:33pm
just being the messenger here, don't know it's smart or not
what I do know: my bicoastal CA (Santa Monica)/FL(Ft. Lauderale) brother, a centrist businessperson who will give an angry denial if you call him a Republican, much much much prefers the results of government by DeSantis to that of Newsom. He's not at all interested in culture wars stuff. And he strongly believes that Newsom and his ilk have ruined California, describes it as a paradise lost, feels much more comfortable in Ft. Lauderdale now. Likes to text pics of how horrible the L.A. area now looks and how tortuous life is there, ala Bill Maher.
by artappraiser on Tue, 07/05/2022 - 4:24pm
Well, California builds stuff - Florida is the playground of retirees and vacationers, so 20% is living off their social security & pensions, banked dollars, while the state feeds itself on room & restaurant taxes, plus spending out of military bases.. What are the high ranking FL schools? FL has about 0.5% use of solar energy, fewer solar panels than Vermont. Besides Disney, what's their creative factor?
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 07/05/2022 - 5:42pm
Only 15% of the population is over 65. Florida has 15 deep water ports that have been modernized to handle all types of shipping. Most of them operate 24/7 and shut down for Christmas and New Years. Lakeland has a very large rail yard and a new round house to handle the rail shipping from the ports. They could not expand the Port of Miami so they built a new port in the everglades to handle the over flow. Most of the shipping is Panamanian class ships and bulk shipping. You should see all the super large warehouses in Lakeland. At Tampa Air Port there is a morning rush hour of heavy planes from UPS, Prime and Fed EX.leaving.
New industry has moved in along the I-4 corridor and on the east coast. Some of them came from California. We have the Space industry that is expanding. Florida built a new college on I-4 that is a STEM college. Florida Polytechnic to be near all the tech growth that is going on.
Disney's free ride is over with. They no longer have their own courts, laws and law enforcement. They have to pay Florida taxes and permits. Their operation was illegal under Florida constitution. DeSantis put a stop on it. They have to let the state inspect them and follow state laws.
If I lived in a house, Florida would help pay for solar panels. I am in a trailer. My electric bill fell 60% in the last 3 years. It has gone up a little this year but is no where near what it was
Florida has a good education system. Since I moved here 35 years ago, They have built half of the universities and colleges that the state now has. It is a much younger system. University of South Florida in Tampa has the largest student body in the country. Hmm....Where did all these kids come from?
P.P. You are welcome to come and see for yourself.
by trkingmomoe on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 7:59am
Florida seems to have moved up in education, CA down, tho Cali handles a ton more students.
All of FL's ports handle $67 billion in cargo ($20b each for the 3 largest). LA Harbor is over $300 billion, Long Beach over $200 billion
Seriously, Florida's like playing in the minors in so many areas - if ppl didn't come there with pockets already filled it'd be a different matter. Nice if you're already retiring... (17.3% are 65+ per 2020 census, tho Trump gamed that to help and back, so who knows...)
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 11:12am
perhaps what you're running into there is the reason people initially wanted to live in both of those states - you label it a retirement mindset, but what others see as a laid back lifestyle. Not looking for dog-eat-dog capitalist growth. Certainly that's the complaint I've seen about what tech bros & venture capitalists did to the Bay area. I know both of my brothers moved to LA when they were young for that very reason, they are very active and outdoorsy and dreamed of retiring EARLY, like in their 40's, and not having to work hard. I know that's what the one means by saying it was "a paradise" in the past, that it was laid back, that it didn't give him anxiety but calmed him down. But without all the shit that comes along with a conservative rural area.
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 11:47am
Of course, Steve Martin clearly notes his decision in order to succeed in comedy, #1 was to move where comedy was tops, not try to be the best in the Catskills. Of course once he's made his mark, he can live where he wants. Lots of Brits moved to Gibraltar and southern coast of Spain - retirement. A bit of business popped up as well for the few who want to work & augment income, but mostly it's golf, beach, sailing. But I'm not going to compare New York mayor's with Miami's that's focused on salsa bands, best piña coladas, and keeping the beaches in good shape - sure, the residents like it, but NYC can't live like that, so it's a false metric. Cannes and Monte Carlo are great as well I hear. As for Florida IT & manufacturing & what-not, meh. Yes, Disney was a magnet for VR and other tech. Not much spinoff from Florida's military bases. A few things in Tampa, but a long time since i heard anything big and promising (defense related primarily).
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 11:55am
Martin gets it because he famously makes his protagonist character in LA Story as a bored-to-tears weatherman having not just the job of reporting great weather day after day but dying for action of any kind. And yes, personally he likes to wander around NYC but has the luxury of having country places; whenever I see one of his banjo videos, it has a woodsy background.
I think most talented creatives crave intellectual life, and that's why they joke about the shallowness of LA and FL, but then there are many who don't want to deal with it 24/7, hence the tradition of a "country house" in the crowded northeast. Then go back to people like my brothers and they don't ever crave an intellectual life (nor a political one, for that matter) and I think most people are like them. I do think it's related that the screeching of passionate extremists left and right turn those most people off. (And furthermore, the initial popularity of Trump is probably related too, while you may see him dragging conservative rule in with him, he was not really passionate about anything except as bitching about politically correct extremists.)
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 12:51pm
Wait, did we move past flyover country as the rugged Bundy individualist defending our rights and real farm patriotic inspirations to "i just need a quiet cottage in the country to chill"? I mean sure, pretty much everyone likes a weekend bungalow - let's pass an amendment, heal the divide.
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 07/08/2022 - 4:00am
"Come & see for myself" suffers the normal biases - I'm not AA's brother nor Ron DeSantis nor whoever, so YMMV.
Here's an interesting comparison site between California & Florida, from someone who's really trying to help people decide.
Better State Florida or California? - Moving to Florida (stateoffloridaliving.com)
Real Florida Pros and Cons Revealed 2022 - Moving to Florida (stateoffloridaliving.com
and a few items that prolly didn't make your "things to consider" list
(for AA 6:00 & 8:30 for Crime aspects, 1:10 for possible Bernie Sanders sighting)
by PeraclesPlease on Thu, 07/07/2022 - 5:16am
LOL...A lot of people have moved here from Ca. And they think they have died and gone to heaven. It is not just your brother. When the lock downs started the snow birds didn't go home. Then decided to make this home and move family here. They do like DeSantis. With all of the influx of new people, Florida is no longer a swing state.
by trkingmomoe on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 6:33am
really like getting your input on this, momoe, even just for personal reasons, as I do wonder on DeSantis whether my brother is going crazy or the left is. The spin against him on social media by liberal activist groups is so extra virulent! (The "fascist' thing I posted, that's not the first time.) Almost to the point that I think someone on his staff wants that to happen and knows how to draw that out. Meantime the actual citizens of Florida seem not to care much about any of that because they either like or are okay with what he's doing as governor.
At the same time, I was initially very impressed by Newsom when I learned about him, he seemed like the neo-liberal manager type I tend to like. But more and more I see complaints from Californians who see him very cynically as just out for himself and not at all happy with his leadership.
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 11:34am
My point is mainly that DeSantis has a much smaller, easier job to do than Newsom - the state is largely a holiday park, keep it running that way. BTW, from Feb 2022, Consumer Affairs:
If the LA ports stop running, the country's in a world of hurt. If Miami harbor shuts for a few days, ho-hum, Bahamas cruises suffer. (yes, CA has San Diego & SF/Oakland and other ports)
As for Covid, Texas & Florida can greatly outpace California per capita in infections and deaths (half the population) and the locals don't seem to give a shit, angrier about wearing a mask and missing parties. Paradise? I assume old folks homes got hit hard in FL, but DeSantis just quit keeping extensive up-to-date records - problem solved.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 11:40am
articles like this are so helpful, not more on culture wars shit actually intended to distract, but telling you about the people who really do the stuff:
by artappraiser on Tue, 07/05/2022 - 8:17pm
Old culture war:
==
2. The Frito Bandito
Do you remember how we said some of the commercials in this article were controversial because they were both opposed and supported at the same time? Frito Lay's "Frito Bandito" commercials are a prime example. Running from the mid-1960s until the early 1970s, these advertisements featured an impish animated character who was a bit too stereotypical in a negative way for some people's tastes. The Frito Bandito was voiced by Mel Blanc, the same voiceover artist who lent the voice of Speedy Gonzalez. He employed nearly the exact same voice and intonations for the Bandito. The character also had a decidedly scruffy appearance, carried a heavy amount of ammunition at all times, and could turn on a time from friendly to murderous. Consequently, it's not hard to see why some people found the character to be offensive and called for his removal. The National Mexican-American Anti-Defamation Committee was one of the most notable objectors.
Still, the lovable-if-offensive Frito Bandito did have his supporters. A survey conducted toward Hispanic Americans in the states of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, revealed that 85% of those questioned liked the Bandito and viewed him as a funny caricature rather than an offensive figure. Frito-Lay tried to tone down the character, though it wasn't a huge effort. They removed the Bandito's gold tooth and scraggly facial hair, but otherwise he changed little. Eventually, they did remove the artillery from his act as well. The company was hesitant to abandon this character, but ultimately did. He was replaced by the very forgettable Muncha Buncha Cowboys. Who? Exactly.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 3:46am
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 12:31pm
FactCheck.org: Stacey Abrams on Violent Crime, Defunding the Police
By Eugene Kiely and Sean Christensen, Updated on June 30, 2022
Summary
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/06/2022 - 3:43pm
Georgians are not buying what Stacey Abrams is selling, and Warnock better watch himself too
Clearly they do like Kemp standing up to Trump so I am guessing that they only have to learn more Walker and those numbers will fall. But they know Abrams by now, and don't like her.
by artappraiser on Fri, 07/08/2022 - 5:24pm
Some perspective, pls - a black female Democrat running in Georgia down by 9% *against the incumbent* is rather respectable - 44% of the electorate seems to be buying what she's selling, which obviously isn't enough (short of a 3rd party candidates), but better than many contested seats, & she's also been a target of MAGA hats for years in ways that Warnock hasn't had to face. (and she hasn't held much in the way of a gov position, Georgia House/minority leader, which doesn't help her). Oh, and Warnock's running against a total cretin dumbass lunatic scandal-ridden sportsstar who has no clue about any gov issue and still Warnock's down by 2.
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 07/08/2022 - 5:39pm
um this is the 2nd time Abrams is running, the voters already know her.
2018 Georgia gubernatorial election
November 6, 2018 Turnout 56.80%
Kemp 50.2%
Abrams 48.8%
this map is the main tell
by artappraiser on Fri, 07/08/2022 - 6:14pm
Congrats, it's also the 2nd time Kemp's running for governor plus once as Secretary of State (you generally get more press as a top level state official or even Governor rather than a minority party member in a state legislature or an ex- minority legislator.
Not sure what the map shows me - the great surprise that urban areas are more likely to vote Dem than rural areas? That since 2018 Trump (+Tucker/Fox) helped consolidate kneejerk MAGA support behind Republicans (tho actual Trump- supported candidates are now slipping) giving Dems worse problems in the South? My Mom gets all her news from Fox - no surprise which way she'll lean on any issue or candidate, and yes, she's gotten worse the last 6 years.
by PeraclesPlease on Fri, 07/08/2022 - 8:19pm
Cook:
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/10/2022 - 3:15am
by artappraiser on Mon, 07/11/2022 - 10:00pm
by PeraclesPlease on Tue, 07/12/2022 - 5:48am
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 7:50am
^
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 7:58am
Poll Shows Tight Race for Control of Congress as Class Divide Widens
Nonwhite and working-class Democrats worry more about the economy, while white college graduates focus more on cultural issues like abortion rights and guns.
By Nate Cohn @ NYTimes.com, July 13, 2022, 3:00 a.m. ET
GOOD CHARTS AT LINK, they were not copyable.
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 8:16am
Biden'a been in for 18 months. These people are fucking delusional to think he ruined their 401k's or did anything but manage COVID and the economy including jobs reasonably well while responding to a Russian invasion. Trump was there 4 years, and did so much deficit spending that of course the economy would be out of whack. I can't help it the population is fucking stupid and easily led around by its nose these days. A party that's run on dumbing down government the last 40 years (Gordon Norquist, Reagan, Fox...) has succeeded, taking the populace with it. Modern economy with Middle Ages comprehension - strange combo.
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 10:47am
One chart here:
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 2:59pm
Desire for structural changes cuts across both parties, a Times/Siena College poll found, but for starkly different reasons. Even Democrats now question if the government is a force for good.
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 2:55pm
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 3:00pm
just gonna plop this here
by artappraiser on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 4:00pm
I just found out about this. Yay, GO STEVE ROBERTS! Helping to hopefully see one less bullshit woke DSA member among Dems in The House being as unhelpful to the president as they can (not to mention her habit of being as racially divisive as she can
Missouri state Sen. Steve Roberts is running for Cori Bush’s congressional seat
St. Louis Public Radio | By Sarah Kellogg Published March 29, 2022 at 12:25 PM CDT
by artappraiser on Sat, 07/16/2022 - 12:21am
p.s. there is some evidence on her Twitter page that she doth protest too much that she's not in it for the celebrity as he accuses; this is pinned at the top:
by artappraiser on Sat, 07/16/2022 - 12:26am
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/17/2022 - 2:00pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/17/2022 - 6:00pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/17/2022 - 6:02pm
by artappraiser on Sun, 07/17/2022 - 6:10pm
by artappraiser on Sat, 07/23/2022 - 5:58pm
dupe deleted, see below
by artappraiser on Tue, 07/26/2022 - 4:24pm
it is clear that some political consultant is suggesting that trolling The Squad about Joe is a good tactic:
by artappraiser on Tue, 07/26/2022 - 4:23pm
by artappraiser on Fri, 07/29/2022 - 3:00am