Showing posts with label Bernie Sanders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernie Sanders. Show all posts

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me wearing a large foam finger pointed upward at 'Let's do this thing,' pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

I'm going to start off with some cute stuff today, because who doesn't need some cute stuff, right?!

1. Outtakes of Senator Cory Booker recording messages to his supporters:


[Video Description: Various clips of Booker looking into the camera and stumbling over his words, stammering and making funny expressions and laughing.]

I especially like that big belly laugh at 0:30!

2. Senator Elizabeth Warren had some fun in Philly, and the really cute part is that photo of her shaking hands with a little girl who is looking very serious about the opportunity to speak to a presidential candidate! OMG my heart.

3. Former HUD Secretary Julián Castro melted my heart by refusing to hold a baby. Yes, you read that right! He didn't want to get the baby sick after he'd been shaking hands all day. COME ON. That's too sweet!


I hope he's as good a dad as that makes me think he must be!

* * *

And now to the decidedly less cute news...

[Content Note: Nativism; racism] I probably haven't read all 200 candidates' responses to Donald Trump's reprehensible racism directed at sitting members of Congress, but the best of the ones I've seen was Julian Castro's, for its needed and deserved bluntness: "Everybody knows that the president acts like a white supremacist. He is a racist; he's made that clear on so many different occasions. ...The question is: What are we as Americans going to do about this?"

Joe Biden and Senator Bernie Sanders tied for the worst responses.

Although Biden at least did say plainly that Trump's statements were "a flat, racist attack," he then suggested that Trump "should go home." How helpful! I bet he'll definitely do that!

Sanders meanwhile just decided to use it as a fundraising opportunity, because of course he did. His tweet contains a donation link and text reading: "I've said all along that Trump is a racist. He is proving that point yet again by attacking Reps. @IlhanMN, @RashidaTlaib, @AyannaPressley, and @AOC. Split a contribution between their campaigns and ours to send a message that his racism will not stand."

Split a contribution between their campaigns and ours. JFC.

* * *

Senator Kamala Harris is making the case that issues affecting women of color are universal issues about which we should all care:
When Kamala Harris thinks about the range of issues that impact women of color — the gender pay gap, the lack of access to affordable housing, and America's high maternal mortality rate for black mothers, among other things — the California senator says she sees universal concerns over the economy, home ownership, and healthcare.

It's a point Harris plans to make Tuesday in Davenport when she joins several women of color at a round-table co-hosted by a local chapter of LULAC, the nation's oldest Latino civil rights organization.

"These are issues that we should all care about," the Democratic presidential candidate told the Des Moines Register. "Where we, as a nation, stand on these issues is a reflection of our collective identity."

..."I really credit the leaders of Iowa for understanding that regardless of what might be the majority population or demographics of the state, that anything that impacts anyone impacts all of us," she said.
[CN: Nativism] Senator Elizabeth Warren is tweeting about Trump's move to end asylum for Central Americans: "This is another targeted, xenophobic attack from the Trump administration. As president, I'll reinstate TPS designations and Deferred Enforced Departure to protect those at risk back in their home countries, including migrants from Central America."

Senator Cory Booker is also tweeting about that move, noting: "This is as illegal as it is immoral." [CN: Violence] He's also remembering Sadie Roberts-Joseph, the Baton Rouge civil rights leader who was found murdered: "Sadie Roberts-Joseph was a pillar of the Baton Rouge community as a civil rights leader and activist who will be missed by so many. I hope and pray for swift justice. As we mourn her loss we must honor her life by continuing her work."

Joe Biden says he'll challenge Trump to some push-ups: "'If [Donald] Trump makes of fun of his age or questions his mental state during a debate, Joe Biden has a response at the ready: He'll challenge him to do push-ups on stage,' the Washington Post reports. Said Biden: 'I'd say, 'C'mon Donald, c'mon man. How many push-ups do you want to do here, pal?' I mean, jokingly. ...C'mon, run with me, man.'" NOPE.


Biden also says of Nancy Pelosi, who inexplicably believes that a meaningless resolution condemning Trump's racism is enough while he's torturing children in concentration camps: "I think she's doing a masterful job. I have great respect for her." Noted.

[CN: Racism; police brutality] The white police officer who fatally shot a Black man last month in Mayor Pete Buttigieg's town of South Bend, Indiana, has quit his job, with the police union president attributing the resignation to "job-related stress, a lawsuit, and national media attention. He said 'hateful things said on social media have been difficult' for the officer and his family. Mills said the 'fights' over the killing are 'just too much for Sgt. O'Neill and his family to undertake right now,' and added: 'Resigning will allow him to focus on these challenges, as well as assist his wife with their three children.'" I would like to know if Buttigieg had any role in orchestrating O'Neill's resignation.

In fundraising news, Beto O'Rourke's fundraising is falling off, and Castro "had the highest rate of donations under $200 of any 2020 candidate. No PAC money, no corporate PAC or lobbyist money — this campaign is driven by grassroots support."

John Delaney is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me looking unenthusiastic, standing next to a giant purple F, pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

[Content Note: Nativism; racism; misogyny; othering] Former HUD Secretary and immigration reform leader Julián Castro came for Donald Trump over his racist tweets about congresswomen of color:

...four Congresswomen should go back home, he said. [crowd boos] You know, this isn't the first time that we've seen this in our country. "Go back to Mexico," they said. "Go back to Africa," they said. "No Irish need apply," they said. "The Chinese are excluded," they said. Throughout the generations, there have been people who build their political careers on hate and division and fear and paranoia and making people "the other." We are not gonna do that; we're gonna be about everybody in this country, and America for all people that believe in basic compassion and humanity and respect. [crowd cheers] That's the kind of America that we're gonna build.
I'm so glad he's in this presidential race.

* * *

[CN: Homophobia] Over the weekend, the liberal magazine The New Republic, which has been absolute garbage for years, published a profoundly homophobia piece about Mayor Pete Buttigeg. It was penned by a gay man, but nonetheless used grossly homophobic language to talk about what the author views as Buttigieg's unfitness for the presidency.


After massive pushback, the piece was eventually taken down with a brief note from the editor reading: "Dale Peck’s post 'My Mayor Pete Problem' has been removed from the site, in response to criticism of the piece's inappropriate and invasive content. We regret its publication." Invasive content? Okay. What meaningless drivel.

Lots of people have made the case in good faith that Buttigieg is not yet qualified for the presidency without engaging in homophobic trash. It's not even a particularly controversial position, given Buttigieg's relative inexperience. Indeed, it's so commonplace that one imagines some avaristic desire to make a pretty banal case "sexier" is the answer to the widely asked question of how TNR's editors ever let that hateful codswallop reach publication. Revolting.

* * *

Joe Biden is rolling out his healthcare plan, which is basically Obamacare 2.0: "Biden today will unveil a health plan that's intended to preserve the most popular parts of Obamacare — from Medicaid expansion to protections for patients with preexisting conditions — and build on them with a new government-run public insurance option." Meanwhile, Biden's presidential run means his cancer initiative is closing down, due to the potential of conflicts of interest if he wins the presidency. Well shit.

Senator Cory Booker has introduced a new plan "to expand access to high-quality, affordable long-term care, and to empower the workers who provide it." His complete plan for "Bringing Dignity and Choice to Long-Term Care" would: 1. Expand eligibility for long-term services and supports to every low and middle-income American and give everyone the choice to live at home; 2. Pay, train, and empower care workers as the essential workforce that they are; 3. Support family caregivers; and 4. Finance the new costs associated with the expansion of Medicaid LTSS eligibility and workforce standards for care workers entirely by the federal government.

Senator Kamala Harris will be introducing a National Domestic Workers Bill of Rights: "It's time we changed the way we value domestic work in America. Today I'm introducing the first ever National Domestic Workers Bill of Rights to guarantee domestic workers across our country the dignity, benefits, and legal protections they deserve." (The text was not yet available at the time of publishing this post.)

Harris is also the focus of a lengthy profile in the New Yorker, which I found in turn fascinating and infuriating (because of how it's written): "Kamala Harris Makes Her Case."

Senator Elizabeth Warren is profiled by McClatchy, through the eyes of her supporters: "Now, [Joanna Berens, a 57-year-old event planner] isn't just convinced Warren would make a strong general election nominee — she's thrilled about the prospect of her confronting [Donald] Trump on the debate stage. 'Oh my god,' she said. 'She will flatten him.'" May it be as you say, Joanna!

Senator Bernie Sanders' campaign is again complaining about how the press doesn't like him: "'This isn't intended to be a sweeping generalization of all journalists,' [campaign manager Faiz Shakir] told Politico, 'but there are a healthy number who just find Bernie annoying, discount his seriousness, and wish his supporters and movement would just go away.'" I mean, it probably isn't helping their case that any reporter who says anything even vaguely critical of Bernie Sanders is immediately subjected to days of relentless abuse by some number of his most fervent supporters.

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is talking about white privilege and how she's benefited from it. She's also giving very fucking good responses about what white privilege actually means.


[CN: Slavery] In sort of related news, Beto O'Rourke is writing about what it means to him that both his and his wife's ancestors were slave owners. I dunno. It's hard for me not to see this as just another reason that O'Rourke should step aside. I would be more impressed with him if he just dropped out already and said he's going to put all his energies toward getting any one of Harris, Booker, Castro, Warren, Gillibrand, or Klobuchar elected.

There was a major blackout in New York City over the weekend, and the editors of the New York Daily News are not happy that Mayor Bill de Blasio was campaigning out of town during it: "It's not just that Bill de Blasio, currently polling at 0% nationally and 0% in the key early states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina, was out of town on a campaign jaunt when a blackout struck Manhattan, trapping thousands on steamy trains underground and cramped elevators on upper floors unknown. Any mayor of the largest city in the country is a national figure. They go out of town sometimes; it's inevitable. ...It's that just Wednesday, de Blasio appeared so eager to use the city as a national stage, photo-bombing on the main parade float as he tried to bask in the U.S. women's soccer team's reflected glory. That's what bugs us." Ouch.

Joe Sestak is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me making a grimace face in front of giant typewriter keys labeled CTRL and Z, pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

[Content Note: Misogyny] This is so fucking infuriating and depressing: "New polling shows how much sexism is hurting the Democratic women running for president."
When we combine six hostile sexism items into a single scale, we get a picture of how sexist Democratic primary voters are compared to other Americans.

...Perhaps unsurprisingly, most Democratic primary voters score lower on hostile sexism than other Americans. But among Democratic primary voters, there's quite a wide range in sexist attitudes. In fact, more than one-fourth of Democratic primary voters score higher than the average American adult on the hostile sexism scale.
Emphasis mine. I'm sure that won't shock anyone who has spent more than 30 seconds paying attention to the misogyny I'm obliged to navigate on the regular. As Aphra_Behn noted: "It's nice to have science, I guess, but they could have just read your mentions for the last 5 years." Lolsob foreverrrrrrr.

Despite misogyny (which will definitely be the title of my memoir), the female senators running for president continue to kick ass.

Senator Amy Klobuchar, a former prosecutor, lays down some facts in response to Labor Secretary Alex Acosta's lies about his involvement in the Epstein case: "The Secretary claims he had to make the deal so the locals wouldn't mess it up. But in the words of the former Palm Beach DA, he is 'rewriting history.' News alert: The feds have a lot of power and can give really long sentences in sex trafficking cases."

Senator Kamala Harris responds to the news that, "for the first time in history, women of color lead 10 of America’s 100 largest cities": "Women and women of color deserve to have a seat at the table where decisions are made — and finally, that's a reality in major cities across our nation."

Senator Elizabeth Warren is telling her own story — "from falling in love and dropping out of college, to chasing my dream of being a public school teacher." She's definitely had an interesting path to being a presidential candidate. I imagine a lot of women can really relate to it.

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand answers 20 questions at Shondaland, and gives not one but two shout-outs to whiskey (hell yeah):
What do you do to take care of yourself? How do you unwind?

I like to exercise as much as possible. Ideally, I like to join my girlfriends for an early morning pilates or yoga class, and when I'm on the road I try to start the day with a 6 a.m. spin class if we can find one, or I just go to whatever hotel gym I'm staying at to lift weights. A good whiskey at the end of the day is always a great way to unwind.

...What is your comfort food?

I stand by whiskey. But will add French fries.
Forget the candidate everyone wants to have a beer with. I want to have whiskey and french fries with Senator Gillibrand!

* * *

In other news...

Senator Cory Booker is once again talking gun violence and reiterating his call for gun licensing: "This is horrifying — and one of the many reasons why we need federal gun safety policies like comprehensive background checks and gun licensing. If you need a license to drive a car then you should need a license to own and operate a firearm."

Former HUD Secretary Julián Castro is talking housing and immigration.

Joe Biden reportedly said in a closed-door meeting with lawmakers that he would "not to hold migrant children in detention centers if elected president," which is a relief, but also: "Biden did not offer any further details on what he exactly he would do with the thousands of young migrants currently housed in facilities run by the federal government and private contractors. The specific changes he would make to the current system of migrant detention also remain unclear." Oh.

Instead of spending $100 million of his personal money on a vanity presidential run, Tom Steyer could spend that money to "restore the voting rights of about 70,000 people in Florida if he wanted to." But wasting it on a bullshit candidacy in a race he'll certainly lose is definitely an option, too.

Mayor Pete Buttigieg has introduced his racial justice plan, which he calls the Douglass Plan, after Frederick Douglass and in a nod to the Marshall Plan, and he is whitemansplaining it very thoroughly:
I think we'll know we're getting somewhere when this is not regarded as some specialty issue that candidates of color talk about or that we only talk about when addressing voters of color. This is a conversation that, frankly, white America needs to have too, because white America needs to face the roots of these inequities and the fact of systemic racism all around us.

I had a challenging conversation with our own police department where, when I talked about systemic racism in addressing officers, many of them felt that it was a personal attack. I need them to understand, especially white officers, the ways in which, no matter how good their intentions might be, that systemic racism is something they in particular need to be conscious of and need to understand how to be part of the solution on. So this is not something that only candidates of color should be talking about — very much to the contrary.
Oh lord. It's not that Buttigieg is necessarily wrong about a lot of stuff, so much as that he is just unprepared, especially to talk about it in sensitive ways.

(And part of it, too, is just my total exhaustion with listening to white men talking about gender and race issues, especially when there are multiple women, including women of color, and men of color running for president who can speak to these issues from a place of authority conferred by lived experience. In the same vein, I respect that Buttigieg has more expertise when speaking to the lives and needs of gay men.)

Like, this tweet in his thread introducing the Douglass Plan is just so weird to me: "If we don't tackle racial injustice in my lifetime, it will upend the American Project in my lifetime. If the Marshall Plan could rebuild Europe, I believe the Douglass Plan could renew America. Text DOUGLASS to 25859 to learn more and join our call for restorative justice." In my lifetime. Twice. What does Pete Buttigieg's lifetime have to do with racial justice? It's so bizarrely self-centered. Which is a chronic problem with his campaign messaging.

Senator Bernie Sanders, meanwhile, is on a real promotional blitz, appearing on Rachel Maddow's show to give a doozy of an interview; penning quite the op-ed for the Washington Post with quite the headline ("The straightest path to racial equality is through the one percent"); and announcing his enemies I MEAN ANTI-ENDORSEMENTS list.

screenshot from Bernie Sanders' website featuring a photo of Bernie speaking outdoors with his finger pointing up in the air, accompanied by a donation button and text reading: 'Anti-Endorsements | 'I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.' – President Franklin Roosevelt'
Full Disclosure: I am not on it.

Oh, and he will also be skipping Netroots Nation, because his team thinks that Daily Kos' Markos Moulitsas won't be an unbiased moderator. I don't know if you should be running for president if you can't handle questions from Markos Moulitsas, but okay.

Bill de Blasio is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me yelling through a bullhorn, pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

This article in the New York Times is so fucking ridiculous I'm not even going to link to it, but here is the lede: "Some people whisper it, some apologize for it, and some are very careful to mention their neighbors — their neighbors would be the ones to ask. 'Do you really think a woman could be elected president?'"

For fuck's sake, a woman was elected president in the last election, and if the racist antiquity known as the Electoral College hadn't rendered moot her 3 million additional votes and the current occupant of the White House hadn't colluded with a foreign adversary to steal the election from her, she'd be sitting in the Oval Office right now and no one would be asking that goddamn infuriating question anymore, and the editors of any publication that continues to ask it without making the points I just made about Hillary Clinton's stolen victory can go eat shit.


In polling news, the new Washington Post-ABC News poll finds that Joe Biden still leads the pack, although the new Reuters/Ipsos poll finds that Black voters' support for Biden has been cut in half.

Good job, Senator Kamala Harris! In other Harris news, she's reminding everyone that, just because Pride month is over, it "doesn't mean we stop speaking out about the abuses being committed against the LGBTQ+ community by this Administration." Indeed!

Beto O'Rourke is marking the 55th anniversary of the signing of the Civil Rights Act: "55 years after the signing of the Civil Rights Act, we're reminded that it's never enlightened members of Congress who've secured change and progress. It's the people who've applied the pressure that has forced them to get it done. In Iowa, we committed to keeping that pressure on." That's...a weird message for someone who is running to be head of government. (Not the acknowledging activists part, but the trashing Congress part. "Never"? Okayyyyy.)

Bernie Sanders is also marking the anniversary: "Today marks 55 years since the Civil Rights Act was signed. This is a moment for us to remember that the struggle for civil rights and human dignity is a struggle not of a single year or decade, but of a lifetime, which must be fought by every generation." And that's a weird message for someone who doesn't believe in "identity politics." ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

In other Sanders news, CNN's Harry Enten says: "You in danger, girl." (I'm paraphrasing.) (Barely.)

Mayor Pete Buttigieg has introduced a national service plan, which he hopes will unify the country: "National service can help us to form connections between very different kinds of Americans, as was my experience in the military. I served alongside and trusted my life to people who held totally different political views. You shouldn't have to go to war in order to have that kind of experience, which is why I am proposing a plan to create more opportunities for national service." All righty!

At Bloomberg: Senator Elizabeth Warren "Starts Winning Begrudging Respect on Wall Street." As well she should. Nevertheless, countdown to the dirtbag left using this news as PROOF!!!1! that Warren is a neoliberal capitalist establishment monster in 3...2...

Warren also continues to call attention to the crisis at the southern border, referring to the images from the Department of Homeland Security's Office of Inspector General's report: "Sickening. Human beings are being herded like animals right now in our country. This goes against our American values. It's cruel and it must end — now."

I mean, it goes against what our American values ought to be, and what we often claim they are, but I wish that she would be more careful in her language with stuff like this. We don't want to concede that Trump's values are the entire nation's values, but we also can't pretend that there isn't a huge portion of the population for whom sadism toward people in need and/or oppressed people is essentially their primary animating value. Pretending they don't exist is part of what got us to this point, so I want more sophisticated rhetoric from Warren (and all the candidates) on that subject.

Senator Cory Booker, for instance, says "our values," rather than "American values," and it's a subtle but meaningful difference. This whole clip is very good:

My immigration policies will reflect our values, that, when people come here escaping terror, and they come to our border, they don't find more terror; that we have the facilities, the resources, to honor their human dignity and evaluate their asylum claims.

Number two is: Family separations are not just going on at the border; they're going on all over the United States [audience murmurs in agreement; a woman says, "That's right."] where you see people afraid now to go to school to drop their kids off, afraid to go to businesses, afraid even to report crimes.

They could be victims — survivors of sexual abuse, or being victimized by their spouse, and they're afraid to go forward for help, or to report about other crimes.

My police department in Newark was complaining to me about a climate, a fear, that's coming over, that is separating — remember, separation is bad — separating immigrant communities from the resources that they could use that would actually help for the safety of everybody.

If I am President of the United States, we're going to stop the practices that we're seeing now, [someone in the audience says, "When you're president!"] where people are being — I should thank you, when, I appreciate that! — where we see people being, families being separated, where a grandfather is being deported when his children are American citizens. We're going to see an end to children who know no other country — the Dreamers — but this one, don't live in fear and anxiety.

We need to have an immigration system that reflects our values and our economic well-being, because immigrants are a positive economic force in our country. [cheers and applause]
And, of course, Julián Castro continues to be a leader on this issue. He is doing the rounds on the various news shows, laying out his vision for this country and levying his beautifully unyielding criticism of this administration.

We already contribute some aid [to Central American countries] now, but this president has said that he's gonna revoke that aid. The thing is, there's a reason that these folks are coming — a hundred and forty-four thousand last month — because they can't find safety and opportunity in their home country. We need to partner with those countries so that people can find safety and opportunity at home instead of having to come to this country.
Note how Castro expertly makes the point that people should have the chance to be safe and thrive in their home countries without, even a little bit, sounding like he doesn't also welcome immigrants who want to come here.

Male anchor asks: You're in favor of decriminalizing border crossings. If you do that, how do you still have a secure border?

Castro: Well, two things: Number one, decriminalizing but there's still part of a court process; it's just a civil process. That's the way that we used to do it, from the late 1920s until about 2004. So this is not something radical; this is the way that we used to handle it.

Secondly, we have six hundred and fifty-four miles of fencing; we have thousands of border personnel; we have planes; we have helicopters; we have guns; we have security cameras; we have boats — we have a border that is being secured and we can maintain security.

But, what we oughta do is use compassion and common sense, and not cruelty. And what you see there, those images that you see, that's not who we should be. That is evidence of a dark heart of cruelty of this administration that I think is unbecoming of this country.
That is not who we should be.


Rachel Maddow: How much do you worry about playing on [Trump's] turf and playing to an image that he likes for his base?

Castro: Number one, I don't think we have any choice. He has a huge bullhorn, and so he's gonna make this an issue, so I believe that we have to offer a compelling, strong alternative. Now, I've said that we can maintain border security, but, what I'm betting, is that there are enough people out there that know that we can do this a better way — and, if he's gonna proceed with a dark heart of cruelty, then I wanna proceed with a heart of compassion and common sense.

And, I'll tell you, about a year ago, I was at the Ursula Processing Center down in McAllen, Texas, on the border. I was there to join activists that were protesting the family separation policy. And, as sad as the situation was, with the little children that were inside that facility, what gave me hope was that the activists that were there, they were white, they were Black, they were Asian-American, they were Latino.

In other words, it was people of all different backgrounds, from throughout the country, who were united with their compassion and their values, their belief in humanity and a common respect for these human beings, no matter the color of their skin or the fact that they're not American.

I'm betting on that, even as he bets on cruelty.
I'm betting on that, too. Sob.


Anyone who still says Castro isn't ready to be president either isn't paying attention to Castro, or isn't paying attention to the crisis at the southern border, or both.

John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me running inside a hamster wheel, pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

Well, this is very good news in which I have zero faith but I sure hope it's right! "Rachel Bitecofer's Negative Partisanship Model — which nailed the 2018 midterm elections — predicts Democrats will win the presidency in 2020." Terrific!

The only problem that I can see is that there was far less election interference in the midterms than the last presidential election, and less than what I'm already seeing in this one. Which was probably by design, so we would have faith that our democracy still works, ahead of foreign interference that Senator Ron Wyden says will "make 2016 look like small potatoes."

So I'm not sure the same model will work in 2020 that worked in 2018. But here's hoping!

* * *

Candidates are scrambling to meet the ludicrous rules for debate qualifications for the fall debates, which of course were established a million years ago and have fuck-all to do with what is actually happening now in the Democratic primary, including ratfucking to elevate spoiler candidates:
Of the 20 candidates who qualified for the first round of debates in June and July, just six are sure to appear in the September-October round, when the Democratic National Committee requires participants to hit 2% in multiple polls and 130,000 individual donors. Though many campaigns are worried, DNC Chairman Tom Perez has resisted pressure to relax the requirements.

"We put our rules out for debate participation months earlier because we wanted to give people time," Perez said in an interview. "We want to be fair to everyone."

There's still time for struggling candidates to recover. All 20 contenders who appeared on the debate stage last week will return for the late July debates. And, for now, only a fraction of voters are paying close attention to the unfolding Democratic contest.

But failing to qualify for the September-October debates could be lethal to any candidate, regardless of whether they formally drop out of the race.
I swear to the fates if Tom Perez's garbage rules mean FOR EXAMPLE that a certain former HUD Secretary who is one of the Democratic Party's greatest assets does not make the fall debate but a certain dipshit witch does, I will lose my fucking mind.

* * *

Politico declares: "The 2020 Democratic Primary Is Suddenly Wide Open." Why? Because, as Democratic strategist Colin Strother explains, people have realized that old white dudes aren't the only game in town, and "Bernie and Biden were largely living off of inertia." LOL ouch! Harsh but true.

That the content is opening up is a testament to the quality of many of the other candidates — and to the fact that Joe Biden is a terrible candidate. He was a terrible candidate twice before, and he's a terrible candidate now.

[Content Note: Racism and homophobia.]

Following his dire performance during the first debate, Biden gave a speech in Chicago about his civil rights record, during which he actually said the following words: "We've got to recognize that kid wearing a hoodie may very well be the next poet laureate and not a gang-banger." Because you know how those are the only two options for Black kids? JFC.

If that weren't enough, he then gave a speech in Seattle on Pride weekend, during which he said that gay rights have come a long way and, only five years ago, if someone "made fun of a gay waiter" at a business lunch, everyone would have just let it go. The audience did not appreciate that assertion. Nor did most of the adult human beings who heard that garbage.

On Twitter, Ashton Pittman noted: "Exactly 5 years ago, ABC's What Would You Do? planted a hidden cam in a Mississippi restaurant to see how diners would react to blatant, homophobic attacks on a gay couple. They repeated the experiment. Each time, Mississippi diners got up and came to the gay couple's defense."

And if that weren't yet enough, CNN's Andrew Kaczynski located video of Biden in 1981 defending his support of "legislation at the time — that was being filibustered by liberals — which would stop courts' ability to order busing."

Naturally, Biden fans are OUTRAGED by all of this, because apparently they didn't realize they are supporting a dude who, had he not gotten rich pretending to be liberal, would be just another old white dude sitting at home in a recliner watching Fox News right now.


Senator Cory Booker continued to make the case that Biden isn't the nominee we need at this moment in time: "[Booker] questioned Sunday whether [Biden] could be a uniter on race if he wins the Democratic presidential nomination, accusing Biden of having an 'inability to talk candidly about the mistakes he made.' ...'Whoever our nominee is going to be, whoever our next president is going to be, really needs to be someone who can talk openly and honestly about race,' Booker said during an appearance on Meet the Press. 'I'm not sure if Joe Biden is up to that task given the way the last three weeks have played out.'"

🔥 🔥 🔥

Meanwhile, of course Senator Kamala Harris is facing a "backlash" after calling out Biden's shitty record on busing. And it's not necessarily from the people you'd expect. I was truly disappointed to see, for instance, that among the vocal critics of Harris is former Senator Carol Moseley Braun, the first Black female senator: "We can be proud of her nonetheless, but her ambition got it wrong about Joe. He is about the best there is; for her to take that tack is sad." Honestly, that Moseley Braun thinks that Biden is the best there is or could be is what's sad.

Harris stands by her decision to question Biden, because she has integrity and gumption: "'It may make people uncomfortable to speak the truth about the history of our country but we must speak the truth,' the California senator told reporters Sunday outside San Francisco's city hall after marching in the city's gay pride parade. 'We must agree that there not only is fact that is the basis for these truths but that we should recommit ourselves to also agreeing that these things should never happen again,' Harris said." Yes.

[CN: Racism] I mentioned on Friday that Harris is now the target of a gross birther campaign that questions her authenticity, and in some cases her citizenship, because her parents are Jamaican and Indian. Senator Elizabeth Warren is taking up space in solidarity with her opponent: "The attacks against Kamala Harris are racist and ugly. We all have an obligation to speak out and say so. And it's within the power and obligation of tech companies to stop these vile lies dead in their tracks."

As is Senator Michael Bennet: "These attacks on Kamala Harris are racist and disgusting. I'm proud to call her my friend and colleague, and I'll continue to stand with her against these vile comments. They have no place in our political discourse."

And Senator Kirsten Gillibrand notes that "we ladies have to stick together."


Very sweet.

In other news, Harris celebrated PrideA with a glittering rainbow jacket! Yay!

And Julián Castro celebrated Pride with lots of friends!


[CN: Nativism] Beto O'Rourke headed south of the border "to meet with kids and families who came to our country seeking asylum but who have been turned back by this administration's unlawful and inhumane policies," and did a good thread about the human beings he met and spoke to, people to whom we refuse to grant refuge.

Rep. Tim Ryan went off on one about Trump going to North Korea to kiss dictator ass: "I have no idea why he is shaking hands with a dictator who just in May was sending missiles into the Sea of Japan. You don't reward that kind of behavior with a visit to your country from the president of the United States. ...This is historic — him going to North Korea is like Chamberlain going to talk to Hitler." I don't think that's quite the right analogy, cough, but Ryan's outrage is well-directed.

Mayor Pete Buttigieg continues to be a fundraising juggernaut, having raised $24 million in the second quarter from more than 230,000 new donors, which makes over 400,000 total individual donors. That is a lot to keep track of, especially for a new campaign, and I hope they are staying on top of making sure each of those donations is legal. That is not, to be abundantly clear, a commentary on Buttigieg; it is a commentary on the fact that foreign interlopers will be trying to discredit surging candidates any way they can.

Senator Bernie Sanders doesn't believe that the age of a candidate should be an issue. I'm sure he doesn't! Also, he says: "I think we've got a good chance to win this thing. But if, perchance, it is not me, I will do everything I can to support the winner and make sure we defeat Donald Trump." I've heard that before.

John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking + Debate Recap

screenshot of the ten candidates in the second night of the first debate standing onstage just before the debate began

Oh boy. That was a real slog and a half!

I was definitely dreading last night's Part Two of the first Democratic debate, and it didn't disappoint! DREAD VALIDATED.

It was a very different vibe than the first night. If the first night was defined by camaraderie and challenging one another to live up to the highest expectations, the second night was defined by lots of yelling and challenging me to not throw my phone into a volcano and jump into the nearest Christmas tree.

I live-tweeted the debate quite thoroughly, in case you want a recap.

My overall summary is that Kamala Harris and Kirsten Gillibrand seemed very senatorial, which I intend as a compliment. They were the standouts of the night for me, but the whole field seemed weaker than the night before.

That said, Harris did have an exceptional moment when she directly challenged Joe Biden on his recent commentary about working together with segregationist senators to get stuff done. It brought out the absolute worst in Biden, who naturally responded (as he always does) with indignation that anyone would suggest he might not be perfect, accusing Harris of misrepresenting his position on busing, snarking at her about becoming a prosecutor when he became a public defender, 'splaining busing at her, then angry-boasting about his civil rights record.

It was ugly. It was classic Biden. And Harris effortlessly plucked it out of him like a skilled prosecutor who needs to reveal the dark side of a defendant on the stand.

But, if I'm honest, even in this very good moment, Harris came across as visibly nervous. In fact, she was noticeably shaky on many occasions. I was having a hard time picturing her onstage with Trump.

I expect that's just lack of experience on such a big stage, so maybe she'll get more comfortable as the campaign goes on, but, at the moment, I don't feel super confident about her as the potential nominee.

She was, by the way, much less nervy in a very good post-debate interview.

I tweeted that I wished Harris was in the first night's group, but, upon consideration, I don't think she would have done as well. If she hadn't had Biden to bounce off (and he hadn't helped by making an immense jackass of himself), and hadn't been able to mask her nerves as the quivering voice of personal grief, I'm not sure she would have registered as strongly among the other group. She may well have been overshadowed by the more confident trio of Elizabeth Warren, Julián Castro, and Cory Booker.

Still. She gave the strongest performance of the evening.

Bernie Sanders was exactly as you'd expect. Even when I agreed with him, I wanted him to STOP SHOUTING AT MY FACE.

Pete Buttigieg just keeps pissing me off with his conservative buzzwords — he literally used the word "handouts" when answering a question about healthcare for undocumented immigrants (even though he supports it!) — and just talks about religion far too much. His candidacy feels like a throwback to the 2004 election. I know lots of people like him. I don't. (Even though I obviously want to be excited about an openly gay candidate from Indiana, a half hour from where I grew up!) I just can't get on board with a progressive candidate moving our political rhetoric backwards.

Michael Bennet was the only person who exceeded my expectations. Which is saying very little, since my expectations of him were nonexistent.

The rest of the candidates ranged from wev (Eric Swalwell) to whut (Marianne Williamson).

The big winners of night two were the winners of night one: Warren, Castro, and Booker. They established themselves as the leaders of this field on night one, and no one on night two managed to effectively challenge that status.

Anyway. We're done with debates for a month. The second debate, hosted by CNN, will be held on July 30th and 31st in Detroit.

* * *

In other news...

[Content Note: Racism] A birther campaign has been started against Harris. Russian bots posing as Black Americans are spreading a message that she's not "an American Black," because her parents are Jamaican and Indian. Absolutely despicable. This is what happens when Russia is allowed to meddle in our politics without consequences.

On that note, Warren and Amy Klobuchar have their eyes on Trump at the G20. Warren tweeted: "Today, Trump joked with Putin about interfering in our elections. He joked about getting 'rid of' journalists with a man who has reporters murdered. The president is looking out for himself—not the American people. We need a president who will always stand up for American values."

And Klobuchar tweeted: "Per NYT: At G-20 reporter asks Trump if he would tell Putin not to meddle in American elections. Trump then says to Putin, 'Don't meddle in the election.' Then, wagging his finger in a lighthearted way, he repeats, 'Don't meddle in the election.' Now THAT will scare Putin."


Fucking hell.

Oh dear: NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio had to apologize after he quoted Che Guevara in Miami, shouting "Hasta la victoria siempre!" during a rally for striking Miami International Airport workers. He said he didn't realize that he was quoting Guevara, even though "the phrase — which means 'until victory, always!' — was essentially trademarked by Guevara in 1959 and has been a catchphrase for the Cuban Revolution ever since." Good grief.

John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking + Debate Recap

screenshot of the ten candidates in the first night of the first debate standing onstage just before the debate began

Well, that was certainly something!

I have to tell you that I was pretty excited for last night's debate, because I am beyond ready to hear politicians once again talking about policies that center caring for people rather than harming them.

And even though I knew I needed an infusion of positivity, I had no idea quite how much I needed it until the debate started, and I kept getting so emotional, even by my own admittedly ridiculous standards. (Hi, I'm Liss. I cry at everything. Nice to meet you.)

Anyway! The debate was good for my soul, to be honest — even though I know that it's fucked-up to be hopeful when we're almost certainly not going to have anything resembling free and fair elections. I just needed a pointed reminder that there are still people who care hard about this country and its people and the people who want to live here, too, and it felt really good to get one.

I live-tweeted the debate quite thoroughly, in case you want a recap.

My overall summary is that Elizabeth Warren, Julián Castro, Cory Booker, and Amy Klobuchar are the only ones who belonged on the stage.

Beto O'Rourke and Jay Inslee were both disappointing and did worse than I expected. Klobuchar was the only person who outperformed my expectations.

The rest of the field was just wasting everyone's time. Bill de Blasio needs to just go home and throw himself in the garbage. Man, he is a lot. Woo.

On a final note: Chuck Todd is the fucking woooooooorst. Lordt.

* * *

The second night of the first debate is tonight, and I am looking forward to that one far less. I'm going to need something a lot stronger than the ice water I was drinking last night to get through listening to Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders and being obliged to treat Marianne Williamson and Andrew Yang as real candidates.

And I swear even the THOUGHT of Sanders shaking his finger at Kamala Harris is giving me hives.

Tonight's going to be everything that last night wasn't. And not in a good way.

Give me strength, Jesus Jones!

* * *

In other news...

Yesterday, Senators Warren and Klobuchar traveled to visit the Homestead concentration camp. Today, O'Rourke will be visiting, and tomorrow Pete Buttigieg, Kirsten Gillibrand, Castro, and Harris will also visit. Good. Keep calling attention to this urgent human rights crisis, Democratic candidates!

Bernie Sanders, ladies, gentlemen, and genderqueers:

MSNBC's Kasie Hunt: If it's clear that you are not gonna be the Democratic nominee, will you leave the race before the convention?

Sanders: I intend to be the Democratic nominee.

Hunt: But if you're not. You stayed in last time, and some people say that you hurt Hillary Clinton's candidacy—

Sanders: [talking over Hunt] No, I have— Hold it, wait, b-b-but— Well, no, some people say that if maybe that system was not rigged against me, I would've won the nomination and defeated Donald Trump. That's what some people say. So I think we're gonna play it out; I think I am excited—

Hunt: You would take the risk—

Sanders: [raising his voice to talk over her] I AM EXCITED—

Hunt: —that you might give Donald Trump the advantage?

Sanders: Are you asking that of every candidate?

Hunt: I'm saying if it's clear that you are not going to win the nomination—

Sanders: [talking over her] It's, let me, well—

Hunt: —will you concede?

Sanders: Right now, we are planning to win the Democratic nomination. And I'm proud of the campaigns we're running in Iowa and in New Hampshire, and I'm proud of our grassroots support and the fact that we have a million volunteers. So our goal right now is to win it— And, by the way, as you may know, poll after poll shows what against Trump? Shows me beating Trump by 8, 9, or 10 points. So we're gonna beat Trump; we're gonna win the Democratic nomination. [grins]

Hunt: Are you a Democrat?

Sanders: Of course I'm a Democrat. I was just at the Democratic National, uh, Convention — a Democratic primary here, right?

Hunt: [looks dubious] All right. That's an easier answer to that question than I feel like we got in 2016. Senator Bernie Sanders, thank you very much.

Sanders: Thank you.
He has never sounded more like Donald Trump. For fuck's sake.

There was lots of talk about the Spanish spoken during the debate last night, and, let's be real, this is the only Spanish from that debate that anyone will remember or matters:


(You're goddamn right I already bought one!)

John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me grinning and pointing at myself with my thumbs while holding a sign reading, 'Who's got two thumbs and a permanent tension headache?', pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

Welp, today is the big day — the first night of the first Democratic debate! Are you so excited?! If you're not excited yet, maybe Senator Cory Booker can help get you excited with a little help from his friends!


[If you can't view the video, it shows Booker dancing down a hallway with some of his Black female supporters, clad in CORY 2020 t-shirts, and it is very adorable and fun!]

You know who else is excited? Donald Trump! Because it gives him an opportunity to be a giant bully, which is one of his favorite things ever! "As Democrats spar on the debate stage this week, the president's campaign will be unleashing dozens of Donald Trump backers on the airwaves in 2020 swing states, blasting out any embarrassing moments on social media, and dispatching talking points to ensure everyone stays on message." And no doubt Trump will be joining in the fun!

I know it's positively quaint to make this observation at this point, but that is so aggressively unpresidential.

Anyway! There will be a dedicated debate thread later today, so I'll just leave it there for now.

* * *

[Content Note: Nativism. Covers entire section.]

A number of the candidates are thinking and talking about Trump's deadly immigration policies and the people affected by them, and I am really glad that it's on their minds.

Booker tweets: "There's nothing criminal about seeking a better life for your family. I've said it before, and I'll say it again now — we have to do the right thing and decriminalize border crossing."

It's important to note what a major influence Julián Castro has had on moving this particular needle:


Senator Elizabeth Warren tweets: "I agree with @JulianCastro: We shouldn't criminalize families trying to build a better future. We need comprehensive immigration reform that's in line with our values and creates a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, including our DREAMers."

And Castro tweets: "Thank you, @ewarren, for joining me on this issue. We shouldn't criminalize desperation — it's time to repeal this terrible law."

Warren is also fixing to visit the Homestead detention facility: "Yesterday at my town hall in Miami, I got asked an important question: Would I go to the Homestead detention center to shine a light on what's happening? The answer is yes. I'll be there today and I hope you'll join me."

Rep. Eric Swalwell visited Homestead a few days ago: "Today I visited the #Homestead Detention Facility. These children need homes, NOT a privatized prison."

[CN: Images of death at link] Beto O'Rourke is bluntly laying the blame for migrant deaths precisely where it belongs: "Trump is responsible for these deaths." Fucking right he is, and I am so grateful to O'Rourke for saying it plainly.

* * *

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand is marking the four-year anniversary of the Supreme Court decision that legalized same-sex marriage:


Senator Kamala Harris is marking the six-year anniversary of the Supreme Court decision that gutted the Voting Rights Act: "Six years ago today, the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act with its decision in #ShelbyvHolder. Now it's up to Congress to restore the #VRA and ensure equal access to the ballot box. We have legislation in Congress to do this — we must pass voting reforms immediately."

She's also tweeting about her plan for banking oversight: "One of the lessons from the Great Recession is that banks who operate as bad actors must be held accountable — and that means giving state attorneys general the tools to properly go after them too. I just introduced a bill to increase accountability and oversight of national banks."

Governor Jay Inslee is calling for an end to the filibuster: "The filibuster has allowed Mitch McConnell to hold this country hostage for far too long. We must put an end to the filibuster." Always love a good McConnell shit-talking.

Joe Biden refuses to say if he backs the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal, which he helped sell as vice-president: "On the eve of the first presidential-primary debates, however, Biden's 2020 campaign wouldn't say whether he still supported the deal. ...Even as Biden is running explicitly as a restoration of the Obama presidency, his campaign press secretary declined to comment on what his position is." LOL okay.

And my friend Leah McElrath is quoted by Eugene Scott at the WaPo on Biden's record with reproductive rights: "Joe Biden has been visible in national politics for my entire adult life, and he has never been a strong advocate on behalf of women's bodily autonomy. I find it hard to trust when it's time to compromise — and that time always comes in politics — that the rights of my daughter and all other women and girls in this country will be something he sees as a nonnegotiable issue and will champion on our behalf." That about sums it up!

This is the most I have ever liked Senator Bernie Sanders, lol:

Face the Nation's Margaret Brennan: Was [Donald] Trump's decision this week to call off that strike the right one?

Sanders: [laughs derisively] See, it's like somebody setting a fire to a basket full of paper and then putting it out. He helped create the crisis, and then he stopped the attacks. The idea that we're looking at a President of the United States who, number one, thinks that a war with Iran is something that might be good for this country—

Brennan: He was just doing a limited strike.

Sanders: [rolling his eyes and waving his hands around sardonically] Oh, just a limited strike! Oh, well, I'm sor-RY! I just didn't know that it's okay to simply attack another country with arms— [air quotes] "Just a limited strike." That's an act of warfare!
And then I read this terrific thread about Sanders' "evolving position on gun rights" — including how "the NRA's involvement...was 'the predominant reason' Bernie Sanders was elected to Congress" — and I'm right back to disliking him as much as ever! Equilibrium has been restored.

John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...

Primarily Speaking

image of a cartoon version of me raising my arms and grinning next to colorful text reading 'SUPER FUN TIMES,' pictured in front of a patriotic stars-and-stripes graphic, to which I've added text reading: 'The Democratic Primary 2020: Let's do this thing.'

Welcome to another edition of Primarily Speaking, because presidential primaries now begin fully one million years before the election!

Let's start with some rousing words from Senator Cory Booker!

Video of Booker in a car, speaking directly to camera: "This is Cory Booker; I'm in the car on the way to South Carolina." Video of cheering supporters. Video of Booker onstage: "Hello, South Carolina!"

Video of news anchor saying, over scenes of cheering supporters: "The biggest thing I noticed about Cory Booker since I got here is, not that yard signs mean everything, but he has a crowd out here. It looks like he has a really good on-the-ground organization."

Video of Booker speaking passionately onstage, interspersed with images of him interacting with supporters: Beating Donald Trump gets us out of the valley, but it does not get us to the mountaintop. I'm running for office because I believe that we as a people can get to the mountaintop. I'm not running because of what we're against; we as a party must stand up for what we're for.

We are for, in the United States of America, once and for all, healthcare being a right for all Americans. We are for every job in America having a living wage, the right to organize, the right to retire with security. We are for public education and making sure that public school teachers are paid what they are worth and raising their salaries. We are for ending the school-to-prison pipeline. We are for standing up to make sure that we don't stick our head in the ground on climate change, but this is a nation that leads us out of this crisis.

Video of Booker speaking at a different event to a cheering crowd: And so, to me, we are all in this together. As James Baldwin wrote to Angela Davis when she was incarcerated, "If they come for you in the morning, they come for me at night." We now have to fight.

This election is about women! This election is about low-income people! This election is about minorities! This election is about all of us! And that's how I'm gonna fight!

This is about liberty and justice for all, and we will win!
May it be as you say, Senator!

* * *

Politico says it has "the most comprehensive guide anywhere to the issues shaping the 2020 Democratic presidential primary," so if you want to check out where the candidates stand on the issues, head on over to check it out!

* * *

I would never presume to say at this point that any of the major candidates are definitely out of the race, but I will say that Senator Bernie Sanders is not looking good. Let's put it this way: If I had to represent his campaign using emojis, it would just be three grimace faces followed by a fart emoji.

😬😬😬💨

It's not that Sanders doesn't still have lots of committed fans — he certainly does! (just look at my Twitter mentions!) (j/k never look at my Twitter mentions!) (save yourselves!) — but he doesn't have any momentum at the moment. He's not picking up new supporters, and he's losing old ones.

But, more importantly, he's not being talked about by the political press as a frontrunner or even a serious challenger. He's not really being talked about much at all. Which is partly because Sanders isn't doing anything new. ("We get it, Bernie." — Literally everyone.) But it's also because the race, at this moment (and that could certainly change), is between Joe Biden and Senator Elizabeth Warren.

I mean:

Matt Viser at the Washington Post: Once the Poorest Senator, 'Middle Class Joe' Biden Has Reaped Millions in Income Since Leaving the Vice Presidency.

Michelle Goldberg at the New York Times: Joe Biden Doesn't Look So Electable in Person.

Marc Caputo at Politico: Joe Biden Keeps Stepping in It – and Voters Couldn't Care Less. (We'll see about that.)

Ali Vitali at NBC News: Elizabeth Warren Jumps Out to a Big Lead in MoveOn Poll.

MJ Lee at CNN: [Content Note: Video may autoplay at link] 'Every One of the Decisions Is Her Decision:' Inside Elizabeth Warren's Policy Factory.

Sabrina Tavernise at the New York Times: How Elizabeth Warren Learned to Fight.

It's not looking good for Biden at the moment, which provides an opening for Sanders at the debate, where they'll take center stage together on night two. And, of course, the political press loves building up female candidates only to destroy them, so Warren won't enjoy such generally positive coverage forever. She's been through several love-hate cycles with the political press already.

But, unless he makes some spectacular moves, Sanders isn't going to recover from this wane. 🤞

* * *

Senator Kamala Harris is talking about the census: "Here's what's at stake with the 2020 census: Our entire democratic system requires an accurate population count. If the Trump administration is allowed to add a citizenship question, millions are at risk of going uncounted and unrepresented. SCOTUS cannot allow this to happen."

Senator Amy Klobuchar is maintaining her terrific Twitter habit of straight-talking this administration's bullshit: "FYI (in case you missed it, it was because they wanted you to): The Trump Administration continues to suppress research and hide the climate science."

Mayor Pete Buttigieg weirdly dodges the Daily Beast's Stonewall questions:
Buttigieg did not respond to these four questions sent to him by The Daily Beast: When and how did you first hear about the Stonewall Riots and what did you make of them? What is their significance for you? How far have LGBT people come since 1969? What would you like to see, LGBT-wise, in the next 50 years?

Instead, Buttigieg sent this statement:

"In the 50 years since Stonewall, it's been extraordinary to see the awakening of the LGBTQ+ community. As the first out elected official running for president, it's hard to believe how quickly these changes have come to our society, but also hard to live with just how much work remains ahead of us.

And in those 50 years we've seen a remarkable transformation: the awakening of an identity that learned how to exert political force and issue a moral call for our nation to do better when it comes to equality. I'm proud to be a part of that, standing on the shoulders of giants in a tradition that goes back to Stonewall and before, and I'm eager for the gains to be made on the road ahead."
Okay!

And Rep. Tim Ryan reminds us that even our crappiest candidates (SORRY, TIM RYAN!) are still pretty great:


John Hickenlooper is still definitely running for president.

Talk about these things! Or don't. Whatever makes you happy. Life is short.

Open Wide...