Preserve the Legislation Filibuster

Jonathan Chait is criticizing Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer for allegedly giving private assurances to the Republicans that he will not eliminate the legislative filibuster if the Democrats regain a Senate majority after the November midterm elections. He makes a strong argument but I’m ultimately unconvinced that Schumer has made either a strategic or a tactical mistake.

Mr. Chait ultimately thinks that any supermajority requirement is undemocratic in nature and that if such a requirement is ever justified it is for lifetime appointments to our judiciary. We currently have the exact opposite situation in the Senate, where judges can be confirmed with a simple majority but most legislation requires sixty votes. This is Chait’s strongest point.

I think the root of our disagreement is over the very nature and existence of the Senate. For me, it has never really made sense to talk about the Senate as a democratic institution. It is a political institution. As far as being a representative institution, it is not historically or by design representative of the people. It is a corrective to democracy rather than participant in it. When Wyoming has the same proportional power as California, that is not in any way a system of one person/one vote. So, if you’re committed to democracy, you should talk less about arcane or idiosyncratic Senate rules and more about abolishing the institution altogether.

Of course, the founding fathers made sure that the Senate could never be abolished without the consent of the states that benefit the most from their disproportional power within it, which means that effectively the Senate will always be with us.

It’s not very fruitful or interesting to have theoretical discussions about things that can never happen, so even if the Senate should be abolished there’s not much point in harping on it. A better discussion is to talk about the positives of the Senate. If we are to be forever saddled with a perverted House of Lords, how can it do us the most good? What doesn’t make sense is to argue that it can be made more democratic or more representative. You can’t make a body representative when Texas and Rhode Island have the same relative power. It’s dishonest to suggest that a 51-49 vote in the Senate always or by necessity represents the will of the majority of the people. In effect, the very design of the Senate is to create a kind of national consensus, where anything that is too vexing to any region or even a single state can be stopped.

This is reflected not only in the unrepresentative composition of the members but in the rules themselves. Mr. Chait is correct that the filibuster rule is not written in to the Constitution and can be and has been changed repeatedly over time. But the chamber operates by unanimous consent, meaning that all one hundred members have to agree to any motion to proceed to a new piece of business. The filibuster rule is really, at heart, nothing more than a framework for overcoming the objection of a single senator. If there are thirty-nine or forty-nine senators objecting, the basic principle is no different.

Once a senator objects, that cannot be the end of the story or nothing could pass without the total unanimity of the members. So, there’s a process set up for overcoming that objection. If you’re interested in how this is presently done, you can read Rule XXII of Standing Rules of the United States Senate which covers cloture and the thirty-hour rule. At the moment, three-fifths of the Senate must agree for a single senator’s objection to be overcome.

There’s a reason this set of procedures has broken down in recent decades. In the 1970’s, it became necessary to carve out an exception to the three-fifths requirement for budgetary issues, since the prospect of a gridlocked Senate imperiled their ability to pass any budget at all. More recently, the Republicans denied the Democrats unanimous consent on so many administrative nominees and lower court judges that it wasn’t possible to fill the positions. Eventually, Harry Reid had to change the rules just so the government and the courts could be staffed at all.

Most recently, the Republicans extended the exception to Supreme Court nominees so they could seat Neil Gorsuch.

Mr. Chait is correct to note a basic lack of logic in the result, which is that it’s easier to put someone on the Supreme Court where he or she may sit for decades than it is to pass a spending bill for a single fiscal year. But, even granting a certain absurdity to how this has unfolded, when we talk about eliminating the filibuster altogether we are really talking about taking away the ability for a single senator to hold up the business of the Senate.

Now, we actually do have a democratic and representative legislature. It’s called the House of Representatives. It serves its purpose and most countries get along fine without having a second far less representative legislature. So, what distinguishes the Senate from the House that might in any way justify the former’s continued existence?

Originally, the senators were elected by state legislatures which made them less directly and immediately accountable to the people. That was the entire point. While the House might go nuts during an ebola outbreak or in the wake of a terrorist attack and pass some really ill-considered legislation, senators would not be as afraid of the momentary passions and fears of the people. Unfortunately, answering to a state legislature rather than the people turned out to invite a lot of corruption, so the Constitution was amended and since 1913 senators have been elected the same way as all other legislators.

Having eliminated the primary way of shielding senators from the people, what remained was the six-year staggered terms. In an even year, roughly a third of the Senate faces the electorate. But two-thirds do not. This means that the majority of the Senate is never in the process of seeking reelection and can therefore, hopefully, cast a vote based more on wisdom and less on fear or partisanship or fundraising considerations. This remains the primary benefit we get from the Senate even if the results are consistently disappointing and the positives seem to be diminishing at a steady pace.

The only other thing that distinguishes the Senate from the House is the unanimous consent rule which makes it possible for even an outnumbered party to force compromise. As Mr. Chait notes, the majority keeps carving out new avenues to overcome this obstacle, but in doing so they are really eroding one of last rationales for the Senate’s existence.

Instead of the Senate being a place where cooler heads can prevail and regional consensus can smooth out national factionalism, it is becoming just a superfluous and unrepresentative version of the House. Abuse of the unanimous consent rule is the root cause of this, and the root cause of this abuse is that the senators are no longer at arm’s length from the electorate. The financial costs of running for reelection mean that fundraising is a daily concern. The need to satisfy a partisan base to stave off primary challengers means that they’re never free to buck their party. The need to win a statewide popular election means that they can be easily whipsawed by the momentary passions or crises of the day.

There is a very good argument that the Senate should not exist in any form so long as it is made up of two members per state irrespective of population. But it cannot be abolished so we should get the best use out of it. And we’re not getting it.

Were the legislative filibuster to go away, then the Senate would lose its last useful function because this would effectively disempower every senator’s ability to meaningfully object, and it would do the same for the minority party.

Finally, Mr. Chait is correct that the Republicans benefit from this arrangement more than the Democrats and that most of Trump’s more controversial agenda cannot be passed through the Senate even with a bare majority. Schumer and the Democrats, by this reasoning, should welcome an end to the legislative filibuster because it will ultimately cost very little in the short-term and make it much easier to legislate in the future.

But what does Schumer gain by threatening the filibuster? He would give McConnell cover to take away the one piece of leverage his party presently enjoys, which isn’t just the ability to filibuster but the ability to delay. And what does he gain by promising to protect the legislative filibuster? He makes it easier for McConnell to stand up to the president’s persistent demands that he do away with it.

If circumstances warrant it in the future, Schumer can always break his promise. There will be a cost to that, but if he’s willing to pay it then it won’t prevent him from doing what he feels needs to be done.

Personally, I would rather see the filibuster reinstated for judges, maintained for legislation, and eliminated solely for staffing the executive branch, since those positions are temporary and should be filled in a timely manner. If I had my way, the Senate would not exist. But if it is going to exist, at least give it a chance to do what it’s good at doing. Otherwise, it’s just a pointless and undemocratic and unrepresentative collection of blowhards.

What Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s Victory Means

I think Josh Marshall is correct when he warns people off over-interpreting the shocking primary loss Joe Crowley, the chair of the House Democratic Caucus, suffered last night at the hands of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a 28-year-old political novice and Democratic Socialist who was working as a bartender as recently as last year. The district is roughly 50 percent Latino, 50 percent foreign-born, and disproportionately young. Add to this that women have been running strong in Democratic primaries all year long, and it really shouldn’t surprise us that the district was ready to make a change or that it would embrace someone running to Crowley’s left.

I don’t think this really ought to send that much of a message either to the Democratic Party or to the nation as a whole. It’s not actually remarkable that a representative from the Bronx and Queens would embrace socialistic policies. And it’s now a strongly minority-majority district, so there’s nothing out of the ordinary about it being represented by a Latina rather than a more traditional Irish-American pol.

If there is any part of this victory that concerns me, it’s that Crowley’s race was used rather explicitly as a reason why he shouldn’t continue to represent the district. If someone were to use that logic to, for example, explain why former NAACP director Ben Jealous shouldn’t be elected as governor of Maryland, I think it would be rightfully condemned. More than that, though, it sends a message to the broader country that I think is more powerful and alienating than Ocasio-Cortez’s ideological leanings. The case for Ocasio-Cortez was made independently of Crowley’s race and making that an issue was gratuitous and unfortunate.

Trumpism feeds off a sense of white racial solidarity, anxiety and grievance, so when Democrats send a message that whites are not welcome or acceptable, it increases the power of his movement.

Having said that, I also don’t want to overemphasize it. Ocasio-Cortez will probably represent my political leanings better than Crowley would have, and I suspect we can say the same for the constituents of New York’s 11th congressional district. The House Democrats will now have the opportunity to elevate someone to the leadership from the younger generations, which is something many people have been advocating with good reason for quite some time. It’s also encouraging to see that it’s possible to win an election in this country even when you’re badly outspent and running against someone with some significantly entrenched power.

Her story is inspiring and she seems to have a lot of natural talent, charisma and energy, which will all be welcome in the Democratic caucus on Capitol Hill. She was correct, too, to argue that she’ll bring a badly underrepresented perspective to Washington.

On balance, I think this election result is good news for the Democratic Party and not some indication of disarray or that they’re moving too far away from the mainstream.

I spent last night looking up the biographies and positions of all the fresh faces among the Democratic Party primary winners in New York State, and it’s a very impressive and heterogeneous pool of talent. Taken in that broader perspective, I think Ocasio-Cortez’s victory was just one small part of a great night for the Democrats of New York.

Clients’ Wealth and the Mossack Fonseca Scandal

[Cross-posted from European Tribune – where dissent is NOT troll rated!]

New Panama Papers Leak Reveals Firm’s Chaotic Scramble to Identify Clients, Save Business Amid Global Fallout | ICIJ |

Argentina President Mauricio Macri

Others reacted to news of the breach with disbelief and anger. According to internal Mossack Fonseca emails, one Uruguayan accountant rejected the law firm’s suggestion that he hand-write and backdate a document to make it appear that the firm had accurate information from the beginning on the ownership of a company controlled by the family of Argentina President Mauricio Macri. The idea was dropped after the accountant reportedly told Mossack Fonseca the document would be “easily refuted by an expert calligrapher.” (A Macri family company spokesman told ICIJ partner La Nación that the president’s father had declared his ownership and had no further comment.)

Beny Steinmetz under investigation for bribery and corruption

A lawyer representing Nigeria’s powerful Senate president Bukola Saraki and his wife took an overnight flight from London to Panama. And one of Switzerland’s highest-profile lawyers excoriated the firm on behalf of the family of Beny Steinmetz, a mining executive now under investigation in Israel for alleged bribery and corruption in Africa .

“The leaking of information of which Mossack Fonseca & Co was the guardian has caused damage to our clients, who were wrong to have trusted you and believed in your abilities and professional rigor,” wrote lawyer Marc Bonnant.

Continued below the fold …

A spokeswoman for Steinmetz told ICIJ the bribery and corruption allegations are baseless. One finance professional told Mossack Fonseca that he had never given permission for his name to be written on offshore company documents, let alone made public.

“It’s gob smacking, and I demand you DELETE my name from all your files,” Jean-Yves de Louvigny wrote in an email to Mossack Fonseca’s office in Luxembourg.

“I am stunned by the fact that someone else can provide my name without my consent!,” de Louvigny wrote. The banker had seen his name published as part of the Panama Papers but claimed he had never had any involvement with an offshore company.

Secret business partner could complicate Kushner’s White House role | Seattle Times – April 2017 |

For much of the roughly $50 million in down payments, Kushner turned to an undisclosed overseas partner. Public records and shell companies shield the investor’s identity. But, it turns out, the money came from a member of Israel’s Steinmetz family, which built a fortune as one of the world’s leading diamond traders.

A Kushner Cos. spokeswoman and several Steinmetz representatives said Raz Steinmetz, 53, was behind the deals. His uncle, and the family’s most prominent figure, is billionaire Beny Steinmetz, who is under scrutiny by law-enforcement authorities in four countries.

In the United States, federal prosecutors are investigating whether representatives of his firm bribed government officials in Guinea to secure a multibillion-dollar mining concession. In Israel, Steinmetz was detained in December and questioned in a bribery and money-laundering investigation. In Switzerland and Guinea, prosecutors have conducted similar inquiries.

The Steinmetz partnership with Kushner underscores the mystery behind his family’s multibillion-dollar business and its potential for conflicts with his role as perhaps the second-most powerful man in the White House, behind only his father-in-law, President Donald Trump.

ABN Amro Belgium ignored evidence of money laundering by controversial customers | Trouw – Dutch News |

The new leaked data from the Panama Papers show that Mossack Fonseca wanted to discontinue its relationship with the Israeli diamond billionaire Daniel Steinmetz right after the first publications in 2016. The Panamanians even report to the financial regulator FIA of the British Virgin Islands possible money laundering by Steinmetz and 31 affiliated companies in tax havens.

Five of these companies appear in the Panama Papers in relation to a loan from the Belgian branch of ABN Amro. Together they guarantee a credit of 100 million dollars that ABN will provide to Diacore, the diamond company of Daniel Steinmetz, in February 2016. That loan is still active, according to internal correspondence from ABN Amro.

Swissleaks

The money laundering suspicions of Mossack Fonseca against Steinmetz are not new at all. The Panamanians rely on publications from 2015, when the diamond billionaire was mentioned in the so-called SwissLeaks, about secret accounts at the Swiss branch of the British bank HSBC.

Steinmetz appears to share an account with Dan Gertler, an Israeli billionaire suspected of large-scale bribery and corruption in the Congo. At the end of last year, the United States therefore places Gertler on the sanction list, making it punishable in America to do business with him.

In addition, there is also the controversial brother Beny Steinmetz, who is involved in a major bribery and corruption case in West African Guinea. A government committee concluded in 2014 that a few years earlier, through bribery, he had acquired the rights to a large iron ore mine in that country. His company BSGR obtained the concession in 2008 for 160 million dollars and sold half of that shortly afterwards for 2.5 billion. Since then he has been the subject of research in the United States, Switzerland and Israel. In the latter country he was arrested late last year because of the bribery case.  

From my earlier diary …

Mueller Set for Interview of Donald Trump … with link to article:
Kushner’s financial ties to Israel raise questions over peace broker role | Middle East Monitor |

Further reading …

Black Cube and Oligarchs in the Shadows | TikunOlam |
Black Cube – a “Mossad-style” business intelligence co

oaquabonita – the obsessive heckler here, here, here and here.

[Comments off-topic … want a flame war, do start your own diary]

History Doesn’t Repeat Itself, But It Rhymes

It’s the demographics, stupid.

“Stupid” in this case doesn’t so much apply to Queens Congressman Joe Crowley, currently the #4 ranking Democrat in the US House of Representatives, and—with his upset primary loss last night to 28 year old first-time candidate Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez—soon to be an ex-Congressman, as it does to the political wiseguys and pundits who saw the 56-year-old Crowley as the next Democratic Speaker, and therefore as politically invulnerable in one of the most heavily Democratic districts in the country.

Crowley’s Queens-Bronx district includes Archie Bunker’s old neighborhood, but the old neighborhood ain’t what it used to be. Today NY’s 14th Congressional district is roughly 50% Latino and 25% “other minorities”. Crowley wasn’t/isn’t a bad representative for his district; it’s just that times have changed.

And, like so much of the Trump era, there are echoes of the Nixon/Watergate era in Crowley’s defeat. In the spring of 1972, legendary Brooklyn Democratic party boss Meade Esposito grumbled to Jimmy Breslin about longtime Rep. Emanuel Celler:

“This is how Manny runs a campaign. He gives me a plaque and I’m supposed to make sure everything is all right in his district. He never comes around….”*

“He has no trouble, has he?”

“Well, there’s some broad says she’s going to run against him the primary or something. You know these freaking broads. Who knows what she wants? It don’t matter. How the hell can you run against the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee? Manny’s a national landmark.” (p. 92)

The “broad” was Liz Holtzman, then a 30 year-old lawyer and party activist. In his Watergate book, How The Good Guys Finally Won, Breslin recounts what happened next, and its political significance:

“Only 23 per cent of the people in the district voted in the June primary. Elizabeth Holtzman received 15,596 votes; Emanuel Celler had 14,986. By the margin of 610, she was in Congress. The fabled Celler was retired, and in a Washington apartment on the morning of June 21, a virtually unknown Congressman, Peter Rodino of Newark, New Jersey, found he was the next Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.

The primary election between Holtzman and Celler could be considered one of the most meaningful elections the nation has had. If Celler had won, he would have dominated the impeachment process with the Judiciary Committee, as he dominated everything about the Committee for his thirty years as Chairman. Brilliant but egotistical, he would have been quite abrasive in such a delicate process. Particularly to needed Republican votes.” (p. 93)

Two years later, in 1974, the “Watergate babies”—over 50 new, young Democratic representatives and senators—followed in Holtzman’s wake and transformed how Congress works.

Ocasio-Cortez’ victory is another signal of a new demographic change inexorably rumbling through the nation and its politics. The baby boomers are retiring from public life and dying off; the millennials are taking their places. It’s a disruptive, chaotic process—as is all demographic change—and it’s going to open up new possibilities for political change that the older and retiring generations can’t imagine.

Like Joe Crowley losing a primary election to a rookie half his age.

*Another echo: Crowley refused to debate Ocasio-Cortez, making a similar mistake to Celler who “never came around”.

Traditional Media Cannot Handle Trumpism

I like this Twitter exchange because I think both people have discovered something absolutely correct and key to understanding the limited political success of Donald Trump.

It almost doesn’t matter what controversy Jeremy Peters is referring to there because what actually matters is that too many people are susceptible to right-wing media efforts to galvanize them against the left with small or exaggerated or entirely fictitious stories.

And Matthew Chapman’s response is spot-on.  But, again, he need not be so specific. During the campaign and ever since, it has been impossible to get negative stories about Trump to have a proper impact for two reasons.  The first is the one Chapman mentions, which is a tendency of the media to gravitate toward balance or both-siderism, in which one large sin by Trump or the Republicans is offset by a smaller sin by Hillary Clinton or the Democrats.  The larger reason, which is implied rather than stated outright, is that the media does not and probably cannot stick with a story for any sustained period of time. One scandal or outrage is always followed immediately by another that cannot be responsibly ignored.  The only story that has had any staying power at all is the Russia investigation. Everything else comes and goes like a heat wave or a cold front.

I’ve talked about this in various ways before, but for traditional media that prides itself on its officially nonpartisan desire to be an objective referee of our politics, they’re never going to be comfortable with taking a moral stand against one party or president. That violates their standards and their understanding of their proper role. Even when they come under sustained attack from the president and his party, they will only move so far to take a stand.  It could be that their model just can’t work in the Era of Trump, and they wind up doing a poor job of educating their readers and of defending themselves at the same time.

The traditional media also have no clear way to give each story the weight it deserves when they’re faced with a never-ending supply of new stories that need to be covered.  They will still obsess over stories, sometimes giving them too much weight, but in a 24/7 news environment with a president that never stops transgressing, they are constantly forced to drop something in order to cover something new.

When you add in that they have less influence than ever before, it’s hard to see how they could succeed if you define success by them educating the public about what is true and what is not, and what matters a lot and what matters only a little.

Trump succeeds by undermining faith in the credibility of good reporters and by making sure no one scandal can stay the focus of the public for very long.  It’s a formula that works, especially when he gets assistance from right-wing media, trolls farms pushing fake news, and sophisticated and targeted social media advertising.

In light of this, it really is a rather glaring own goal by the media to be scolding the left for their lack of civility. That’s genuinely a microcosm of why Trump won, and also why his support has not completely collapsed.

Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Vol. 71

Happy Hump Day!  From now until July 11th, I’m taking over for Don Durito, spinning tunes and serving drinks for everyone’s entertainment.

It’s summer!  To celebrate, I’m doing the same thing for this week’s music party that I did in Midweek Cafe and Lounge, Vol. 57, share songs that celebrate the season.

I begin a song celebrating the beginning of summer when I was a kid, Alice Cooper’s “School’s Out!”

It should come as no surprise that this song has been used in at least one movie, “Dazed and Confused.”  I never get too far from movie music.

Continuing with the 1970s, the next song is “Summer Breeze” by Seals and Crofts.

For the final 1970s song about summer, I’m sharing Mungo Jerry – “In The Summertime” ORIGINAL 1970.

I plan on posting more summer songs in the comments.
Once again, I’m concluding the diary proper by quoting Don Durito.

For those of you wondering how I and Neon Vincent are circumventing Sucuri to embed videos, here is an example of the embed code we use, so that you can replicate as wanted:

Just remember that each unique 11-digit video code in YouTube needs to be pasted in two separate locations within the embed code in order for your video to show up properly. So easy that I can do it!

With those instructions, feel free to post your favorite music videos in the comments.

Fighting With One Arm Tied Behind Yr Back

[Cross-posted from European Tribune – where dissent is NOT troll rated!]

Opinion analysis: Divided court upholds Trump travel ban

Continued below the fold …

Trump’s trade war with NAFTA partners … China … Europe …

Europe choosing to return in kind … geographical in Trump’s red states … 20% tariff on Harley-Davidson for example agricultural products …

On tariffs and trade war … finding someone to blame … more threats from the Big Boss:

Europe getting tired of the Brexit holdup by Theresa May …

Airbus has delivered a body blow to Brexit Britain. It won’t be the last | The Guardian Opinion |

A few days ago, I wrote about how big businesses were no longer just frustrated with Theresa May and her Brexit bumblings. Instead, they were turning hostile. “Soon the headlines will be not just about a few hundred jobs moving out of the City – but of firms scrapping their expansion plans, or factories shifting to Poland, or thousands of jobs going at a stroke of a pen.”

Today’s announcement from Airbus is just the first of those body blows to the British economy. The aeroplane-making giant has said in public what it has been telling ministers and officials in private for months: if May’s government crashes out of the EU without a deal, it will be forced to “reconsider its footprint in the country, its investments in the UK and its dependency on the UK”. Even an “orderly” Brexit, with all ducks in a carefully negotiated row, will cost the multinational billions in red tape and slower operations.


“Airbus should carefully monitor any new investments in the UK and should refrain from extending its UK suppliers/partners base.” Make no mistake: a multinational is now showing Brexit Britain and its shambles of a government the red card. And it will not be the last.

The significance of this is hard to overstate. Airbus directly employs 14,000 people in Britain; its supply chain supports a further 110,000 jobs here. In a country beset by low pay and low productivity, this sector is the opposite: highly skilled, highly paid, and with productivity growth of around 4% a year (compared with only 1% in the wider economy).

What UK stands to lose if Airbus pulls out the country

PM May on Heathrow expansion, shows Britain is open for business after Brexit

Prime Minister Theresa May believes the project will boost economic growth while signaling the country’s commitment to expand international trade and transport links as it prepares to leave the European Union.

MPs back Heathrow third runway project as Johnson faces criticism | The Guardian |

Boris Johnson has faced sharp criticism from fellow Conservative MPs over his decision to miss Monday night’s crunch vote on Heathrow expansion by flying out of the country on an official visit to Afghanistan.

The foreign secretary claimed that resigning over his opposition to the £14bn project, which the Commons backed on Monday night by 415 votes to 119 – a majority of 296, would achieve “absolutely nothing” and that he would lobby against it privately instead.

However, he faced disdain from colleagues for choosing to travel to Kabul on the day of the vote so he could avoid choosing between his cabinet job and his longstanding opposition to the project, which now faces a legal challenge.

Senior Conservative MPs even suggested that Johnson may have finally ended his hopes of eventually taking over from Theresa May as Tory leader by failing to live up to election promises.

Johnson, after being elected for his Uxbridge and South Ruislip seat, told supporters: “I will lie down with you in front of those bulldozers and stop the building, stop the construction of that third runway.”

Even NATO’s Stoltenberg is feeling the heat of a division in the Alliance through Brexit and the disdain of President Trump for his closest allies …

The GOP Has Never Cared About the Deficit

I’m old enough to remember when a Democrat was president and the Republicans couldn’t stop howling about the deficit and the national debt.

The nation’s fiscal outlook looks ever bleaker, thanks in part to deficit spending during President Donald Trump’s first term, Congress’ nonpartisan budget scorekeeper projected Tuesday.

Within 16 years, the federal deficit is expected to be the largest in history, outpacing even the fiscal shortfalls that followed World War II, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates.

Congress’ recent tax and spending laws — along with ballooning costs of programs like Social Security and Medicare — also are driving up the amount the government pays in interest on money borrowed to make up for the gap in cash coming in and going out.

Indeed, those interest payments will exceed the cost of all Social Security spending within decades, CBO predicts. Interest costs also will be higher than discretionary spending, which amounts to all federal dollars Congress controls.

Back then, we used to point out that Republicans always act like deficit scolds when they’re out of power but then spend like drunken sailors when they are in power themselves. This was our way of suggesting there was a certain lack of sincerity involved in their rhetoric. When they forced government shutdowns and damaged our national credit rating with their threats to default on our debt, we tried to point out that they didn’t actually care about deficit spending in the least, but only cared about tax cuts and not letting funds be spent on Democratic priorities.

Some people listened, but mostly we were told that we needed to compromise with the terrorists.

I am just using this opportunity to point out that Trump is the third Republican president in a row to follow a Democrat into office and then immediately balloon the deficit with overly large tax cuts that disproportionately favor the rich and fail to deliver on their promise that increased economic growth will make them pay for themselves.

Personally, I don’t like spending money on interest payments. Unless you’re making smart and timely investments, this is usually wasted money. That’s why in a time of historically low interest rates, we should have made massive investments in infrastructure rather than giving all the cheap money away to our richest citizens.

But, we don’t seem to ever learn, so I expect to back here again one day after a Democratic president comes in does his or her best to right our flagging ship. We’ll be told they’re not doing enough to fix the deficit and then a new Republican president will immediately move to give what little money we have to their donors in the name of freedom and apple pie.

The Midterms Will Make Us More Divided

Ron Brownstein has a really excellent article out today on how the Republican Party is now as firmly opposed to legal immigration as they are to illegal immigration. He’s done a deep historical dive into the roll calls of various immigration bills to demonstrate his point. The implications of Brownstein’s piece are quite troubling. To understand why, let me begin with where we presently stand:

In the House, about 85% of Republicans represent districts where the foreign-born share of the population was lower than the national average of 13.5% in 2016. Similarly, 42 of the 51 Republican senators represent the 30 states where immigrants compose the smallest share of the population, mostly in the South, the Midwest and the Mountain West. Republicans hold only nine of the 40 Senate seats in the 20 states where immigrants constitute the largest share of the population, most of them along the coasts. In 2016, Trump’s pattern of support followed those tracks too: He won 26 of the 30 states with the smallest share of immigrants, but lost 16 of the 20 with the highest.

We do not know how the midterm elections will turn out at this point, but it’s a safe bet that they will result in a more complete sorting of the electorate. The two most likely Democratic pickups in the Senate are in Arizona and Nevada, which are both well above the national average in their diversity. Democrats in North Dakota and Indiana are the most vulnerable, and both states are below average in their diversity. The Republican seats most likely to fall to the Democrats in the House are from highly diverse districts, many of them in growing suburban areas that have traditionally been rock-solid for the Grand Old Party. If any House Democrats lose their seats in November, they will most likely come from rural or exurban districts that are low on the diversity scale.

Within Democratic circles, there’s a debate about whether the Democrats can maintain their commitment to the poor and to urban issues if their center of gravity moves toward the affluent suburbs, and also about whether the party can or should do more to compete in rural areas. But a lot of this is beyond their control. The president’s policies and rhetoric, increasingly being backed by the Supreme Court, are creating a kind of tribal divide over race and region that no amount of Democratic messaging can overcome. Trump is moving suburban voters into the Democratic Party more efficiently than the Democrats could ever manage to do themselves, and he’s solidifying his rural support in the process. Political professionals can’t do much but watch this tsunami roll over the country in November and then analyze the carnage.

What we’ll probably see is a good night for the Democrats and a very concerning night for the country as a whole. What remains of the GOP will be more nativist, more provincial, more culturally and regionally isolated and homogeneous, and significantly less affluent and educated.

Democrats overestimate how rich the Republicans are to begin with, but after November they’ll be less of a country club party than they’ve ever been, and also more Southern, more evangelical and more advanced in age.

This is all going to make the Republican Party more dangerous and more of a threat to democracy. It’s also going to remove whatever moderation they currently have on the issue of immigration.

The Democratic Party will change, too, in some ways that many people will not like. That’s kind of inevitable anyway for any party that grows, even temporarily, beyond its recent historical size. But, as I’ve mentioned several times before, the Democrats will become the owners of a highly counterintuitive, unnatural and unstable alliance of cities and suburbs. This won’t resemble the old FDR coalition, with its odd admixture of the Solid South, the farmer-labor movement and the ethnic urban machines of the North. The Republican Party will be culturally shut out, like never before, from many of the most affluent and best educated places in the country. And if they follow Trump’s lead on trade, tariffs and immigration, they’ll start losing the small business community, too.

In general, it’s a good thing for the current Republican Party to lose power, but this is not going to teach them a lesson. It is going to do the very opposite.