James Baker Republicans Are the Problem

Republicans who should know better support Trump for their own selfish reasons.

In a recent interview promoting the biography of James Baker he recently co-authored with his wife Susan Glasser, New York Times chief White House correspondent Peter Baker (no relation) says the former secretary of state “is like a parable for the modern Republican Party.”

In the book, The Man Who Ran Washington: the Life and Times of James Baker III, it’s reported that Baker, a Bush family confidant, has a low opinion of President Trump but due to tax cuts, deregulation and conservative appointments to the federal bench, would like to see him reelected.

This distinguishes him from the Bushes and many veterans of both presidents’ administrations. As Peter Baker notes, George H.W. Bush voted for Hillary Clinton, Barbara Bush wrote-in her son Jeb, and George W. Bush says he voted for “none of the above.”

In recent days, Marc Racicot, a former head of the RNC and the campaign chairman for George W. Bush in 2004, endorsed Joe Biden, as did Bush’s first director of Homeland Security, Tom Ridge.

They joined a group of 73 Republican national security officials who came out for Biden in August. But if there’s no shortage of prominent Republicans who have split from Trump, it’s voters who think like Baker who give him power and a chance of reelection.

Baker’s case is especially glaring because Trump has torn down much of the edifice he built in his career as a foreign policy leader. In particular, the president’s contempt for international alliances, American leadership, and free trade stand as a sharp rebuke of Baker’s approach to managing the collapse of the Soviet Union and the creation of a post-Cold War world. Baker’s co-architect of that world, now deceased former National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft, endorsed Clinton in 2016. Colin Powell broke with the GOP in 2008 and endorsed Barack Obama. Yet, Baker remains loyal to the party and to Trump despite this assault on his legacy.

The president frequently exaggerates the percentage of support he retains from Republican voters, but it stands at 94 percent in the most recent Gallup poll. That’s partly because some defectors, like Powell, no longer self-identify or register as Republicans, but it still shows that many Americans will adjust to almost anything in the service of interests they hold dear.

When that interest is principled and genuine, as the abortion issue is to many voters, it’s more defensible than when it’s a self-interested desire to pay fewer taxes and face less regulation. Baker doesn’t have that excuse. His known contempt for social conservatives goes back to earliest days of the Reagan administration, when he advised the president to nominate Sandra Day O’Conner to the Supreme Court over the objections of the pro-life movement.

Yet, social conservatives aren’t exempt from the criticism that their principles are malleable. Trump’s judicial appointments may advance their goal of overturning Roe v. Wade, but he makes a mockery of family values.

The presidency is Donald Trump forces Republicans to make difficult decisions about which of their principles are most important, and the results reveal a lot about character.

In Baker’s case, his biographer put it this way:

I think that Baker, in some ways, is like a parable for the modern Republican Party. His struggle has been the larger party struggle with Trump, who is not their cup of tea. You know, they don’t particularly like him, they wouldn’t invite him to their country clubs, and they wouldn’t invite him to their homes for Thanksgiving dinner. But, you know, he has been successful at what Jared Kushner told me a couple weeks ago was the hostile takeover of the Republican Party. And they have found they’ve decided that they have to accommodate themselves to him for at least as long as he’s in office.

Trump’s campaign is not going well but Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight still gives him a 21 percentchance of winning the election (and a 54 percent of winning if Biden carries the popular vote by fewer than 3 points). Thanks to Republicans like Baker who “accommodate themselves,” it’s possible that Trump will be in office a lot longer.

 

Pat Toomey Has Seen Enough

The Republican senator will not run for reelection, nor will he he run for governor.

I never expected Senator Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania for run to reelection in 2022, but that’s because I anticipated he’d run for governor instead. Now he’s announced that he will not run for either. All across the Commonwealth there is much mirth and rejoicing!

I can only speculate on what has led Toomey to terminate his political career, although it’s not completely over since he intends to serve out his present Senate term. The most obvious scenario is that he took a look at Trump’s 2:1 deficit in the Philadelphia suburbs and concluded that the Pennsylvania GOP is headed for a long trip to the wilderness. But there could be personal or health reasons for him to announce this now. Or he could just be disgusted with the present state and direction of his party in general. We may get some hints when he makes this all official in a scheduled press conference on Monday.

I’ve long dreaded a Toomey run for governor of my home state, largely because I consider him a formidable candidate, and it’s never easy to replace a two-term governor with a governor of the same party. So, I am very relieved to learn that doesn’t intend to run.

Despite Spin, COVID-19 Will Have the Final Say With President Trump

We can’t believe anything the White House tells us about the president’s health, but we’ll definitely know if he lives or dies.

It’s Saturday evening, and it’s unclear whether the president of the United States is at serious risk of dying. I could offer my best guess as to his condition, but it’s probably a pointless exercise because even high-ranking people in the White House have no idea.

Several White House aides also said they also did not have confidence in what they were being told by other officials.

“I can tell you what I am hearing, but I honestly have no idea if it’s right,” said one senior administration official close to the president. “A lot of people aren’t even telling other people in the building the truth.”

In most circumstances, the obvious lying and obfuscation surrounding the president’s health would be a sure sign that they’re trying to hide bad news, but this crew of thugs lies even when it’s in their best interests to tell the truth. Also, they’re lying in part to cover over their irresponsible behavior which has resulted in at least two dozen needless infections that we already know about, including at least eleven people who set-up and planned the presidential debate in Cleveland on Tuesday.

It appears likely that Trump knew he had COVID-19 earlier than he let on, making his subsequent choice to put people at risk a deliberate and potentially criminal act. Therefore, there are both legal and political reasons to obscure the truth about the actual timeline of events.

This is consistent with the seemingly sudden and severe onset of symptoms which typically do not result in immediate hospitalization. We’re not getting a straight story from anyone, but it now seems likely that Trump needed supplemental oxygen prior to going to Walter Reed medical center, and also that he had heart palpitations and a high fever.

He was able to sit, in suit and tie, to deliver a message to the nation from the presidential suite at the hospital on Saturday night. He looked pale, his voice was raspy, and at one point it appeared he was suppressing an urge to vomit, but he otherwise seemed lucid and as a rather subdued version of his normal self. He obviously isn’t intubated at the moment, so that’s a positive from the perspective of his prospects for recovery.

He’s clearly very sick, and the decision to treat him with monoclonal antibodies (REGN-COV2), an experimental treatment that has been administered on a “compassionate” basis to “fewer than 10 other people,” according to drug company spokesperson Alexandra Bowie, indicates his doctors were at one point facing a desperate situation. That impression is bolstered by the decision to treat him with remdesivir,

A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that patients receiving remdesivir recovered in 11 days, compared with 15 days for those who received a placebo. However, that study found the medication to be most effective for hospitalized patients with severe disease requiring supplemental oxygen.

The drug is administered intravenously over the course of five days. There is no evidence that it reduces the mortality rate, but it does seem to help those who recover to recover faster. The main point, however, is that it’s is normally used only on people who are already in desperate straits.

Obviously, at Trump’s age and body mass, he’s at high-risk of succumbing to COVID-19. Some experts put his odds of death as high as 30 percent, although he presumably has the best available treatment.

One thing I know is that you can’t spin this disease. If he dies, he dies, and if he recovers, he recovers. We will get our answer on that, one way or that other.

 

Saturday Painting Palooza Vol.790

Hello again painting fans.

This week I will be continuing with the painting of Jerome, Arizona. The photo that I’m using (My own from a recent visit.) is seen directly below.


I’ll be using my usual acrylic paints on a 9×9 inch canvas panel.

When last seen the painting appeared as it does in the photo seen directly below.


Since that time I have continued to work on the painting.

For this week’s cycle I have started on the old buildings. The large building to the rear is actually about 5 stories or so, much of it hidden by the slope. The shops and restaurant ahead of it have now been further defined. Also new is the telephone pole and wall at the curve in the road.

The current state of the painting is seen in the photo directly below.


I’ll have more progress to show you next week. See you then.

The Right and Wrong Ways to Fight Coney Barrett

A strategy of delay, not whining, stands the best chance of killing it

There is no realistic scenario–not even the president contracting COVID-19–in which the nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court will be defeated in the U.S. Senate prior to Election Day. The Republicans currently have the votes to put her on the Court as the replacement for Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and no argument or pressure campaign can dissuade them from exercising their power.

Therefore, it makes no sense for the Democrats to take political risks or throw everything but the kitchen sink at Barrett, as they did, for instance, in the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh, arguably costing Democrats three red state senate seats. They have a better chance of stopping her confirmation if they can push off a vote until after the November 3rd election. They can best achieve that with a strategy of procedural delay and messaging focused on the unprincipled and unprecedented way the GOP is forcing this confirmation in the middle of an election. Indeed, there are scenarios in which the Trump’s illness makes delay the more likely outcome.

Fortunately, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer seems to understand that this confirmation should not be treated as a normal one. On Tuesday, before news broke of the president’s condition, Schumer tweeted that he would not meet with Barrett and lend credence to “such an illegitimate process.”

Four and a half years ago, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refused to entertain Barack Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court on the grounds that it was an election year. Now he’s looking to push through Donald Trump’s nominee in a severely truncated process in the last days before an election. By his own standard,  this is not valid.

There’s another reason this nomination is not legitimate. As our editor-in-chief Paul Glastris stated, “A working majority of GOP senators pledged to support Trump’s nominee before they knew who it was!” That, notes Glastris, is “an admission by these GOP senators that they are not considering the nominee’s qualifications and not open to any arguments based on qualifications.”

Under these circumstances, the most principled position for Democrats to take is to refuse to engage in the normal Kabuki of a SCOTUS nomination process. This principled stand is also the politically wise one. It would be dangerous for Democratic Senators to, say, raise questions about how Coney Barrett’s religious views might influence her jurisprudence, as Senator Dianne Feinstein did at her 2017 confirmation for the appellate court, or to react to last minute unprovable allegations from her past, as Democrats did in the Kavanaugh hearings.

But that doesn’t mean Senate Democrats have to passively accept Coney Barrett’s nomination. Quite the contrary: they can fight it hard, and with better (though still long) odds for success, through a disciplined approach that relies less on white hot rhetoric than on delay. The aim should be to push the confirmation vote past the election when conditions could be much more favorable for killing the nomination. Successful or not, a strategy of aggressive delay can help voters see this confirmation process for what it is: a raw exercise of power that violates wise and well-established norms for filling lifelong appointments and does real harm to the respect Americans have for the Court.

The key facts to grasp in such a delay strategy are not Coney Barrett’s views on Stare Decisis or the dogma of People of Praise, but the quotidian workings of Senate procedure. So, at the risk of boring you with wonkery, here’s what the Senate Democrats can and should do:

If events proceed as planned, on Monday October 12, 2020, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham of South Carolina will hold the first of four hearings to consider Barrett’s nomination. On October 26, just eight days before Election Day, the Republican-controlled committee will report her nomination favorably to the full Senate.

That doesn’t allow much time for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to file for cloture to begin and end debate on the nomination, and it probably requires him to either get the cooperation of the Democrats or allow for some egregious violations of the Senate rules.

The first delaying tactic the Senate Democrats should employ involves Paragraph 5(a) of Senate Rule XXVI, also known as “the two-hour rule.” The purpose of the rule is to help manage senators’ time, and it states that no committee hearings (excepting on the Committees on Appropriations and Budget) can be held after the Senate has been in session for two hours or past 2:00 pm without unanimous consent. The rule also provides that any unauthorized meeting of a committee cannot report out a bill or nomination.

There’s no way to avoid the rule, but the hearings on the confirmation of Jeff Sessions as Attorney General in January 2017 show that it’s easy to work around it. In that case, controversy over Trump’s Muslim ban and the firing of acting Attorney General Sally Yates led the Democrats to invoke the two-hour rule. Then-Judiciary Committee chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa simply canceled the day’s hearing and rescheduled it for 10:30 am the next morning. Chairman Graham can do the same thing, holding morning hearings to remain in compliance with the rule, but that will push the fourth hearing to Friday the 16th, a mere 18 days before Election Day.

Assuming the Democrats force this one-day postponement, their next opportunity to delay will occur when the Barrett hearings commence on Tuesday the 13th. At that point, any one of their members can invoke the rules of procedure to request  “the nomination on the agenda of the Committee…be held over until the next meeting of the Committee or for one week, whichever occurs later.” It won’t be surprising if the Democrats exercise this right, considering that every one of their members on the committee just sent Graham a letter requesting a delay.

If this rule were respected, Graham would have to put off the first hearing until Tuesday the 20th, and the committee would not be able to complete its four days of hearings until Friday the 23nd, a mere 11 days before Election Day.

These two stalling tactics would be sufficient in themselves to force a change in the Republicans’ plans. As of now, Graham wants to report out Barrett’s nomination 14 days after her first hearing, and if the first hearing is held on the 20th (instead of the 12th) that would place the committee vote on Election Day itself.

For this reason, it’s very likely that Graham will simply ignore the rules of procedure, as he did in August 2019 when he wanted to push through Trump’s anti-asylum Secure and Protect Act before the summer recess. To get his way, Graham had to violate the committee’s quorum rules, which require at least two members of the minority to be present in order to conduct official business. His willingness to break the rules doesn’t mean, however, that the Democrats should show up for the first day of the hearings.

To highlight the illegitimacy of the process, only one Democrat should appear at the initial hearing. This would deny Graham a quorum and allow the request for a week’s delay. At that point, Graham would no doubt push ahead, but in clear violation of the committee rules and the minority party’s rights.

Progressives like Chris Kang, chief counsel of the activist group Demand Justice, argue that Senate Democrats should boycott the hearings entirely, but that’s not necessarily desirable. There are good reasons to get Coney Barrett on the record on a variety of issues, especially her views on the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act, and a boycott of the first hearing doesn’t preclude senators from participating in all or part of the next three.

An internal Senate Democrat memo obtained by The Intercept, lays out a plethora of other stalling tactics that could be employed, some more plausible and sensible than others. It seems clear, though, that a concerted effort by the minority to slow down the process has a decent chance of upsetting the Republicans’ aggressive schedule. And while aggressive one-on-one grilling of nominees hearings can capture public attention but be politically dangerous, debates and votes on Senate procedure don’t make for gripping TV and seldom put lawmakers jobs at risk.

In the event, however, that the president becomes gravely ill before November 3 or, more frighteningly, dies, the Democrats might not be alone in arguing to push off the confirmation vote. In such solemn circumstances, the public would be appalled if Senate Republicans did not take a pause in their headlong push. It is not hard to imagine a few tradition-minded senators, like Lamar Alexander, who is retiring, agreeing with the Democrats that a delay would be appropriate.

For those who oppose the confirmation, there are several advantages to postponing any final vote past the election. A New York Times/Siena College survey released over the weekend showed that 56 percent of the electorate wants Ginsburg’s replacement selected by the winner of the presidential election. That’s consistent with polling taken last week. Those numbers will only grow if Democrats pick up Senate seats in the election and the people see the Republicans moving forward in a lame duck session relying of the support of politicians whom they’ve just rejected. That’s doesn’t mean the confirmation will be stopped, but it will certainly exact a higher cost.

There could be a more tangible benefit, too. Today, the Republicans have a 53-47 majority in the Senate, and only two members, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine, are on the record in opposition to pushing forward. This gives Senate Republicans a narrow 51-49 majority. That number would be reduced to 50-50 if Democrat Mark Kelly defeats incumbent Republican Martha McSally in the Arizona special election. He would not be seated prior to the certification of the election results but he could be seated before the new Senate takes office in January, With Kelly, a former astronaut, in the Senate Democrats could stop the nomination.

The reason is fairly simple. The vice-president breaks ties in the Senate, but he cannot vote on procedural questions. That means a determined opposition of fifty can prevent the nomination from coming up for a vote. For this to work, Sens. Collins and Murkowski would have to vote with the Democrats not just on the Barrett vote but on the motions to move to the vote.

This is admittedly a longshot. McConnell could hold the vote prior to the seating of Mark Kelly, but that would again magnify the illegitimacy of the process.

It is macabre to consider, but delay could also work if an illness or death occurs in the Senate. When Sen. Edward Kennedy died in August 2009 and was replaced by Republican Scott Brown, it nearly derailed passage of the Affordable Care Act.

The point of opposing Barrett is not to make outraged liberals feel better during the hearings. The goal should be to get her confirmation vote postponed until after the election, which ups the chances that Joe Biden can nominate Ginsburg’s replacement.

Stupid and Irresponsible Crew Predictably Gets COVID-19

The disregarded the risks and must now try to survive the consequences.

President Trump’s refusal to take medical and scientific advice seriously guaranteed that he’d personally put himself at unnecessary risk of contracting COVID-19, so it’s no at all surprising to learn that he has tested positive and is already suffering from symptoms of the disease. At his age and weight, he’ll be fortunate if he survives. More than 200,000 Americans have already succumbed to the virus, many of whom took better precautions than the president, and most of whom would be alive today if he’d done even a halfway competent job of leading the country.

There’s a good chance Trump murdered some of his biggest donors on Thursday, and they are reportedly “freaking out.” After the president learned that his aide Hope Hicks tested positive for COVID-19, he proceeded anyway to a prescheduled event at his Bedminster, New Jersey golf resort. While there, he met privately for forty-five minutes with about 19 donors who had paid a quarter million dollars for the privilege. They should have known the president was presumptively contagious. People should assume that about anyone who acts like a moron with respect to this health threat.

And Trump is the most visible moron on this issue in the entire world.

Even if Trump lives, associates like Chris Christie might not. We already know of others from the president’s circle who have been infected and are showing symptoms, like First Lady Melania, RNC chairman Rona McDaniel Romney, and Senator Mike Lee of Utah.

It’s okay to offer thoughts and prayers for these people, but it’s also okay to be pissed off that they’re so stupid and irresponsible.

Trump’s Electoral College Advantage Is Outrageous

Biden has the same odds of defeat if he loses the popular vote by one point as Trump has of winning if he loses the popular vote by seven.

I don’t know about you, but I found the following graphic from FiveThirtyEight appalling and infuriating:

Imagine a scenario where Biden wins the popular vote by four points and still loses the election. There is a nearly one in four chance of this happening?

There are principled reasons why we should do away with the Electoral College, but here we see a purely partisan reason. We are not fighting on an even playing field. The Republican candidate has nearly a 50 percent shot of winning an election even if they lose the popular vote by three points. In a narrow popular vote victory of one point or less, Biden has an eleven percent chance of being elected. Correspondingly, if Trump wins the popular vote by one point, Biden has almost no chance. In fact, he’d be in the same place as Trump if Trump were to lose by seven points.

These are outrageous odds, and it puts one party at far too much of a disadvantage. If a sports team wins the championship but doesn’t cover the betting spread, we don’t crown the losers. The Democrats would be insane to let this situation stand without putting up a fight.