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Chris Christie's graceful pirouette on Jim Jordan

As a large guy myself, I really appreciate other guys who are on the larger size but are nimble on their feet. You haven’t known anxiety until you’ve been an obese father of the bride expected to dance like Fred Astaire with your daughter with all eyes on you.

It encourages sobriety.

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How Trump squeezed Republicans’ squishy center and got a full House

For a brief and illusory moment, it looked like the GOP had found its center, and the center had finally found its voice.

Moderate Republicans started pushing back against Trump-inspired bullying and refused to respond to threats over the House speakership vote. Behind closed doors, and then three times on the House floor, numerous Republicans then gave Rep. Jim Jordan the thumbs-down. The caucus then pivoted to the center, nominating relative centrist, Tom Emmer (R-MN), for speaker.

Even more extreme than Johnson’s 12th century views were his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

In December 2020, Johnson sent an email to every House Republican soliciting their signature on an amicus brief to support a Texas claim before the Supreme Court that sought to invalidate votes from Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, four battleground states Biden had won.

Johnson’s email pressured congressmen to sign onto the brief by advising them that Trump was “anxiously awaiting the final list” to see who signed to support his stolen election claims.

Texas’ crackpot challenge was legally suspect from the beginning, but Trump wanted to see a “list” of loyalists who supported him enough to advance dubious legal claims before the high court.

SCOTUS rejected the stunt with a terse reminder that Texas didn’t have a say in how the states of Michigan, Georgia, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin conducted their elections. Only a few days after Texas filed the claim, SCOTUS rebuffed it, ruling simply that, “Texas has not demonstrated a judicially cognizable interest in the manner in which another State conducts its elections.”

Johnson embraced debunked Hugo Chavez claims

Johnson’s efforts went beyond nationwide activism on the spurious Supreme Court challenge. Johnson also peddled outlandish stolen election claims that have since been debunked, not least through Sidney Powell and Kenneth Chesebro’s guilty pleas.

Although it didn’t age well, Johnson’s 2020 post-election interview may serve as a guidepost on what we can expect from a rabidly pro-Trump speakership in 2023 and 2024. Johnson said:

“…(W)hen you have (election fraud) on a broad scale, when you have, you know a software system that is used all around the country that is suspect because it came from Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela… You know, and that’s the problem that we’re up against. … The allegations about these voting machines, some of them being rigged with this software by Dominion… when (Trump) says the election is rigged, that’s what he’s talking about, that it was — the fix was in.”

Fox News recently agreed to pay Dominion $787 million dollars for those exact same lies. Johnson is fortunate that most statutes of limitations bar defamation claims after one to two years.

MAGA creates stories, then cites them as evidence

Johnson’s late-2020 statements may be safe from defamation liability, but free elections are now endangered. An October public opinion survey conducted with the Brookings Institute found that almost all Americans (92 percent) who listen to far-right news such as Fox believe the 2020 election was stolen from Trump, and a rising percentage support political violence as a legitimate response to such perceived election problems.

As Trump faces multiple criminal charges related to his failed attempt to overturn the election, his counsel keeps filing serial attempts to shield him from legal liability. Citing news articles and op-eds rather than evidence, Trump’s team claims that President Joe Biden pressured the DOJ to pursue a “nakedly political” prosecution of Trump. Trump’s pleadings rely on widespread concern about election fraud, manufactured anxieties that he and Johnson created, planted, watered, fed and amplified in the first place.

ALSO READ: Selling hate, vulgarity and violence: How Trump and MAGA overran a quaint Midwest festival

Now that the far right has officially ascended in the House, we can expect continued attacks on election integrity, and contemptuous rebuke of efforts to hold Trump legally accountable. During Johnson’s first press conference as speaker, when a reporter asked about his efforts to overturn the last election, GOP lawmakers loudly booed and shouted “shut up!,” drowning out the question.

Trump, of course, is pleased to see the House fall to his nefarious control.

How far Johnson will go in service to Trump to silence journalists, constrict the Bill of Rights and disenfranchise the majority of Americans who agree Trump is either a criminal or unethical remains to be seen.

For now, the people’s house has fallen to MAGA extremists, their hour come at last, slouching towards Bethlehem to be born.

Sabrina Haake is a columnist and 25-year litigator specializing in 1st and 14th Amendment defense. Follow her on Substack.

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How Trump’s mouth is killing American exceptionalism

It’s exasperating to watch the American legal system bend over backward to protect a lawless man committed to its destruction, but here we are.

Last week, the D.C. Court of Appeals heard oral arguments on the proper scope of Donald Trump’s gag order in the 2020 election fraud case — one of four, separate criminal cases he’s facing while again running for president. Whatever this court decides, Trump is sure to test its opinion as the trial proceeds through jury selection, evidentiary rulings and closing arguments that will enrage an already incendiary defendant with no impulse control.

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Same person who sought Zelensky's help in digging up dirt is behind the Biden impeachment

Republicans hailed the indictment handed down by Special Counsel David C. Weiss last Thursday against Hunter Biden on tax evasion as a validation of their impeachment inquiry into President Biden.

But Republicans have still failed to link Joe Biden to any impeachable offense — or to any offenses at all. The 56-page indictment never mentions President Biden and provides zero evidence linking the misdeeds of the son to the father.

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Hunter Biden wants to testify openly — but Republicans won’t let him

The Post ran with this headline this morning: “Ahead of House GOP vote on impeachment inquiry, Hunter Biden defies subpoena.” While that it factually accurate, it’s obscures the whole truth, which is this.

The president’s son is refusing to participate in a closed-door interview with the House Republicans, who are pursuing an impeachment inquiry against his dad. His attorney said Hunter Biden fears the “risk of having parts of his testimony leaked selectively,” per USA Today.

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If you were running for president, who would you rather be?

There is a strain of American political thought that comes and goes, depending on the fortunes of the Democratic Party. It should have a proper name, I suppose, but whatever you call it, it’s dumb leftism.

Serious leftism offers a serious critique of the structures of power that prevent the flowering of egalitarian democracy. Dumb leftism gives lip service to that, but it’s usually indistinct from the rest of liberalism, which is often, but not always, concerned with the same things. Dumb leftism becomes distinct only when the Democrats fall on hard times.

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Why 'it’s the economy, stupid' no longer applies

I don’t buy the idea, widespread among opinion-havers, that the more the president talks up the economy, the more annoyed people are going to get with him. I don’t buy this idea because I don’t buy the reciprocal nature of it. If people are feeling like the economy is bad, they’re going to feel that way no matter what Joe Biden says about it.

But do people really feel like the economy is bad? I don’t know more about economics than you do, but let’s say yes and no. Yes, in that prices are too damn high, higher than most of us are accustomed to, especially the price of groceries and housing. These are not options. They are necessities. That’s going to make the economy feel bad.

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GOP efforts to keep major issue off ballots in 2024 is an 'implicit admission'

On Friday, the Associated Press released the results of new polling that should raise concerns among liberals and Democrats who argue that “democracy is on the ballot” in the coming presidential election. They should challenge the idea, accepted as true by many liberals and Democrats, that a vote for democracy is also a vote for Joe Biden.

Moreover, the polling results should spur debate about messaging. Should Democrats favor an abstraction like “democracy”? Or should they favor concrete goals achievable only by way of democratic politics? The real answer is likely both. (Why not cover all the bases?) But by the time you get to the end of this piece, I hope you’ll see that concrete goals, like abortion rights, are probably the better choice.

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Trump claims ‘witch hunt’ but the real numbers just don’t add up

Former President Donald Trump has recently been crying wolf by declaring America’s legal system is a “witch-hunt” against him. Trump claims the New York, Georgia, Florida and District of Columbia court cases – with 91 felony charges – are politically motivated to restrict his ability to run for president in 2024.

Anyone with a modicum of intelligence would realize the hypocrisy of Trump’s current ploy if they knew he never once declared “witch-hunt” in the 62 lawsuits he filed and lost while contesting the 2020 election. Note: Trump-appointed judges were among the 80-plus magistrates who dismissed his election fraud lawsuits.

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Democracy doesn’t have to be a hostage crisis

Donald Trump’s campaign said yesterday that it planned to appeal a decision by Maine’s top election official to remove the former president from that state’s Republican presidential primary ballot.

Secretary of State Shenna Bellows, a Democrat, had said that Trump is “constitutionally barred from appearing on the state’s primary ballot under Section 3 of the 14th Amendment,” according to NBC News.

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On the 'I won’t vote for the lesser of two evils' rubbish

Some people tell me they hate Trump but don’t particularly like Biden. They say Biden is too old, or he’s not doing enough to stop Israel’s bombing of Gaza, or he’s caved to Big Oil, or he isn’t tough enough.

So they tell me they’re not going to vote next November. Or they’ll vote for a third-party candidate.

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Why Marjorie Taylor Greene is channeling centuries of racist rhetoric

As one of Georgia’s most high-profile racists (a high bar in that state), Marjorie Taylor Greene has a reputation to uphold. Which is probably why this week she posted an attack on the Blackrock investment firm for having DEI or Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs at that company.

“Corporate communists believe they have to force behaviors,” Greene wrote on her Xitter feed. “They only need to remember as a corporation or business their ONLY job is to SERVE THEIR CUSTOMER with the best job possible to make their customers happy! It’s not about gender, sex, race and blah blah blah.”

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Trump looks stronger than he actually is

There is some debate about whether Donald Trump is weak or strong coming out of last night’s caucuses in Iowa. On the one hand, he won the state by 51 percent. The AP called the race by 7:30. Some caucus-goers hadn’t cast their ballots yet. Altogether, this would suggest that his “stranglehold” on the Republicans is tighter than ever.

But on the other hand, only 110,000 people participated in the caucus this year compared to 187,000 in 2016, a drop of nearly 40 percent. Of that number, nearly half picked someone who is not Donald Trump. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis won more than 21 percent. Former UN ambassador Nikki Haley won nearly 20 percent. (Vivek Ramaswamy won nearly 8 percent before dropping out and endorsing Trump.)

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