Thursday, June 29, 2023

Impeachments for everyone!

Impeachment is in the air. And it has been for quite some time. I’m not talking about President Biden, although Republicans would certainly love to impeach him (and they have tried). The House Republican impeachmentapalooza didn’t start with Joe Biden.

There was talk of impeaching Biden from the earliest days of his administration. The talk, however, was limited to the fringes of the party. For instance, Marjorie Taylor Greene filed articles of impeachment on January 21, 2021, the day after Biden was inaugurated. The attempt went nowhere, but to an even greater extent than some fringe Democrats set out to impeach Donald Trump from Day One, MAGA Republicans have been gunning for Joe Biden from the beginning.

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MTG’s impeachment effort went nowhere, but MAGA didn’t stop there. In August 2021, the Biden Administration was at a low point with the chaotic Afghanistan withdrawal and the extension of the pandemic-era eviction moratorium. I wrote at the time about the rumblings of another impeachment attempt. As it turned out, Rep. Bob Gibbs (R-Ohio) introduced articles of impeachment in September 2021, but again, the effort went nowhere.

The next target was Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas. The attempt to impeach Mayorkas began in earnest after Republicans took control of the House in 2022. In the winter and spring of 2023, I saw a lot of chatter online about impeaching Mayorkas, but it was never really clear was the basis would have been.

Politico story on the subject links the impeachment movement to Biden border policies (which Mayorkas did not set), Mayorkas’s handling of the border situation, and a claim by Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.), chairman of the Homeland Security Committee, that Mayorkas was “derelict” in doing his job.

The basis of these claims was unclear and that is likely why the Mayorkas impeachment fizzled. By mid-June, Republicans were admitting that they didn’t have the votes. And it wasn’t just Democrats who presented a problem. Adopting articles of impeachment in the House requires only a simple majority, but not all Republicans were on board.

“Maladministration, even of this magnitude, is not grounds for impeachment,” Tom McClintock (R-Calif.), told CNN. “Show me treason, bribery, or other high crimes or misdemeanors. And I’m all ears. But at the moment I have not heard it or seen it.”

McClintock is wrong that maladministration is not grounds for impeachment. As I discussed during the Trump years, abuse of office and incompetence were traditionally grounds for impeachment in both English common law and in the early US government. However, McClintock is correct that Republicans have not made the case that Mayorkas has committed impeachable offenses.

More recently, two new discussions of impeachments have arisen. Both center around Hunter Biden, who, of course, is not a government official and cannot be impeached.

Republicans obviously hope to get get to Joe by way of Hunter, but so far criminal links to the president have eluded them. That’s why Republican talking points so often include references to the “Biden family.”

One of the most intriguing pieces of evidence is a Whatsapp message allegedly sent by Hunter to Chinese business partners in which he claimed to be “sitting with my father” as he pressured them to comply. But Joe still denies ever being in business with his son and the date of the exchange, July 30, 2017, was when Joe was neither president nor vice president and had little influence to sell. Even if the message is authentic, it does not yet incriminate Joe in anything illegal or unethical.

A different tactic is the threat to impeach Merrick Garland. Hunter’s plea deal has aroused suspicions and whistleblowers claim that there was interference from the Justice Department in the investigation.

Accounts from Attorney General Merrick Garland and US Attorney David Weiss differ on how much authority Weiss was given in the investigation. Garland claims that Weiss had final authority while Weiss allegedly said that he was “not the deciding official on whether charges are filed.”

However, in a letter to Jim Jordan earlier this month, Weiss wrote, “I have been granted ultimate authority over this matter, including responsibility for deciding where, when, and whether to file charges and for making decisions necessary to preserve the integrity of the prosecution.”

Unless something damning pops up, this impeachment also seems likely to go nowhere, but the investigation will undoubtedly be long-lasting.

It’s also unlikely to reach President Biden. Even if the whistleblower accounts are correct, there is so far no evidence that any interference came at Joe’s orders. It is just as likely that lower-level officials acted to protect Hunter because they assumed that is what the president would want them to do.

So far, House Republicans have given their base what they promised: a myriad of investigations. But so far the investigations have come up short. More than anything else, Republican efforts seem like revenge impeachments in search of justifications.

To some extent, the same was true of Democrats during the Trump Administration, but the big difference is that Joe Biden has not given his opponents much ammunition to use against him. That is unlike Donald Trump who threw caution to the wind, ignored his advisors, and abused his office.

Trump deserved to be impeached both times. Republicans need to get past that and concentrate on the business of government. It will be their record of getting done to make the lives of Americans better that will be the issue in 2024, not the gotcha politics of investigating and impeaching members of the Biden Administration.

And no, they are not the same thing.

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SUPREME COURT STRIKES DOWN RACIAL AFFIRMATIVE ACTION: Breaking news as I write this is that the Supreme Court has ruled that race cannot be a factor in college admissions.


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Wednesday, June 28, 2023

SCOTUS kills Independent State Legislature Theory

 One of the most impactful Supreme Court decisions from this term may turn out to be the ruling handed down in the sleeper case of Moore v. HarperThe case involved a North Carolina congressional redistricting issue, but the Supreme Court took the case as an opportunity to slap down the theory that state legislatures are not subject to judicial review with regard to election law. In David French’s words, the Court “nuked [the independent state legislature theory] from orbit.”

In the North Carolina case, the state supreme court ruled that the new congressional map was an unconstitutional partisan gerrymander. A federal court had ruled that partisan gerrymandering was beyond the scope of the federal judiciary (although federal courts could still intervene to stop racial gerrymandering), but the state court held that it could be addressed under state law and “also rejected the argument that the Federal Elections Clause vests exclusive and independent authority in state legislatures to draw federal congressional maps.” The court ordered a new, independently-drawn congressional map to replace the state legislature’s partisan one.

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The initial ruling was subsequently revisited and overturned by the new North Carolina supreme court after the election when its makeup shifted from a Democratic majority to a Republican majority. This second case is referred to as Harper II to distinguish it from the earlier Harper I decision. The new ruling overturned the earlier decision that partisan gerrymandering could be resolved by state courts.

The legal wrangling is complex, but Chief Justice Roberts, writing for the majority, cut to the chase, saying, “ The court dismissed plaintiffs’ claims but did not reinstate the 2021 [partisan gerrymandered] congressional plans struck down in Harper I under the State Constitution.”

The independent state legislature theory essentially holds that the Elections Clause and the Presidential Elector Clause of the Constitution give state legislatures the authority to set election law without checks and balances except for congressional override. The Brennan Center has a detailed explanation of the legal theory and history of the idea, which originated in a concurrence by Chief Justice William Rehnquist in Bush v. Gore. Prior to this week, the Court had considered the theory only once when it rejected it in a 2015 case from (where else?) Arizona.

Opponents are concerned that independent state legislature theory could be used to dramatically alter American democracy. In theory, it would mean that state legislatures could enact laws that could enhance gerrymandering or suppress voting and the opposition party would have no recourse except to have Congress pass a new law to supersede the state law.

Most disturbingly, the theory was used by Trump sympathizers in 2020 in their attempt to overturn election results. Some Republicans objected to pandemic-era changes to voting procedures in the runup to the 2020 elections on the grounds that judges and state election officials had no authority to deviate from rules set by legislatures.

In the 6-3 decision yesterday, the Supreme Court pointedly eviscerated independent state legislature theory. Chief Justice Roberts wrote the opinion and was joined by a bipartisan group of justices that included Sotomayor, Kagan, Kavanaugh, Barrett, and Jackson. Justice Kavanaugh also filed a separate concurring opinion. Justice Thomas wrote a dissent which Gorsuch joined in full and Alito joined in part.

After defending the Court’s jurisdiction and reasoning that the case was not moot, Roberts discusses Marbury v. Madison, the landmark case that you may remember from high school American History classes. Marbury established the judicial review process that, Roberts writes, “was so ‘long and well established’ by the time we decided Marbury in 1803 that Chief Justice Marshall referred to judicial review as ‘one of the fundamental principles of our society.’”

“The Elections Clause does not carve out an exception to that fundamental principle,” Roberts writes in the Syllabus. “When state legislatures prescribe the rules concerning federal elections, they remain subject to the ordinary exercise of state judicial review.”

As a final word, Robert says, “State courts retain the authority to apply state constitutional restraints when legislatures act under the power conferred upon them by the Elections Clause. But federal courts must not abandon their own duty to exercise judicial review.”

In other words, state legislative actions on elections are still subject to judicial review at both the state and federal levels.

In part one of his dissent, Thomas calls the North Carolina case “a straightforward case of mootness. The federal defense no longer makes any difference to this case— whether we agree with the defense, disagree with it, or say nothing at all, the final judgment in this litigation will be exactly the same.”

It is on this question of mootness that both Gorsuch and Alito joined.

In part two, joined only by Gorsuch, Thomas adds, “I would gladly stop there…. Nonetheless, I do not find the majority’s merits reasoning persuasive.”

“I fear that this framework will have the effect of investing potentially large swaths of state constitutional law with the character of a federal question not amenable to meaningful or principled adjudication by federal courts,” Thomas explained.

While Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch have been panned for their dissenting votes, I’m not sure that they all subscribe to the independent state legislature reasoning. At least in Alito’s case, it seems that he may have objected to the case that was picked as a vehicle for the ruling. The same three dissented from denial in pandemic-era cases that the Court declined to hear, but we don’t know how they would have voted if those cases had been heard.

Well, we do have a clue how Thomas would have voted from his dissent in Moore, but even in Thomas’s case, he seems to reject the extreme form of the theory in which some proponents have argued that even a governor’s veto of election laws should not be allowed since the governor is neither part of the legislature nor Congress.

Despite Thomas’s concerns, the ruling seems to take the proper course. Even though judicial review and the power to strike down unconstitutional laws are not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, Roberts points out that the concept was widely accepted and used long before Marbury v. Madison. Indeed, the judiciary could not function as a check and balance on the executive and legislative branches without the power of judicial review.

Considering that, does it make sense that judicial review should not apply stage legislatures making election law? After all, the Constitution also lists powers of the president and Congress without explicitly stating that these are also subject to review by the courts.

The pandemic did constitute a special situation. The intervention of courts to expand mail-in ballot access was controversial, but in many cases, the rulings were made early enough in the process to meet the Purcell guidelines against last-minute changes prior to an election. In any case, the sudden threat of a highly dangerous and contagious infectious disease presented a legitimate reason to make late changes.

That should not be construed as a license by state courts and election officials to make changes willy-nilly before every election. Despite alarmist claims to the contrary, the Court gave wide discretion to emergency measures in the early days of the pandemic but has since shortened the leash as the country returned to business as usual. The pandemic emergency laws have not become the permanent norm.

In any case, Republican electoral chances may have been damaged less by the extensions to mail-in and early voting than by the party’s own choice to attack the strategy of voting anytime and anywhere other than in-person and on Election Day.

FiveThirtyEight pointed out that there was little difference between the mail-in voting rates for the parties in 2016, but in 2020, early voting rates jumped for Democrats while Election Day voting skewed heavily towards Republicans. It might also have behooved Republicans not to renominate one of the most unpopular and incompetent presidents in history, the person who was also undoubtedly most responsible for the dropoff in Republican early voting.

One important point to note on the ruling is that not only was it bipartisan, but two of the three justices appointed by Donald Trump were in the majority. This was not a decision made by a liberal activist Court even though the dissenters were all made up of the Court’s conservative faction.

Ultimately, Moore v. Harper is a shot across the bow of state legislatures who think that they are insulated from accountability by the inapplicability of judicial review and the gridlock in Congress. As the nation careens toward the 2024 elections with many Republican state legislatures enacting laws that limit voter rightsrestrict other than in-person voting, and even give state officials more power to overturn election results, the Supreme Court’s majority let it be known that federal courts will be watching them and that shenanigans will not be tolerated.

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DESANTIS BACKER BESET BY RACIST TEXTS: Twitter erupted at Breitbart’s revelation that Pedro Gonzalez, a right-wing social media influencer had sent racist and anti-Semitic text messages. Gonzalez apparently does not dispute the reality of the messages but blamed Trump supporters for leaking them.

RUSSIAN COUP FALLOUT: The New York Times reports that Russian generals knew about Yevgeny Prigozhin’s plans for revolt in advance, forcing Prigozhin to move up his timetable. The Wall Street Journal says that Prigozhin planned to capture Russia’s top military leadership. Fox News reports that Belarussian dictator Lukashenko convinced Putin not to “wipe out” the Wagner rebels. Indian outlet Livemint reports that Prigozhin is now in Belarus.

SMOD STAND-IN: The “Sweet Meteor of Death” was considered to be a preferable alternative to either candidate in the 2016 and 2020 elections. So far, no such planet-killing meteor has appeared, but there may be a new option. Italy, the same country that gave us the theory that satellites changed the vote tallies in the 2020 election (not to be confused with Jewish space lasers) may provide a new alternative.

Scientists report that Italy’s Campi Flegrei, a supervolcano near Naples, may be nearing an eruption. As CBS News explains, scientists detected record seismic activity in April which may indicate an upcoming eruption. Campi Flegrei, which last erupted in 1538, is capable of producing an eruption at category 8, the highest level on the Volcano Explosivity Index.

Such an eruption could have world-altering consequences. A previous supervolcano eruption in 1816 produced a “year without a summer” as ash clouds circled the globe and blocked sunlight. This would help to resolve global warming concerns while probably accelerating climate change in a different direction. It would also be a cataclysmic loss of human life.


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