I’ll never forget two things about the first time I met @repjohnlewis back in 2003. 1/x
The first is how powerful it was to stand next to a man whose fame came from the combination of the righteousness and effectiveness of his actions rather than winning election, making money, performing on screen, hitting a ball or simply being born to the right family. 2/x
I had read about Mr. Lewis and watched documentaries on the civil rights movement in which he was one of the key figures, but it suddenly struck me how different he was because the glory he pursued was that of God and country — better mankind and a more perfect union. 3/x
Yes, I probably understood that at some esoteric level before I shook his hand and introduced myself to ask a question about some mundane story of the day that I have long since forgotten. But it was like a lightning bolt of full realization in the shadow of his quiet dignity 4/x
Here was a man who had done something so important — and so selfless, and so just, and and with such strategic and tactical effectiveness, not to mention patience and perseverance — that I had never met anyone like him and probably never would again. 5/x
The second thing I remember is that he called me “brother.” 6/x
He has called me “brother” every time I have spoken to him since.
He calls men “brother” and women “sister.”
7/x
That first time it hit my ears — John Lewis calling me “brother” — it was the most inclusive word I had ever heard. He had fought so hard so that he and I would be seen under the law the way our founders said we were created, as equal, and I had done no such thing to earn it. 8/x
I couldn’t consider myself his equal in any terms other than those of the Declaration: “all men are created equal.”
But those are the words he fought to make true — with his “sisters” included — and by calling those around him “brother” and “sister” ... 9/x
he confers upon all of us the dignity of equality and conveys an unstated expectation that we will treat others as brothers and sisters. He didn’t fight for more power or rights than his neighbor. He fought for equality, and his use of the word “brother” crystallizes that. 10/x
Here is a man who walks this earth as an example of how we can more faithfully live up to the declarations of our founders and the creator to whose grace they attributed the inalienable rights of mankind.
May Brother Lewis walk this earth for many years to come. 11/11.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
When Brian Zahra learned he had impregnated Alyssa Jones in May 1983, he grabbed the Yellow Pages, found an abortion clinic in the Detroit suburbs and made an appointment, she said.
Indiana’s top law enforcement official, Republican AG Todd Rokita, thought the villain in the rape of a 10-year-old girl was the doctor who treated her.
It bears repeating.
This is not an activist. It’s not a church official. It’s not someone sitting in a Lazy-Boy shouting at his TV.
This is the person responsible for making decisions about how to protect the state’s citizens from threats and exercising prosecutorial discretion.
I’ve done significant reporting on Indiana politics over the years.
I don’t believe most Indiana residents are so anti-abortion that they think the state should prosecute doctors for terminating pregnancies of raped children.
Follow the thread:
NY’s new congressional map is forcing democrats to play musical chairs.
DCCC chair Sean Patrick Maloney, who is white, plans to run in a district that takes in most of the constituency of Rep. Mondaire Jones, who is Black 1/x nbcnews.com/politics/2022-…
That could mean a matchup between Jones and Maloney, who runs the party’s campaign arm, or Jones and Rep. Jamaal Bowman, who is also Black. 2/x
The DCCC is an incumbent-protection operation that raises dues from House incumbents, including many Black Caucus members. 3/x
Faiz Shakir, who managed Sanders' 2020 campaign, said promoting progressive candidates and causes can be an end in itself or a launching pad for the next race: "You can do both," he said in an interview.
Sanders is just the most openly ambitious of an emerging field of Democratic hopefuls who are positioning themselves to run if Biden doesn't, more than a dozen Democratic insiders said in interviews.
A nasty primary highlights split over Israel and direction of the Democratic Party nbcnews.com/politics/2022-…
“I’m not drinking my own bull crap. I’m just working my ass off. That’s all you can do.”
Reps. Haley Stevens and Andy Levin, both Democrats, are running against each other in the Detroit suburbs. AIPAC is backing Stevens, who is not Jewish, because it sees Levin, who is Jewish, as insufficiently pro-Israel. J Street, a progressive group, is coming to Levin’s aid.
In 72 battleground districts identified by House GOP campaign arm, Trump donated to only 2 candidates: Ryan Zinke in Montana and Derrick Van Orden in Wisconsin.
Trump is sitting on a fortune. Republicans want it for the midterms.
The vast majority of Trump’s donations have gone either to loyalists in primaries on the “revenge tour” or incumbents in safe Republicans seats. We have a nifty chart embedded in the story.
What Trump hasn’t done is put cash into Republicans challengers in many Democratic-held seats, nor has he used his war chest to make independent expenditures on behalf of candidates.