1/ For Black Americans, middle class stability has always been a lie.
In her latest Vox column, @annehelen explores how centuries of systemic racism have cut short Black people’s opportunities for wealth while keeping white wealth buoyed to the top: vox.com/the-goods/2224…
2/ "A foundational myth of the American dream is the potential of the individual, wholly unbound by context," @annehelen writes. "The idea is that in America, land of opportunity, you excel on your own merits.
And "because of intersecting racist policies and practices ... wealth has been far more difficult for Black Americans to accumulate." vox.com/the-goods/2224…
4/ As Jasmyne, a Black employee at an LA nonprofit, explains:
"My husband and I earn middle-class salaries, but we also have significant student debt and often have to support family. We live in an expensive city. ... He is saving for retirement, but I haven’t even begun.”
5/ Dee, a 41-year-old working mother, shared this feeling of nonstop precarity:
“I live in America. There is no support for middle-class families, and there is no targeted support for those who have suffered from systemic racism.”
6/ This story is the second installment of @annehelen’s monthly @thegoods column on America’s hollow middle class.
Read her first piece — on the secret struggle to stay afloat while maintaining middle class status — here: vox.com/the-goods/2216…
2/ As we learned the first time Trump was impeached, merely impeaching the president isn’t enough to remove him from office.
The House can charge Trump with a removable offense by a simple majority vote, but he must be convicted by the Senate by a two-thirds vote.
3/ If the impeached official is convicted, the Senate then must decide what sanction to impose on them.
Removal is one option. The Constitution also permits the Senate to permanently disqualify Trump from holding “any office of honor, trust or profit under the United States.”
1/ Congress starts the process of counting Electoral College votes and formally confirming Joe Biden’s win at 1 pm today.
It’s usually a mainly ceremonial task, but this year Trump has hyped up the count as a showdown effort to overturn the election. vox.com/2021/1/6/22213…
2/ Biden's victory isn't in jeopardy: The Electoral College vote count — 306 votes for Biden, 232 for Trump — was finalized when the electors cast their votes in December.
3/ Some Republicans plan to object to certain swing state results, claiming they can’t be trusted due to allegations of fraud.
But throwing out electoral votes requires approval from both houses of Congress, something that is extremely unlikely to happen. vox.com/2021/1/6/22213…
1/ Tuesday’s #GeorgiaRunoffs will determine which party controls the US Senate.
But it’s not as simple as either Republicans or Democrats getting total control. Here's why: vox.com/2021/1/4/22204…
2/ If Democrats manage to pull out two wins in the runoffs, the two Georgia seats would grant them only 50 seats in the Senate, plus Vice President-elect Kamala Harris serving as a crucial tie-breaker for simple majority votes.
3/ But most bills need to clear a 60-vote supermajority in the Senate.
So even if Democrats have control of the Senate, they still need around 10 Republican votes to get much done.
Passing Democratic bills will be extremely difficult in a 50-50 Senate. vox.com/2021/1/4/22204…
With Joe Biden's wins in Wisconsin and Michigan, per Decision Desk, Joe Biden is now just 17 electoral votes shy of a win in the presidential election.
A win in just PA (20), or the combination of AZ (11) and NV (6) would get him there.
2/ If Biden wins Arizona and Nevada, both states he is leading in, it would put him at exactly 270 electoral votes. A big update from Arizona is expected Wednesday evening.
3/ Many eyes are on Pennsylvania; Trump’s lead has been shrinking as the state continues to process a large number of mail in ballots.
The remaining vote there “appears to be overwhelmingly for Biden,” per the New York Times’ @Nate_Cohn.