@TheAtlantic The story is set in Harris County, Texas (greater Houston). Texas GOP hopes to repeal innovations that promoted record voting in 2020.
Now the paradox: 2/x
@TheAtlantic Harris County, target of GOP voter suppression in 2021, is one of the counties where the Latino vote swung most sharply to Trump in 2020. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/… 3/x
@TheAtlantic I wrote: "Of Harris’s 299 majority-Hispanic precincts, more than 90 percent moved toward Trump between 2016 and 2020, some precincts by more than 30 points." 4/x theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
@TheAtlantic The upscale and mostly white voters whose voting rights the GOP most wants to protect? They are swinging hard *away* from the GOP, especially in Texas.
Meanwhile ... 5/x
@TheAtlantic The voters most susceptible to voter suppression - non-college Latino men - are the group swinging hardest *to* the GOP, especially in Texas. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/… 6/x
@TheAtlantic Republican lawmakers are self-sabotaging because they get their political ideas from watching Fox News' programs warning of "great replacement." In fact, incoming Latino voters are the GOP's best (only?) hope for counter-acting its loss of educated younger white voters. 7/x
@TheAtlantic It's natural to assume that political professionals know what they are doing. And I assume that non-Parscale Republican pollsters and strategists mostly do know. But the legislators watch Fox News. And Fox lies to them, to their harm. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/… END
@TheAtlantic PS and that's why Florida's DeSantis is so interesting to me. He seems to be one of the few leading national Republicans who can count. theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
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You can watch the 2000 Bush climate-change speech below. It's an amalgam of discordant elements as you will hear if you listen. 2/x c-span.org/video/?159527-…
Most of the Bush energy team was committed to a future of expanding fossil fuels use, including more coal. But two on the team - Gary Edson and John Bridgeland - were equally strongly committed to the climate-change issue. They got their language into the Saginaw speech. 3/x
Those critics object that the unvaccinated can imperil others as well as themselves. Understood and accepted. That's true now - will be true for some time to come. 2/x
My thread was talking about a pair of hypotheticals:
1) "IF" the vaccines work as well as they seem to do; and
2) "IF" the US continues to make progress toward double vaccination of most of the population ...
3/x
@jbarro Trump got himself vaccinated early, in secret. But his rhetorical energy was concentrated on abusing the public-health professionals leading the vaccine effort.
Likewise ... 2/x
@jbarro Rupert Murdoch got himself vaccinated in December 2020 at a British NHS clinic, three weeks before even the Queen (and head of the British state). Yet Murdoch too has used his power to discourage others from protecting themselves as he protected himself.
In 2016, poor health strongly predicted Trump voting. A county's rate of diabetes, alcohol consumption, obesity, etc. predicted its propensity to vote Trump *even better* than race/education. thehealthcareblog.com/blog/2017/01/0…
I think of that grim relationship between Trump and sickness as I read the latest stories about how so many Republicans continue to refuse COVID vaccines. 2/x washingtonpost.com/health/2021/04…
As @DKThomp points out, vaccine refusal is especially strong among younger Republicans 3/x
Any follow-ups to report 4 days ago of theft - abduction? - of Darius, the world's biggest rabbit? This mystery cannot be left unresolved. bbc.com/news/uk-englan…
Some suspect the involvement of Dexter, the world's second biggest rabbit, who will inherit the championship title if Darius is not recovered.
I'm late to this fascinating report by @DemCorps - but it remains urgent reporting about the post-Trump GOP. It describes a bitterly divided party: 70% still in thrall to Trump, 30% against him democracycorps.com/republican-par…
@DemCorps Trump's defeat has left his supporters aimless, powerless, pessimistic, and alienated from politics. Real-world consequence: by spring 2009, the anti-Obama Tea Party had already come into being. There's no equivalent movement in 2021 to resist Biden.
@DemCorps Racially resentful pro-Trump Republicans find Biden unthreatening - and accordingly are reacting to Biden's recovery plans with interest and "what's in it for me?" curiosity rather than the fierce rejection with which they met Obama plans in 2009.