The media needs to hold them accountable instead of moving on. Here’s how. washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/medi…
“If it were up to him, Kruse would prescribe a simple rule for network TV producers thinking about putting election denialists on-air: ‘Don’t book them, as long as they haven’t publicly retracted.’
“The Harrisburg station expects to continue its practice at least through the 2022 elections and possibly through 2024. If legislators change their minds, the station will reflect that in their language, but it won’t simply wipe the slate clean for them.
“ ‘Elected officials are going to run on this,’ Blanchard said. ‘This is an example of their judgment.’
“In other words, no memory hole. No ‘let’s just move on.’ And, sorry, no amnesty.”
The media gets caught up in trivial matters because the 24 - hour news cycle always demands fresh outrages. But some events are more important, more fundamental.
How politicians acted after the 2020 election is more significant than any “news of the day.” WITF has shown us that it is possible to cover current political questions while refusing to forget who tried to subvert our republic. We must never forget.

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More from @HalMarshall2309

4 May
The attorneys in this case knew how Judge Jackson’s order was going after about one page of text. See if you can pick up on the clues about which way the wind is blowing from the opening paragraphs of her 34 page opinion. citizensforethics.org/wp-content/upl…
My personal favorite is “The Attorney General’s characterization of what he’d hardly had time to skim, much less, study closely, …“ was viewed by many as “an attempt to hide the ball.”
“On Friday, March 22, 2019, Special Counsel Robert S. Mueller, III delivered his Report of the Investigation into Russian Interference in the 2016 Presidential Election to the then-Attorney General of the United States, William P. Barr.
Read 13 tweets
4 May
“Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled that the contents of the memo ‘call[] into question the accuracy of Attorney General Barr’s March 24 representation to Congress,’ …
“specifically that Mueller had left it to the attorney general to determine whether the conduct his report describes is a crime, and …
“that OLC’s description of the document ‘served to obscure the true purpose of the memorandum,’ which CREW argued was to help Barr spin his version of the Mueller Report.
Read 7 tweets
4 May
“Yesterday, as a result of a CREW lawsuit, a federal judge ordered the [DOJ] to turn over a memo that then-Attorney General Bill Barr cited as key to his reasoning for not charging Donald Trump with obstruction of justice at the conclusion of the Mueller investigation.
“When Barr delivered the Mueller Report to Congress, he claimed there wasn’t sufficient evidence to charge Trump, and cited a memo from the Office of Legal Counsel to justify his choice.
“CREW sued to make the memo public, and in yesterday’s ruling, the judge not only ruled in our favor, but said that the memo’s contents raise some serious questions, including whether Barr and the DOJ acted in bad faith in describing the memo to Congress and in court.”
Read 4 tweets
4 May
“Companies have little incentive to follow the law. The Labor Department’s Wage and Hour Division, which investigates federal wage-theft complaints, rarely penalizes repeat offenders, according to a review of data from the division.” publicintegrity.org/inequality-pov…
“Public Integrity obtained the records through a Freedom of Information Act request covering October 2005 to September 2020. The agency fined only about one in four repeat offenders during that period.
“And it ordered those companies to pay workers cash damages — penalty money in addition to back wages — in just 14 percent of those cases.
Read 4 tweets
4 May
“Already battered by long shifts and high infection rates, essential workers struggling through the pandemic face another hazard of hard times: employers who steal their wages.” publicintegrity.org/inequality-pov…

“When a recession hits, U.S. companies are more likely to stiff their lowest-wage workers. These businesses often pay less than the minimum wage, make employees work off the clock, or refuse to pay overtime rates.
“In the most egregious cases, bosses don’t pay their employees at all.
Read 6 tweets
4 May
On Monday, “Trump issued a statement attempting to commandeer the term ‘Big Lie,’ commonly used to refer to the false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him, by asserting that the term should now refer to President Biden’s election victory.
“Cheney quickly condemned Trump’s comment as well as anyone who supports his statements about the election.” washingtonpost.com/politics/chene…
“ ‘The 2020 presidential election was not stolen,’ Cheney tweeted. ‘Anyone who claims it was is spreading THE BIG LIE, turning their back on the rule of law, and poisoning our democratic system.’
Read 5 tweets

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