Good scoop from @teddyschleifer here. Specific proposal is a nonpartisan primary, in which the top 5 candidates will advance to the ranked choice general, election. Similar to Alaska's new system.
Aim is to help independents or moderates compete without being spoilers.
The system is clearly meant to help the Bloombergs or Murkowskis (or Yangs) of the world, who are frustrated with traditional primaries.
These folks believe a moderate or independent could win the general election, if they could only get there, and not be viewed as a spoiler.
I would add that if you believe the greatest threat to US democracy is the Republican Party's capture by extremists — then you should really be trying to do something about GOP primaries, which help preserve that stranglehold.
This proposal does take aim at those primaries
Republicans who become viewed as enemies of Trump tend to lose their primaries, retire to avert certain primary defeat, or silence their criticisms.
So a proposal like this is meant to give candidates like Jeff Flake or Liz Cheney a plausible path to reelection
Would it work? Many reforms intended to transform politics fall short of reformers' hopes.
But the status quo is: too-vocal Trump critics face near-certain primary doom. This would at least provide a possible path.
(It would also affect Dems in a way progressives may not love)
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As @DavidCornDC notes, "leaving" the party to become an independent does not necessarily mean *switching* to caucus with GOP. (Dems have independents Sanders and King in their caucus already.)
So, unclear whether it would be a PR stunt or a true disaster for D Senate control
But the party switch has always been Manchin's ultimate trump card. I asked him about it several months ago, and he said: "I know I can change more from where I'm at. And I still believe in the principles of the Democratic Party that I grew up with."
Is Manchin bluffing? Maybe! But the last 50-50 Senate, in 2001, fell apart for a very similar reason — moderate Sen. Jim Jeffords (R-VT) fell out of step with his party, and got fed up with high-handed pressure tactics.
Why it'll be so tough for Dems to hold the Senate: 1. The 3 red state Ds are more vulnerable than the 3 blue state Rs 2. Dems have 10 other senators representing states Biden only narrowly won. GOP has only 4 in narrow Trump win states (NC+FL) (cont'd)
3. The 2022 Senate map is not on its face terrible for Dems — their problem is defying the historically common midterm backlash 4. The 2024 Senate map is really rough for Dems. The three Trump states Dems are up, and so are five other Ds in states Biden won by less than 3 points.
5. So if 2024 turns out to be a strong presidential year for Dems, they'll still have a tough time keeping WV/MT/OH seats.
If it's a bad presidential year for Dems, ~8 seats are at risk.
And if 2022 was good for GOP too, a 60-vote GOP supermajority post-'24 is plausible.
It was pretty remarkable that Senate Democrats went from 45 seats in 2005 to 60 seats in mid-2009. Just took two cycles and a party switch!
No party has had a one-two punch of Senate election cycles since. (Rs gained seats in 2010, 2014, 2018, Ds in 2012, 2016, 2020)
The long stretch of GOP *underperformance* in Senate elections is also notable.
Think of the number of states won by the pres. nominee as the "fundamentals" for Senate seat expectation. Ds have consistently done better than that since 2000, until 2020, which was right on target
Legally it doesn't seem to matter (they haven't been charged with anything), but regarding the narrative Durham is trying to put out, it's an important distinction.
Were they trying to drum up a thin/bogus Trump/Russia tie? Or did they genuinely believe in what they'd found?
Durham's indictment of Dem lawyer Michael Sussmann is a "speaking indictment." Is written with much detail to advance narrative that Trump was victim of foul play re: the "secret Russian server" story
Durham’s belief, expressed in this indictment, is basically that Clinton supporters drummed up a thin/bogus Trump Russia tie, fed it to the FBI to get Trump under investigation, then had it leaked to the press to hurt Trump’s campaign.
But Durham does not say any of that is criminal.
The crime he alleges is a false statement made by one person involved, attorney Michael Sussmann, during a meeting with the FBI.
Alleges Sussman said he was not acting on a client's behalf, but that he really was.
That is: Republican voters chose to elevate a bombastic, polarizing candidate and hope he could squeak through the weird recall process, rather than someone who could have plausibly been actually popular in a blue state
And the takeaway is apparently that Elder is the frontrunner to be the GOP's candidate again next year... except in a head-to-head matchup with Newsom that he's far *less* likely to win.