Congressional Dems from Florida are ratcheting up pressure on the University of Florida to explain and reverse its decision to ban professors from testifying against the state's voting law.
I asked the University of Florida to detail its rationale. A spox emailed me a new explanation.
It's not persuasive. And one of the professors tells me he repeatedly testified against the state of Florida in the past with the university's approval:
@RepDWStweets Ron DeSantis' role here is potentially very troubling. He has allies on the board of the University of Florida. Are they behind this decision?
Remember, this is the same Ron DeSantis who signed the voter suppression law at issue on Fox News:
*$555 billion on climate
*CTC extended a year
*Corporate and global min tax
*Universal pre-K
*Child care funding
*Expanded ACA subsidies, including Medicaid in red states
Elon Musk's absurd opposition to the billionaires tax shows exactly why we need it. Billionaires like him have benefited from policy choices that helped them build huge fortunes. One is the privileging of wealth, which this new tax would target. My latest: washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
The billionaires tax is being widely treated as just a stopgap revenue raiser. But this is all wrong. It would fix flaws in the tax code that are themselves glaring problems. This would have real benefits beyond revenues.
Awful: Manchin is again shrinking climate provisions. This could weaken US leadership at the global climate conference. This, even as a new AP poll finds 55% of Americans support action. The malapportioned Senate is the bane of our existence. My latest: washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
A new quote from Manchin captures why we're in trouble.
"I’m totally out of sync with 48 other Democrats,” he said. "I’m just trying to survive in a very, very divided Congress in a very divided country."
Poor JD Vance. He' getting hammered by $1 million in ads reviving his past attacks on Trump. Vance is desperately atoning by claiming to be the real heir to Trump's populist legacy, as if GOP voters care more about that than about Trump himself. My latest: washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
JD Vance is running a campaign saturated in performative anti-cosmopolitan posturing and demagoguery about cultural liberalism and critical race theory.
He wants to tax corporations for standing up for the voting rights of African Americans.
Kyrsten Sinema's effort to block some of Biden's tax hikes will likely be great news for the 1 percent. It would benefit a large swath of wealthy investors, capital owners and well-heeled professionals. A tax expert walked me through the appalling details: washingtonpost.com/opinions/2021/…
Sinema reportedly opposes hiking corporate/top income tax rates.
Key: The corporate hikes would hit shareholders. So not doing that plus not raising top income rates would largely benefit the 1 percent.
Tax Policy Center's Steve Rosenthal explains here: