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Mar 21, 2023 10 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Nebraska State Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh (D), who paused her 3-week filibuster to debate anti-trans legislation, addresses her GOP colleagues:

“You are caring, kind, and compassionate people who are here to do public service… Pay attention to this conversation. Open your hearts.”
Nebraska State Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh (D) made a deal Thursday with Republican colleagues to pause her three-week filibuster and resume debate on a bill that would outlaw gender-affirming care for minors.

Learn more about Cavanaugh’s fight: bit.ly/NEFilibuster Image
“If this bill advances, the filibuster will resume. I will join it with my whole heart, with my whole chest. And every bill will be going to cloture.”

— Nebraska State Sen. Megan Hunt (D), during debate on the state’s anti-trans bill, threatens to bring the legislature to a halt
Nebraska State Sen. John Fredrickson (D), the first openly gay man elected to the state legislature, calls anti-trans bill a “recycled playbook”:

“A lot of these things were said in the ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s about gay people ... ‘It’s just a phase.’ ... It’s a bit dehumanizing.”
Nebraska State Sen. Mike Moser (R), debating the state’s anti-trans bill, argues teens shouldn’t be allowed access to gender-affirming care because "13-year-olds can't be responsible for murder because their brains aren't sufficiently formed."
“By the way, my first babysitter... was a hermaphrodite, so I learned from a very early age that people’s biology can be very different than male or female.”

— Nebraska State Sen. Carol Blood (D) critiques the state's proposed anti-trans bill for excluding some gender identities
“The only compromise with bills like this is to just leave people alone … Pull the bill … That’s the compromise: leave people alone.”

— Nebraska State Sen. Jen Day (D) responds to Republican colleagues seeking “compromise” on an anti-trans bill stalled in the state legislature
There’s a whole lot of talk about God during this debate about Nebraska’s anti-trans bill.

State Sen. Steve Erdman (R): “For the life of me, I can’t imagine why we want to mess with something that God created. He made us male and female.”
Nebraska State Sen. Machaela Cavanaugh (D) vows to block amendments on anti-trans bill and dares Republicans to vote on it in its “purest, evil form”:

“I tried to get the committee to change this bill ... So now you want to compromise, to assuage your guilt? No thank you.”
#NEleg voted to adjourn until Wednesday.

After back-and-forth, the GOP majority voted to end debate on Sen. Megan Hunt’s (D) motion to postpone the bill. A vote to advance the bill is imminent, but it needs 3 rounds of votes to reach the governor’s desk. ketv.com/article/nebras…

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More from @therecount

Apr 19
Just minutes after the full jury was selected in Donald Trump's New York hush money criminal trial, someone appears to have set themself on fire outside the courthouse, per CNN's @thelauracoates.
CNN's @thelauracoates describes the emotions of seeing the apparent immolation:

NYPD official describes the lead-up to a man setting himself on fire outside the Trump trial courthouse in Manhattan:

Read 6 tweets
Aug 23, 2023
The first 2024 debate is here: The GOP field's set to meet tonight (without Trump). But why do we do debates? Do they even matter? Sometimes, yes...a lot.

Here are 5 moments from recent primary debates that actually changed the trajectory of the nominating contest — and history. Image
2008: Hillary Clinton struggles to take a clear stance on giving driver's licenses to “illegal immigrants.”

Her attempt at nuance reinforced a central criticism of her candidacy — that she was overly cautious and poll-tested — helping fuel Barack Obama's ultimate victory.
2011: Rick Perry forgets the third federal department he was promising to eliminate.

Perry had already dropped steeply in polls after prior poor debate performances. The “oops” moment seemed to prove he lacked preparation and is regarded as his campaign's death knell.
Read 4 tweets
Jul 26, 2023
Is Biden poised for a breakthrough on the economy?

Today, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 25 basis points after a brief pause in June.

But by virtually any metric, inflation — and the economy as a whole — is in a very different place than when it met in July 2022. Image
The Fed has steadily raised interest rates since March 2022, playing catchup as inflation soared to 40-year highs. After its June pause, that campaign resumed today — with yet another rate hike. Image
Amid the Fed’s effort to drive down inflation, concerns have risen that the dramatic rise in interest rates could slow growth enough to tip the U.S. into recession.

But job growth has remained steady — raising hopes for what economists call a “soft landing.” Image
Read 7 tweets
Jun 14, 2023
A real Fox News chyron at the end of its 8 p.m. hour.
(Yes, this is real.)
A Fox News spokesperson has told @washingtonpost that “the chyron was taken down immediately and was addressed,” but did not go into specifics. washingtonpost.com/media/2023/06/…
Read 4 tweets
Jun 13, 2023
Donald Trump arraignment today:
• Court appearance takes place at 3 pm ET in Miami
• Expected to plead not guilty to 37 counts
• Will voluntarily turn himself in before that
• Will be fingerprinted digitally
• Mugshot will likely not made public
• Will not be handcuffed
A transcript of the hearing will be released, likely soon after the hearing.
forbes.com/sites/alisondu… Image
Read 4 tweets
Jun 1, 2023
THREAD: There was backlash to the backlash at a heated school board hearing in Florida’s deep-red Hernando County on Tuesday.

You should see what teachers, students, and parents said about right-wing culture wars and anti-LGBTQ policies that are driving some educators to quit.
“I have never seen such fear from my colleagues as I’ve seen in the last two months.”

— Social studies teacher Victoria Hunt says “the culture that has been created” in Hernando County, Florida, is driving teachers to leave “the county, the state, or the profession altogether.”
Parent at the Hernando County, Florida, school board hearing Tuesday: “I’m appalled by how many gay people are here.”

*Crowd cheers*
Read 8 tweets

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