New, from me: There is a useful distinction between cheap talk and revealed preferences.
For the far right, the cheap talk is about election integrity, but Republican abandonment of ERIC reveals a preference for the Big Lie and voter suppression. donmoynihan.substack.com/p/the-far-righ…
Dems have always claimed GOP election policies were about voter suppression. To sort out these narratives, it would be nice to have a clean example of where Republicans walked away from an election tool that unambiguously improved election integrity.
ERIC is that example.
ERIC had been uncontroversial. Republican officials knew it worked well. Then one dropped out of the program. Why?
A week before, Gateway Pundit, the same source which labeled Parkland shooting victims as crisis actors, declared it to be a Soros-funded conspiracy.
Keeping the voter rolls up to date is a basic task for election administration. But surely we can use modern data science techniques like ERIC to do it better than sending out postcards, or just purging people who do not vote in the last few elections.
So what is the real objection to ERIC that caused the far right to target it? The program requires that states notify eligible voters that they are eligible. Basic, minimal outreach.
But if you political movement is built on limiting the vote, this sounds like a conspiracy.
There is another layer to this story, which is exemplified by the role of Cleta Mitchell, who heads the "Election Integrity Network" and has pressed GOP officials to abandon ERIC. You might remember Mitchell as part of Trump's team trying to overturn the 2020 election.
Mitchell resigned from her law firm and devoted herself full time to Big Lie activism. She is training poll watchers to verify voter rolls. In other words, she wants partisan amateurs to replace professional election officials and ERIC.
The line between fraud and voter outreach is blurred in Mitchell’s mind. Election integrity seems to be less about minimizing illegal voting and more about minimizing voting more generally, or at least minimizing the influence of voters not aligned with Republicans.
The term Orwellian is overused, but it surely applies to a situation where the leader of the Election Integrity Network works against a proven tool to protect election integrity. And Mitchell has been successful.
Sorry for the long thread. If you like writing at the intersection of politics, policy and administration, please share or please consider subscribing to my free newsletter. It is getting harder to use Twitter, and Musk is still suppressing Substack posts. donmoynihan.substack.com
I drew a lot from incredible reporting by @MilesParks who talked about what he found here.
The connections are pretty clear. Leonard Leo of the Federalist Society helped bankroll the work of Ginni Thomas. He also arranged for Clarence Thomas to attend Koch fundraisers. propublica.org/article/claren…
The shared purpose of Leonard Leo, Ginni Thomas, Clarence Thomas and the Koch network was to put right-wing judges on the court. And Clarence Thomas used his public position on the court to raise money for that.
Clarence Thomas used to support the Chevron doctrine, which allows delegation to administrative expertise. But the people who fund the Koch network can't buy off administrators, so they want to remove their influence from the process. Now Thomas agrees with the donors.
Also this guy: young people today can't afford a house because they occasionally buy new clothes
If the people @FinancialReview care for free speech at all, they will do the decent thing and allow replies to this tweet, allowing a full and frank exchange of views.
America has 22 times the firearm homicide rates as the European Union.
We are less safe and less free because of how available guns are in this country. healthdata.org/news-events/in…
America makes up about 15% of gun homicides, and together with five other countries constitutes half of gun homicides in the world. vox.com/2018/8/29/1779…
The reason more people in America are dying from guns is because there are more guns in America.
America is the only country with more guns than people. cnn.com/2021/11/26/wor…
New, from me: I wrote about how the emerging debacle at New College (one-third of faculty gone, students can't find classes, housed in airport hotels) reflects the incompetence of populists like DeSantis.
Competence, the ability to perform organizational core tasks, is an underrated quality. It is an especially overlooked quality by people who value other things, like ideological goals, or believe that existing institutions are corrupt, or who have never actually run things.
Fuck Around (left, celebrating the firing of a faculty who criticized the Regents)
and
Find Out: (right, soliciting faculty applications because you don't have enough to teach classes - one-third have left for some reason).
The DeSantis takeover of New College was meant to offer a model of a conservative-run higher ed.
The result is chaos, which is what happens when incompetent people who don't actually care about organizational mission take over public services. insidehighered.com/news/students/…
The NY Times recently featured Chris Rufo to explain how DEI was undermining liberal education.
You know what actually undermines a liberal education?
Losing one-third of faculty.
Not offering core classes to students.
Raging incompetence and blind indifference.
Rufo is seeking to personally recruit replacements. Which is completely at odds with what university trustees are supposed to do. No way that could go wrong, right?
From the internal Texas A&M reports: it was A&M Regents who signaled their opposition to McElroy, at which point the university figured out they would not tenure her.
Seems like the Regents cost A&M $1M. Nice job.
: ... tamus.edu/wp-content/up
Not great when a university President is saying "I'm assuming all texts were deleted" and then tells faculty she was not involved in hiring process. (She has since resigned).