Tuesday Open Thread [3.8.16]

Tuesday Open Thread [3.8.16]

Rebecca Traister imagines a Clinton/Trump race:
Clinton’s South Carolina speech, which emphasized racial unity and a message of peace, love, and understanding, forecasts how she plans to frame her campaign in opposition to the bombastic demagogue who trades on anger and prejudice. But it also points up just how much they are running in two separate elections, to be president of two different countries. Trump is running in the country that is in the midst of a dramatic and terrifying backlash to the social movements of the past 50 years; Clinton herself represents the very victories of some of those movements and is seeking to modestly stabilize their gains. In the end, this may be an epic, gory battle between those who are threatened by the changing face of power in America and those who are doing the changing.
Usually, the more optimistic and hopeful campaign wins, especially when the economy is good (which it is) and when presidential approval is good (which it is, as Obama is over 50% approval).
Delaware General Assembly Pre-Game Show: Tues. March 8, 2016

Delaware General Assembly Pre-Game Show: Tues. March 8, 2016

We already know what won't be addressed by the returning General Assembly this week: Abolition of Delaware's death penalty. However, it's for the best of reasons.  It's quite possible that the United States Supreme Court has already sounded the, um, death knell for Delaware's capital punishment statute.  The ironies involved in this are dee-lish.  The Delaware legislative hardliners some twenty years ago decided that juries were sometimes too namby-pamby when it came to doling out the death penalty, so they decided to give the judges (who must come before the State Senate for  nominations and renominations) the exclusive life and death authority. Which is precisely why Delaware's statute appears to have run afoul of the recent Supreme Court ruling, which 'deemed unconstitutional part of a Florida statute that grants exclusively to judges the right to determine a sentence of death in capital cases'.  Delaware has the same language in its statute, which is why the Delaware Supreme Court has placed a moratorium on any capital case moving forward until it can review the statute and determine whether Delaware's statute can pass constitutional muster.