In money race, the three main Congressional candidates all lead a category

In money race, the three main Congressional candidates all lead a category

Bryan Townsend has raised $531,644.82 for his Democratic Congressional primary campaign so far, as of the quarterly finance reporting period ending June 30. That tops Sean Barney's $418,205.04 and Lisa Blunt Rochester's $353,246.35. Meanwhile in the 2nd Quarter (from April 1 to June 30), Barney outraised Townsend and Rochester $210,307.29 to $175,971.44 and $138,353.98, respectively. Finally, in terms of cash on hand, Lisa Blunt Rochester leads the pack, with $320,257.32 to Barney's $278,623.81 and Townsend's $247,633.74. However, Lisa's lead in Cash on Hand is because she leads in another category: the candidate who has lent the most money to her own campaign. She has donated $178,900 of her own money to her campaign. So really, her actual Cash on Hand minus her loans is $141,357.32. But there is something interesting about Barney's money....

Saturday Open Thread [7.16.16]

Josh Marshall has four questions after the failure of the Turkey Coup.
One: Erdogan's government has been trending in an increasingly autocratic direction for years. There are many good things about the failure of this coup. But heads of state who find their fears or paranoias about conspiracies against their rule validated in bloody attempted coups do not tend to loosen their grip. Quite the opposite. The most predictable outcome of this coup is a deepening and tightening of Erdogan's hold on power. That's a big problem. Two: I'm curious what role the US and the EU and its member states played, if any, in how this crisis unfolded. All the key turning points could have happened entirely internal to Turkey. But maybe not. And if not, just how is important in understanding the current world picture - the relative balance of forces of cohesion and disintegration. Three: What's the fate of the fairly substantial number of members of the military who participated in this coup? This obviously goes to question one. Soldiers who conspire against a civilian government need to be punished. But Erdogan tends to overdue rather than underdo these things, to put it mildly. So I am curious to see whether some restraining forces can make their influence felt, which obviously goes to point two. Four: The obvious one. Why did this happen? What was the precipitating event, if there was one, or what were the goals? We don't seem to have a clear or good idea of either. Those will matter a great deal.

The Weekly Addresses

President Obama acknowledged that the aftermath of tragedies like we've seen in Dallas, Baton Rouge, and Minnesota, can leave us struggling to make sense of these events. Vice President Biden delivered last week's address and commemorated the lives of the five police officers who were killed and the seven people who were wounded in Dallas. Governor Markell honors the life of Tim McClanahan.