DL Open Thread: Friday, June 18, 2021

Filed in Featured, Open Thread by on June 18, 2021

We (Almost) Have A Progressive General Assembly!  Passage of the $15 minimum wage bill is a BFD.  The Senate has become a progressive legislative body run by progressive leaders.  There hasn’t been a single piece of progressive legislation that has been deep-sixed there, and a whole lot of progressive initiatives have started there.  The combination of progressive legislators, legislative supporters of organized labor, and strong public lobbying compelled the reluctant crew of Chamber lackeys in the House to support SB 15, and to defeat every amendment designed to weaken it.  Perhaps overshadowed yesterday was the passage of bills like HB 115, HB 163 (Suxco’s Collins was the only no), and HB 195, among others. Check ’em out. Good things are happening.  Get a couple more progressives in the House, and elect a progressive governor in 2024.  Hard work, but doable.

How Amazon Burns Through Warehouse Workers.  Doesn’t stop Delaware from gifting them $$’s to open new sweatshops here.  Break up Amazon! And don’t give them any more ‘economic development’ money. They sure as fuck don’t need it.  Oh, and regulate the fuck out of ’em.  That means you, DOL.

Portland Criminals Crowd Control Cops Resign En Masse.  My daughter lives in Portland. The so-called crowd control police live for the chance to beat up protestors. Their heads are in the ’60’s, and everyone with long hair or a different skin color are the enemies. One of the worst of the worst was indicted for pounding a protestor with a baton.  So, the entire unit resigned.  From the crowd control unit. They’ll still be rousting progressive protestors in one form or another.  This is a rogue police force.

Speaking Of Rogue Cops…: “The Justice Department on Thursday released horrifying new police body camera footage from the January 6 assault on the US Capitol, after CNN and other outlets requested the tapes.The footage was used in the case against Thomas Webster, a former Marine and retired police officer from the New York City Police Department accused of participating in the Capitol attack.”  And beating up an on-duty cop trying to protect the Capitol.

Here’s The Worst Supreme Court Justice.  It’s probably a good thing.  He seems skilled at alienating his conservative colleagues. The enemy of my enemy…

Juneteenth Becomes National Holiday Before Juneteenth.  It’s real, and it’s spectacular.  The story of slavery and the emancipation are now officially part of the American story.

Company Cut 2000 Jobs, Reaped Largest Tax Benefits During Pandemic.  Marathon Oil. Uh, that’s not the way it’s supposed to happen.  Make ’em pay it back:

BailoutWatch found that the fossil fuel industry was more likely than other sectors to benefit from the tax changes in the Cares Act because of their financial losses in 2019 and 2018, when refining margins were already in decline during those less profitable years. The watchdog group also found that fossil fuel companies lobbied heavily for these changes during the drafting of the legislation. Marathon spent $2.6m on lobbying in Washington in 2020, including to increase Cares Act tax deductions.

In all, the report found that 77 oil and gas companies received $8.24bn from the Cares Act tax refunds while laying off nearly 60,000 employees. Marathon’s federal tax breaks are in addition to state and local tax incentives that the company receives in Louisiana.

Take Manchin’s Voter ID Deal?  This writer makes a persuasive case for it:

That’s exactly why Manchin’s proposal is, as a matter of both policy and politics, quite elegant. The currently available evidence suggests that, as improbable as it may seem, expanding voter-ID requirements to all 50 states would do little to reduce turnout. But Manchin’s not just trying to require identification nationwide. He would also expand the types of government ID that can be used in elections, for example by allowing voters to cast ballots if they display a utility bill. This version of a voter-ID law would require voters to prove their identity without disenfranchising a large number of voters—in other words, it’s the exact type of voter-ID law most Americans already support.

And consider what Democrats, and democracy, will get in return for this concession. Automatic voter registration. An end to partisan gerrymandering. Mandatory early voting nationwide. Joe Manchin’s offer will leave some voters out. That’s bad. But the number of voters who will be enfranchised by this proposal outnumbers—by orders of magnitude—the number who will be left disenfranchised. That’s not just a step in the right direction. It is, potentially, the difference between preserving our democratic system of government and not.

Stacey Abrams has embraced it.  I think that’s good enough for me.

What do you want to talk about?

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  1. Alby says:

    Rogue police forces outnumber the other kind — is there another kind? — by at least 10 to 1.

    • It’s funny. In Portland, the protestors know the cops, and know the especially rotten ones.

      It’s a street-level study in aberrant psychology.

  2. Jason330 says:

    “We (Almost) Have A Progressive General Assembly! ”

    I’m impressed by how this all comes down to the ability to turn out voters. Progressives proved that they can do that and the go-along-to-get-along losers see it very clearly when they look at the seat Jaques once occupied.

    The next big test will keep progressive momentum building (or show that the wave has crested) is the Gov’s primary. It will be tough because it is statewide, but only statewide Dems. So there is that.

  3. Alby says:

    Jonathan Chait at New York magazine has a piece up about SCOTUS upholding the ACA. He makes a (to me) persuasive case that it was the ACA that broke the Republican Party.

    the passage of Obamacare was a traumatic event for Republicans. The wound it opened in the party’s psyche has not fully healed, and even more than a decade after its passage into law, they cannot reconcile themselves to its legitimacy. …

    [E]ven though it merely incrementally expanded an existing program (Medicaid) and copied a program designed by a Republican governor (Mitt Romney), it was met by unmitigated hysteria on the right. What seemed to unhinge conservatives was less the substance of the bill than the very idea of Democrats using their control of government to … govern. Republicans became fixated with the sinister machinations that they believed had produced the bill. …

    Turning a policy question over insurance-market regulation and subsidy levels into a cultural fight was a shrewd, and perhaps necessary strategy. But it left the party’s elite with no way to back down.

    The pattern of the anti-Obamacare crusade has continued to define the Republican party elite’s relationship with its base. First, they make a practical decision on the basis of self-interest, then convince their voters the cause is existential, then discover they have no choice but to act as if their own lies are true.

    • It also certainly hinged on a Black President getting it done–hence the unhinged response.

      • Alby says:

        Among the mob, yes, but Chait’s talking about the institutional Republicans.

        It hinges on their fear that the ACA will work like Social Security, a program that fueled lopsided Democratic majorities in Congress for 50 years.

  4. Jason330 says:

    This is wild.

    How The Roberts Court Laid The Groundwork For 2021’s All-Out Assault On Voting Rights

    Roberts cropped a quote from a precedent setting case to completely change the meaning. WTF? who knew that was even possible?

    It is like there is no limit to the amount of mischief and criminality Republicans are capable of.

  5. All Seeing says:

    Carney has no stones and a CORPORATE. Delaware is still unsistainable for human life.
    The environment is the worst and behind the times in just about everything. That no tax shit has caught up to the government. Republicans are chamber of Commerce yes men.
    Need I say more?

    • The problem has been that Democrats, especially our D governors, are Chamber yes men. The General Assembly is now standing up to both the Chamber and Carney. Get rid of a couple more state reps, and elect a progressive D governor, and the transformation is complete.

      The R’s are irr-elephant. Plus, in Delaware, much of the Party has been taken over by the Suxco mouthbreathers.