Delaware Liberal

DL Open Thread: Thursday, May 25, 2023

Omigod, omigod, omigod! Just got this in my e-mail in-box, and my pulse immediately quickened:

Hi friends and family!
Hope you all are doing well. Some incredible people are hosting a few gatherings/discussions next week where I’ll be sharing my thoughts on the Delaware political/civic landscape.
I would love to get your feedback, thoughts, and ideas for efforts here in our state.
We’ll have good food (vegetarian and non-vegetarian) and great people!
If you can’t make it or want to talk at another time, let me know and I would be grateful to setup a call!
Many thanks in advance,
Eugene
p.s. Below are the links to RSVP. Would love to see you at one of these gatherings!
New Castle County Discussion
Monday, May 29th at 4pm
5624 Kennett Pike Wilmington, DE 19807
RSVP here!
Kent County Discussion
Thursday, June 1st at 6pm
229 Pebble Valley Drive
Dover, DE 19904
RSVP here!
Sussex County Discussion
Wednesday, May 31st at 6pm
28 Haworth Court Rehoboth Beach, DE 19971
RSVP here!
The Eugene in question is Eugene Young!  Wow, I wonder what he has in mind.  Whatever it is, I’m all in.
Texas Rethug Circular Firing Squad. Unfortunately, and uncharacteristically for Texas, w/o the use of real weapons.  Delicious, nonetheless:
The Texas Capitol was unexpectedly gripped by an escalating intraparty showdown among top Republicans on Wednesday after a House committee took steps toward a possible impeachment of the Republican attorney general, Ken Paxton, over charges of corruption and abuse of office.
The allegations had been lodged before against Mr. Paxton, but they gained new force as investigators working for the Republican-controlled House panel — the Committee on General Investigating — publicly detailed each accusation over three hours of public testimony, concluding that Mr. Paxton had most likely committed crimes.

Whether the committee would recommend impeachment, or stop short of doing so, remained an open question. But the Republican House speaker, Dade Phelan — whose own resignation Mr. Paxton publicly called for this week — signaled his openness to that outcome.

“The attorney general appears to have routinely abused his powers for personal gain and exhibited blatant disregard for the ethical and legal propriety,” a spokeswoman for Mr. Phelan said in a statement. “Speaker Phelan stands in full support of the general investigating committee and the recommendations that may come as a result of their thorough and diligent investigation.”

The most recent tensions initially burst into public view on Tuesday afternoon when Mr. Paxton, who is already under indictment for securities fraud, accused Mr. Phelan of performing his duties while drunk and called for the speaker’s resignation.

The move sent a shock through Austin. Shortly after, word came that Mr. Paxton might have had a personal motive for attacking the speaker: The House investigating committee had subpoenaed records from Mr. Paxton’s office, as part of an inquiry into the attorney general’s request for $3.3 million in state money to settle corruption allegations brought against him by his own former high-ranking aides.

Cities Pay Out $80 Mill Because Cops Just Couldn’t Resist Beating Protestors During 2020 Protests:

The brutal murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers on 25 May 2020 sparked the largest nationwide demonstrations since the civil rights era, as upwards of 26 million people gathered to protest racism and police brutality.

But, three years later, at least 19 US cities will pay more than $80m total to protesters who sustained various injuries as a result of law enforcement action, ranging from being teargassed to being shot with projectiles, and have filed dozens of civil lawsuits.

Verheyden-Hilliard noted that mass settlements were paid out for police violence experienced during the Occupy Wall Street movement in 2011 and 2012 and for police using excessive force during anti-globalization protests in the early 2000s. Then came 2020.

“We had millions of people flowing into the street to stand against racist police violence. And in city after city and small town after small town, law enforcement was deployed to violently repress demonstrators,” Mara Verheyden-Hilliard said.

Uh, Khakis?  Carney’s gotta Carney.

What do you want to talk about?

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