2

Thursday, November 3, 2022

TRUMP IS ACTIVELY PLOTTING TO STEAL THE MIDTERM ELECTIONS (AND THE NEXT PRESIDENTIAL ONE)

 Per Rolling Stone, Trump has convened lawyers and advisers to scheme how to challenge the results in November if they don’t go his way. Yes, despite the fact that his attempt to steal the 2020 election is reportedly under criminal investigation by the Department of Justice.

Image may contain Tie Accessories Accessory Donald Trump Suit Coat Clothing Overcoat Apparel Human and Person
US President Donald Trump boards Air Force One before departing Harlingen, Texas on January 12, 2021. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)MANDEL NGAN/GETTY IMAGES

If you were actively under investigation for attempted murder, a thing you’d probably want to avoid in the meantime would be going out and trying to murder someone else. Most people understand, without needing it to be explained to them, why this would be a bad idea. And then there’s Donald Trump. He hasn‘t been implicated in any murders (that we know of) nor is he currently trying to kill anyone (again, that we know of). He is, however, said to be actively plotting to steal the midterm elections, and the presidential one after that‚ which seems pretty wild given that he’s reportedly under criminal investigation for attempting to steal an election just two years ago.

Rolling Stone reports that in recent months, Trump has “convened a series of in-person meetings and conference calls to discuss laying the groundwork to challenge the 2022 midterm election results,” according to four people familiar with the matter. But hey, you might be saying, what’s wrong with challenging election results if you have a legitimate reason to do so? And the answer is nothing, except that in this case, the ex-president has a well-documented history of “challenging” results simply because he doesn’t like them, and basing his case on total lies.

According to reporters Asawin Suebsaeng and Adam Rawnsley, during these meeting and conference calls, “pro-Trump groups, attorneys, Republican Party activists, and MAGA diehards often discuss the type of scorched-earth legal tactics they could deploy” and have “gamed out” ways to “aggressively challenge” election outcomes they’re unhappy with, i.e. ones in which Republicans don’t win. One route they reportedly plan to take on election night, if a clear winner is yet to be announced, is the one Trump deployed in the early hours of November 4, 2020, in which he declared: “This is a fraud on the American public. This is an embarrassment to this country. We were getting ready to win this election. Frankly, we did win this election.”

While Trump has apparently been “briefed on plans in multiple states and critical races,” he reportedly is largely focused on the Pennsylvania races, particularly the one for US Senate between Mehmet Oz and John Fetterman. Despite the fact that the most recent poll puts Fetterman ahead of the former TV doctor (and alleged puppy killer) by a whopping six points, sources have told Rolling Stone that Trump and other Republicans will launch “a legal and activist crusade” if the Fetterman does not offer a “speedy concession,” or if the results are too close to call.

And, of course, Trump isn’t just plotting to undermine democracy in 2022.

As he hosts meetings on possible 2022 election challenges, he’s also been laying the groundwork for a run in 2024—where Pennsylvania again promises to be critical and competitive. As one source who has spoken to Trump several times about a potential post-election-day legal battle over the Oz-Fetterman race puts it, Trump views a potential midterm challenge as a “dress rehearsal for Trump 2024.”

Trump is gripped by the belief that he got cheated in Philadelphia in 2020, and this time around, he has privately demanded his allies concentrate additional firepower and legal resources in the commonwealth’s largest and most racially diverse metro area. In recent weeks, according to two people with knowledge of the situation, the ex-president has asked several advisers and at least one of his attorneys what national and Pennsylvania Republicans are doing to prevent Democrats from—in his words—“steal[ing] it in Philadelphia [like] they did last time.”

As for the investigation into the last attempt to steal an election—and the violent riot he incited when that attempt failed—Rolling Stone reported in July that Trump’s legal team was “planning for criminal charges” to be brought against him. Which need to come sooner rather than later, lest he actually win a second term and make them disappear.

Ron DeSantis: not just an evil little man but something of an idiot too

The governor of Florida and reported 2024 hopeful contains multitudes. Per the Financial Times:

At Yale, [DeSantis] found refuge at the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, an athlete-heavy club that featured barrels of beer and prominent former members, including the Bushes and Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh. In his recent pandemic memoir, What Just Happened: Notes on a Long Year, the author and critic Charles Finch recalled two things about his former classmate, known then as “D”: he did an uncanny impression of baseball star Jose Canseco and, according to a friend, would tell dates he liked Thai food, but pronounced it “thigh”. If they corrected him, Finch wrote, he would find an excuse to leave. “He didn’t want a girlfriend who corrected him

Wednesday, November 2, 2022

What is Allan Lichtman's prediction for the 2024 US presidential election?

 American University’s distinguished professor of history, Alan Lichtman, shocked the world when he accurately predicted that Donald Trump would defeat Hillary Clinton in 2016.

During a Zoom interview with The National, Prof Lichtman held up a note he received from Mr Trump in 2016 shortly after that prediction came to fruition.

“Professor, congrats, good call,” it reads, in large letters written in marker with Mr Trump’s signature.

This time around, using his 13 trends or keys system to predict the White House winner, he correctly predicted a Joe Biden victory.

As yet, the professor who has accurately predicted the US presidential contest since 1982 – when he tipped Ronald Reagan to win in 1984 – has not received any congratulatory note from President Trump.

“No, and I don’t expect to,” Prof Lichtman said. “Although I’m still waiting to see if I get a nice note from Joe Biden.”

Mr Lichtman’s model looks at several factors in predicting a winner, including party mandate, third-party challenge, social unrest, incumbency and charisma.

“I predicted a Biden win in the beginning of August of this year based upon my prediction system that has been right ever since I predicted Ronald Reagan’s election in April of 1982,” he said. “It’s a non-partisan system.”

What surprised Lichtman?

On election night outside the White House, a very partisan crowd of demonstrators clearly expected Mr Biden to be declared the winner in a clear landslide, but they would have to wait for hundreds of thousands of mail-in ballots to be counted across the country.

Look, I'm 73 years old and I've been doing these predictions for 40 years, and I get butterflies in my stomach every four years

Mr Lichtman said although this election was unconventional because of the Covid-19 pandemic and several other factors, he did not flinch on election night when it came to his prediction of a Biden victory, while also acknowledging the mercurial nature of voters.

“Look, I’m 73 years old and I’ve been doing these predictions for 40 years, and I get butterflies in my stomach every four years,” he said.

“I repeatedly reaffirmed this prediction, including when the votes began to come in and it looked like Donald Trump might be re-elected, but I understood that no election was final until all the votes were counted, and in most states the mail-in ballots, which were overwhelmingly Democratic, would be counted last."

Sure enough, Mr Biden secured enough electoral votes to become president-elect, and also won the popular vote by approximately five million ballots.

Mr Lichtman, however, did say he was surprised by several aspects of the election.

“First of all the magnitude of the turnout. This is a great tribute to the American people that they achieved a record turnout in percentages terms, the highest turnout since 1960,” he said. “That was surprising in the middle of the worst pandemic in 100 years.”

Mr Lichtman noted that both candidates managed to turn out significantly more voters than expected, and that ultimately, Mr Biden’s turnout operation surprised many.

“Not only is Biden on track for 306 electoral college votes, the same that Donald Trump got last time when he called it a landslide, but Biden is also on his way to a thumping popular vote victory of five million popular votes or more,” he said.

Prof Lichtman was also surprised by the disconnect between the White House race compared with the elections for the Senate, House of Representatives and state legislatures.

“On the other hand, Republicans did extremely well in elections for US Congress and actually gained seats when all the pollsters said they would lose seats, and they did very well in state legislative elections.”

Trump’s reaction to defeat 'the worst moment in US presidential history'

Prof Lichtman was rather taken aback by how Mr Trump handled the electoral defeat.

Every indication, including statements from Republican election officials throughout the country, indicate that this was a remarkably smooth, full and fair election, and Donald Trump's challenges are entirely baseless, frivolous and dangerous

“I think what’s happened with Donald Trump since the election represents the worst moment in US presidential history,” Mr Lichtman said, comparing it with how previous incumbents have reacted.

“We have never had a losing president, or for that matter, any losing candidate, so openly and falsely and dangerously attack the foundations of our democracy. He’s baselessly accusing the other side of widespread fraud when in fact there was no such fraud.”

Prof Lichtman also said that Mr Trump’s behaviour was being enabled by those who work directly for him, as well as those who serve in some of the highest positions of power for the Republican Party, such as Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell

“He’s the great enabler, saying ‘oh it’s not unusual to have all these challenges’, but it is unusual,” Prof Lichtman said. “It’s never happened before; no losing candidate has ever initiated widespread challenges to an election like this, particularly when these challenges have absolutely no basis in fact.

“Every indication, including statements from Republican election officials throughout the country, indicate that this was a remarkably smooth, full and fair election, and Donald Trump’s challenges are entirely baseless, frivolous and dangerous,” he said.

What is Lichtman's prediction for 2024?

Prof Lichtman, who details his strategy for predicting the White House winner in his book, Predicting the Next President: The Keys to the White House, said although it is very early, it would strongly be to the Democratic party's advantage if Mr Biden ran for re-election in 2024.

“With the sitting president running again, you’re not going to have a big internal party fight, that’s a major key, and you’re unlikely to have a big third-party movement. It's also worth noting that Biden will probably achieve major policy changes from the Trump administration,” he said.

It doesn't look like the Republicans have anyone who fulfils the 'challenge charisma key', the once-in-a-generation inspirational candidate, like Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan

There are some, however, who see Mr Biden’s age, he is 77, as an obstacle to a second term.

Although Mr Biden has not indicated whether or not he plans to run for re-election, there is ample speculation that he might not.

If that is the case, Prof Lichtman says it will be a tougher journey for Democrats.

“You lose the incumbency key right off the top, and you’re much more likely to have an internal party battle for who will be the nominee to take over from Joe Biden,” he said.

Conversely, although he stopped just short of making a prediction, Mr Lichtman believes the 2024 presidential vote could be problematic for the Republican party.

“It doesn’t look like the Republicans have anyone who fulfils the ‘challenge charisma key’, the once-in-a-generation inspirational candidate, like Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan,” he said, pointing to the potential for a power vacuum in the party.

How does Lichtman's 13 keys model work?

The 13 keys to the White House is an index of true or false responses to a set of questions, based on a simple pattern recognition algorithm.

"True" answers favour the re-election of the incumbent, while "false" answers favour the challenger.

When six or more of the statements are false, the incumbent party is predicted to lose.

Lichtman's 13 keys to the White House:

  1. Party mandate: After the midterm elections the incumbent party holds more seats in the US House of Representatives than it did after the previous midterm elections.
  2. Contest: The candidate is nominated on the first ballot and wins at least two-thirds of the delegate votes.
  3. Incumbency: The sitting president is the party candidate.
  4. Third party: A third-party candidate wins at least 5 percent of the popular vote.
  5. Short-term economy: The National Bureau of Economic Research has either not declared a recession, or has declared it over prior to the election.
  6. Long-term economy: Real per-capita economic growth during the term equals or exceeds the mean growth during the previous two terms.
  7. Policy change: The administration achieves a major policy change during the term comparable to the New Deal or the first-term Reagan Revolution.
  8. Social unrest: There is no social unrest during the term that is comparable to the upheavals of the post-civil war Reconstruction or of the 1960s, and is sustained or raises deep concerns about the unraveling of society.
  9. Scandal: There is no broad recognition of a scandal that directly touches upon the president
  10. Foreign or military failure: There is no major failure during the term comparable to Pearl Harbor or the Iran hostage crisis that appears to significantly undermine America's national interests or threaten its standing in the world.
  11. Foreign or military success: There is a major success during the term comparable to the winning of World War II or the Camp David Accords that significantly advances America's national interests or its standing in the world.
  12. Incumbent charisma: The incumbent party candidate is a national hero comparable to Ulysses Grant or Dwight Eisenhower or is an inspirational candidate comparable to Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan.
  13. Challenger charisma: The challenger party candidate is not a national hero comparable to Ulysses Grant or Dwight Eisenhower and is not an inspirational candidate comparable to Franklin Roosevelt or Ronald Reagan.

- Source: Allan J. Lichtman, The Thirteen Keys to the Presidency

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

KEY ISSUES IN US MIDTERM 2022

Washington, DC – As US politicians make their final appeals to voters ahead of critical midterm elections, a wide-reaching and varied set of issues has dominated discussions across the United States.

Republicans, who are seeking to retake control of Congress from their Democratic Party rivals, are lamenting the state of the economy amid a global financial downturn and a steady rise in the cost of living.

And Democrats are focusing on abortion rights after the US Supreme Court revoked the constitutional right to the procedure, while raising concerns about the future of democracy and fair elections in the country.

The November 8 election, which will see all the seats in the House of Representatives and more than a third of the Senate up for grabs, will have an enormous influence on the rest of President Joe Biden’s term.

Here, Al Jazeera examines the major issues at play in this election cycle.

The economy

“It’s the economy, stupid.”

That was the de facto motto of Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign against incumbent President George HW Bush, who had rallied dozens of countries across the world to beat back Saddam Hussein’s invasion of Kuwait. As Bush tried to tout the triumph of the first Gulf War, Clinton shifted the focus to an economic recession at that time and won the presidency.

Taking a page out of Clinton’s book, this year Republicans have been pushing to make the economy a central issue in the midterm elections, often accusing Biden of seeking to distract from soaring inflation.

Despite a dip in petrol costs in August, consumer prices went up 8.3 percent compared to the same month last year. While Democrats argue that inflation is linked to global events, such as the war in Ukraine, and coronavirus pandemic-related supply chain issues, Republicans say government spending, which has accelerated under Biden, is to blame.

“Inflation is crushing Americans, and it’s disproportionately hurting the most vulnerable,” Mehmet Oz, a Republican Senate candidate running in the swing state of Pennsylvania, wrote on Twitter on September 20. “It’s making everyday necessities like groceries cost more. Hurting small businesses. And hitting seniors, many of whom rely on Social Security, when they need every last penny.”

US Midterm Election 2022: Date, schedule, timings, ratings, opinion polls, exit polls, results; all that you need to know

FT reported 


OPINION POLLS, RATINGS: WHO IS GAINING OR LOSING GROUND?

Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll: US president Joe Biden's approval dips to 39%, which is closer to the lowest level of his term just two weeks before midterm polls.

USA TODAY poll: Democrats led 44%-40% against Republicans

Generic ballot (party names): The respondents support the Republican congressional candidate over the Democratic contestant by 49%-45%.

FIVE KEY STATES TO WATCH OUT FOR IN THE US SENATE RACE

Georgia: Democrat Raphael Warnock Vs Republican Herschel Walker
Pennsylvania: Democrat John Fetterman vs Republican Mehmet Oz
Arizona: Democrat Mark Kelly Vs Republican Blake Masters.
Nevada: Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto Vs Republican Adam Laxalt
Wisconsin: Democrat Mandela Barnes Vs Republican Senator Ron Johnson


All US House seats and 34 Senate seats are up for grabs this November, and the results will decide what kind of laws will get passed for the remaining president Joe Biden’s term.

Let's deep dive into finding answers to fundamental questions thrown around during election season in the United States of America. What are midterm elections, when to vote, how is US Senate race assessed, who is up for election, citizens' opinions and a lot more.


TRUMP IS ACTIVELY PLOTTING TO STEAL THE MIDTERM ELECTIONS (AND THE NEXT PRESIDENTIAL ONE)

  Per  Rolling Stone,  Trump has convened lawyers and advisers to scheme how to challenge the results in November if they don’t go his way. ...