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My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.



October 17, 2024

Day of love????

Trump calls 6 January US Capitol riot a 'day of love'

James FitzGerald

Donald Trump has described the US Capitol riot of 6 January 2021 as a "day of love" during a campaign event just weeks before the presidential election.

The former president claimed the thousands who travelled to Washington DC that day did so because “they thought the election was a rigged election”.

On 6 January, a mob breached the US Capitol building in an effort to deny the certification of Joe Biden's election win, forcing lawmakers to flee. Several deaths, including that of a police officer, have been attributed to the events that day.

Trump has spent years making false claims that the vote was rigged. The event continues to divide America.

During his "town hall" event in Miami, Florida, Trump was challenged to win back the vote of a man who said he had been disturbed by what happened after the Republican lost the 2020 vote.

"Nothing done wrong at all," Trump said in a lengthy response.

"There were no guns down there. We didn’t have guns. The others had guns, but we didn’t have guns. And when I say we, these are people that walked down — this was a tiny percentage of the overall which nobody sees and nobody, nobody shows. But that was a day of love."

He recalled addressing a group of "hundreds of thousands" during a speech elsewhere in Washington DC.

"They didn't come because of me," he went on. "They came because of the election. They thought the election was a rigged election, and that's why they came."

Trump has been accused of criminal efforts to overturn his defeat, which were recently described in detail in a filing from the federal prosecutor investigating him.

Among the claims made by Special Counsel Jack Smith were that Trump planned to declare victory in the 2020 vote no matter the outcome, and that he laid the groundwork for challenging the vote ahead of election day.

Mr Smith also detailed how Trump fell out with Mike Pence, his vice-president who refused to join his boss in attempting to deny Biden his election win as Trump supporters gathered in Washington on 6 January 2021.

During the Univision broadcast, the voter questioned why he should support Trump when even his former vice-president, Mike Pence, was not backing him this year.

Alluding to Pence's refusal to comply with Trump's demands on 6 January, he said: "The vice-president - I disagree with him on what he did. I totally disagreed with him on what he did."
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The special counsel's legal filing against Trump that was released earlier this month stated that the then-president "made clear that he expected his supporters to take action". Trump is also accused of seeking to "exploit the violence and chaos".

Trump will not be tried ahead of the 2024 vote. He denies wrongdoing, and says he is immune from prosecution over the events of 2021.

He points to a recent US Supreme Court ruling that said he could not be prosecuted for official acts undertaken when he was president.

During Wednesday's event with Univision, Trump also stood by false claims that immigrants from Haiti had turned to eating pets in the town of Springfield, Ohio - claiming he "was just saying what was reported".

Both campaigns have been making intensive media appearances ahead of the 5 November vote, which pits Trump against the Democratic nominee, Kamala Harris.

Meanwhile on Wednesday, Harris made a combative first appearance on Fox News - a network that hosts some of her most vocal critics.

Underground....

US bombers target underground Houthi weapon sites in Yemen

Nathan Williams

The US says it has carried out "precision strikes" against five weapons storage locations in areas of Yemen controlled by the Houthi movement.

Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said B-2 Spirit stealth bombers were part of the operation that targeted hardened underground facilities housing missiles and other munitions that the Iran-backed group had used to attack civilian and military ships.

The strikes demonstrated the ability of the US to hit facilities that adversaries sought "to keep out of reach", he added.

Houthi-run Al-Masirah TV said the strikes targeted six areas in and around the capital, Sanaa, and two near the northern city of Saada. It did not report any casualties.

US Central Command, which oversees US military operations in the Middle East, also said there were no initial indications of civilian casualties from the strikes.

Several of those areas mentioned by Al-Masirah host military bases where analysts have said satellite imagery showed the Houthis were creating or enlarging underground facilities, including the Television area in the north of Sanaa and al-Hafa to the south-east.

Mohammed al-Bukhaiti, a Houthi political official, wrote on X that the attacks would “only increase our determination to continue our military operations in support of Gaza”.

The Houthis have repeatedly targeted commercial shipping in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden since November 2023. They have sunk two vessels, seized a third of targeted ships and killed crew members.

They say they are acting in support of the Palestinians in the war between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip. They have claimed - often falsely - that they are targeting ships only linked to Israel, the US or the UK.

They have not been deterred by the deployment of Western warships to protect merchant vessels or by US and British air strikes on territory they control in north-western Yemen.

The Houthi attacks in the Red Sea have forced major shipping companies to avoid the Red Sea and the Suez Canal, impacting international trade.

Austin said in a statement: "At the direction of President Biden, I authorised these targeted strikes to further degrade the Houthis' capability to continue their destabilising behaviour and to protect and defend US forces and personnel in one of the world's most critical waterways."

He added that the US would "continue to make it clear" to the Houthis that there would be "consequences for their illegal and reckless attacks".

In September, the Pentagon said the Houthis had launched "a complex attack" on US Navy ships in the region, though all of the weapons launched were shot down.

As well as the attacks on ships in the Red Sea, the Houthis have fired several missiles and drones at Israel directly.

In July, a drone launched from Yemen struck Tel Aviv, killing one person. In September, the group fired several missiles at Israel, including one that targeted Israel's main airport.

Both times Israel responded by attacking sites in Houthi-controlled Yemen, including fuel tanks and other infrastructure at the Red Sea port of Hudaydah.

The Houthis are part of a network of armed groups in the Middle East backed by Iran that includes Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.

Four takeaways

Four takeaways from Harris's combative first Fox interview

Max Matza

Democratic US presidential nominee Kamala Harris has conducted a combative first interview with Fox News.

She clashed repeatedly with her host on topics such as transgender prisoners, illegal immigration and President Joe Biden’s mental fitness.

Harris's foray on to a network that hosts some of her most vocal critics comes amid a flurry of media appearances with less than three weeks to go to polling day.

Her rival Donald Trump, a frequent interviewee on Fox, appeared on the network on Wednesday himself - in a town hall-style event with an all-female audience.

Polls suggest that, taken as a whole, women voters are sceptical of the former president, who took questions on familiar issues such as the economy and immigration but stumbled when asked about fertility treatment.

During her own 25-minute sit-down, Harris and Fox host Bret Baier often interrupted each other, with Harris at one point saying: “I’m in the middle of responding to the point you’re raising and I’d like to finish.”

Here are four takeaways.

1) Harris challenged to apologise

The vice-president's Fox interview began on the subject of immigration, with Baier playing her an emotional clip showing the mother of Jocelyn Nungaray, a 12-year-old girl killed by a migrant who had illegally crossed the border into the US and was released from detention.

Asked whether she should apologise to the families of Americans who were killed by illegal migrants, Harris responded: "I'm so sorry for her loss."

“Those are tragic cases,” she added. “There’s no question about that."

Baier also asked about her 2019 stance that border crossings should be decriminalised. This is one of several issues where the vice-president has been accused of flip-flopping.

Harris said: “I do not believe in decriminalising border crossings and I have not done that as vice-president, and I would not do that as president.”

She went on to blame Trump for persuading Republicans in Congress to vote down a border deal earlier this year, saying: "He preferred to run on a problem instead of fixing a problem."
  • US election polls: Who is ahead - Harris or Trump?
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2) Questions on gender surgery for prisoners

Harris was asked about taxpayer-funded gender reassignment surgery for prisoners, a policy she has in the past said she supports.

Asked if she would as president advocate for taxpayer dollars to be used to that end, she responded: "I will follow the law."

When pressed for more details, she said such surgeries had been available to prisoners while Trump was in office. However, no transgender surgeries took place in the federal prison system while Trump was president.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons told BBC Verify that two federal inmates have had gender reassignment operations - the first in 2022 and the second in 2023.

When Harris was running as a Democratic candidate for president in 2019, she checked a box in a questionnaire from a civil rights group saying that as president, she would use her authority to ensure that transgender-identifying detainees in prison and immigration facilities would have access to "treatment associated with gender transition, including all necessary surgical care".

The Harris campaign has said this “is not what she is proposing or running on” in the 2024 election.

3) Vice-president tries to distance herself from Biden

Fox played a clip from an interview Harris gave last week saying that there's "not a thing" she would change about the actions of the current Biden-Harris administration, in which she serves as vice-president.

She went further than she has gone before in trying to place some distance between herself and her boss.

"Let me be very clear, my presidency will not be a continuation of Joe Biden's presidency," she said on Wednesday, without elaborating.

Baier pressed Harris on her belief that American voters do not want to "go back" to Trump, and whether people that continue to support the former president are "stupid" or "misinformed".

"I would never say that about the American people," Harris responded.

Baier also pressed her on why one of her campaign promises is to “turn the page” when she has been vice-president for more than three years.

Harris turned to criticising Trump.

4) Harris sidesteps question on Biden mental state

Harris deflected questions from Baier concerning Biden's mental state.

Asked when she first noticed that Biden's mental faculties "appeared diminished", Harris said: "Joe Biden, I have watched in from the Oval Office to the Situation Room, and he has the judgment... and experience to do exactly what he has done in making very important decisions on behalf of the American people."

When pressed further on the issue, Harris responded: "Joe Biden is not on the ballot, and Donald Trump is."

Just kill it...

NASA is planning to give the beleaguered Boeing Starliner another shot at space — in late 2025

Story by abharade

NASA has released the schedule for its commercial launches in 2025, and the Boeing Starliner is slated to get another chance at spaceflight.

In a blog post on Tuesday, the agency listed the "Next Starliner Flight" as the last of its three launches in its 2025 schedule.

But it added that the spacecraft's next flight dates will be released after "Crew Flight Test lessons" are incorporated into the aircraft and NASA approves its "operational readiness."

"The timing and configuration of Starliner's next flight will be determined once a better understanding of Boeing's path to system certification is established," the blog post said.

"Meanwhile, NASA is keeping options on the table for how best to achieve system certification, including windows of opportunity for a potential Starliner flight in 2025," it added.

The first planned launch of 2025 will be the SpaceX Crew-10 mission. NASA said in its blog post that the agency is now targeting a launch "no earlier than February 2025."

According to the post, NASA astronauts Anne McClain and Nichole Ayers, along with astronauts from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and Russia's Roscosmos, will be on the mission.

The second slot of the year has been reserved for the SpaceX Crew-11 mission, which will take place "no earlier than July," the post added. The four-person crew of the Crew-11 mission will be revealed at a later date.

Hope for Starliner

The Boeing Starliner, which returned to New Mexico on September 6 without its crew, suffered several issues with its thrusters and helium leaks as it approached the International Space Station on June 6 to dock.

The difficulties resulted in the delay in the return of its crew — the two NASA astronauts, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams. NASA said it decided to "prioritize safety and return Starliner without its crew."

The agency has now turned to SpaceX to bring Wilmore and Williams back to Earth. The duo are scheduled to return via the SpaceX Crew Dragon in February 2025.

SpaceX and Boeing's competition continues

The two companies have been in the commercial space exploration race since they both won highly sought-after NASA contracts totaling $6.8 billion in 2014.

According to NASA's 2014 press release, Boeing and SpaceX were allotted $4.2 billion and $2.6 billion, respectively.

The contracts were part of NASA's public-private partnership, the Commercial Crew Program.

Following the Starliner's successful launch in June, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said that his space exploration company had beat Boeing to the punch four years before.

In 2020, SpaceX surged ahead of Boeing in the space race when it became the first private company to fly astronauts to space.

Musk brought that win up in an X post about Starliner in May, writing: "SpaceX finished 4 years sooner."

Now, Musk is accusing the Federal Aviation Administration of playing favorites with Boeing.

In September, he wrote on X that the FAA should punish Boeing for its Starliner failures rather than impose "petty" fines on SpaceX.

This was after the FAA proposed a $633,009 fine for SpaceX, saying that Musk's company had violated the terms of its launch licenses during two launches in June and July 2023.

Representatives for NASA didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, sent outside business hours.

Struggles to Answer

Donald Trump Struggles to Answer Tough Questions in Univision Town Hall

Story by Ewan Palmer

Former President Donald Trump avoided directly answering a series of questions about his previous actions or 2024 campaign pledges during a Univision town hall on Wednesday.

At the event, the Republican presidential nominee took questions from an audience of undecided Latino voters in Miami, discussing issues such as the January 6 attack, immigration and abortion.

However, Trump did not go into specifics on a number of the topics that audience members raised, and he avoided some issues altogether.

The Univision event was a chance for Trump to appeal to Latino and Hispanic voters, a potentially crucial voting bloc in swing states such as Nevada and Arizona.

A recent New York Times/Siena College poll found that 56 percent of Hispanic voters said they would vote for Vice President Kamala Harris, with 37 percent saying they would vote for Trump. In 2020, Joe Biden won the support of 65 percent of Latino voters, compared to 32 percent for Trump, according to a CNN exit poll.

Newsweek has contacted Trump's campaign team for comment via email.

One voter at the town hall, who identified as an unregistered Republican, told Trump, "Your action, and maybe inaction, during your presidency and the last few years was a little disturbing to me."

The voter cited Trump's responses to the January 6 attack on the Capitol and the coronavirus pandemic as examples.

He then noted how many past members of Trump's administration, including former Vice President Mike Pence, who no longer support the Republican's White House bid, adding, "So why would I want to support you?"

Trump replied that only "a very small portion" of people in his previous administration no longer supported him. He also downplayed the Capitol riot and suggested it was a "day of love."

"You had hundreds of thousands of people come to Washington. They didn't come because of me. They came because of the election. They thought the election was a rigged election, and that's why they came," Trump said. "Some of those people went down to the Capitol. I said, 'Peacefully and patriotically.' Nothing done wrong at all."

Trump added that many voters, including those in the Latino community, would support him in November. "Maybe we'll get your vote," he said. "Sounds like maybe I won't, but that's OK, too."

A voter who said he had worked for many years picking strawberries and cutting broccoli, a job he said was mainly done by undocumented migrants, asked Trump, "If you deport these people, who would do that job, and what price would we pay for food?"

Trump again did not directly answer the question, replying: "Farmers are doing very badly right now—very, very badly under this administration. Under my administration, farmers did very well."

The former president then criticized the Biden administration, which he said had allowed "hundreds of thousands of people that are murderers, drug dealers, terrorists" into the country.

"We want workers, and we want them to come in, but they have to come in legally. They have to love our country. They have to love you, love our people. The problem with this administration is, they've totally lost control," Trump said, adding, "We want people to come in, but we don't want murderers."

Another voter asked why Trump had used his influence earlier this year to tell Republican lawmakers to kill a bipartisan border security bill that sought to crack down on illegal migration and reduce border crossings.

"You like strong borders, so do I, and we have them," Trump said. "We had the strongest border we've ever had in the recorded history of our country." Trump then went on to discuss the crime rate in Chicago, criticizing Democratic Mayor Brandon Johnson.

When asked whether he agreed with his wife, former first lady Melania Trump, on the importance of protecting the right to abortion access—a view she expressed in her soon-to-be-published memoir—Trump said that his wife had "to go with her heart."

"I wouldn't want to impose what I think," he added.

Elsewhere in the event, an audience member asked Trump to name three virtues he saw in Harris.

Though he said the question was the "toughest" one of the night, Trump offered some praise for the vice president.

"I'm not a fan. I think she's harmed our country horribly, horribly—at the border, with inflation, with so many other things," Trump said.

He continued: "But she seems to have an ability to survive, because, you know, she was out of the race, and all of a sudden she's running for president. That's a great ability that some people have and some people don't have.

"She seems to have some pretty longtime friendships … I call that a good thing, and she seems to have a nice way about her."

Harris received a similar question on Trump's virtues during her Univision town hall in Las Vegas on October 10.

"I think Donald Trump loves his family, and I think that's very important. I think family is one of the most important things that we can prioritize," Harris said.

She added: "But I don't really know him, to be honest with you. I only met him one time, on the debate stage. I've never met him before, so I don't really have much more to offer you."

Rammed home her talking points

Harris clashes with Fox as she tries to peel away some GOP voters

Analysis by Stephen Collinson

Kamala Harris didn’t get her second debate with Donald Trump — so she went on Fox News instead.

The vice president clashed heatedly with the pro-Trump network’s top anchor Bret Baier on Wednesday night in the kind of adversarial, unscripted scrum that Republicans have long accused her of avoiding.

Harris and Baier squabbled and interrupted one another, as he exposed her policy flip flops and reversals and she rammed home her talking points. The contentious clash, conducted in swing state Pennsylvania, had more in common with the vice president’s sole debate showdown with the former president than forensic, formal interviews where she’s often stumbled.

“May I please finish, you have to let me finish,” Harris said early in the interview, using a technique she has employed against male rivals in congressional hearings and debates in the past.

The vice president’s trip to Fox News showed how she’s trying to conjure new turning points in a contest with no clear leader and with most swing states regarded as toss-ups. Trump’s decision to decline a second debate with his rival has meant that the final weeks of the campaign lack big scheduled moments that could change the race.

In the end, on Wednesday, both Harris and Fox News probably got what they wanted.

The vice president looked combative after daring to walk into the conservative media lair and struck a contrast with Trump, who is largely avoiding television news interviews in which he will be cross-examined. She singled out his extreme rhetoric and threats to use the military on “enemies from within” — in a way the channel’s viewers rarely see. Her performance bolstered her new campaign tactic of raising fresh alarm about a second Trump term that she said in a speech earlier Wednesday would see the ex-president sit in the Oval Office “plotting retribution, stew in his own grievances and think only about himself and not you.”

Harris also did some damage control after saying in an interview last week that there wasn’t much she would have done differently from the unpopular commander in chief over the past four years. “My presidency will not be a continuation of Joe Biden’s presidency,” Harris said. “Like every new president that comes into office, I will bring my life experiences and my professional experiences and fresh and new ideas.”

Fox, meanwhile, got hours of post-interview content for its commentators. Its post-debate analysis, for instance, seized on Harris’ non-answer to one of Trump’s charges — how many undocumented migrants let into the country on her watch. As the network spooled highlights of the interview, it ran a chyron that read “Kamala continues her tirade against Trump.” Baier pressed Harris on issues important to the conservative audience, including tragedies of young American women murdered by undocumented migrants — for whom the vice president expressed deep sympathy — and her previous support for using taxpayer dollars to fund gender-affirming care for transgender inmates, including undocumented immigrants. (She said she would follow the law on such policies as president).

And in case Harris changed the minds of any of its viewers, Fox followed her appearance with searing rebuttals from Trump’s older sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, and his former ultra-hardline political adviser Stephen Miller.

The tightrope that Harris was walking as she sought to show steel and presidential mettle was evident from critiques of her performance on social media that often played into tropes directed at strong, Black women.

But before the interview, Harris spokesman Ian Sams explained her thinking. He noted Fox’s high ratings include some undecided voters and Democrats. And he said that Harris wanted those viewers to hear from her directly.

Another day of courting distinct voting blocs

The Fox interview capped another day Harris used to try to peel away potentially small numbers of voters who could make a difference in tightly fought battlegrounds less than three weeks before the neck-and-neck election.

After courting Black male voters on Tuesday, she traveled to the Keystone State to try and appeal to Republicans who are disaffected with Trump’s anti-democratic behavior. Appearing with Republican former lawmakers and officials driven out of their party by Trump, the vice president noted that finding her in such company would normally be surprising.

But she added, “Not in this election, because at stake in this race are the democratic ideas that our founders and generations of Americans before us have fought for. At stake in this election is the Constitution of the United States.”

Democrats believe there may be significant numbers of GOP voters, including some who voted for former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley in the Republican primary, who could be persuaded to vote for Harris next month. If only a few thousand Fox viewers or traditional conservatives swapped sides, it could push some swing states in the vice president’s direction. Still, the risk for Harris is that her display in her first formal Fox interview could alienate some of those voters. And the 100 or so Republicans who appeared with her on Wednesday in Bucks County, a critical Philadelphia suburb, in many cases represented the GOP’s past — left behind in the populist transformation engineered by Trump.

Trump plays into Harris’ claims he’s unhinged

At that Pennsylvania rally, Harris reinforced her newly tough tone against Trump, blasting him as “increasingly unstable and unhinged.” She’s also been raising questions about his age and faculties – turning the tables on the 78-year-old ex-president who often used the same strategy against Biden when he was in the race.

In many of his recent appearances, Trump has seemed to play into Harris’ claims. On Wednesday, for instance, he doubled down on his false claims that Haitian migrants were eating cats and dogs in Ohio. He said in a Univision town hall with undecided Latino voters that the refugees, who are in the country legally, were “eating other things too that they’re not supposed to be.”

The Republican nominee also proclaimed himself “the father of IVF” in his latest attempt to distance himself from the chaos in women’s reproductive health after the Supreme Court’s conservative majority, which he built, overturned the constitutional nationwide right to an abortion. Harris later told reporters that the comment was “bizarre,” as she seeks to use subsequent state-level abortion restrictions to widen the gender gap that could help her beat Trump.

And as Democrats increasingly highlight the perceived threat to American democracy from Trump, the Republican vice presidential nominee, Sen. JD Vance, insisted that the former president did not lose the last election. “I’ve answered this question directly a million times: No. I think there are serious problems in 2020,” the Ohio Republican said. “So, did Donald Trump lose the election? Not by the words that I would use, OK?”

Trump, meanwhile, insisted in a Univision town hall, that January 6, 2021 – one of the most notorious days in American history – was a “day of love” and that there was “nothing done wrong at all.”

Any one of Trump’s recent comments would have disqualified a conventional candidate. But it is a mark of how he’s transformed American politics that his support base is impervious to scandalous or outlandish behavior.

And there is no doubt that Trump, for all his crudeness and tearing at the constraints meant to rein in demagogic leaders, is the authentic voice of tens of millions of Americans.

Harris is also hampered by a daunting political environment. She’s a member of an unpopular administration at a time when many Americans are still feeling the after effects of the high inflation that the White House often downplayed and are frustrated by still high prices for rent, cars and groceries.

It’s taken her several months to arrive at the assurance that she’d strike a strong contrast with Biden’s administration, which she unveiled in the Fox interview. In itself, that’s a reflection of her struggles as a presidential candidate. And her difficulty at the start of the Fox interview to effectively parry some of Baier’s questions on immigration showed that the issue remains a weakness and may be a significant impediment to her efforts to win over GOP defectors.

Still, the fact she braved the interview at all might help her with undecided voters. And if nothing else, her appearance served to highlight how the conservative media machine and Trump’s are all but indistinguishable from one another.

Eviscerates Ted Cruz.........

UC Berkeley law grad eviscerates Ted Cruz in Texas Senate debate

By Alec Regimbal

Rep. Colin Allred, a UC Berkeley law grad who’s running to unseat Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, met his opponent on the debate stage for the first time Tuesday, and it was a spicy affair.

Allred, a Democrat who represents Dallas and neighboring suburbs in the U.S. House of Representatives, zinged the Republican Cruz on issues including abortion, insulin prices and the two-term senator’s refusal to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election for Joe Biden.

In perhaps the most memorable moment of the night, Allred — a former NFL linebacker for the Tennessee Titans — contrasted his actions with Cruz’s when a mob of former President Donald Trump’s supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 6, 2021, to prevent lawmakers from certifying Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential election win.

“I took off my suit jacket, and I was prepared to defend the House floor from the mob,” he said. “At the same time, after [Cruz] had gone around the country lying about the election, after he’d been the architect of the attempt to overthrow that election, when that mob came, Sen. Cruz was hiding in a supply closet.”

Cruz laughed and shook his head in response to the barb, despite admitting in a 2022 book that he did, in fact, get into a supply closet with some colleagues after violence broke out.

Another uncomfortable moment for Cruz came when Allred took him to task over capping the cost of insulin, which included a jab about Cruz’s decision to vacation with his family in Cancún in 2021 as Texas residents dealt with the effects of a devastating winter storm.

“One in four Americans are rationing their insulin,” Allred said. “Do you know what rationing your insulin means? It means you’re not taking the medication you need to survive. And so we said, ‘Let’s make sure that this is affordable.’ I was willing to do it and voted for it. Sen. Cruz voted against it.”

He continued: “It’s not surprising. He’s also one of the biggest recipients of campaign donations from big pharma lobbyists in the entire United States Senate. It’s true. But this is a pattern. This is somebody who goes to the Ritz Carlton in Cancún. Do you really think he cares about inflation, and about working families?”

According to Open Secrets, Cruz received the fourth largest donation amount from pharmaceutical companies among senators in the 2016 election cycle. He has not been one of the top 20 recipients since then, Open Secrets’ website says.

Allred also excoriated Cruz for his stance on abortion, saying it doesn’t amount to being “pro-life.” Texas enacted one of the strictest abortion laws in the U.S. after the Supreme Court ruled to overturn Roe v. Wade in 2022, a decision Cruz applauded.

“I want to be very clear to the people of Texas: I support the protections, and the restrictions, under Roe,” Allred said. “But Sen. Cruz just called himself pro-life. You’re not. You’re not pro-life. It’s not pro-life to deny women care so long that they can’t have children any more. It’s not pro-life to force a victim of rape to carry their rapist’s baby.”

Allred’s performance is sure to energize Democrats, who are facing a tough battle to maintain their thin majority in the upper house. Of the 34 Senate seats up for grabs this year, only 11 are held by Republicans. That means Democrats will need to defend seats in several battleground areas like Nevada and Pennsylvania, but they’re also hoping to pick up seats in purple states.

While Texas has been a GOP stronghold for the past few decades, Cruz, a longtime Democratic boogeyman, is seen as one of the more vulnerable Republicans up for reelection. Though Cruz is currently leading in polls by 4%, he has more to lose by agreeing to a debate and providing his opponent a statewide platform.

However, Adam Sterling, the executive director of the Berkeley Center for Law and Business at the university’s law school — and a friend of Allred’s — said Cruz and his team likely underestimated Allred.

“There’s the expectations game,” Sterling said. “Sen. Cruz is an intelligent man, and I think that his reputation has always been that he’s a strong debater. … Colin probably exceeded expectations in his performance.”

As for Allred’s chances, Sterling contrasted his platform with that of Beto O’Rourke, the former Democratic Texas congressman who lost his bid to unseat Cruz in 2018 by about 215,000 votes despite garnering national attention. Sterling said, at that time, O’Rourke seemed more focused on national politics than state politics (O’Rourke kicked off a bid for president in the 2020 presidential primary, but dropped out in 2019).

This time, Sterling said that script has been reversed. He said Allred is more focused on Texas, whereas Cruz appears to be parroting national Republican talking points — evidenced in part by his attacks against transgender people.

“I think Colin just did an incredible job of speaking to the voters directly,” Sterling said, adding that he was struck by Allred’s attacks against Cruz’s “showboating” on trips to the southern border. “Colin was more able to speak directly, he spoke directly to the camera, bringing it to individuals in Texas.”

Ceding the argument

Kamala Harris and the problem with ceding the argument

The vice president had a chance to defend immigrants on Fox News. She passed.

by Christian Paz

Fox News was never going to be a friendly venue for Vice President Kamala Harris. In an appearance on Special Report With Bret Baier, she was asked about some of the American right’s top fascinations and talking points: gender-affirming surgeries, Joe Biden’s mental acuity, the prospect of war with Iran. And — of course — she got tough questions about immigration policy and the southern border.

It was in answering those questions that Harris demonstrated how much the Democratic Party is moving right — toward the ideological center on immigration — under the banner of her candidacy.

She chose not to defend the virtue of immigration, or of immigrants themselves, and continued to cede the playing field to the right. There were no references to the nation’s immigrant roots or the value of those immigrants (here legally or not) that Baier kept asking about. And there was no condemnation of Donald Trump’s stated plans for mass deportations of undocumented immigrants. She didn’t mention it, even as he pitches invoking archaic laws to round up and deport millions of people living in the United States.

Instead, Harris used the interview to further distance herself from her past and her party’s left flank on immigration. Did she regret the immigrant-friendly positions she took in 2019 to allow undocumented immigrants to apply for driver’s licenses, qualify for free tuition at some universities, or obtain public health insurance under a universal plan?

Not no.

“Listen, that was five years ago, and I’m very clear that I will follow the law. I have made that statement over and over again,” Harris responded.

If so, Baier followed up, why did she select a running mate, Gov. Tim Walz, who signed some of those same proposals into state law in Minnesota?

Harris paused before saying that her ticket is “very clear that we must support and enforce federal law and that is exactly what we will do.”

And so the pattern repeated itself: Given opportunities to defend migrants in the face of classic right-wing fearmongering (as when she was asked about “single adult men who went on to commit heinous crimes”), Harris would cede the premise and pivot to the bipartisan border bill Biden proposed earlier this year that Trump helped tank. She did the same when asked if she regretted the Biden administration’s repeal of Trump-era executive orders restricting immigration — citing a bill the White House proposed that she said would’ve “fixed our immigration system.” But she omitted that it also would have provided a pathway to citizenship for certain undocumented immigrants already living in the US.

This all continues a trend for Harris. Just last week, at a town hall hosted by the Spanish-language media network Univision, Harris was twice presented with opportunities to invoke and condemn Trump’s mass deportation plans when speaking to attendees who had family who were deported or unable to get health care because they lacked legal status. She passed on that chance, instead referencing her past support for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program recipients before pivoting to talk about reviving the bipartisan border bill.

And since becoming the nominee and headlining a national party convention that tended to reference immigration in the context of needing more hardline border policies, she’s continued to push for a bipartisan border bill that many progressive and liberal immigration advocacy groups and members of her own party don’t support. Those critics are still biting their tongues — pointing out the need to unite to win the election and keep a roundly anti-immigrant Trump from controlling the executive branch — but that truce will only hold as far as November 5.

Supreme Court keeps refusing to decide

The strange case that the Supreme Court keeps refusing to decide

A mysterious Supreme Court case could change everything about criminal punishment.

by Ian Millhiser

For more than a year, Joseph Clifton Smith, a man who says he is intellectually disabled, has sat on death row, waiting to find out if the Supreme Court will greenlight his execution.

Smith’s case, known as Hamm v. Smith, first arrived on the Court’s doorstep in August 2023. Since then, the justices have met more than two dozen times to decide what to do about the case, and each time they’ve put the decision off until a future meeting.

No one outside of the Court can know for sure why the justices keep delaying, but if you follow the Court’s Eighth Amendment cases closely, it’s easy to see how the Hamm case could open up all kinds of internal rifts among the justices.

The Eighth Amendment, which has a vague ban on “cruel and unusual punishments,” is at the center of the Hamm case because, for decades, the Court has held this amendment forbids executions of intellectually disabled offenders (and offenders who commit a crime while they are juveniles). The idea is that both groups have diminished mental capacity, at least as compared to non-disabled adults, and thus bear less moral responsibility even for homicide crimes.

That idea, however, has long been contested by the Court’s various ideological factions, and the Hamm case potentially reopens up all of the Court’s issues with the amendment at once. Indeed, in the worst-case scenario for criminal defendants, the justices could potentially overrule more than 60 years of precedents protecting against excessive punishments.

This Supreme Court’s ongoing battles over the Eighth Amendment, briefly explained

In two 2000s decisions, Atkins v. Virginia (2002) and Roper v. Simmons (2005), a coalition of Democratic and moderate Republican justices handed down decisions that barred youths and people who are intellectually disabled from being executed. Those majority decisions came down over bitter dissents from the Court’s right flank — the same right flank that has since gained a supermajority on the Supreme Court.

At least some of the current Court’s Republicans seem eager to use their newfound supermajority to blow up those two cases (and pretty much everything the Court has said about the Eighth Amendment in the last six or seven decades). So it’s possible that the Court is fighting over what to do with the Hamm case because many of the justices want a wholesale revolution in Eighth Amendment law.

Beginning in the mid-20th century, the Supreme Court maintained that the Eighth Amendment “must draw its meaning from the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.” Thus, as a particular method of punishment grew less common, the Court was increasingly likely to declare it cruel and unusual in violation of the Constitution.

At least some members of the Court’s Republican majority, however, have suggested that this “evolving standards of decency” framework should be abandoned. In Bucklew v. Precythe (2019), the Court considered whether states could use execution methods that risked causing the dying inmate a great deal of pain. Justice Neil Gorsuch’s majority opinion, which held that potentially painful methods of execution are allowed, seems to exist in a completely different universe than the Court’s Eighth Amendment cases that look to evolving standards.

While the Court’s earlier opinions ask whether a particular form of punishment has fallen out of favor today, Gorsuch asked whether a method of punishment was out of favor at the time of the founding. Though his opinion does list some methods of execution, such as “disemboweling” and “burning alive” that violate the Eighth Amendment, Gorsuch wrote that these methods are unconstitutional because “by the time of the founding, these methods had long fallen out of use and so had become ‘unusual.’”

What makes Bucklew confusing, however, is that it didn’t explicitly overrule any of the previous decisions applying the evolving standards framework. So it’s unclear whether all five of the justices who joined that opinion share a desire to blow up more than a half-century of law, or if the justices who joined the Bucklew majority simply failed to rein in an overly ambitious opinion by Gorsuch, the Court’s most intellectually sloppy justice.

In any event, Hamm opens up at least two major potential divides within the Court. Smith says he is intellectually disabled; the state of Alabama wants to execute him anyway. So the case perfectly tees up a challenge to Atkins if a majority of the justices want to go there. Meanwhile, Bucklew looms like a vulture over any cruel and unusual punishment case heard by the Court, as it suggests that the Republican justices may hit the reset button on all of its Eighth Amendment precedents at any time.

So what is the specific legal issue in Hamm?

The Court receives thousands of petitions every year asking it to hear a particular appeal, and it typically only grants several dozen of these petitions. The vast majority of these cases are nominally discussed at one of the justices’ regular conferences, then promptly denied.

In recent years, the Court often discusses a case in two different conferences before agreeing to hear it — for this reason, I and other Supreme Court reporters often watch the list of cases the Court “relisted” for a second conference to identify cases the justices are more likely to hear. Occasionally, a case may be relisted for several conferences in a row. But this is rare, and typically is a sign either that the justices are negotiating over which issues they wish to decide in a particular case — or, more often, that a justice is dissenting from the Court’s decision not to hear a case and the “relists” are really just buying that justice time to draft an opinion.

Hamm, however, has now been relisted in every single conference since the justices first discussed it on October 27, 2023. That is, to say the least, highly unusual. And it suggests that some particularly bitter internal negotiations are ongoing. If someone were dissenting from the Court’s decision to turn the case away, they likely would have released that dissent last July, because the justices typically try to resolve loose ends before they go on their summer vacation.

Hamm involves a question that would inevitably arise once the Court decided Atkins — though it is unconstitutional to execute intellectually disabled offenders, there will always be some offenders who are on the borderline of what mental health professionals consider an intellectual disability. The specific question before the Court is what to do with these borderline cases.

As a general rule, someone must have an IQ of 70 or below to be considered intellectually disabled. But IQ tests aren’t particularly precise — as the Supreme Court acknowledged in Moore v. Texas (2017), the IQ of someone who scores 74 on a particular IQ test falls within “a range of 69 to 79.” So, if courts read IQ tests as if they can identify an offender’s IQ score exactly, an intellectually disabled person could be executed due to something as arbitrary as a measurement error.

Accordingly, the Court held in Hall v. Florida (2014) that a capital offender with an IQ score slightly above 70 must be given “the opportunity to present evidence of his intellectual disability, including deficits in adaptive functioning over his lifetime.” That is, such an offender must be allowed to present additional evidence beyond their IQ score to show that they are, in fact, intellectually disabled.

Hamm is such a case. Smith took five different IQ tests, four of which showed him with an IQ in the low to mid-70s. Accordingly, two lower courts looked at additional evidence of his disability, determined he is, in fact, intellectually disabled, and ruled that he must receive a sentence other than death.

In asking to execute Smith, in other words, Alabama is asking, among other things, that the Supreme Court overrule Moore and Hall, both cases that were handed down before former President Donald Trump remade the Court in the Federalist Society’s image. If the Court agrees, that alone would be a very significant legal development, both because it could allow intellectually disabled inmates to be executed due to a testing error, and because it would be a severe blow to stare decisis — the idea that judicial precedents shouldn’t be tossed out simply because the members of a court change.

Of course, this Court’s Republican majority has shown little regard for stare decisis, at least in cases that divide along partisan lines. Since Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation gave the Republican Party a supermajority on the Supreme Court in late 2020, the Court has behaved as if it was going down a checklist, overruling liberal victories such as the cases establishing a constitutional right to abortion or the line of cases permitting affirmative action in limited circumstances, and replacing them with whatever outcome the GOP prefers.

Yet, while this process has been painful for Democrats and toxic for the Court’s approval rating, it hasn’t been comprehensive — occasionally, one or more of the Republican justices signal that they will allow a previous liberal victory to remain in effect. Concurring in the Court’s decision to overrule Roe v. Wade, for example, Justice Brett Kavanaugh identified the Court’s past decisions protecting a right to contraception, as well as the right to marry a person of your own choosing, as cases he did not intend to overrule.

All of which is a long way of saying that there’s no good way to know if Atkins or Roper is on the Court’s checklist of past liberal decisions to be overruled. These justices’ approaches to specific cases are often idiosyncratic, unpredictable, and unbound by preexisting law — just look at the Republican justices’ recent decision holding that Trump was allowed to commit many crimes while he was in office. The question of whether Atkins survives or falls will turn on whether there are five justices who want intellectually disabled people to be executed, and nothing else.

But the fact Hamm has been relisted so many times suggests, at the very least, that there is a vocal faction within the Supreme Court that wants to use this case to aggressively reshape the law.

What can be made of Bucklew?

The other uncertainty looming over Hamm is the Bucklew decision, which didn’t so much overrule the Court’s last six decades of Eighth Amendment precedents as pretend that they didn’t exist.

Bucklew involved a death row inmate who claimed that the Eighth Amendment would not allow him to be executed using Missouri’s lethal injection protocol — he said he had an unusual medical condition that would cause him to experience extraordinary pain before his death. So the question was whether the Constitution allows a state to execute an inmate in a manner that may amount to torture.

Gorsuch’s opinion denying relief to this inmate reads like the Court’s “evolving standards of decency” framework never existed. This phrase appears nowhere in Gorsuch’s opinion, and the only citation to Trop v. Dulles (1958), the first Supreme Court case to use that phrase, appears in Justice Stephen Breyer’s dissent.

Rather than follow longstanding law, Gorsuch asked whether capital offenders could be subjected to similar pain “at the time of the framing.” This is the Eighth Amendment rule long favored by the Court’s rightmost flank, including in Justice Antonin Scalia’s dissenting opinion in Atkins.

Scalia’s Atkins dissent, moreover, doesn’t simply disagree with the Court’s past decisions. It lays out many examples of how the law would change — and how much easier it would be to subject even minor criminal offenders to outlandish punishments — under a framework that looks to how things worked in the 1790s.

For starters, Scalia argues that only “severely or profoundly” intellectually disabled people enjoy some protection against execution (he argues these individuals were often “committed to civil confinement or made wards of the State” rather than being criminally punished). One of the sources Scalia cites suggests that only people with an IQ of 25 or below enjoy any constitutional protection.

More significantly, Scalia also argues that the Eighth Amendment only forbids “always-and-everywhere ‘cruel’ punishments, such as the rack and the thumbscrew,” and that it does not prohibit the government from imposing excessive punishments for minor crimes. Under Scalia’s framework, if the death penalty can constitutionally be applied to murderers (and he believes it can) then it can also be applied to shoplifters. If a rapist can be sentenced to life in prison, so too can a jaywalker.

Gorsuch’s Bucklew opinion elaborates on the sort of punishments that, under this originalist framework, are prohibited by the Eighth Amendment. He lists “dragging the prisoner to the place of execution, disemboweling, quartering, public dissection, and burning alive” as examples.

So there is a faction within the Supreme Court that would drastically shrink Americans’ constitutional protections against cruel and unusual punishment. This faction would allow more people to be executed. They would apparently eliminate any concern that punishments must be proportionate to the crime. And the kinds of punishments they do offer up as examples of impermissible sanctions are the kinds of things normally depicted in torture scenes from movies set in the Middle Ages.

Will five justices go there? It’s impossible to know. But that a total of five justices joined Gorsuch’s opinion in Bucklew suggests this faction could very well prevail — if and when the Court decides to take up Hamm.

Cruz is a loser.

Texas Democrats Are Trying the “Throw Ted Cruz in a Locker” Strategy

Cruz says his opponent Rep. Colin Allred is a liberal; Allred says Cruz is a loser.

Tim Murphy

One of the biggest moments from Tuesday’s US Senate debate in Texas was about high school sports. For months Sen. Ted Cruz and other Republicans have charged that Democratic Rep. Colin Allred wants to allow “boys in girls’ sports”—citing, among other things, a vote he cast last year against the Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act, which aimed to defund school sports programs that allowed transgender athletes to compete as a gender other than what they were assigned at birth. Republican outside groups have been spending almost unfathomable sums of money on this line of attack. A recent New York Times story found that they had spent at least $65 million on various anti-trans ads in key states. Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown alone has been targeted by $37 million in anti-trans attacks.

If you are a supporter of trans equality, the line about boys playing girls sports is not technically true, because it rests on a false and malicious premise—opponents are misgendering people who do compete. But everyone in either camp understands who and what this is about, and what exactly Republicans in Washington would like to do about it.

In the last week, Allred, a supporter of the Equality Act, which would ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity, has begun to push back in a more aggressive, though sometimes confusing, way. On Friday he responded to the deluge with a direct-to-camera ad in which he says he doesn’t support “boys in girls sports or any of this ridiculous stuff that Ted Cruz is saying.” And on Tuesday night, the former NFL linebacker used his past work experience to flip the issue back on Cruz. After Cruz unspooled a long list of votes where Allred appeared to show a troubling degree of support for trans rights, Allred shot back:

I stand here as a proxy for millions of Texans who are sick and tired of this act. When Cruz starts talking about teen sports, you gotta watch out because the only position he ever played was left out. I’m not trying to be mean, senator, but sit this one out please. Listen, I don’t support boys playing girls sports. I don’t. What I think is that folks should not be discriminated against. And what Sen. Cruz should try to explain to you is why he thinks they should. But ultimately what he’s trying to do is a little game called distraction, to distract you from his record of abandoning us when we need him most. Of not being here when we need him. That’s what he’s trying to do. And that’s why he’s spending so much time on this.

These, in a nutshell, are the two competing theories of what might now be the closest Senate race in the country: Cruz says Allred is a liberal; Allred says Cruz is a loser.

Allred, as my colleague Serena Lin reported earlier this month, is running a far different campaign than Beto O’Rourke did in 2018. O’Rourke was willing to say just about anything and go anywhere. Allred is a lot more cautious about his message, but spending a lot more money on television ads to get it out there. He is pushing a far more centrist set of policies when it comes to the federal government’s role on the southern border.

But Allred can also draw from an even richer list of things that Cruz has done in the last six years to piss people off. While Cruz returned to the subject of trans rights frequently during the debate, Allred spoke again and again about the inherent smallness of the man standing next to him—painting the junior senator as AWOL, a coward, and a lackey.

Twice at the debate, Allred brought up Cruz’s very specific whereabouts on January 6th, 2021, in what felt like an obvious attempt to emasculate the former Princeton debate champ. Here’s one of those moments:

The officers locked all the doors we barred the doors the president walks through to deliver the State of the Union with furniture that we usually use to hold paper, and I texted my wife Ally—who was seven months pregnant with our son Cameron and at home with our son Jordan, who wasn’t yet two—‘Whatever happens I love you.’ And I took off my suit jacket and I was prepared to defend the house floor from the mob. At the same time after he’d gone around the country lying about the election, after he’d been the architect of the attempt to overthrow that election, when that mob came, Senator Cruz was hiding in a Supply Closet. 

“And that’s okay—I don’t want him to get hurt by the mob, I really don’t,” Allred said with a smile. But, he added, “This election is accountability.”

Cruz shook his head during all of this, but Allred was correct: Cruz did hide out in a supply closet. In fact, the anecdote comes from Cruz’s own book, Justice Corrupted.

“He’s never there for us when we need him,” Allred said at another point, linking the insurrection to another infamous episode in Cruz-lore. “When the lights went out in the energy capital of the world, he went to Cancun. On January 6th, when a mob was storming the capital, he was hiding in a supply closet. And when the toughest border security bill in a generation came up in the United States Senate, he took it down. We don’t have to have a senator like this.”

As these exchanges make clear, this line of attack is not neatly partisan or left-right. Allred is hoping to appeal to at least some people who agree with Cruz on transgender equality. He needs the votes of some people who are demanding harsher policies on the southern border, and has adjusted his messaging accordingly. But above all, he is banking that Democrats might just flip this seat if enough people can put aside their differences, and agree on one thing: Ted Cruz is kind of a loser, right?