Tag Archives: The Big Lie

Pam Bondi, the 2020 election, Project 2025, and the Ku Klux Klan Act

Pam Bondi’s hearings start today.  She’s applying for the job of Attorney General: the lawyer for the United States.  Given the shifting loyalties and vindictive proclivities of the President-elect who has put her forward, every Senator has both an obligation and a very personal stake in ensuring that she understands who her prospective client is.

In that process, one piece of the Project 2025 playbook should be front and center.

There’s no shortage of material in the DOJ section of Project 2025. It calls outright for abolishing the independence of the FBI (and all other independent agencies), prosecuting DAs who use their prosecutorial discretion, enforcing an 1873 law against mailing abortion drugs, and on and on. It implies still more, with goals that would be well within elections-have-consequences bounds in responsible hands (including past Attorneys General of both parties), but deeply concerning in others.

But there’s one bit of Project 2025’s section on DOJ that hasn’t gotten anywhere near the attention it should.  On pp. 562-564, there’s a portion suggesting shifting responsibility for prosecuting election-related offenses from the DOJ’s Civil Rights Division (CRT) to the Criminal Division (CRM).

The problem here isn’t actually the suggestion to shift responsibility. As a factual matter, the authority to prosecute most election-related offenses, including most versions of the particular statute mentioned in the chapter, already lives where Project 2025 wants it to live (with CRM). The Project 2025 chapter seems to have gotten this wrong based on the author’s misunderstanding of a single out-of-context table

The problem here also isn’t the fact that when the Project 2025 chapter gives an example of the reason to “shift” to CRM, the example relates to a relitigation of the 2020 election.  I mean, it’s a problem we’re still fighting that fight, yes.  But it’s far from the biggest problem with the example.

The problem is that the particular example that the Project 2025 authors chose to make their point — the example they were aiming for as a paradigm case — is crazypants.  And Bondi should be asked whether she agrees with it.

In 2020, PA’s chief election official, the Secretary of the Commonwealth, sent guidance to counties saying that a voter showing up at the polls but listed on the books as voting absentee should vote a provisional ballot, not a regular ballot.  If the mail ballot counted, the provisional wouldn’t.  If the mail ballot didn’t count for some reason, but the voter was actually eligible, the provisional ballot should count.  One ballot counted and only one ballot counted, for one eligible voter.

Whether the Secretary’s guidance was correct is a matter of state law.  In 2024, in a slightly different context, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court endorsed the guidance’s approach.  But whether you agree or disagree with that interpretation, either way around, this is a fight about the meaning of state law.

And, to be clear, this is a state law fight about whether the ballot of an _eligible_ voter should be counted in the event of a procedural error (which might have been the state’s mistake).  Absolutely no part of this fight, under any reading of the guidance, even remotely suggests that an ineligible voter will be able to vote.

The Project 2025 chapter — in the example they chose to highlight as the paradigm case of DOJ enforcement — says that for issuing this guidance, the PA official “should have been (and still should be) investigated and prosecuted”  (emphasis added).  For conspiring to deprive Pennsylvanians of their civil rights UNDER THE KU KLUX KLAN ACT  (emphasis emphatically added.)

It’s worth saying again. The Project 2025 chapter thinks that a matter of heartland federal prosecution is that the DOJ should send a state official to prison — under the Klan Act — based on a disagreement about whether state law allows an eligible voter to cast a ballot that will be counted. When the state official was trying to ENfranchise the voter.

The reason this case hasn’t been prosecuted isn’t because the authority is with the wrong DOJ division.  The reason this case hasn’t been prosecuted is because that prosecution would be insane. I know plenty of conservative federal prosecutors who take their oaths of office quite seriously. I don’t know one who would think this case is proper.

This is an unrecognizable criminal prosecution.  So much so that it’s hard to describe how out of bounds this suggestion is.  The best I can do is a bad balls-and-strikes metaphor. 

Some legal arguments are strikes.  Some are balls.  (And sometimes the line between depends on the judge.)

Some are wild pitches.

This one is a pitcher completely ignoring the plate and the batter, and trying to fire a fastball as hard as he can directly into the face of a spectator in the stands.

And over the next two days, Pam Bondi should be asked whether she agrees that this is a valid use of DOJ authority.

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“Election denialism has staying power even after Trump’s win”

A States Newsroom report on the continuing attempt to blame election losses on nefarious mysterious misconduct rather than … more valid votes being cast for someone else. 

For those claiming conspiracy, I continue to wonder at how they explain the remarkably narrow focus of the alleged fraudsters, to rig just one statewide election (U.S. Senate, state Supreme Court, etc.), but mysteriously ignore all of the other races in the state.

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“Jenna Ellis, Former Trump Lawyer, Will Cooperate in Arizona Election Fraud Case”

N.Y. Times: Ellis is one of 18 individuals charged by Arizona for their involvement in efforts to overturn Arizona’s election results in 2020. Arizona agreed to drop nine fraud, forgery, and conspiracy charges in exchange for her cooperation and truthful testimony. She is the first of the 18 defendants to accept a plea. Ellis has pled guilty to a felony in Georgia and faces additional charges in Wisconsin and Michigan.

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“Trump Says Georgia’s Governor Is Hampering His Efforts to Win There”

NY Times:

Former President Donald J. Trump suggested without evidence on Saturday that Georgia’s Republican governor was hampering his efforts to win the battleground state in November, a claim that carried echoes of Mr. Trump’s attempt to overturn his defeat to President Biden there in 2020….

At a rally at the Georgia State University Convocation Center in Atlanta, in a speech that lasted more than 90 minutes and that was peppered with grievances about his loss four years ago, Mr. Trump falsely claimed, “I won this state twice,” referring to the 2016 and 2020 elections.

Mr. Trump lost to Mr. Biden by roughly 12,000 votes in Georgia in 2020. Last year, the former president was indicted by an Atlanta grand jury on charges related to his efforts to subvert the results of that election in that state. On Saturday, he complained that he might have avoided legal jeopardy if Mr. Kemp and Mr. Raffensperger had cooperated with his attempts to reverse the 2020 results.

Update:  Greg Bluestein posts the statement of a bipartisan group of two former governors, a senator, and a mayor:  “Trump’s remarks today completely – and intentionally – undermine confidence in our elections. This type of baseless rhetoric is harmful to the protection of our democratic process and future of this great nation.”

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“Trump pledged to pardon Jan. 6 rioters. He faces pressure to name names.”

An excerpt from the WaPo piece about the law-and-order candidate:

Trump has steadily escalated his glorification of Jan. 6 defendants, often known in the MAGA movement as “J6ers,” describing them as hostages and patriots who have been mistreated. After his conviction in New York on 34 counts of falsifying business records, Trump proudly adopted the term “political prisoner” for himself.

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“2020’s ‘fake elector’ schemes will be harder to try in 2024 – but not impossible”

Derek Muller, for The Conversation, recounts some of the ways that both the law and enforcement have changed in the last four years.

Speaking of which, Wisconsin Public Radio reports that an attorney charged last week in the Wisconsin false-elector scheme has been temporarily suspended from a panel advising state judges on ethics.

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“In top races, Republicans try to stay quiet on Trump’s false 2020 claims”

Washington Post reports that while those auditioning for Vice President maybe embracing Trump’s narrative, Republican candidates in tight races are being intentionally vague, redirecting the focus on election rules. Also not good.

“[Unlike in 2022], many of the Republicans running alongside Trump in swing races are being far more ambiguous about their stance on 2020. Whether they have previously dismissed or embraced his claims, GOP nominees in some of the year’s most critical races are now evading the question and changing the topic. A number of them have steered clear of his most brazen allegations but tried to endear themselves to Trump’s supporters by questioning voting rules.”

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SCOTUS, Social Media Removal of Hate is Not “Discrimination”

This is Orwellian.

Texas and Florida passed state laws that effectively hinder social media platforms in removing hate, white supremacy, election denialism, and similar content. The states are currently before the U.S. Supreme Court in the NetChoice cases attempting to defend those laws. As Daphne Keller explains:

Yet now, in their briefs, Texas and Florida are also arguing their laws prohibit discrimination, just as civil rights laws do. On that logic, ‘must-carry’ laws that may compel platforms to carry racist diatribes and hate speech are justified for the same reasons as laws that prohibit businesses from discriminating based on race or gender.

This should be obvious, but Facebook or YouTube deciding to remove a racial slur, Nazi propaganda, or white nationalist attempts to mainstream “replacement theory” is not the same as Woolworth’s deciding to remove African American college students sitting at a lunch counter and attempting to order food.

Daphne has more here.

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“Don’t blame democracy’s woes on the GOP or ‘tyranny of the minority’”

Jennifer Rubin in the WaPo

Two of the year’s best books on politics present contrasting diagnoses for what ails American democracy.

Liz Cheney’sOath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning lowers the boom on the mendacious and cowardly Republicans and the now four-times-indicted former president Donald Trump, whom they enabled in nearly destroying our democratic system. “Tyranny of the Minority: Why American Democracy Reached the Breaking Point,” by Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt, cites structural protections for the minority that have been exploited to the point that self-government is threatened. Both books have a point, but neither puts the blame squarely where it should be. . . . 

Plainly, we need both structural change and public virtue to repair our democracy. But there is another element the analyses do not fully acknowledge: voters. We get the government we want and deserve.

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“From Bush v. Gore to ‘Stop the Steal’: Kenneth Chesebro’s Long, Strange Trip”

N.Y. Times has an in-depth profile of Kenneth Chesebro.

“Some former colleagues say Mr. Chesebro’s 180-degree turn came after a lucrative 2014 investment in Bitcoin and a subsequent posh, itinerant lifestyle. Others, like Mr. Tribe, see Mr. Chesebro as a ‘moral chameleon’ and his story an old one about the seduction of power.

‘He wanted to be close to the action,’ said Mr. Tribe, who is among 60 lawyers and scholars who signed an ethics complaint in New York that could result in Mr. Chesebro’s disbarment. At Harvard, Mr. Chesebro assisted Mr. Tribe on many cases, including Bush v. Gore, which Mr. Tribe, as Mr. Gore’s chief legal counsel, argued before the Supreme Court.”

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“Special counsel Jack Smith pulls subpoena over pro-Trump fundraising”

Washington Post raises questions about what can be inferred from the decision of Special counsel Jack Smith to withdraw “a subpoena seeking records about fundraising by the political action committee Save America.” The group, controlled by former president Donald Trump, was involved in efforts to block the results of the 2020 presidential election.

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