Allies of Donald J. Trump are discussing ways to elevate third-party candidates in battleground states to divert votes away from President Biden, along with other covert tactics to diminish Democratic votes.
They plan to promote the independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as a “champion for choice” to give voters for whom abortion is a top issue — and who also don’t like Mr. Biden — another option on the ballot, according to one person who is involved in the effort and who, like several others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the plans.
Trump allies also plan to amplify the progressive environmental records of Mr. Kennedy and the expected Green Party candidate, Jill Stein, in key states — contrasting their policies against the record-high oil production under Mr. Biden that has disappointed some climate activists.
A third parallel effort in Michigan is meant to diminish Democratic turnout in November by amplifying Muslim voters’ concerns about Mr. Biden’s support for Israel’s war in Gaza. Trump allies are discussing running ads in Dearborn, Mich., and other parts of the state with large Muslim populations that would thank Mr. Biden for standing with Israel, according to three people familiar with the effort, which is expected to be led by an outside group unaffiliated with the Trump campaign….
“Content creators ask Meta to reverse politics limits on Instagram, Threads”
Taylor Lorenz for WaPo:
Hundreds of political and news content creators, along with activists, meme account administrators and journalists, have signed an open letter to Meta asking the company to reverse its decision to limit the reach of accounts posting “political content” on Threads and Instagram.
Meta announced in February that it no longer would recommend content about politics and social issues on the two social media platforms, which have tens of millions of users in the United States.
The decision has alarmed users who post about social issues, including LGBTQ rights, women’s rights, racial inequality and disability. And independent journalists and content creators say they’ve struggled to reach their audiences in recent weeks since the change was rolled out. The limits, they say, have significantly affected creators who are Black, female, disabled and LGBTQ.
“Why Trump’s ‘hush money’ case is bigger than hush money; The judge indicates that this might be another case of election interference. Could it have affected the outcome?”
Aaron Blake for WaPo:
But that last shorthand might not be totally apt, if a Monday letter from the judge in the case is any measure. Indeed, New York Supreme Court Justice Juan Merchan seems to indicate that what we really have is a third election interference case.
“The allegations are in substance, that Donald Trump falsified business records to conceal an agreement with others to unlawfully influence the 2016 presidential election,” Merchan summarizes in laying out the process for jury selection, which is set to begin Monday.
Merchan isn’t exactly rewriting the charges against Trump. But the characterization is a reminder that there’s more at stake here than Trump’s alleged affair with adult film actress Stormy Daniels, hush money or even allegedly breaking the law by hiding the hush money paid to Daniels. (Those particulars are salacious but seemingly small-bore compared with Trump’s other three indictments.)
What we also have is an alleged plot to illegally obscure damaging information to benefit the winning candidate in a very close election. And given how close that election was, it’s hardly ridiculous to wonder what effects this alleged crime may have had on the country’s course.
But could it possibly have swung the 2016 race?
That’s unknowable. But there are a couple of things we can say.
Travis Crum: “Originalism, Lived Experience, and the Twenty-Sixth Amendment”
The following is a guest post from Travis Crum:
Next week, the Supreme Court will consider whether to grant cert in Cascino v. Nelson. The question presented in Cascino is whether Texas’s law allowing any voter who is sixty-five or older to request an absentee ballot violates the Twenty-Sixth Amendment, which prohibits age discrimination in voting. The Cascino litigation has been ongoing since the 2020 election cycle—when the COVID-19 pandemic heightened the case’s immediate stakes—and the Fifth Circuit’s initial decision upholding this facially discriminatory law attracted substantial attention. As I argued back in 2020, the Fifth Circuit’s egregiously wrong decision should be reversed.
Here, I want to highlight a different point: Cascino presents a rare situation when the relevant constitutional provision was adopted during the lived experiences of some of the Justices. Indeed, some Justices were teenagers at the time and were enfranchised earlier than they otherwise would have been due to its ratification. The Twenty-Sixth Amendment allowed Justice Sotomayor to vote in the 1972 presidential election and Chief Justice Roberts to vote in the 1974 midterm election. And although they weren’t directly affected by it, Justices Thomas and Alito were in college during the Twenty-Sixth Amendment’s ratification debate. For once in our age of originalism, we have originalists present during the drafting and ratification of the relevant constitutional provision.
In the cert-stage briefing, the parties are implicitly advancing different forms of originalist argument. Texas is essentially making an original expected application argument based on the underlying rationale for the Twenty-Sixth Amendment’s adoption. During the Vietnam War, the federal government drafted men who were eighteen years old. However, in all but a handful of States, citizens needed to be twenty-one years old to vote. Congress responded to the criticism that those sent to fight in Southeast Asia should be old enough to vote by lowering the voting age to eighteen when it reauthorized the Voting Rights Act in 1970. But in Oregon v. Mitchell, a deeply fractured Court concluded that Congress could lower the voting age only in federal elections—not state elections. The Court’s decision, however, risked chaos, as States were not prepared to run elections with a bifurcated electorate. Accordingly, Congress promptly proposed and the States quickly ratified the Twenty-Sixth Amendment in 1971. Texas focuses on this history to claim that the Twenty-Sixth Amendment’s raison d’etre was to lower the voting age to eighteen. And because absentee ballots were rare in the 1970s, Texas’s argument goes, the right to vote is not implicated in this case.
By contrast, the plaintiffs pitch their argument based on original meaning. That is, the right to vote includes all steps in registering and casting a ballot. Furthermore, the plaintiffs claim that the Twenty-Sixth Amendment should be read in pari materia with the Fifteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-Fourth Amendments. Making the “right to vote” contingent on the timing of the relevant Amendment, as Texas would contend, risks different definitions for the same phrase based on the electoral rules in place in 1870, 1920, 1964, and 1971. To use one deeply problematic example of Texas’s argument: because secret ballots were not used during Reconstruction, it would be constitutionally permissible for a State to provide a secret ballot to only white voters.
If the Court were to grant cert in Cascino, the oral argument and opinion(s) would be a fascinating insight into how originalist arguments would function in a world with constitutional amendments. Would original expected application or original meaning prevail? Would it matter what Justice Thomas personally thought the Twenty-Sixth Amendment accomplished in 1971? What about Justice Alito’s recollection about and familiarity with absentee voting while he was in college? In a similar vein, Cascino would provide a useful exemplar of how the Court would react if Article V were revived and new constitutional amendments were ratified. If, hypothetically, our nation were to adopt a “real right to vote,” Cascino could illuminate how best to craft a legislative record and frame a public debate.
This is the third time the Court will consider whether to hear Cascino, though it is the first time the case is up on the normal—as opposed to shadow—docket. This time, the stakes are lower given the pandemic’s end, and the case has attracted—with one notable exception—less attention than in 2020. Nevertheless, Cascino raises important questions about originalism and the meaning of the Constitution’s voting rights amendments. Here’s hoping the third time’s a charm.
Why Is California Preregistration of 17-year-olds So They Are Ready to Vote at Age 18 Stuck at a Low 15% Despite “Automatic Voter Registration?”
Laura Brill and Lisa Cohen explain that not all “automatic voter registration” is the same.
Speaking on April 21 Panel at the L.A. Times Book Festival on My New Book, “A Real Right to Vote”
Looking forward to this conversation:
By the People, For the People: Conversations on Safeguarding Democracy – Tickets Required
Town and Gown

Sunday, Apr 21
1:30 PM – 2:30 PM
Event Description
Sometimes it’s hard to tell if it’s normal for each generation to feel like it’s on the verge of political, climate, or economic apocalypse, or if things really are currently worse than they’ve ever been. The 2024 election feels like the most urgent race in decades, with democracy on the line. How did we get here? What is the path forward? And what does this year’s election mean for the future of our country, no matter the outcome?
Richard Hasen
Michael Isikoff
Daniel Klaidman
Seema Mehta
Tina Nguyen