Monthly Archives: October 2020

Midwest Senate Races

With a little over two weeks to go, there are two Senate races in the “farm belt” part of the Midwest that are relatively close — Kansas and Iowa.

Kansas has been a pleasant surprise.  The Republican leadership in D.C. dumped a ton of money into the Republican primary to defeat Spawn of Satan Kris Kobach, and most people assumed that, having succeeded in getting Roger Marshall the nomination, the Republicans could go back to ignoring Kansas.  But a funny thing has happened.  Apparently, the divisions in the Republican Party haven’t healed.  While Trump looks likely to win Kansas, his numbers are rather low for a Republican in such a deep red state.  And if Trump only gets in the mid-50s, Roger Marshall can’t afford to bleed any support away.

Part of the problem for the Republicans is that Kansas is a geographically big state.  While about one-third of the state lives in close proximity to Kansas City, the other two thirds are pretty scattered.  And that means that candidates running their first state-wide race have to introduce themselves to a lot of people who have never heard about them before.  While both candidates face this problem, the Democratic candidate, Barbara Bollier had only minimal opposition in the primary which meant that she could run positive ads introducing herself as a former moderate Republican who only became a Democrat because the Kansas Republican Party had fallen off the far-right cliff.  Meanwhile, Marshall had to deal with a very nasty campaign in which many of his past sins were broadcast to the rest of the state for the first time.  In the end, Marshall won the primary because the party leadership told the voters that he was the only viable alternative to Kobach and that Kobach couldn’t win, not because Kansas voters liked Marshall. Continue Reading...

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Census Talk

With a little less than two weeks to go before the election, developments concerning the 2020 Census are likely to get buried beneath the latest nonsense spouting from our President.  But the 2020 Census is going to be a very big deal next Spring, and what happens between now and January could have a significant impact.

The main purpose of the Census is to provide population figures for use by Congress in apportioning house seats to the states and for use by the states (and local government) in then drawing district lines for everything from congressional seats to city council seats.  As a secondary effect, some government grants to states and localities are also based on population.

Typically, the Census can be viewed as having three phases.  Phase One has historically been conducted by mail  — sending forms to every residential address and having the residents complete those forms.  This year, this phase was modified to allow people to respond on-line, but the essence of this phase remains the same in terms of it mostly relying on voluntary participation.  Phase Two is the field operation.  In this phase, workers go to residences that did not respond to try to get answers to the census by personal contact.  Finally, Phase Three is the compilation of this data. Continue Reading...

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Runoffs and Control of the Senate

With less than three weeks to go until election day. A lot of ink has been spilled over how state laws on the receipt and counting of absentee/mail-in ballots could delay knowing who won the presidential election.  But it could take even longer to know who will control the U.S. Senate.

One of the reasons is, of course, that the same delay in counting votes for the Presidential election could also delay counting the votes for the Senate elections.  However, given where the seats are and the current polling average, I expect that most Senate seats will be called on election night.  And it is possible that one party or the other will have a good enough night to get to 51 seats by midnight.

But there is a real chance that control of the Senate will come down to three races.  (At the very least, these three races will impact how comfortable the majority is.  Both parties have a handful of Senators who will occasionally split on a key vote.  Needless to say a 50-50 Senate with Vice-President Harris only voting in the case of a tie is going to be less likely to pass major legislation than a 53-47 Senate especially if the filibuster finally goes the way of the dodo.)  And in all three races, the election may not be over on election night. Continue Reading...

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The Confirmation Hearings

In the past five years, we have seen the Turtle (Senator Mitch McConnell) go from the unprecedented blocking consideration of a Supreme Court nomination made eight months before an election change into the Hare trying to force an unprecedented vote on a Supreme Court nomination made after Labor Day prior to the election.  While the Senate did not have to approve the nomination of Merrick Garland in 2016, the very rules that the Republicans are relying on now to justify their consideration of Amy Coney Barrett mandated giving Judge Garland a hearing and a vote (at least a procedural vote).   And given the modern procedures, giving Judge Barrett a vote before the election requires cutting the process short.  The simple fact is that conservative Republicans are trying to pack the court.  While, barring some type of miracle, Democrats will not be able to prevent a vote from taking place before the election, there are some issues that should be front and center at the confirmation hearings that will take place this week.

At the top of the list is health care.  While the nominee will probably try to evade the question, it is important to make crystal clear that — if confirmed on the current schedule — Judge Barrett may be the one vote that removes the current protection for people with preexisting conditions.  In the November argument session, the Supreme Court will consider the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act.  This case arises from the 2012 decision upholding the Affordable Care Act.  In that decision, after rewriting the law to avoid finding that the Affordable Care Act was authorized by the impact on interstate commerce, the 5-4 majority found that the individual mandate was authorized as a tax.  When the Republican Congress failed to repeal the entire act but did repeal the tax, Texas and other red states filed the current suit alleging that the repeal of the tax also repealed the individual mandate and the rest of the Affordable Care Act.

While Judge Barrett will probably try to avoid talking about the merits of the case (as she will be sitting on the Supreme Court when this case is heard), she should be at least forced to explain her approach to one of the key issues in the case.   That issue is “severability.”  Stripped of legal jargon, severability is about whether one invalid clause in a bill or statute requires the courts to reject the entire bill.  Under most of the recent decisions, there is no plausible basis for the Supreme Court to strike the entire Affordable Care Act because Congress expressly decided to repeal one part and leave the rest intact. Continue Reading...

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