[Daily Kos Morning Roundup](
[Abbreviated Pundit Roundup]( is a long-running series published every morning that collects essential political discussion and analysis around the internet. - [Prosecutions of Fake Electors for Trump Gain Ground in Swing States]( Georgia, Michigan and Nevada have already brought charges against a total of 25 fake electors, including current and former Republican Party leaders in those states. The Georgia case, led by Fani T. Willis, the district attorney of Fulton County, has gone further, bringing charges against Mr. Trump himself and a number of his advisers. Investigations are also playing out in Wisconsin as well as in Arizona, where the state attorney general, Kris Mayes, is expected to bring charges soon. Grand jury subpoenas were recently issued to the people who acted as fake electors in Arizona, including Kelli Ward, a former state Republican chairwoman. Mike Roman, a former Trump campaign official who is already facing charges in Georgia, is also among those subpoenaed in the Arizona case. There are so many state investigations going on that âthey all kind of run together,â said Manny Arora, a lawyer for Kenneth Chesebro, an architect of the fake-electors plan who has emerged as a key witness in the investigations. âMost of the jurisdictions are keeping it local and leaving the big stuff to the feds,â Mr. Arora said, adding that he did not expect most of the state cases to âbe quite as sweeping as Georgia.â
- [The average donation to Daily Kos is just $9.44. Can you please start a monthly recurring donation of $9.44 right now to help Daily Kos keep fighting?]( - [SOS: Most election fraud reports in Nevada donât warrant criminal prosecution]( The Nevada Secretary of Stateâs Office has referred 14 cases of potential election fraud for criminal prosecution since 2020 out of hundreds of reports received and more than 2.4 million votes cast, reinforcing that voter fraud is not widespread in the Silver State, according to a report the office released this week. In recent years, the office has received a rising number of reports of potential violations of election law, ranging from allegations of people voting twice to voter history discrepancies. These complaints represent a minuscule proportion of total votes cast in the state over that time, and many of them were found to not violate state law, with nine prosecution referrals made from 2020 and five from 2022. The release of the report, the first of its kind in Nevada, comes seven months before the November general election and years after false allegations of widespread voting fraud spread across Nevada and the rest of the country, fueling the false narrative that former President Donald Trump won the 2020 election. Such claims were key talking points for some Republicans running for statewide positions in 2022.
- [New York City Haunts His Trial]( With jury selection underway in Donald Trumpâs criminal trial in Lower Manhattan, the former presidentâs chickens have finally come home to roost. It feels uniquely appropriate that Mr. Trump will have to endure the scrutiny on his old home turf. New York City residents have been subjected to his venality and corruption for much longer than the rest of the country, and weâre familiar with his antics â the threats, the lawsuits, the braggadocio, his general ability to slip through the tiniest crack in the bureaucracy or legal system just fast enough to avoid the consequences of his actions. He rose to fame here, but was never truly accepted by the old money elites he admired. The rich and powerful sometimes invited him to their parties, but behind his back they laughed at his coarse methods and his tacky aesthetic. His inability to succeed in New York in quite the way he wanted to drove much of the damage he did to the country as a whole, and arguably his entire political career. [...] Itâs harder for Mr. Trump to avoid the actual untelevised reality of who he is in New York City, where he grew up the son of a wealthy Queens real estate developer and used his inheritance less to grow the family business than to grow his personal brand. His business dealings were murky, sometimes mob-connected and riddled with high-profile failures and bankruptcies. Serious real estate investors did not regard him as a peer. Eventually, banks began to refuse to lend him money. He was ruthlessly skewered by New York publications, most famously by Spy magazine, which called him a âshort-fingered vulgarian.â [...] If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere, the song goes, but Mr. Trump couldnât make it here â at least not the way he craved â despite being born here and being one of the few people who could afford it. So itâs easy to understand why he bashes his hometown as a crime-ridden hellscape, and why the Oval Office appealed. Washington offered him political power but also something he may have wanted even more: the respect New York denied him.
- [The âfake newsâ-ification of local newsâand what to do about it]( Local news is a darling of the moment in the journalism world. Thinkers and funders have trained their attention on (variously) âsaving,â ârebuilding,â and âreinvigoratingâ journalism that serves communities outside of major cities and the national spotlight. For good reason. The capacity of local news to share useful information across a community (there have been multiple traffic accidents at intersection x), enable civic engagement (neighbors want to install a traffic light), and hold leaders accountable (the mayor used the traffic light money to put a hot tub in town hall) is obvious. Whatâs more, local news really does need saving. Thereâs no clear, sustainable revenue model for news outlets that cover zoning-board hearings and water main breaks, and as a result, local newspapers have been dropping like flies or getting caught in the deadly web of private equity ownership. Much of the country is now served by no local news outlet at all. Thereâs another reason for local journalism being in fashion: it feels insulated from the ugliness of partisan politics. The most recent Great Hopes of media research and philanthropy, misinformation and disinformation studies, are falling out of favor, perhaps in part because they acquired the familiar stench of polarization. Proponents of local news, however, boast about the trust local news still enjoys, even across party lines. After all, what do high school sports and Girl Scouts building a sensory garden for shelter dogs have to do with Joe Biden and Donald Trump? But if money and energy are going to be poured into local news with the assumption that local journalists are and will remain trusted across partisan lines, weâre going to be in for an unpleasant surprise. Yes, polling shows that local news is more trusted across the political spectrum than national news, but only 29 percent of Republicans surveyed by Gallup in 2021 said they trusted their local news, down from 34 percent in 2019. This is consistent with what Iâve heard from journalists who work for local outlets (mostly but not exclusively in Pennsylvania) and conservatives who read or have stopped reading them. In fact, the striking thing when you examine the relationship between local news and conservative audiences is that, in spite of all the differences between the Bucks County Courier Times and the New York Times, their alienation from conservatives sounds dishearteningly similar.
- [Blinken Is Sitting on Staff Recommendations to Sanction Israeli Military Units Linked to Killings or Rapes]( A special State Department panel recommended months ago that Secretary of State Antony Blinken disqualify multiple Israeli military and police units from receiving U.S. aid after reviewing allegations that they committed serious human rights abuses. But Blinken has failed to act on the proposal in the face of growing international criticism of the Israeli militaryâs conduct in Gaza, according to current and former State Department officials. The incidents under review mostly took place in the West Bank and occurred before Hamasâ Oct. 7 attack on Israel. They include reports of extrajudicial killings by the Israeli Border Police; an incident in which a battalion gagged, handcuffed and left an elderly Palestinian American man for dead; and an allegation that interrogators tortured and raped a teenager who had been accused of throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails. Recommendations for action against Israeli units were sent to Blinken in December, according to one person familiar with the memo. âTheyâve been sitting in his briefcase since then,â another official said. [...] Multiple State Department officials who have worked on Israeli relations said that Blinkenâs inaction has undermined Bidenâs public criticism, sending a message to the Israelis that the administration was not willing to take serious steps.
- [They struck down Roe v. Wade, now they're coming for birth control and IVF. Show where you stand with our 'Abortion is Healthcare' t-shirt]( - [Abortion and the 2024 election: There is no easy way out for Republicans]( Since 2022, when the Supreme Court eviscerated Roe in the Dobbs case, we have been undergoing a reluctant national seminar in obstetrics and gynecology. All over the country, legislatorsâmostly maleâare discovering that pregnancy is not simple. Pregnancies go wrong for many reasons, and when they do, the fetus needs to be removed. One of the first to discover this reality was Republican State Representative Neal Collins of South Carolina. He was brought to tears by the story of a South Carolina woman whose water broke just after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Obstetrics lesson #1âa fetus canât live after the water breaks. But âlawyers advised doctors that they could not remove the fetus, despite that being the recommended medical course of action.â And so, the woman was sent home to miscarry on her own, putting her at risk of losing her uterus and/or getting blood poisoning. [...] ...As these stories accumulate, the issue will continue to have political punch. We have already seen the victory of pro-choice referenda in deep red conservative states like Kansas, Kentucky, Montana, and Ohio; and in swing states like Michigan and in deep blue states like California and Vermont. In an era where almost everything is viewed through a partisan lens, abortion rights transcend partisanship. [...] What is the likely political impact? Judging from what weâve seen so far, these referenda are likely to succeed even in the most conservative states. The question is: What is the likely impact on other races? There are two states, Arizona and Florida, where turnout for the pro-choice referenda could help President Biden. Biden won Arizona last time but by a very small margin. Trump won Florida by just over three percentage points, so putting it in Bidenâs column is tougher but not impossible. Besides the presidential, there are Senate races in Arizona, Nevada, and Maryland that could be affected by the abortion referenda. Arizona and Nevada are competitive races. Maryland should be a Democratic seat given how strong Democrats are there, but the popular ex-governor, a moderate non-Trump Republican, is running for Senate, increasing the odds that a Republican could take the seat. Finally, there are seven competitive House seats that could also be affected by turnout for the abortion referendaâtwo in Arizona, one in Colorado, one in Nebraska, and three in New York. Deep red states like Arkansas, Missouri, and South Dakota donât have any races that are likely to be so impacted by the abortion referenda that the election outcomes would flip the seats from one party to the other, but any large increase in Democratic-leaning voters could affect races in the future. Want to write your own stories? [Log in]( or [sign up]( to post articles and comments on Daily Kos, the nation's largest progressive community. Follow Daily Kos on [Facebook](, [Threads](, and [Instagram](. Thanks for all you do,
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