[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. - [Storming colleges with riot cops to keep them âsafeâ should scare America about whatâs next]( A violent coast-to-coast, riot-cop crackdown on campus protests threatens the right for all dissent on the eve of the presidential election. History doesnât repeat but it rhymes, gratingly. As a new generation of young people speaks out against attacks on women and children halfway around the world â this time in Gaza â college administrators from Boston to L.A. are racing to call in heavily armored riot cops to shut down protest encampments at campuses theyâd sold to applicants as bastions of academic freedom, open expression, and historic demonstrations that had changed the world. They are destroying the American university in order to keep it âsafe.â In a week when decades happened, the lowest moments in what became a nationwide assault on college free speech by militarized police veered from shock to tragicomical irony.
- [George Stephanopoulos Opens His Show With a Blistering Commentary: âBedrock Tenets of Our Democracy Are Being Testedâ]( This Weekâs George Stephanopoulos opened Sundayâs show with a blistering commentary on the state of American politics today brought about largely by âwhatâs happening in courtroomsâ and not on the campaign trail. Stephanopoulos checked off the litany of legal cases against Donald Trump, and reminded viewers that none of this is ânormal.â âUntil now, no American president had ever faced a criminal trial,â Stephanopoulos began, continuing: No American president had ever faced a criminal indictment for retaining and concealing classified documents. No American president had ever faced a federal indictment or a state indictment for trying to overturn an election, or been named an unindicted co-conspirator in two other states for the same crime. No American president has faced hundreds of millions of dollars in fines for business fraud, defamation, and sexual abuse.
- [Rural Communities Can Benefit From Infrastructure Fundsâif Rollout Is Done Right]( The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Actâs nearly $1.8 trillion marks a profound boost in infrastructure spending; but to make the most of new resources, the federal government must address communitiesâ wariness of projects because of past treatment. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) might be remembered as the act that, quite literally, rebuilt America for the 21st century. With collective expenditures of upward of $1.8 trillion, the act emphasizes public works and private investments in what has been called a generational down payment on the nationâs infrastructure. IIJA, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), and the CHIPS and Science Act also reflect a profound change in federal infrastructure policy: All three are part of a broader policy goal to simultaneously rebuild domestic supply chains for national competitiveness and resilience, build a clean energy system to address the climate crisis, and ensure investments produce an inclusive and just economy. Realizing these goals will require rebuilding Americaâs electrical grids, bridges, telecommunications, and other infrastructure on a scale not witnessed in decades, and many infrastructure projects will be built in rural communities. In particular, IIJA addresses long-standing shortcomings and underinvestment in broadband and water and wastewater facility development that have systematically left behind rural areas with low population density. Infrastructure improvements necessary to transition away from fossil fuelsâsuch as wind and solar farms, transmission lines, battery manufacturing facilities, and mining for critical mineralsâwill likely be concentrated in resource-producing regions and rural areas. And stabilizing supply chains will require scaling up domestic resource production and transporting goods to manufacturing centers along reliable shipping corridors.
- [In Oregon Primary, A Study In Contrasts on How to Strengthen Democracy]( Oregonâs legacy of strong participation lives alongside lingering exclusions, like a ban on prison voting. Secretary of state candidates share howâand whetherâtheyâd tackle those. Even a state with a reputation for generally excellent voter services always has room to improve, their testimonials stressed. That is not lost on the leading Democratic candidates to be Oregonâs next chief elections official. James Manning, a state senator, and Tobias Read, Oregonâs treasurer and a 2022 candidate for governor, each told Bolts that they believe the state can do more to encourage participation and broaden voter access. But they also offered different priorities and visions for what needs fixing. In his interview with Bolts, Manning emphasized the urgency of reversing the restrictions and structural neglect that keep some at the margins, including by ending the ban on people voting from prison. He talks of lingering exclusions as stains on democracy, stemming from a history of racism that Oregon should immediately confront. Read feels the state should focus on fine-tuning the mechanics of Oregonâs existing systems before considering an idea, like voting from prison, that may be more divisive. His priorities, he said, include ironing out Oregonâs universal mail voting and automatic registration laws to address ways in which they may be tripping up the people that theyâre meant to help.
- [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?]( - [Shocker From Top Conservative Judge: Trump Likely To Skate Completely]( J. Michael Luttig sees two potential outcomes from Thursdayâs Supreme Court arguments. Both are grim for our democracy. âIâm profoundly disturbed about the apparent direction of the court,â J. Michael Luttig told me. âI now believe that it is unlikely Trump will ever be tried for the crimes he committed in attempting to overturn the 2020 election. I called Luttig, a former federal judge with extensive conservative credentials, to solicit his reaction to this weekâs Supreme Court hearing over Donald Trumpâs demand for absolute immunity from prosecution for any crimes related to his insurrection attempt. On Thursday, Luttig posted a thread critiquing the right-wing justices for their apparent openness to Trumpâs argumentsâbut that thread was legalistic and formal, so I figured Luttig had a lot more to say.
- [A Republican and a Democrat confront our era of bad vibes]( Are you skeptical of bipartisan dialogues and commissions that pretend away differences in a chase after a lowest-common-denominator âcenterâ? Me, too. Yet there is good reason to be weary of a political culture so saturated with negative partisanship and mutual mistrust that it makes discussing our nationâs most intractable problems impossible. Thatâs especially true of challenges that defy easy ideological categorization: social disconnection, loneliness, the damaging side effects of social media, the shattering of families, the curse of drug addiction. Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), who has made it a personal crusade to move these challenges to the forefront of politics, told me he sees âa lot of room between right and left to work hardâ on these questions.
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