[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. - [Nikki Haley Surrendered, But Not Her Voters]( Most of her supporters voted for Haley as a way to stop Trump. Haleyâs announcement today that she intends to vote for Trump wonât raise their opinion of him, it will only lower their opinion of her. When she says, as she said again today, that she wished Donald Trump would âreach outâ to her voters, sheâs speaking words that may sound like English, but make no sense. The only way Donald Trump could reach out to Trump-skeptical Republicans is by pleading guilty to the many criminal charges against him and vowing to devote the rest of his life to restitution for the victims of his many civil frauds. Itâs neither surprising nor disappointing that Haley has aligned herself with Trump after inveighing so fiercely against his utter unfitness for office. His rivals always do. Ted Cruz did it after Donald Trump insulted his wife and accused his father of involvement in the assassination of John F. Kennedy. Marco Rubio did it after Trumpâs relentless mockery of his height, character, and intellect. Compared to those gross self-humiliations, itâs a relatively small thing to submit to a candidate who merely called you a âbirdbrain,â scored xenophobic points off your name, and implied that your military-deployed husband had gone overseas to run away from you. Haley is making a calculation about 2028. Perhaps it will work out for her. I doubt it, but who knows? The question before those who once backed her is more immediate.
- [Bad news: Daily Kos revenue is downâwe're struggling. You are a part of the solution, small donors keep us going. Can you donate $5?]( - [Meg Whitmanâs Trying to Be A Different Kind of US Ambassador. Washington Is Noticing.]( The Kenyan leader will be in Washington on Wednesday and Thursday, in part for a sure-to-be glamorous state visit hosted by the White House â a rare chance for an African country to grab the U.S. national spotlight. Ahead of that heâs been spending time in Atlanta, home to many key companies and a strong Black middle and upper class. As heâs been greeted by a range of dignitaries, Whitman has been by his side. Her presence could fuel questions about what lies ahead for her. A Cabinet post, perhaps? The 67-year-old chuckles at the idea but doesnât rule it out. âI never dreamed I would be the ambassador to Kenya,â Whitman told me in an interview. âI donât know. Maybe Iâll retire. Iâve said that three times, and Iâve never done it. But weâll see what happens.â [...] Wealthy, politically appointed ambassadors often land in cushy posts in Europe, but Biden aides suggested Kenya would be a better fit for Whitman. A major reason was that Kenya is an African tech hub with significant business potential, and the Biden administration wanted more emphasis on commercial prospects in Africa. Whitman decided it was worth a shot.
- [What These Stories About Samuel Alitoâs âProvocativeâ Flags Are Really About]( Itâs easy to be furious at Samuel Alito, who has recently racked up yet another petty personal grievance display over, of all things, flags. Last week saw the earthquake report that his wife flew a flag upside downâsignaling either that the country is in danger or that the election was stolenâin the days after the Jan 6 attack on the capitol. This week, the New York Times further reports that Alito was flying an âAppeal to Heavenâ flag at his New Jersey beach house this past summer. That flag is not merely another January 6 signifier but also rooted in John Lockeâs âappeal to heaven,â meaning âa responsibility to rebel, even use violence, to overthrow unjust rule.â [...] ...We have a judicial enterprise that rules over us with absolutely no one ruling over them. Nobody should be all that surprised that Sen. Dick Durbin has announced that the Senate Judiciary Committee will not launch a probe into Alitoâs recent conduct. The Senate has also been trying to unearth the financing for Thomasâs quarter million dollar salt-of-the-earth RV amid other ethics violations, and Leonard Leo has declined to comply with subpoenas related to it. Yes, the Senate should be acting to resolve this problem, but that seems to have largely stalled at âasking them to recuse.â So just to review, this isnât really a Sam Alito problem, or a Clarence Thomas problem, or a John Roberts problemâbut it also isnât even a Senate-Dems-who-canât-muster-the-energy-to-close-the-deal problem. No, I have come to conclude is that this is an us problem. Because rather than hurling ourselves headlong into the âAlito Must Recuseâ brick wall of âyeah, no,â we need to dedicate the upcoming election cycle, and the attendant election news cycle to a discussion of the courts. Not just Sam Alito or Clarence Thomas who happen to go to work every day at the court, and not just Dobbs and gun control, which happens to have come out of the very same court, but the connection between those two tales: what it means to have a Supreme Court that is functionally immune from political pressure, from internal norms of behavior, from judicial ethics and disclosure constraints, and from congressional oversight and why that is deeply dangerous. Moreso, why justices who were placed on the court to behave as well-compensated partisan politicians would do so in public as well as on paper. Until we do that, Justice Alito will continue to fly around the world giving speeches about his triumph in Dobbs and that Clarence Thomas will keep taking gifts and failing to disclose them. That wonât be the end of the Supreme Court story, it will just be the start of it.
- [Return of the Inflation Truthers]( Some of us have seen this movie before. In the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed engaged in âquantitative easingâ â loosely speaking, printing a lot of money in an attempt to boost a weak economy â and there were many people insisting that this would lead to runaway inflation. When huge inflation failed to materialize â when theoretical models saying that money-printing wouldnât be inflationary in an economy with very low interest rates passed the reality test with flying colors â some people refused to accept what was (or actually wasnât) happening. Instead, they became âinflation truthers,â insisting that the benign numbers were fake. [...] The first and most innocent version of disinflation denial â one common among the general public, and not especially connected to partisanship â involves confounding the level of prices with inflation, the rate of change in prices. [...] Less innocent is the widespread urban legend that official measures of inflation leave out essential goods like food and gasoline, and therefore donât reflect the true cost of living. I see this legend in my email all the time.
- [Rishi Sunakâs election call means he thought the worst was yet to come]( ...The decline in inflation was smaller than expected and, privately, Treasury figures have no hope of an early interest rate cut. No one in No 10 truly believes that people have started to feel the effects in their weekly shop yet. And irregular migration is not falling: arrivals on small boats are up nearly a quarter compared with the same period last year. A key plank of a November election campaign would have been further tax cuts. But Sunak and Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, are staring into an empty cupboard. Government insiders believe that a key reason behind Wednesdayâs call was a warning from the International Monetary Fund of a looming £30bn hole in the public finances. In public, the government rejected the IMFâs argument that there was no room for a third cut in national insurance and instead the Treasury should consider unpopular measures such as cuts to public spending or scrapping the triple lock on the state pension. There are other, smaller advantages to a summer election. It avoids a clash with the US election in November and the chaos that any stray comment from Donald Trump could have thrown into the grid, if the US and UK had run parallel campaigns.
- [Meg Whitmanâs Trying to Be A Different Kind of US Ambassador. Washington Is Noticing.]( The Kenyan leader will be in Washington on Wednesday and Thursday, in part for a sure-to-be glamorous state visit hosted by the White House â a rare chance for an African country to grab the U.S. national spotlight. Ahead of that heâs been spending time in Atlanta, home to many key companies and a strong Black middle and upper class. As heâs been greeted by a range of dignitaries, Whitman has been by his side. Her presence could fuel questions about what lies ahead for her. A Cabinet post, perhaps? The 67-year-old chuckles at the idea but doesnât rule it out. âI never dreamed I would be the ambassador to Kenya,â Whitman told me in an interview. âI donât know. Maybe Iâll retire. Iâve said that three times, and Iâve never done it. But weâll see what happens.â [...] Wealthy, politically appointed ambassadors often land in cushy posts in Europe, but Biden aides suggested Kenya would be a better fit for Whitman. A major reason was that Kenya is an African tech hub with significant business potential, and the Biden administration wanted more emphasis on commercial prospects in Africa. Whitman decided it was worth a shot.
- [Show your support for independent news with a Daily Kos t-shirtâunion decorated and made in the USA! Click here to get yours]( - [Supreme Court delay on Trumpâs immunity claim gets more outrageous by the day]( The truth is we should have already had or been close to a verdict in the federal prosecution brought by special counsel Jack Smith. That case concerns the conspiracy Trump allegedly orchestrated to manipulate the results of the 2020 presidential election, which culminated in the Jan. 6 insurrection. The Washington case had been set to begin in early March, and Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg had expressed openness to postponing the New York case so the Washington one could go first. With the federal trial estimated to last eight to 12 weeks, it would most likely be done or wrapping up by now. The reason that didnât happen is that a majority on the court decided to delay the administration of justice by considering Trumpâs outrageous presidential immunity argument. Trump argues that because he was president at the time of the alleged crimes, he is immune from prosecution in the case. But he doesnât stop there: His lawyers have presented a shocking theory of presidential power that would render him immune even if he ordered SEAL Team Six to assassinate his political rivals (barring first being impeached and convicted, something that has never happened in American history). [â¦.] In Trump v. Anderson, the case deciding whether Trump could remain on Coloradoâs ballot as a presidential candidate despite the constitutional limits on insurrectionistsâ holding office, the Supreme Court ruled in Trumpâs favor just 25 days after oral arguments and just 61 days after he petitioned the court for review. It did so even though Trump remained on the ballot pending a decision. Tuesday marked 26 days after the court heard oral arguments, 99 days and counting since he appealed the unanimous D.C. Circuit ruling against him and 162 days and counting since the Justice Department originally asked it to take up the case. Yet there is no sign of a decision. 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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