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Republicans’ Anti-Woke, Anti-Vote Crusade Has Crashed Into the Constitution

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A morning roundup of worthy pundit and news reads, brought to you by Daily Kos. - Republicans’

[Daily Kos Morning Roundup]( A morning roundup of worthy pundit and news reads, brought to you by Daily Kos. [Click here to read the full web version.]( - [Republicans’ Anti-Woke, Anti-Vote Crusade Has Crashed Into the Constitution]( Republicans’ Anti-Woke, Anti-Vote Crusade Has Crashed Into the Constitution, Charles Blow, The New York Times The same party that argues for parental rights when haranguing and harassing educators about what is being taught and read in the classroom couldn’t care less about the parental rights of those trying to provide the best care for their children or who want their children to have an awareness and understanding of the broad spectrum of humanity and its expressions of love. The Republican politicians pushing these un-American laws aren’t constitutional absolutists; they’re constitutional opportunists. The same is true when it comes to elections, where the Republican strategy has become clear: Rather than change their party to appeal more broadly to the electorate, many Republican politicians are whittling away at the electorate and our election architecture, trying to remove or hamstring those aspects of the process that could lead to them losing. They want to change the very meaning of democracy, shrinking to a government chosen by the chosen, a more originalist version of our system in which only certain people participate. - [Be skeptical of the ‘wave’ of evangelical voters]( Be skeptical of the ‘wave’ of evangelical voters, Nathan L. Gonzales, Roll Call Do evangelicals make up that large share of the electorate compared to Black, Hispanic and union voters? The short answer is: no. White born-again or evangelical Christians made up 24 percent of the electorate in the 2022 elections, according to the media consortium exit poll conducted for CNN, ABC, NBC, and CBS. Black (11 percent) and Latino (11 percent) voters and those from a union household (18 percent) combined to comprise 40 percent of the vote. A second exit poll, conducted for Fox News, The Associated Press, and The Wall Street Journal broke out voters who were union members (11 percent) and voters who had a union member in their household (6 percent), but the end result was the same. White evangelicals made up 20 percent of the electorate in 2022, according to the second exit poll, while Black (11 percent), Hispanic (10 percent) and union members (11 percent) combined for 32 percent of the electorate. Adding in voters in a union household, that coalition ticketed up 38 percent — nearly double the white evangelical vote. - [Texas sets new hate crimes record, DPS data shows]( Texas sets new hate crimes record, DPS data shows, Steven Monacelli, The Texas Observer Newly released data collected from the Texas Department of Public Safety (DPS) show that hate crimes in Texas increased by 6.4 percent from 2021 to 2022, marking the sixth year in a row the state has seen an increase in hate crimes—and setting a new record. The data show that Texas reached a new peak of at least 549 documented hate crimes across the state, with over 56 percent of hate crimes in 2022 targeting LGTBQ+ and Black people. [...] According to Texas DPS data, the majority of documented hate crimes are clustered in the top five most populous counties, which accounted for 54 percent of all hate crimes in 2022. The top 10 counties, home to 66 percent of Texans, accounted for 63 percent of hate crimes that same year. When normalized for population size, smaller counties tend to have much higher rates of hate crime incidents. The top 10 most-populous counties were split in terms of their change in the number of hate crimes year-over-year, with some seeing an increase and others seeing a decrease from 2021 to 2022. [...] When broken out by bias type, there is not a consistent trend regarding year-over-year changes in hate crimes. The overall increase seen in the state is driven by a handful of groups: anti-LGBTQ+, anti-Asian, anti-Other Religion, anti-Other Race, and anti-Jewish. Meanwhile, anti-white and anti-Latino hate crimes have slightly decreased, while anti-Black hate crimes have remained flat. Hate crimes against other groups have increased and decreased variably. Minority groups faced significantly higher rates of hate crimes per capita. - [‘WTF is going on?’]( ‘WTF is going on?’, Jon Allsop, The Columbia Journalism Review For starters, while Putin has indeed tried to suck the air out of Russia’s domestic media, there have long been gaps in the seal. Online readers can use VPNs and other tools to access restricted independent media. As the war in Ukraine has dragged disastrously on, a new cadre of pro-war bloggers have periodically challenged Putin from the right, for not being hardline enough. Mikhail Zygar, the former editor in chief of the independent Russian channel TV Rain, told The New Yorker’s David Remnick over the weekend that these bloggers are now more important than propagandists on state TV. “They pose themselves as representatives of some ‘true Russia,’” Zygar said. “They are careful, but they do not denounce Prigozhin.” And repression does not always equal control. Writing in The Atlantic yesterday, Anne Applebaum argued that by distorting the domestic information space, Putin has, above all, encouraged widespread popular apathy—which has discouraged opposition to his rule, but also meant that, as Wagner forces marched on Moscow, Russians en route didn’t rise up to stop them. Internationally, not everyone has always bought the media caricature of Putin as a strategic genius. (A remark that I once heard on a panel discussion about the Trump-Russia scandal, to the effect of the power dynamics in the Kremlin being far more farcical than one might intuitively think, has long stuck with me, though apparently not so much that I can remember who said it.) Putin’s prosecution of his war in Ukraine already punctured this image; if nothing else, the mutiny might finally deflate it and conjure a different media archetype in its stead: one of a paper tiger whose foes just grew real teeth. The truth, of course, will be messier than this image, too. - [Daily Kos hats are made in the USA and union decorated. Show your support for progressive, independent media by getting yours now.]( - [National Geographic lays off its last remaining staff writers]( National Geographic lays off its last remaining staff writers, Paul Farhi, The Washington Post On Wednesday, the Washington-based magazine that has surveyed science and the natural world for 135 years reached another difficult passage when it laid off all of its last remaining staff writers. The cutback — the latest in a series under owner Walt Disney Co. — involves some 19 editorial staffers in all, who were notified in April that these terminations were coming. Article assignments will henceforth be contracted out to freelancers or pieced together by editors. The cuts also eliminated the magazine’s small audio department. The layoffs were the second over the past nine months, and the fourth since a series of ownership changes began in 2015. In September, Disney removed six top editors in an extraordinary reorganization of the magazine’s editorial operations. - [Bad news: Daily Kos is facing tough financial times. Grassroots donors like you help us make ends meet. Can you chip in $5 to help us keep fighting?]( - [Joe Biden Tries to Change the Narrative on the Economy]( Joe Biden Tries to Change the Narrative on the Economy, John Cassidy, The New Yorker But setting aside the politics of all this, which isn’t easy, Biden has a stronger economic argument to make than many people realize. In headline terms, his case can be summed up in three words: jobs, investment, and fairness. At a broad level, the Administration’s policies have helped the U.S economy rebound from the covid-19-induced slump more strongly than many economists expected, while, simultaneously, starting to tackle some deep challenges that had long been neglected. By the nature of things, it’s too early to say whether these efforts to shift the economy’s historical trajectory will succeed, but some of the early signs are encouraging. The jobs record is central. When Biden took office, in January, 2021, the pandemic recovery was well under way: a hundred and forty-three million Americans were working, and the unemployment rate was 6.3 per cent. Last month, 156.1 million Americans were employed, and the jobless rate was just 3.7 per cent. Precisely how much of the job growth we’ve seen during the past two and a half years can be attributed to the $1.9 trillion stimulus that the Biden Administration signed in the March, 2021, American Rescue Plan can be debated, but the legislation undoubtedly played a significant role in supporting demand and hiring.[...] In the Build Back Better economic plan that Biden laid out during his 2020 Presidential campaign, he promised to boost investment in American manufacturing and bring back jobs that had been offshored. After entering the White House, he didn’t get his entire economic agenda through Congress. But, taken together, the new spending, tax credits, and investment subsidies that were contained in the infrastructure bill, the chips Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act amount to an ambitious new industrial policy, which aspires to strengthen American high-tech manufacturing, make the green-energy transition a reality, and create well-paying jobs. Earlier this year, I argued that Biden’s industrial initiative would ultimately be seen as his most significant policy contribution. ICYMI: Popular stories from the past week you won't want to miss: - [Meet the dumbest Republicans in the House—it’s not who you think]( - [Unbelievable! Georgia teacher fired for reading children's book]( - [Sen. Rick Scott introduces new 'travel warning' for Florida]( Want even more Daily Kos? Check out our podcasts: - [The Brief: A one-hour weekly political conversation hosted by Markos Moulitsas and Kerry Eleveld]( - [The Downballot: Daily Kos' podcast devoted to downballot elections. New episodes every Thursday]( 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](, [Twitter](, and [Instagram](. Thanks for all you do, The Daily Kos team Daily Kos Relies on Readers Like You We don't have billionaire backers like some right-wing media outlets. Half our revenue comes from readers like you, meaning we literally couldn't do this work without you. Can you chip in $5 right now to help Daily Kos keep fighting? [Chip in $5]( If you wish to donate by mail instead, please send a check to Daily Kos, PO Box 70036, Oakland, CA, 94612. Contributions to Daily Kos are not tax deductible. Sent via [ActionNetwork.org](. To update your email address, change your name or address, or to stop receiving emails from Daily Kos, please [click here](.

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