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Opinion: Roy Moore is staying home

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Wed, Dec 13, 2017 01:52 PM

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Those who supported him will always be stained by it. View in | Add nytdirect@nytimes.com to your ad

Those who supported him will always be stained by it. View in [Browser]( | Add nytdirect@nytimes.com to your address book. [The New York Times]( [The New York Times]( Wednesday, December 13, 2017 [NYTimes.com/Opinion »]( [David Leonhardt] David Leonhardt Op-Ed Columnist Roy Moore lost. Thank goodness. The United States Senate will not have among its members a proud anti-Muslim, anti-gay bigot who is the subject of multiple credible accusations of molestation. The politicians who supported Moore, starting with President Trump, and those who silently refused to condemn him, including many congressional Republicans, will forever be stained by doing so. They supported a man who rejects American values. They also supported a man who managed to lose what should have been an easy Republican win. The immediate implication of Doug Jones’s victory is that the Republican margin in the Senate will shrink to just two votes once Jones is sworn in, sometime in the next several weeks. This means the party can lose only one of its members and still pass legislation (with the vice president breaking a tie). Republicans will now be in even more of a rush to pass their tax plan. I hope the Alabama result causes at least a few of them to reflect on the folly of passing an unpopular bill that increases the deficit and hurts the middle class. Only two more Republican “no” votes can keep it from passing — and the plan [violates the stated principles]( of at least three Republican senators ([Susan Collins]( Jeff Flake and John McCain). McCain, [who cares about process]( in particular may want to think back to what the Democratic leader, Harry Reid, announced the day after the 2010 special election in Massachusetts — a Democratic defeat as shocking as last night’s Republican defeat. “We’re going to wait until the new senator arrives until we do anything more on health care,” [Reid said](. The Alabama result also means that the Democrats have a path to a Senate majority next year, if they can hold their own seats and win two of the races among Arizona, Nevada and Tennessee. “Incredibly, the fight for control of the US Senate in 2018 should now be considered a toss-up,” [Nate Cohn said on Twitter](. Alex Burns of The Times has an excellent Twitter summary of the Republicans’ many strategic errors in Alabama. They included the appointment of a tainted temporary senator and the decision to drive a House member who might have won out of the race. If you’re of the age to remember the Choose Your Own Adventure books, [you’ll enjoy reading the full Burns thread](. Also on Twitter, Al Giordano [hailed — and explained]( — the N.A.A.C.P.’s get-out-the-vote efforts. [Jamil Smith said]( “Voting in America, for black folks and other marginalized communities, is often an act of self-preservation. It’s worth noting how patriotic it is that they keep working to improve a nation that not only subjugates them on a daily basis, but cries foul whenever progress is made.” The Upshot’s [election-returns page]( received a lot of deserved praise last night, and it was by far the best way to watch the results. It was well ahead of the television coverage. But I think it’s important to emphasize that the Upshot estimate wasn’t “right” because it showed Jones as having a greater than 50 percent chance of winning most of the night. Sometimes, events with a probability of less than 50 percent will happen, and that doesn’t make the probability “wrong.” Those of us who enjoy data still have work to do to make this case more persuasively. There is a widespread — and fundamentally incorrect — belief that a probability of 60 percent or 75 percent or 90 percent means it’s gonna happen. It does not, any more than a die is broken if it rolls a one. Sometimes, a candidate with a 62 percent chance of winning well into election night (as Jones had for a time last night) will lose. Otherwise, the percentage wouldn’t be merely 62. (Disclosure: I was The Upshot’s founding editor and worked on it until 2015.) The full Opinion report from The Times follows, including many good pieces on Alabama. Editorial [Roy Moore Loses, Sanity Reigns]( By THE EDITORIAL BOARD Doug Jones strikes a blow against Donald Trump and for morality in American politics. Op-Ed Contributor [A G.O.P. Tragedy in Four Acts]( By CHARLES J. SYKES Republicans embraced Trump, Moore and post-ethics politics. In defeat, they are officially post-shame. Op-Ed Columnist [Thank Heaven for . . . Alabama?]( By FRANK BRUNI If this deep-red state isn’t beyond redemption, then America isn’t, either. Op-Ed Columnist [As Goes Moore, So Goes Trumpism]( By ROSS DOUTHAT A defeat in Alabama should inspire a course correction in the White House — but it won’t. Op-Ed Columnist [Alabama Says No to Trump’s Tribalism]( By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN This was a real sign of health. Op-Ed Contributor [Trump and Bannon Can’t Save the Day]( By QUIN HILLYER The president and the populist badly botched their attempt to put Roy Moore over the top. HOW ARE WE DOING? We’d love your feedback on this newsletter. Please email thoughts and suggestions to [leonhardt@nytimes.com](mailto:leonhardt@nytimes.com?subject=Opinion%20Today%20Newsletter%20Feedback). ADVERTISEMENT Op-Ed Columnist [What Happens if the Tax Bill Is a Revenue Disaster?]( By PAUL KRUGMAN Market response may be muted; the big impact may be political. Op-Ed Columnist [In Trump World, the Need for Disobedience]( By ROGER COHEN When immense power is in erratic hands, the readiness of subordinates to disobey becomes critical. Even a dog knows that. [Fox News v. Robert Mueller]( Angie Wang By THE EDITORIAL BOARD The propaganda machine has kicked into high gear, and has a single goal: convincing President Trump to fire the special counsel. Contributing Op-Ed Writer [My Favorite Holiday Movie Involves a Giant Rabbit]( By JENNIFER FINNEY BOYLAN If the season means anything at all, it’s about believing in things we cannot actually see. Op-Ed Contributor [How the Tax Bill Hurts the Poorest Schools]( By NORA GORDON Congressional Republicans are going to make it more difficult for states to address inequality in public education. Op-Ed Contributor [When Judges Prey on Clerks]( By DARA E. PURVIS Law professors should refuse to send students to problematic judges and publicly explain why. Op-Ed Contributor [When Climate Change Becomes a Credit Problem]( By JEFF NESBIT State and local governments may see their credit ratings drop if they don’t prepare for global warming. Op-Ed Contributor [Lighting Hanukkah Candles Under the Swastika’s Shadow]( By DANIELLA J. GREENBAUM Tonight a menorah that began its life in Nazi Germany will be lit in Israel. LIKE THIS EMAIL? Forward it to your friends, and let them know they can sign up [here](. ADVERTISEMENT Letters [After the Times Square Bomb, Calls to Limit Immigration]( A writer of Pakistani descent criticizes such a response, while another writer says stricter policies would be a wise precaution. SIGN UP FOR THE VIETNAM ’67 NEWSLETTER Examining America’s long war in Southeast Asia [through the course]( of a single year. FOLLOW OPINION [Facebook] [FACEBOOK]( [Twitter] [@nytopinion]( [Pinterest] [Pinterest]( Get more [NYTimes.com newsletters »](  | Get unlimited access to NYTimes.com and our NYTimes apps. [Subscribe »]( ABOUT THIS EMAIL You received this message because you signed up for NYTimes.com's Opinion Today newsletter. [Unsubscribe]( | [Manage Subscriptions]( | [Change Your Email]( | [Privacy Policy]( | [Contact]( | [Advertise]( Copyright 2017 The New York Times Company 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

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