Newsletter Subject

On Politics: The man at the center of Arizona’s Senate primary

From

nytimes.com

Email Address

nytdirect@nytimes.com

Sent On

Fri, Jan 28, 2022 12:01 AM

Email Preheader Text

Spoiler alert: It’s Donald Trump. | January 27, 2022 NEWSLETTER NOTICE Beginning in mid-Februar

Spoiler alert: It’s Donald Trump. [View in browser](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP4QlAWh0dHBzOi8vbWVzc2FnaW5nLWN1c3RvbS1uZXdzbGV0dGVycy5ueXRpbWVzLmNvbS90ZW1wbGF0ZS9vYWt2Mj9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZwcm9kdWN0Q29kZT1DTiZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1cmk9bnl0JTNBJTJGJTJGbmV3c2xldHRlciUyRjhhNzQ0NmJiLWZhMTUtNTY4MS05MTI0LWQwMDFmMTZhMTM4NCZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~)|[nytimes.com](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0StaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) [On Politics](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S9aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc2VjdGlvbi9wb2xpdGljcz9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) January 27, 2022 NEWSLETTER NOTICE Beginning in mid-February, the On Politics newsletter will be available only to Times subscribers. [Subscribe to The Times now for $1/week](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TKaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc3Vic2NyaXB0aW9uP2NhbXBhaWduSWQ9OExLRlEmY2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) for access to Times journalism and all of our newsletters — to follow your interests and discover others. [Author Headshot](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S-aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vYnkvbGVhaC1hc2thcmluYW0_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~)[Author Headshot](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S_aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vYnkvYmxha2UtaG91bnNoZWxsP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) By [Leah Askarinam](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S-aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vYnkvbGVhaC1hc2thcmluYW0_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) and [Blake Hounshell](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S_aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vYnkvYmxha2UtaG91bnNoZWxsP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) In the U.S. Senate primary in Arizona, Republicans might become so consumed with winning Donald Trump’s blessing that they lose sight of the general election.Adriana Zehbrauskas for The New York Times The high stakes of a G.O.P. primary Senator Kyrsten Sinema has received so much attention recently that you might have forgotten that she’s not the Arizona Democrat up for re-election in 2022. That would be Senator Mark Kelly. As a freshman Democrat in a state that President Biden won by less than a percentage point in 2020, he’s [one of four vulnerable incumbents](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S_aHR0cHM6Ly9pbnNpZGVlbGVjdGlvbnMuY29tL3JhdGluZ3Mvc2VuYXRlP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) whom Republicans are targeting as they seek to regain the majority in the U.S. Senate. If Republicans fail to knock off Kelly, a popular former astronaut with piles of campaign cash, it’ll be for one main reason, party strategists and pollsters tell us: A primary so consumed with winning Donald Trump’s blessing that the Republican Party sets itself up to lose the general election. “With the current electoral environment shaping up to be very pro-Republican, the only potential issue is that a hard-right candidate comes out of the primary and ends up losing in what should be a gimme Republican year,” said Mike Noble, an Arizona-based pollster. The obvious choice for a challenger to Kelly might have been Doug Ducey, Arizona’s Republican governor. He managed to win re-election in a brutal year for Republicans and is not allowed to run for a third term. But Ducey has [steadfastly maintained he’s not interested](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TlaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMS8xMS8yMC91cy9wb2xpdGljcy9nb3AtdHJ1bXAtZ292ZXJub3JzLW1pZHRlcm1zLmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) in the Senate. That leaves a number of lesser-known Republicans to vie for the nomination. The best way to stand out? Obtaining the endorsement of Trump, which means making remarks or taking positions that could haunt them in November. First, there’s Attorney General Mark Brnovich, who’s worked in Arizona government for the last decade. But he faces intense pressure from Trump and from the Republican grass-roots to find fraud in his investigation of the 2020 election. At an Arizona rally earlier this month, Trump referred to his baseless claims that he actually won the state and told the crowd that he was “anxiously waiting” to see whether Brnovich would agree with him, and that they’d soon find out if the attorney general is a “good man.” Brnovich, apparently undeterred, [posted on Twitter a photo of himself with Trump](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TyaHR0cHM6Ly9hemNhcGl0b2x0aW1lcy5jb20vbmV3cy8yMDIyLzAxLzE1L3RydW1wLXBvaW50cy1hLWJpZy1maW5nZXItYXQtYnJub3ZpY2gtaW4tZmxvcmVuY2UvP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA). Trump reserved a warmer reception for Blake Masters, calling him “a really terrific guy” at the rally. Masters — a venture capitalist backed by Peter Thiel, a billionaire tech mogul who’s close to Trump — has [said that he believes Trump won in 2020](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TVaHR0cHM6Ly90d2l0dGVyLmNvbS9iZ21hc3RlcnMvc3RhdHVzLzE0NTgxMTA3OTIxNDY5NTIyMDA_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbGFuZz1lbiZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) and that the country is being [run by “psychopaths.”](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TNaHR0cHM6Ly90d2l0dGVyLmNvbS9iZ21hc3RlcnMvc3RhdHVzLzE0ODU2NTY1NjUwOTI4MDY2NTc_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) Then there’s Jim Lamon, a businessman [whose campaign put $1 million](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0ThaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMi8wMS8xMi91cy9wb2xpdGljcy9sZXRzLWdvLWJyYW5kb24tbWVtZS1nb3AuaHRtbD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) behind a TV ad cheering “Let’s Go Brandon,” a far-right slogan that translates to an expletive directed at Biden. Lamon [also helped facilitate](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP4QkAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmF6Y2VudHJhbC5jb20vc3RvcnkvbmV3cy9wb2xpdGljcy9lbGVjdGlvbnMvMjAyMS8wOS8wMy91LXMtc2VuYXRlLWNhbmRpZGF0ZS1qaW0tbGFtb24taGVscGVkLXBheS1hcml6b25hLWF1ZGl0LXNlY3VyaXR5LzU2OTk3MjkwMDEvP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) Republicans’ post-mortem review of the 2020 election results in the state’s most populous county. All of these efforts to win the former president’s support could backfire in the fall if Democrats are able to anchor the eventual nominee to Trump. “Yes, it’s a big benefit and help during the primary due to Trump’s current influence over the electorate,” Noble said. “However, it is absolutely a weakness when they move into the all-important general election.” It’s ‘the Republicans’ to lose’ Before we go any further, let’s make one thing clear: Given the national environment, Republicans should have a natural advantage in a state that Biden won so narrowly. It’s not just that the party in the White House tends to struggle in the first midterm election of a president’s term, or that the president’s approval ratings are hovering in the low 40s. It’s also that Biden inherited a pandemic and all the economic and social fallout that came with it. And that Arizona was ruby red only a few short years ago, suggesting that Kelly’s three-point margin in 2020 could be easy enough to erase. “It’s absolutely the Republicans’ to lose,” Brian Seitchik, an Arizona-based Republican consultant, said of the race. Republicans are confident that whoever becomes their nominee will enter the race against Kelly in a strong position to win. “​​Voters and persuadable swing voters will be inclined to want to vote for someone who’s going to be a check and a balance on the Biden administration,” said Daniel Scarpinato, a former chief of staff to Ducey. Proceeding with caution Arizona elected two Democratic senators during Trump’s term and ultimately voted to oust him in 2020. And even in a national environment that could lift Republicans to the majority, they could still find ways to lose. Scarpinato said he hasn’t seen candidates engage in behavior that would “tear the party apart or put people in a position where they’re perceived as being unelectable.” But he cautioned that Republicans can’t become so preoccupied with fighting one another in the primary — which is not until August — that they delay their attacks against Kelly. “They need to start now,” Scarpinato said. One Republican national strategist involved in Senate races told us that the top concern for many in his party is that the eventual nominee drains all their resources on the primary, leaving them cash-strapped against Kelly, who ended last year with nearly [$20 million in his campaign account.](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TzaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY25uLmNvbS8yMDIyLzAxLzA3L3BvbGl0aWNzL21hcmsta2VsbHktOS1taWxsaW9uLWZvdXJ0aC1xdWFydGVyLWFyaXpvbmEvaW5kZXguaHRtbD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) And while others noted that while Republican-aligned outside groups such as the Club for Growth could make up any gaps in spending, money is likely one reason that many Republicans keep hoping Ducey changes his mind and decides to run, Noble said. Ducey was re-elected in 2018 even as Democrats won a Senate seat in Arizona for the first time in decades. He’s already proven he can put together a top-tier statewide campaign operation. But Ducey has said publicly and privately that he’s not running, and it’s easy to see why: He’d have to get through a Republican primary and general election without the support of Trump, who blames him for losing the state in 2020. Just a few weeks ago, Trump reiterated in a [statement](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP4QyAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LjEybmV3cy5jb20vYXJ0aWNsZS9uZXdzL3BvbGl0aWNzL3RydW1wLXNheXMtaGUtd2lsbC1uZXZlci1lbmRvcnNlLWR1Y2V5LWZvci1zZW5hdGUtYWhlYWQtb2YtYXJpem9uYS12aXNpdC83NS1hN2JiOTYyZS1jMWE1LTRlNGEtOGQ1YS04ODQ1NWNkZjZlNmE_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) that Ducey would never have his “endorsement or the support of MAGA Nation!” One of the great unknowns in the 2022 election is the effect of the president’s approval rating. If it stays in the low 40s, Kelly could be ousted no matter how skilled a campaign he runs, or how bumbling an opponent he faces. “He has to carry around Joe Biden like a sack of potatoes wherever he goes,” said Stan Barnes, a Republican strategist based in Phoenix. What to read tonight - Some Democrats hope that nominating a Black woman to the Supreme Court will help [solidify support from Black voters in the midterms](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP4RHAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tL2xpdmUvMjAyMi8wMS8yNy91cy9zdGVwaGVuLWJyZXllci1zdXByZW1lLWNvdXJ0LXJldGlyZT9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3I2hvdy10aGUtbGVmdC1hbmQtdGhlLXJpZ2h0LXdpbGwtdXNlLWEtbmV3LXN1cHJlbWUtY291cnQtbm9taW5lZS10by1tYWtlLXRoZWlyLWNhc2VzLWluLXRoZS1taWR0ZXJtc1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~), Trip Gabriel reports. - The [confirmation process will test Senator Dick Durbin](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP4RMAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tL2xpdmUvMjAyMi8wMS8yNy91cy9zdGVwaGVuLWJyZXllci1zdXByZW1lLWNvdXJ0LXJldGlyZT9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3I2xlYWRpbmctYmlkZW5zLW5vbWluZWUtdGhyb3VnaC10aGUtanVkaWNpYXJ5LWNvbW1pdHRlZS13aWxsLWJlLWEtbWFqb3ItdGVzdC1vZi1pdHMtbGVhZGVyLXNlbmF0b3ItZHVyYmluVwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~), the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, which is evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans. - In [his latest Congressional Memo](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TxaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMi8wMS8yNy91cy9wb2xpdGljcy9kZW1vY3JhdHMtdm90aW5nLXJpZ2h0cy1iaWxsLW5lZ290aWF0aW9uLmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~), Carl Hulse asks if the Democrats’ new voting bill talks are for real — or for show. - The economy is growing faster than it has in decades, so why aren’t voters rewarding Biden for it? [Here’s what economists told](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TkaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMi8wMS8yNy9idXNpbmVzcy9lY29ub215L2JpZGVuLWVjb25vbXktcG9saXRpY3MuaHRtbD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) Jeanna Smialek and Ben Casselman. - This is more of a recommendation on what to do tonight: Try [gerrymandering an imaginary state](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP4QJAWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3Lm55dGltZXMuY29tL2ludGVyYWN0aXZlLzIwMjIvMDEvMjcvdXMvcG9saXRpY3MvY29uZ3Jlc3Npb25hbC1nZXJyeW1hbmRlcmluZy1yZWRpc3RyaWN0aW5nLWdhbWUtMjAyMi5odG1sP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) in this online game created by Ella Koeze, Denise Lu and Charlie Smart. Justice Thomas, left, has been mistakenly referred to as Chief Justice, the position John Roberts, right, holds.Erin Schaff/The New York Times One more thing … A lighthearted moment accidentally illuminated some important dynamics on the Supreme Court — more consequential, perhaps, than the [retirement of Justice Stephen Breyer](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TjaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vbGl2ZS8yMDIyLzAxLzI3L3VzL3N0ZXBoZW4tYnJleWVyLXN1cHJlbWUtY291cnQtcmV0aXJlP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA). In oral arguments last week in a case about whether Boston can stop a private group from [flying a Christian flag in front of its City Hall](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TlaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMi8wMS8xOC91cy9zdXByZW1lLWNvdXJ0LWJvc3Rvbi1mbGFnLWZyZWUtc3BlZWNoLmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~), a lawyer for the plaintiffs was addressing Clarence Thomas, a deeply conservative associate justice who joined the court in 1991. “Chief —” the lawyer, Mathew Staver, began, before correcting himself and continuing, “Justice Thomas.” The little-noticed hiccup came after a flood of recent commentary and reporting on Thomas’s [growing influence](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TmaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMC8wNS8xOC91cy9wb2xpdGljcy9jbGFyZW5jZS10aG9tYXMtc3VwcmVtZS1jb3VydC5odG1sP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) after years on the margins of the court. Last year, Jill Abramson, the former executive editor of The New York Times, [observed in an opinion essay](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TiaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMS8xMC8xNS9vcGluaW9uL2NsYXJlbmNlLXRob21hcy1zdXByZW1lLWNvdXJ0Lmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) that “what is remarkable is the extent to which the Supreme Court, with the addition of three Donald Trump nominees who create a 6-to-3 conservative majority, seems to be reshaping itself in Justice Thomas’s image.” This is the one thing that pundits of opposite political leanings seem to agree on: Liberals have lamented Thomas’s role as [“the new chief justice,”](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TyaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY25uLmNvbS8yMDIxLzA3LzIxL29waW5pb25zL2NsYXJlbmNlLXRob21hcy1zdXByZW1lLWNvdXJ0LXBvd2VyLXRvb2Jpbi9pbmRleC5odG1sP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) while conservatives, including [the influential Wall Street Journal editorial page](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TgaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cud3NqLmNvbS9hcnRpY2xlcy9nb2Qtc2F2ZS10aGUtY2xhcmVuY2UtdGhvbWFzLWNvdXJ0LTExNjIxODkzMTY4P2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA), have hailed [“the Thomas court.”](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TFaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY291cnRob3VzZW5ld3MuY29tL3RoZS10aG9tYXMtY291cnQvP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) It’s not the first time someone has made the same error. In March of last year, when a lawyer in another case mistakenly called Thomas “Mr. Chief Justice,” the actual chief justice — John Roberts — joked, [“There’s no opening.”](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TyaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubGF3MzYwLmNvbS9hcnRpY2xlcy8xMzcxMDc0L2NoaWVmLWp1c3RpY2UtdGhvbWFzLXRoZXJlLXMtbm8tb3BlbmluZy1yb2JlcnRzLXF1aXBzP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) Thanks for reading. We’ll see you tomorrow. — Blake & Leah Were you forwarded this newsletter? [Sign up here](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TBaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vbmV3c2xldHRlcnMvcG9saXRpY3M_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) to get it delivered to your inbox. Is there anything you think we’re missing? Anything you want to see more of? We’d love to hear from you. Email us at onpolitics@nytimes.com. NEWSLETTER NOTICE Enjoying this newsletter? Subscribe to keep receiving it. We’ve reserved a selection of newsletters, including this one, for Times subscribers. Subscriber support ensures that we have the resources to deliver this must-read, five-day-a-week newsletter that unpacks and illuminates American politics from every angle. Your access to this newsletter ends in mid-February. [Become a Times subscriber for $1/week](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TKaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc3Vic2NyaXB0aW9uP2NhbXBhaWduSWQ9OExLRlEmY2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) to enjoy our journalism and to continue to read this newsletter and any others you find interesting. Need help? Review our [newsletter help page](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TYaHR0cHM6Ly9oZWxwLm55dGltZXMuY29tL2hjL2VuLXVzL2FydGljbGVzLzM2MDAwMTQ4ODI2Ni1OZXdzbGV0dGVycz9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) or [contact us](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TXaHR0cHM6Ly9oZWxwLm55dGltZXMuY29tL2hjL2VuLXVzL2FydGljbGVzLzExNTAxNTM4NTg4Ny1Db250YWN0LXVzP2NhbXBhaWduX2lkPTU2JmVtYz1lZGl0X2NuXzIwMjIwMTI3Jmluc3RhbmNlX2lkPTUxNTAwJm5sPW9uLXBvbGl0aWNzJnJlZ2lfaWQ9Nzc2NzQ5NTImc2VnbWVudF9pZD04MDk0OSZ0ZT0xJnVzZXJfaWQ9YWE0OTFlZjdmMWQ5NjRlNDk3OWZiNzg0ZTc0ZTAxZDdXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) for assistance. You received this email because you signed up for On Politics from The New York Times. To stop receiving these emails, [unsubscribe](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TIaHR0cHM6Ly9teWFjY291bnQubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc2VnL3Vuc3Vic2NyaWJlL0NOL2EwYTRlOTMwMGEzMzY0YjAxNjU2MTU1MWQwNDA2Yzk4ZDJiMWUyMjdkNjEzMGNhMDJjMmFhNTVkZDExZGQxZjRkN2IyZGIwMjNmMmE3OGM0NzE2ZGJjMTA0Y2IxMGE1OD9lbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZzZW5kX2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTFXA255dEIKYd9JMvNhKfxP9FIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luOTBAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAAAA) or [manage your email preferences](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0SyaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vZW1haWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~). [Subscribe to The Times](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TKaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc3Vic2NyaXB0aW9uP2NhbXBhaWduSWQ9OVJYNzgmY2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~)[Get The New York Times app](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0THaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vc2VydmljZXMvbW9iaWxlL2luZGV4Lmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~) Connect with us on: [facebook](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S6aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZmFjZWJvb2suY29tL255dHBvbGl0aWNzLz9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) [twitter](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S0aHR0cHM6Ly90d2l0dGVyLmNvbS9ueXRwb2xpdGljcz9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) [instagram](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0S3aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuaW5zdGFncmFtLmNvbS9ueXRpbWVzLz9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) [Change Your Email](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TBaHR0cHM6Ly9teWFjY291bnQubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vbWVtL2VtYWlsLmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~)[Privacy Policy](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TiaHR0cDovL3d3dy5ueXRpbWVzLmNvbS9jb250ZW50L2hlbHAvcmlnaHRzL3ByaXZhY3kvcG9saWN5L3ByaXZhY3ktcG9saWN5Lmh0bWw_Y2FtcGFpZ25faWQ9NTYmZW1jPWVkaXRfY25fMjAyMjAxMjcmaW5zdGFuY2VfaWQ9NTE1MDAmbmw9b24tcG9saXRpY3MmcmVnaV9pZD03NzY3NDk1MiZzZWdtZW50X2lkPTgwOTQ5JnRlPTEmdXNlcl9pZD1hYTQ5MWVmN2YxZDk2NGU0OTc5ZmI3ODRlNzRlMDFkN1cDbnl0Qgph30ky82Ep_E_0Uht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW45MEBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAAA~)[Contact Us](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TJaHR0cHM6Ly9teWFjY291bnQubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vbWVtYmVyY2VudGVyL2hlbHAuaHRtbD9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~)[California Notices](~/AAAAAQA~/RgRj1bdJP0TGaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vcHJpdmFjeS9jYWxpZm9ybmlhLW5vdGljZT9jYW1wYWlnbl9pZD01NiZlbWM9ZWRpdF9jbl8yMDIyMDEyNyZpbnN0YW5jZV9pZD01MTUwMCZubD1vbi1wb2xpdGljcyZyZWdpX2lkPTc3Njc0OTUyJnNlZ21lbnRfaWQ9ODA5NDkmdGU9MSZ1c2VyX2lkPWFhNDkxZWY3ZjFkOTY0ZTQ5NzlmYjc4NGU3NGUwMWQ3VwNueXRCCmHfSTLzYSn8T_RSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjkwQGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAAA~~) The New York Times Company. 620 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10018

Marketing emails from nytimes.com

View More
Sent On

08/12/2024

Sent On

08/12/2024

Sent On

07/12/2024

Sent On

07/12/2024

Sent On

07/12/2024

Sent On

07/12/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.