• Strongly Dem (42)
  • Likely Dem (3)
  • Barely Dem (2)
  • Exactly tied (0)
  • Barely GOP (1)
  • Likely GOP (3)
  • Strongly GOP (49)
  • No Senate race
This date in 2022 2018 2014
New polls:  
Dem pickups : (None)
GOP pickups : (None)
Political Wire logo Obama Rips Trump’s ‘Obsession’ with Him
Democratic Voters Show Shift Away from Israel
Trump’s IRS Pick Has Ties to His Personal Legal Team
House GOP Leaders Postpone Action on Spending Bills
How Crazy Is Darializa Avila Chevalier?
Only 18% Believe U.S. Met Objectives in Iran
TODAY'S HEADLINES (click to jump there; use your browser's "Back" button to return here)
      •  The Mamdani Moment
      •  Democratic Anxiety in Maine
      •  Donald Trump Has a(nother) Bad Day
      •  Congress Passes Housing Bill
      •  Never Forget: The Civil (Rights) War

The Mamdani Moment

Lots of elections yesterday, and lots of storylines. But the biggest storyline involves New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who backed three somewhat risky horses in races for the House of Representatives, and went 3-0. Here's a rundown of the most notable results:

The Trifecta: Mamdani endorsed three lefty candidates in three very lefty New York City districts. Those districts are NY-07 (D+25), where Assemblywoman Claire Valdez (D) defeated Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, 56.1% to 35.8%; NY-10 (D+32), where former city comptroller Brad Lander (D) defeated Rep. Dan Goldman (D), 65.8% to 34%; and NY-13 (D+32), where doctoral student and public defender's office staffer Darializa Avila Chevalier (D) defeated Rep. Adriano Espaillat (D), 49.4% to 45.9%.

One does not want to overstate Mamdani's power to sway elections. Obviously, as with Donald Trump, his influence is limited to certain kinds of districts. A Mamdani endorsement is not going to be an asset in, say, ME-02. Further, two of the three races were so lopsided, Mamdani could not plausibly have been decisive. Oh, and there were plenty of races yesterday, even in NYC, where the establishment candidate won. That said, going 3-0, and knocking off two incumbents, is nonetheless impressive. By contrast, Donald Trump has endorsed in many more races, and has only managed to just equal the total that Mamdani put up yesterday (Trump helped knock off Dan Crenshaw, R-TX, and Thomas Massie, R-KY). This is because Mamdani takes some risks, whereas Trump largely does not.

It is also worth noting that all three of the races were substantially impacted by the issue of Israel, with criticism of that nation central to the platforms of each of the three lefty winners. In a story that speaks to the salience of Israel, the now-defeated Goldman was banned from a Brooklyn coffee shop on Monday because he is pro-Israel, and because he (allegedly) accepted money from AIPAC. Alan Dershowitz, who is desperately trying to remain relevant, has announced that he will file suit on Goldman's behalf. It would seem that Dersh did not learn in law school that "political ideology" is not a protected class.

What does this presage for 2026 and, more importantly, for 2028? It is possible that Israel/AIPAC will remain salient, and will divide Democrats the way that they did in 2024 (to the detriment of Kamala Harris). On the other hand, it's also possible that because of the violence with Hamas, and now the violence with Hezbollah, the worm has turned, and skepticism of Israel has become the dominant (or, at least, an acceptable) position in the Democratic Party. If so, that would be good news for the blue team, which would prefer to be relieved of one of its most divisive wedge issues.

Governor, South Carolina: We'll get back to the many House races (in New York and elsewhere), but we do generally try to list these election results in order of significance, and governors generally have more impact than representatives do. So, in South Carolina, the Trump-endorsed state AG Alan Wilson (R) won the runoff in a walk, outpacing the Trump-endorsed Lt. Gov. Pamela Evette (R) 68.6% to 31.4%. It's South Carolina, which has a PVI of R+8 and hasn't elected a Democrat as governor in the 21st century, so Wilson will be the state's next governor barring some miracle.

Readers will not be surprised to learn that Trump has already taken credit for Wilson's victory. As soon as the results were in, the President hopped on his powered-by-Viagra social media platform and posted this:

It says 'REPUBLICAN NOMINEE
FOR GOVERNOR OF SOUTH CAROLINA ALAN WILSON WINS! ENDORSED BY PRESIDENT TRUMP!' It has Trump's picture in the foreground,
and Wilson's picture, about 20% smaller, in the background.

Notice, in particular, how Trump's picture is larger than the actual winner's picture.

Despite the propagandizing to the contrary, we would argue this was actually a loss for Trump. Again, he endorsed both candidates. And he endorsed the loser (Evette) long before he endorsed the winner (Wilson). Indeed, as we noted Monday, he only endorsed Wilson this weekend, by which time it was obvious Wilson would win. In other words, the endorsement was about saving face and protecting Trump's batting average, and it clearly was nowhere near decisive. Trump's REAL candidate, the one he backed for months and months, went down in flames. He is at his most efficacious in races where there are three or more Republicans running, and he can tell the base which is the Trumpiest one of all. The President is far less impactful in two-way races between Republicans, and he's largely toothless in any other kind of race (unless he anti-endorses a Republican in a general election contest).

Governor, Maryland: As expected, Gov. Wes Moore (D) cruised to re-nomination, with 87.8% of the vote. He will face former state legislator Dan Cox (R), who won that side of the primary with 45.2% of the vote. This is a rematch of the 2022 Maryland gubernatorial election, where Moore trounced Cox, 64.5% to 32.1%. Further, around 500,000 Democrats cast ballots in this primary, as compared to fewer than 250,000 Republicans. So, you don't need to tell us who is going to win in November.

NY-01: This seat is one that exists at the edge of a hypothetical blue tsunami in November. It's on Long Island, is R+4, and incumbent Rep. Nick LaLota (R) is running for reelection. It will only be in play if anti-incumbent sentiment is extremely strong. The Democrat who will be crossing his fingers and hoping for the best is Chris Gallant, an openly gay firefighter who used to fly helicopters for the National Guard. Two very different conceptions of masculinity represented there. He's running on kitchen table issues, especially the cost of living and health care.

NY-03: This district is EVEN, and so will get a lot of attention from both parties. It's held by Rep. Tom Suozzi (D), who easily won renomination yesterday with nearly 80% of the vote. He will square off against former state assemblyman Mike LiPetri (R), who ran for the U.S. House in 2022 and lost, and who then challenged Suozzi in 2024 and lost again, 52% to 48%. LiPetri's main issue is "I wuv Donald Trump." We don't love his chances, but all the race raters have this district as Leans/Tilts Democratic, so maybe they see something we don't.

NY-04: Rep. Laura A. Gillen (D), in the middle of her first term in the House, is going to try to hold onto this D+2 district. She will face Hempstead Town Receiver of Taxes Jeanine C. Driscoll (R). We have never heard of that job, but we assume it outranks Associate Dogcatcher. Frankly, it sounds more like a job you would find in Robin Hood than in 21st century America.

In any event, Driscoll has held the post since 2019. She says her main priority is to "enhance the quality of life of Nassau County residents." As opposed to all the politicians whose goal is to make their constituents' lives worse. The main way in which Driscoll wishes to achieve this goal is by "securing our southern border." Inasmuch as the border, at its nearest point, is a mere 1,865 miles from NY-04, we can see how securing it would definitely represent a radical change in the lives of Nassau County residents.

NY-12: A D+33 district that is not going to be in doubt in November. However, Rep. Jerrold Nadler is vacating it after more than 30 years, and so there was a fierce competition for the nomination to succeed him. Assemblyman Micah Lasher ran a garden-variety Democratic campaign. Assemblyman Alex Bores built his campaign around reining in Big Tech, and Big Tech responded by running millions in anti-Bores ads. Jack Schlossberg ran on a platform of "John F. Kennedy was my grandpa." George Conway's platform is "I am a Republican-turned-Democrat who really hates Trump."

Lasher won in a fairly close one, taking 39.1% of the vote to 35% for Bores. Schlossberg finished third, with just 10.8%. Conway finished a distant fifth, at 6.1%. So, Lasher will be your next representative from NY-12.

NY-17: This is a D+1 district represented by a Republican, namely Rep. Mike Lawler. The Democrats are looking at this one and licking their chops. Admittedly, because we're talking Democrats here, it's probably Beyond Meat pork-style chops.

We had a report from reader E.H. in Ossining, NY, about the dynamics of the Democratic primary (Lawler was unopposed), which we'd like to pass along:

The Democratic primary boiled down to three candidates: Effie Phillips-Staley, a Westchester town trustee and the most progressive candidate; Cait Conley, a recent arrival to the district whose credentials are a West Point degree, service in the military, and a NatSec position in the Obama administration; and Beth Davidson, a Rockland County elected official.

Most of the people I know (including me) have a strong preference for Phillips-Staley, feeling that her platform most closely aligns with their values. And yet none (again, including me) are voting for her. Everyone is focused on who can beat Lawler as the only thing driving their vote, and the consensus is that she can't win, while either of the other two can. The other people I know are evenly divided between Conley and Davidson. Conley seems to be the better retail politician and has more ability to command a room and engender enthusiasm from a crowd. The negatives for her are the carpetbagger thing plus some past connections to big tech (AI) during a period when she worked as a NatSec/military consultant.

Davidson has stronger connections to Rockland voters, having been elected over there, so might be able to peel off more of Lawler's base voters. Her negatives are her less-persuasive politicking chops. As far as I can tell, the two of them have near-identical platforms (middle-of-the-road standard Democratic), so the vote is really personality- and strategy-focused. The GOP seemed to be most afraid of Conley, so I went with her, but if Davidson wins, it's fine with me as well. Whoever wins, I'll be hardcore volunteering, along with all the other people in my circle. No one cares if "their" candidate wins, we all just want to get the district back from Lawler.

Thanks, E.H.!

The winner here, in something of a rout, was Conley, with 49.5% of the vote as compared to 31.9% for Davidson and 15.3% of the vote for Phillips-Staley. We say again, the establishment candidates also did well in many races yesterday. Conley was indeed the opponent Lawler did not want to face, so he probably didn't sleep too well last night.

NY-18: We feel we should at least mention all the swingy seats, so the D+2 NY-18 makes the list. However, there was no actual contest yesterday, as Rep. Pat Ryan (D) and Jackie Mary Auringer (R), who works for her family's construction business, were unopposed. Ryan's a pretty strong campaigner and fundraiser, while Auringer's platform is pretty fuzzy, so the race raters think the Representative is safe, despite the purple-ness of his district.

NY-19: Another swingy district, at D+1. Rep. Josh Riley (D), who was unopposed, found out yesterday that he will match up against state Sen. Peter K. Oberacker (R). We do not know what Oberacker's issues are, because his website has no issues page. He does say he believes in "common sense," which is a bold stance to take. His biggest accomplishment in the state Senate is securing passage of a bill that declared baseball to be the state sport of New York. As you might be able to tell, we are underwhelmed.

NY-21: This R+10 district, which Rep. Elise Stefanik (R) will vacate in January after 12 years in office, is not really supposed to be in play. However, reader M.S. in Canton, NY, thinks that... maybe...:

In a bitter Republican primary, Trump-endorsed candidate (and loose cannon) Anthony Constantino defeated Robert Smullen, who had been endorsed by most county Republican committees and most "establishment" Republicans in the district, 59.3% to 40.2%. Meanwhile, dairy farmer Blake Gendebien easily won the Democratic primary with 64.7% of the vote.

The good news for Democrats: Although Smullen lost the Republican primary, he is already on the general election ballot as the candidate of the state's Conservative Party. If he stays in the race—he was noncommittal in his concession speech—it could split the conservative vote in a three-way race, and open a path for Gendebien. This has happened around here before: In 2009, Democrat Bill Owens scored an upset win in a special election for Congress when a tea partier (remember them?) ran on the Conservative line and split the conservative vote with an establishment Republican.

The bad news for Democrats: It looks like the number of votes for Constantino in the Republican primary (currently 26,565) will surpass the total number of votes for all candidates in the Democratic primary (currently 23,480). So even if all of Smullen's voters stick with him in the general election (unlikely), the Democrats may not have enough votes even to win a three-way race. Then again, the high-profile race today was on the Republican side, so maybe a lot of Democrats sat out the primary.

More bad news for Democrats: I have met Gendebien in person and he comes across very well, but I listened to his victory speech, and it was awkward at best. He is not a seasoned campaigner, and it shows.

So where is this going? I'll stick with my sense that this seat stays in the (R) column, but as they say, predictions are hard, especially about the future.

Thanks, M.S.!

NY-22: Another technically swingy seat (D+4) where nothing happened yesterday because Rep. John W. Mannion (D) and USDA staffer Kailee Buller (R) were both unopposed. Buller's campaign is so focused on kitchen table issues that she calls her campaign the "Kitchen Table Solutions Tour." But a D+4 district, in a blue year, against an incumbent, is no small hill to climb, so the race raters do not like her chances.

NY-24: Another district that, at R+11, isn't really swingy. But also another maybe... district, according to reader P.W. in Springwater, NY:

NY-24 is currently represented by Rep. Claudia Tenney (R), who a few years ago left her old district to run in a safer one. She's most famous for nominating Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, lobbying to make his birthday a national holiday, and taking credit for projects initiated under legislation she voted against. In the past, Democrats have basically given up on this district—14 counties around Lake Ontario and the Finger Lakes—but this year there is a Democratic primary. More significantly, a pretty robust local initiative to "Defeat Tenney" has been going on for months, complete with road signs, postcards, community events, etc.

Will it work? Maybe not, but in a blue wave? You never know. At least more of us are becoming aware Tenney spends more time on Fox News than in her district, never has town halls (only unannounced, small, meetings with pre-selected local supporters), and agrees with every unpopular position Trump has taken, from the Big, Ugly Bill, to the January 6 pardons and $1.8 billion slush fund, to the war in Iran. I'm not sure where she stands on the Reflecting Pool debacle, but it wouldn't surprise me if she took a quick dip (or at least stuck her toes in the water) to prove her loyalty to "her favorite president."

Thanks, P.W.!

The candidate who will try to take Tenney down is veteran, teacher, and Department of Veterans Affairs staffer Alissa J. Ellman (D), who easily won her primary with 61.7% of the vote. It would seem that Ellman has her finger on the pulse of the district, as her platform emphasizes two things: (1) kitchen table issues, and (2) that Tenney is out-of-touch and generally absent from the district.

MD-05: This is another district that is not at all swingy, at D+17, but has gotten attention because Rep. Steny Hoyer (D) is vacating it after nearly half a century. A horde of Democrats descended, and the winner is the Hoyer-backed state Del. Adrian Boafo (D), who took 32% of the vote in a 24-way race. That easily outpaced second-place finisher Quincy Bareebe, who claimed 18.1% of the vote. Boafo is pro-Israel and was backed by AIPAC and the crypto industry, so those things are clearly not fatal everywhere, even in deep-blue districts. Boafo's victim in November will be Chris Chaffee (R), who identifies himself as a "digital creator" (a description that covers a gamut from "website designer" to "I have an OnlyFans page"), who has run for office several times before, and who has not bothered to put together a campaign website.

MD-06: The one swingy district in Maryland, at least currently, is the D+3 MD-06. On the Democratic side, Rep. April McClain Delaney (D) battled with businessman David J. Trone (D), who held the seat immediately before McClain Delaney. She won the primary, 43.7% to 37.3%. The Republican in the race will be Robin Ficker, who is currently a real estate investor, but who is more famous for being a perennial candidate, a disbarred attorney, and a guy who shows up to sporting events and heckles the athletes. If this is the best the GOP can come up with, it's not a surprise that the race raters have it as solidly Democratic, despite the district being just D+3.

UT-01: As expected, former Representative Ben McAdams (D) easily won the right to run in this now-Democratic district, taking 56.2% of the vote while his three leftier challengers split the rest. The Republican will be Riley Owen, a veteran of both the Navy and the Trump v1.0 White House who takes the bold position that he believes in the American Dream. Cook has not announced a PVI for the district since its boundaries were redrawn due to a court order, but all the race raters have it as solidly Democratic. So, McAdams is presumably headed back to Washington.

SC-01: This district is on the very edge of "swing" territory at R+6, especially since it's a Democratic-friendly year, and since the seat has been left open by Rep. Nancy Mace's (R) ill-conceived attempt to run for governor. The blue team's odds got a little better yesterday, as the Democratic runoff was won by Vice Admiral Nancy S. Lacore (ret.). Lacore was fired by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, almost certainly for sexist reasons, and the district happens to be home to a lot of current and former military. Given that Donald Trump is underwater in South Carolina, it's not impossible that Lacore could win this thing.

Attorney General, South Carolina: Prosecutor David Stumbo (R) spent the last few days of the campaign in the hospital, but it wasn't enough to keep him from defeating state Sen. Stephen Goldfinch (R), 55.7% to 44.3%. South Carolina attorneys general tend to take the lead in filing lawsuits against Democratic presidential administrations, so you might hear Stumbo's name a bit if the Democrats retake the White House in 2028.

State Senate District 46, Maryland: Maryland Senate President Bill Ferguson (D) was unopposed in each of the last six elections. This time, he drew a challenge from veteran and activist Bobby LaPin (D), whose sole issue was "Ferguson is trying to stop Democrats from gerrymandering the state's district maps." Ferguson won, but it was pretty close, given that he's an established officeholder running against an unknown: 57% to 43%. We mention it because Ferguson might well take a lesson from this the next time Wes Moore starts talking about redrawing the maps (with the goal of turning the R+8 MD-01, currently held by Rep. Andy Harris, R) blue.

If you were looking for 3,500 words on yesterday's results, well, you just got 'em. The next week will be a little less busy; Louisiana has a U.S. Senate runoff on Saturday, and then Colorado's primary is Tuesday. (Z)

Democratic Anxiety in Maine

As long as we are on the subject of election results, let's turn our attention (back) to Maine for a moment. Recall that the good people of Maine use ranked choice voting, such that not all of the results were known when the state held its primaries a couple of weeks ago. The picture is clear now, however.

As a reminder, Rep. Jared Golden (D-ME) is retiring from ME-02, a very rural district in the north of the state. It is the largest district by area east of the Mississippi. Even though Maine is a blue state, ME-02 is R+4. Holding such a red, rural district will be tough for the Democrats, even under favorable conditions.

The Republican candidate in ME-02 has been known for months, as former governor (and devoted Trumper) Paul LePage (R) was unopposed. And now, the Democrat is known, as State Auditor Matt Dunlap won the primary, 52.5% to 47.5% for second-place finisher Joseph M. Baldacci. Baldacci actually led 31.6% to 29.2% after the first round of voting, so Dunlap was obviously the more commonly preferred alternative for the supporters of the third- and fourth-place candidates.

Dunlap is a progressive and was the Maine co-chair of the 2016 campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT). He has been endorsed by Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), whose Silicon Valley district is 2,800 miles from ME-02. The three candidates that Dunlap beat, including Baldacci, who had the backing of the DCCC, are all more moderate. For a long time, progressives have said that if rural voters would only see what progressives want to do for them, they would win. Now we will get a good test of that. Dunlap's top five priorities are:

  • Getting the cost of living down.
  • Enacting Medicare for All.
  • Supporting unions and workers' rights.
  • Protecting a woman's right to have an abortion if she wants one.
  • Fighting to protect democracy.

Note that none of these are specifically aimed at farmers, lumberjacks, lobsterjacks or oysterjacks (or jills). Dunlap appears to have dusted off Bernie's campaign platform and is running it. House races are often more local. And in this case, LePage is far better known than Dunlap. The Democrats may lose a potentially winnable seat here.

That said, while the DCCC may be disappointed in the voters' choice, they are going to do whatever they can to help him out, because the blue team needs to hold this seat. It helps that LePage, while well-known, is also somewhat notorious, with a number of scandals and impolitic moments in his past. There haven't been any recent polls, but there should be shortly now that the nominees are known. For what it's worth, the now-defeated Baldacci campaign commissioned a poll in late May, and it had Baldacci beating LePage by 8 points, 49% to 41%.

Having a lefty candidate in a not-so-lefty district is not the only thing in Maine that has Democrats worried, however. Let's take a look at the last seven polls of this year's U.S. Senate race between Graham Platner and Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME):

Pollster Date Platner (D) Collins (R) Net
Pan Atlantic SMS Group May 8-18 48% 41% Platner +7%
University of New Hampshire May 21-25 51% 42% Platner +9%
UMass Lowell/Center for Public Opinion/YouGov May 13-26 48% 43% Platner +5%
NYT runs story about Platner's sexting (May 30)
PPP June 2-3 49% 45% Platner +4%
NYT runs story about Platner's former girlfriends (June 5)
Tavern Research June 5-8 51% 49% Platner +2%
Quantus Insights June 9-11 46% 45% Platner +1%
Wick June 11-13 48% 45% Platner +3%

The trendline couldn't be clearer. Platner's still in the lead, but barely, and he's clearly been hurt by the two recent scandals. Oh, and he's up against an opponent who tends to overperform her polls. The Democrats and their candidate will hope he can bounce back, but at the moment, Platner clearly has work to do. (V & Z)

Donald Trump Has a(nother) Bad Day

Some days, Donald Trump suffers so many setbacks, embarrassments and other might-be-bad-for-his-party developments that it's hard to keep up. Yesterday was such a day. To wit:

Regime Change: There was something of a cottage industry in Trump exposés during Trump v1.0; that hasn't happened as much this time around. Maybe there hasn't been time, or maybe the market has been sated, or maybe there aren't as many angry former Trump staffers looking to stand outside the tent and pi** in. Whatever is going on, we got our first Trump v2.0 entry in the genre this week; it's Regime Change: Inside the Imperial Presidency of Donald Trump, by Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan. It's full of dirt, albeit not-that-surprising dirt. According to the authors, for example, the most powerful person in the White House is Stephen Miller. And during the first days of the Iran War, Trump's focus was buying trees for the White House lawn. And Trump flatters himself that he's more powerful than Attila the Hun, Genghis Khan, Napoleon, Joseph Stalin, Mao Zedong, and Adolf Hitler.

Senate Finger, Meet Trump Eye: Speaking of Iran, it's only symbolic, but the Senate voted yesterday to order Trump to remove American forces from Iran. The vote was 50-48, with most of the Republicans and John Fetterman (D-PA) in the minority, the rest of the Democrats, the independents, and Republicans Bill Cassidy (LA), Susan Collins, Lisa Murkowski (AK) and Rand Paul (KY) in the majority, and Mitch McConnell (R-KY) and Dave McCormack (R-PA) absent. This certainly isn't going to improve the administration's negotiating position.

Full Court Press: Some days, the administration suffers many losses in court. Some days, it's only one or two. Yesterday was one of the "better" days, with only one loss. Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California P. Casey Pitts ruled that it's not legal for the administration to show up at immigration courts and arrest people. This is going to be very disappointing to the most powerful person in the White House. And it's not going to make Trump happy, either.

Dead Ducks: We mean that literally. As we have already written, one of the predictable effects of filling water that is used by ducks—say, the water in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool—with heavy-duty chemicals is that you're going to kill some ducks. At this point, at least three photos of dead baby ducks floating in the pond are all over social media. We are not going to share any of them, because they are very depressing. It is true that three ducks (or five, or ten) are relatively small in the grand scheme of things. It is also true that Americans love, love, love animals and they hate, hate, hate people who do harm to animals, especially baby animals.

Patient Zero?: There is a new anti-obesity drug, called retatrutide, that is in the final stages of clinical trials. Yesterday, STAT reported that a single person was given a "compassionate waiver" in April to gain early access to the drug. This person was 79 years old at the time, is clearly well-connected, is clearly OK with the idea of "rules for thee, not for me," and is significantly overweight. You can presumably figure out who STAT is pointing the finger at. The publication did manage to get some indirect evidence from White House staffers, while the White House Press Office originally did not deny the reporting, and then later offered only a tepid denial.

If STAT has connected the dots correctly, then at very least, it means that even Trump realizes that the image he has created of the lean-and-mean "fittest president in history" is a load of garbage. However, the fact that it's this drug, that the whole thing was so aggressively fast-tracked, and that Trump has already shown outward signs of issues, gives at least some suggestion that there is something more serious going on. One diagnosis that fits the facts (assuming, again, that it was Trump who got the drug) is pulmonary hypertension, which is a very serious and potentially fatal condition.

Again, not a great day for the fellow in the Oval Office. (Z)

Congress Passes Housing Bill

Congress rarely gets anything done, beyond renaming post offices. It even more rarely gets something bipartisan done. So, it's something of a surprise that both chambers just passed the Road to Housing Act by overwhelming margins—88-5 in the Senate, 358-32 in the House. There are a few things to be ironed out by a Conference Committee, and then it will head to the desk of Donald Trump, who is expected to sign it.

The bill is basically an omnibus bill combining roughly 60 different ideas from both sides of the aisle. For example, some regulations that limit home construction would be removed. Localities that build lots of new housing would get extra federal funding at the expense of localities that don't build lots of new housing. There would be some new limits on private equity purchases of homes (though not as many limits as the lefties, like Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-MA, wanted).

This bill is not going to do all that much in the short term. First of all, the housing market is like a barge, and moves forward very, very slowly. Second, there are a couple of key issues that are somewhere between difficult and impossible for the Congress to address. One of those is that interest rates are high, and those are controlled by the Fed. Another is that anything that reduces the prices of existing housing will make existing homeowners hopping mad. So, the focus really has to be on new housing which, again, takes time.

That said, this is a clear indication that members of both parties recognize there is a serious problem here, and if they fail to do something it is at their own peril. Further, we have argued that the conditions in the U.S. right now mirror the Gilded Age in several ways, suggesting that a new Progressive Era is around the corner. And most of the really important legislation of that era started as something relatively toothless, and then was revised by subsequent legislation to be something meaningful. Read about the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 and then the Clayton Antitrust Act of 1914, for example. Every journey starts with a single step, and maybe, just maybe, this new law is the first step in an important new journey for the United States. (Z)

Never Forget: The Civil (Rights) War

Today, a piece about a different, and very important, struggle courtesy of reader M.R. in La Jolla, CA:

The veterans' stories have been very moving. Just a thought... could we mention the veterans and martyrs of another war—the war for civil rights?

Many people know about the story of the three men killed during Freedom Summer in 1964. Mickey Schwerner and James Chaney worked for the Congress of Racial Equality in Mississippi. Andrew Goodman was one of the hundreds of college students from across the country who volunteered to work on voter registration, education, and Civil Rights as part of Freedom Summer.

A poster that was produced
when the three men went missing. It has pictures of the three men, and the text 'THE FBI IS SEEKING INFORMATION
CONCERNING THE DISAPPEARANCE AT PHILADELPHIA, MISSISSIPPI, OF THESE THREE INDIVIDUALS ON JUNE 21, 1964 EXTENSIVE
INVESTIGATION IS BEING CONDUCTED TO LOCATE GOODMAN, CHANEY, AND SCHWERNER, WHO ARE DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:' There is no
actual description, though, just their names and photos.

Scholars estimate that at least half of the white people who came down south as volunteers that summer were Jews. To be honest, most of the northern synagogues kept quiet about the issue of civil rights; the young Jews who took the journey did so not because they were encouraged, but simply of their own initiative.

This past Sunday was the civil yahrzeit (death anniversary) of the three men killed by a racist mob, fighting for the rights of every American.

An additional note: It's fairly clear that the case drew national attention because, though Jews, Schwerner and Goodman were white. Mickey Schwerner's wife Rita, also a CORE worker, refused to offer a teary plea to find her husband. Instead, she said in an interview with reporters on the scene, "It is tragic, as far as I am concerned, that white Northerners have to be caught up in the machinery of injustice and indifference in the South, before the American people register concern. I personally suspect that if Mr. Chaney, who is a native Mississippian Negro, had been alone at the time of the disappearance that this case, like so many others that have come before, would have been completely unnoticed."

Rita is still alive. I hope nobody is insulted if you include the memories of the activists who put their lives on the line as part of this series.

Thanks, M.R., and we are sure nobody will be insulted. (Z)


       
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---The Votemaster and Zenger
Jun23 The Trump Administration Just Keeps Losing in Court...
Jun23 ...And Yet, Trump Says There Are No Limits to His Power
Jun23 Trump Approval Keeps Sinking
Jun23 Political Bytes, Local Edition: Maryland, New York and Utah
Jun23 Starmer Will Stand Down
Jun23 Never Forget: P.O.W. Wow
Jun22 There Are Some Highly Contested Primaries Tomorrow
Jun22 Negotiations with Iran Are Underway, Kind Of
Jun22 Senior Republicans Are Pessimistic about Any Iran Deal
Jun22 J.D. Vance Found a Way to Defend the MOU: Brazenly Lie about It
Jun22 Starmer May Be Out of a Job
Jun22 Meloni Rebukes Trump
Jun22 Never Forget: Here Comes Da Jug?
Jun21 Sunday Mailbag
Jun20 Saturday Q&A
Jun20 Reader Question of the Week: Mental Dis-Ease, Part IV
Jun19 The Iran War: Donald Trump Did Not Ace This Test
Jun19 In Congress, Part I: The President Is a Real Scrooge
Jun19 In Congress, Part II: House Democrats Continue to Chip Away at GOP's Grip on Power
Jun19 Political Bytes: From Harry S. Truman to Barack Obama
Jun19 Never Forget: Short Stories, Part III
Jun19 I Read the News Today, Oh Boy: Trout Mask Replica
Jun19 This Week in Schadenfreude: Death to Algae!
Jun19 This Week in Freudenfreude: I Am the Eggman
Jun18 Latest Leak on the Iran MOU
Jun18 Is Trump Setting Up Vance to Be a Scapegoat?
Jun18 Republicans Are Praying the Iran Deal Will Ease the Pain at the Pump
Jun18 G7 Summit Concludes
Jun18 Fed Chair Warsh Is Going to Disappoint Trump
Jun18 Georgia Lawmakers Hesitate to Redraw the Maps for 2028
Jun18 Robert Kennedy Jr. Keeps Showing Up in Swing Districts
Jun18 Grumpy Old Man Says Trump Will Quit Next Year
Jun18 Never Forget: Happy Birthday, Papa
Jun17 In This Case, Red and Blue Do Not Make Purple
Jun17 Nuts and Bolts, Part I: Thom Tillis
Jun17 Nuts and Bolts, Part II: Susan Collins
Jun17 Democratic Presidential Candidate of the Week, #25: Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL)
Jun17 Never Forget: Not Every Rosie Was a Riveter
Jun16 The Art of the Pseudo-Deal
Jun16 The Slush Fund Might Be in Trouble...
Jun16 ...But the Weaponization of the Federal Government Continues Unchecked
Jun16 Senate Might Assert Itself... Sort Of
Jun16 Political Bytes, Local Edition: DC, CA-14, South Carolina, Colorado Senate and NY-21
Jun16 Never Forget:
Jun15 There Are Elections in Three States Tomorrow
Jun15 Sort-of-Peace Is Sort-of-Closer in Iran
Jun15 Trump Is Fighting Father Time, and Father Time Is Winning
Jun15 Cornyn: Trump's Final 2 Years as President Will Be Miserable
Jun15 Poll: Trump's Support with Working-Class Independents Is Cratering
Jun15 Texas Republicans: Talarico Is Not a Real Man