Wednesday, December 16, 2020

New API fellows

Alabama Policy Institute has announced that former former State Senator Bill Hightower, Bishop Jim Lowe, and former State Senator Bryan Taylor have become fellows of the Institute.

I look forward to reading the pieces these new fellows of the Institute put forth on about subjects that they consider of importance in furtherance of the Institute's non-profit, non-partisan mission as an educational and research organization committed to free markets, limited government, and strong families.

Friday, December 11, 2020

Denouncing ALGOP in Congress

Reps. Byrne, Brooks, Palmer & Aderholt have signed an amicus brief supporting  the Trump backed lawsuit that has been filed in U.S. Supreme Court seeking to overturn election.

On Twitter, I denounced, and I will solicit other Alabamians to denounce, Reps. Byrne, Brooks, Palmer & Aderholt for signing the amicus brief.

I request Gov. Ivey to denounce Reps. Byrne, Brooks, Palmer & Aderholt for signing the amicus brief. I solicit from her staff to have an opportunity to speak to a staff member of Gov. Ivey about why I have denounced Reps. Byrne, Brooks, Palmer & Aderholt, and why Gov. Ivey should denounce them.

It is appropriate for me to provide a written explanation of why Gov. Ivey should denounce Reps. Byrne, Brooks, Palmer & Aderholt.

I will do that here.

[to be completed]

Pending composing my explanation of why Gov. Ivey should denounce Reps. Byrne, Brooks, Palmer & Aderholt (and Rogers, who was added to list of brief signatories), I append here an email from Dr. Mark Elovitz, a friend of mine in Alabama, who has the professional credentials set out at the end of the below email.

From: Mark Elovitz
To: MARK CAR
Sent: Fri, Dec 11, 2020 8:06 am
Subject: Lemmings, Legal Madness & Seditious Abuse
Question: What do you get when you cross a herd of sheep with a herd of lemmings?
Answer: A herd of 106 Congresspersons compulsively rushing over the cliffs of legal madness while wittingly plunging themselves into the abyss of featherbrained incompetence, wretched ineptitude and contumacious insolence.
> If the foregoing sounds harsh, it is. If the foregoing seems partisan, it is. If the foregoing appears unlikely, unbelievable and unfathomable, it is not. In fact, that herd of Republican Congresspersons impertinently, fractiously and pigheadedly signed the President’s notoriously moot and mercilessly meritless Petition urging the Supreme Court to invalidate millions of votes cast for President-Elect Joe Biden.
> Now then, let’s be crystal clear. Mr. Trump has the absolute right to file a legally sound Petition/Brief. Members of Congress have an unquestionable right to lend their names, their respect, their prestige and their honor to the President’s Petition. However, it must needs be unequivocally stated and resolutely asserted that having the right to act does not convey even a semblance of legitimacy, a scintilla of authenticity or a shred of viability to the substance of that Presidential Petition (i.e. Trump’s currently pending Supporting Brief in behalf of the underlying Petition filed by the Texas Attorney General and supported by 17 other Attorneys General ).
> Perhaps most critically, the President’s Supporting Brief combined with the underlying Petition constitute what has been aptly characterized as “seditious abuse of the judicial process.” And, that is the egregious rub. Here’s why.
> Rule 11(b) of The Federal Rules Of Procedure (the rules that apply to pleadings filed in Federal Courts (The Supreme Court and all lower Federal Appellate and District Courts) requires that pleadings (petitions, motions, etc) must be supported by sound grounds. Absent legal jabberwalk, that rule requires that there must be real facts and/or bona fide legal argument based on existing law that underlie the grounds for which the requested relief is asserted.
> Then, also seriously consider that speculation, hypothesis, conjecture, supposition, bald-faced allegations and debunked conspiracy theories do not qualify as “sound grounds.” In fact, when the Court determines that the pleadings have been knowingly or wittingly filed without the requisite sound grounds, then the Court may impose such sanctions as it deems proper upon the offending counsel.
> Considering the abysmal
> absence of substantive facts (evidentiary support or existing law) undergirding Mr. Trump’s current Brief & the underlying Petition to the Supreme Court, the American public might well be prepared for a scathing dismissal of Mr. Trump’s Brief and the underlying petition it supports. Indeed, no court (neither the Supreme Court nor even the most unheralded, most undistinguished or lowliest court in the land) could or should entertain any filing not predicated upon sound grounds.
> Therefore and upon information and belief, the Supreme Court is likely (but certainly not guaranteed) to dismiss the cited pleadings with appropriate derision if not also with sanctions. In so doing, the Supreme Court would be brusquely asserting that American democracy and our legal system will not be cowed by fatuous litigation nor will they be subverted by Presidential authoritarianism, by specious Congressional partisanship or by the vapid protestations of jaundiced, jaded and injudicious legal counsel.
> Premises considered, one is reminded that it was none other than President Lincoln who wittingly urged: “Never stir up litigation. A worse man can scarcely be found than one who does this!”
> Enough said?
>>> M.H. Elovitz, Ph.D., J.D.*
>>> Director
>>> Centre For Strategic Geopolitics

*Dr. Mark Elovitz currently is the Director of the Centre for Strategic Geopolitics, a world affairs think tank. Dr. Elovitz has been a professor of law, a litigator, a U.S. Air Force Officer, a T.V. World Affairs Anchor and Commentator, and was a consultant to the Federal Government on public policy in Washington during the Carter and Reagan Administrations. He has also authored hundreds of articles, essays and other publications on topics ranging from legal liability, enhanced healthcare delivery, religion, and biomedical ethics to public policy, foreign affairs and geopolitics. Dr. Elovitz has been a participant in the U.S. Naval War College's Current Strategy Forum and has testified before the U.S. Congress' Committee On Foreign Affairs. Dr. Elovitz currently consults and frequently lectures on world affairs and geopolitical issues. Singapore's Presitge Lifestyle Magazine 2012 calls Dr. Elovitz a "seminal visionary. https://stratgeopol.blogspot.com/

Also, I post Alabama's Joe Scarborough's brutally stinging denunciation this morning of the106+ GOP in Congress who signed brief to have SCOTUS overturn election.

And I've requested Governor Ivey to denounce Reps. Byrne, Brooks, Palmer & Aderholt

Then there is Jerry Carl, newly elected representative to Congress from the Alabama 1st Congressional district. 

Senator-elect Tommy Tuberville could be so stupid as to do Trump's bidding on January 6th. 

Friday, November 27, 2020

Contradicting Trump

Trump's words of past two days
Donald Trump's words on Thanksgiving included the following:

"Certainly I will, and you know that," Trump said when asked by a reporter about leaving the White House if Biden is declared the winner on December 14. "I will and, you know that."
"It's going to be a very hard thing to concede because we know there was massive fraud," Trump said without evidence.
"As to whether or not we can get this apparatus moving quickly -- because time isn't on our side, everything else is on our side, facts are on our side, this was a massive fraud."
The President falsely added that if Biden is declared the winner, the Electoral College, "made a mistake, cause this election was a fraud."

Today, Trump tweeted
Trump irrationally inviting increased retaliation
Trump will soon lose the supreme power and protections of the Presidency.

After that happens, the legal, political, economic and social retaliation against Trump and his family for the damage Trump has inflicted on America will likely be huge.

What Trump has been doing since November 3rd will invite increased retaliation. 

Trump's current pardoning activity is particularly inviting of future retaliation against Trump and his family.

Trump seems irrational in his inviting increased retaliation against him and his family after he loses the supreme power and protections of the Presidency.

Four years of Trump has taught that Trump does whatever he wants, whether it is rational or irrational from the perspective of his self-interest. There is no dissuading Trump from an irrational course of action on which he has decided.

Trump's above words in the past two days will invite increased retaliation against Trump after he loses the power and protections of the Presidency.

Retaliation can commence by prominent parties contradicting Trump's words.

Trump's supporters
Many of Trump's supporters are aware of his irrationality, but remain silent.

Other Trump supporters speak in ways that encourage Trump in his irrationality.

Mo Brooks is one of Trump's supporters who encourages Trump's recent irrationality, per the below tweet: 

 Supporters like Mo Brooks need to be called out for their support of Trump's irrationality.


12/10/20
Voter reliance on election machinery
Election machinery in the United States is ponderous, diverse and a work in progress.
Tens of thousands of government officials and citizens strive mightily to make the machinery work well.
We vote in reliance on and trust of these officials and citizens and the hard work they do and the machinery they have in place for the voters to have a democratic election.
An election loser cannot afterwards contend the election machinery on which the voters relied in having the election should have been different machinery or operated differently, and, based on such contention, get the election invalidated or get the loser declared the winner contrary to the results that were produced.
That does not prevent the loser or anyone else from seeking to get the election machinery changed for future elections.

Sunday, November 8, 2020

Dear ALGOP, what will you do?

Dear ALGOP,

How have four years of Trump changed you?

Have you become "Trumpists"?

How do you think Trump being gone as President will change you going forward?

Will you continue being "Trumpists"?

A. Trump's fraudulent election claims
The immediate question for you is whether you will continue with touting Trump's fraudulent election claims as Trump pursues his litigations regarding same.

Connected to that question is, if Trump does not prevail in his litigations and Joe Biden becomes President on January 20th, will you support using the election fraud claims going forward to "delegitimatize" Joe Biden's presidency.

On that latter question, will you be motivated by "tit for tat" for the GOP to do against Joe Biden to "delegitimize" him as being fair retaliation for what you believe the Dems wrongfully did against Trump for four years to "delegitimize" Trump?


12/4/20
B. Go to war for country; it's a civil war
Here is what Chairman Lathan has said that those in ALGOP should do:
Will all in ALGOP go along with Chairman Lathan?

Will some in ALGOP push for a different attitude and approach?


12/9/20
C. ALGOP coupmongering is bad for AL
Trump is trying for a coup to overturn the election. 

Some in ALGOP are cheering Trump on in his coup attempt to overturn the election.

This coupmongering by Rep. Brooks, Rep. Moore and others in ALGOP is bad for America, bad for democracy and bad for the United States economy and business, including Alabama business.

Any loser of an election can pursue legal rights to contest the election. 

Historically, contesting a Presidential election after votes have been counted and results reported has been avoided, because of a shared belief about the importance to democracy that Americans believe their Presidential elections have integrity.

Richard Nixon had reason to believe that, in the extremely close 1960 Presidential election, the election was stolen from him through Democratic vote fixing in Texas and Illinois. Nixon did not contest the election, largely out of a sense of civic responsibility that great damage would have been done to America's democracy if he had.

Five weeks after the 2020 election, Trump is relentlessly trying to overturn the results of the election in ways that are hugely unacceptable and damaging to the United States.

This is happening, first, because Trump is motivated exclusively to serving his personal interests and desires, and he cares nothing about whom and what he damages in the pursuit of his self interest. In his caring only about himself, Trump has shown he gets psychological gratification from being a wrecking ball and inflicting damage on others, and that he acts on that.

Trump could not do what he doing to try to overturn the election if Trump did not have the unquestioning support of Republicans in Congress, and Trump has that support because of Trump's control and power over his base. The Republicans cannot stay in office without the support of Trump's base, so those Republicans will not act to stop Trump from what Trump is doing in trying to overturn the election.

The damage to the United States that comes from Trump's coup attempt is increased by Trump's base believing the 2020 election was stolen from Trump. This belief of Trump's base probably would not stand up if the Republicans in Congress collectively said to Trump's base that the election was not stolen from Trump. The Republicans in Congress do not do that, and the belief that the election was stolen from Trump gets more deeply ingrained in Trump's base.

After January 20th, Trump will continue telling his base that the election was stolen from him, and, using the power Trump gets from the support of his base, Trump will use their belief that the election was stolen from Trump to help him get his selfish gratification from trying to be a wrecking ball against Biden's efforts to lead the country through the virus and economic crisis. 

Trump's vindictive spite, anger and selfishness make him indifferent to whether his actions cause a slowdown in America's winning the war against the virus, in repairing the economic devastation to tens of millions of Americans as a result of the pandemic, and in getting the economy fully back on track.

The foregoing bad effects for the United States emanating from Trump causing slowdown in recovery from the pandemic will extend to Alabama and its citizens, business and economy.

The ability of Trump to cause these bad effects would be less if Republicans in Congress tell Trump's base the election was not stolen from Trump.

Leaders in Alabama business should tell the ALGOP coupmongers to cut it out.


1/6/21
D. Stark choice to be constructive or destructive
ALGOP, and particularly, our ALGOP in Congress, have a stark choice. 

They can slavishly do whatever Trump wants them to do and destructively help Trump impede our country's war against the virus and its economic devastations.

Alternatively, they can choose not to slavishly do what Trump wants them to do to impede our country's war against the virus and its economic devastations, and instead they can constructively pitch in to their utmost to help in our country's war to defeat the virus and its economic devastations. 

Chairman Lathan is staying all in with Trump, going so far as to say ‘absolutely not’ when asked if  Trump bore any blame for the attack on the Capitol.

We can keep tabs on Chairman Lathan as to whether she will be destructive after January 20th and aid Trump trying to impede our country's war against the virus and its economic devastations.


1/9/21
E. Resignation or not; impeachment
Growing calls for Trump to resign call for reaction by ALGOP.

ALGOP can consider whether Trump should resign either from the perspective of the Republican Party  or from the perspective of the country as a whole. Resignation or not can also be considered from the perspective of Trump personally.

From the above news report, Chairman Lathan would appear to be of the view that ALGOP's position should be based on what is better for the Republican Party. I will leave it for Chairman Lathan to lay out the case of why it is better for the Republican Party that Trump not resign.

I will consider the resignation question from the perspective of the country as a whole and whether it is better for the country for Trump to resign, or better that he not resign, and how much better or not. 

In Trump's Thursday night video (which is no longer accessible on Twitter), Trump said "My focus now turns to ensuring a smooth, orderly and seamless transition of power."

I would contend that will be better ensured if Trump resigns and Pence oversees transition.

I having been tweeting the below

In addition to, or perhaps part of, the goal for the country to have a smooth transition, there is or should be a objective to lessen division in the country and have a healing process.

Lessening division and healing the country faces huge obstacles. Probably the biggest obstacle is that  tens of millions of Trump supporters believe the election was stolen from him. They believe this largely because Trump has told them that and Trump has given every indication that he will not stop telling his supporters that the election was stolen from him.

The Democrats adamantly do not agree with Trump that the election was stolen from him.

Progress will not be made on the unity and healing front without progress being made on resolving the disagreement about whether the election was stolen. 

A Trump resignation would go a long way to signal that the election was not stolen from Trump, and that would help the country.

Wrapped up with the belief of Trump supporters that the election was stolen from him is a further belief that Trump did nothing wrong in his Presidency and the Democrats have been evil in their attacks on Trump during the past four years. Trump has been adamant that he has done nothing wrong during his four years, and what Trump says is a main source of the belief of his supporters that he has done nothing wrong and is being monstrously treated by the Democrats.

As with the question of whether the election was stolen, little progress can be made on the unity and healing front so long as tens of millions of Trump supporters believe Trump did nothing wrong and has been monstrously treated by the Democrats.

A Trump resignation would go a long way to being an admission by Trump that he did wrongs as President, and that admission would help the country.

All of the foregoing is good argument why it would be better for the country if Trump resigned.

If there is a case to be made that Trump would be better than Pence for accomplishing the transition, or that Trump not resigning would be better contribute to unifying and healing of the country, or if there are other reasons why it would be bad for the country for Trump to resign, that case should be laid out by Trump or someone on behalf of Trump.

Impeachment

The Democrats are threatening impeachment if Trump does not resign.

The argument being made against impeaching Trump is that impeachment would further divide the country.

If Trump will not resign, that leads to considering whether impeachment would be better for the country compared to there not being an impeachment, with particular attention to which would better contribute to unifying and healing the country.

As stated above, no progress can be made on the unity and healing front if tens of millions of Trump supporters believe the election was stolen from him. Trump has given every indication that he will not stop telling his supporters that the election was stolen from him.

Progress will not be made on the unity and healing front without progress being made on resolving the disagreement about whether the election was stolen. This is true now and will be true after January 20th; it is true whether or not there is an impeachment, and impeachment will not increase division in the country above where division is at; and impeachment could accelerate resolving the disagreement about whether the election was stolen from Trump.

There is no getting around that the country must have more resolution about whether the election was stolen and whether Trump did anything wrong. There can be intense focus on these before January 20th by means of an impeachment. Alternatively, the questions will be around for months or years adversely affecting the country's governance and politics.

Saturday, November 7, 2020

80,000,000 to 74,000,000

The national divide of 80,000,000 Americans voting for Biden and 74,000,000 Americans voting for Trump desperately needs addressing.

The national divide has been horrendous for the four years of Trump and was very bad for years before Trump.

I. Biden and Trump supporters talking to each other
I have pounded for several years in favor of the two sides to talking to each other.

I will continue pounding on that.

To proceed on this, I copy and paste here a message I received a couple of weeks ago from a European woman who has an adult daughter living in Alabama and who took took an acute interest in the election. The message said: 

Congratulations. Now you all must start the healing process. Each democrat must choose one staunch Trumpoupie, call him/her up and have them express their frustration, anger, sorrow whatever and not go into discussion. Just listen and say things like; it is very upsetting for you. Just reflect their feeling (you are so angry, so sad, so hurt etc) and no discussion. The wound must be healed by kind and understanding ‘democrats’. And that democrat must really try to build a relation with that Trumpoupie. If each democrat chooses 1, then 70 million Trumpoupies get the feeling they are understood and that may be the other side isn’t that bad. Once the anger and sadness subsides and rationality sets in it will be possible to plan together how to reunite the country again. You need a love peace happiness movement.

When I asked the woman what efforts she had made to share the above message with others, she replied: 

Well sort of spread it on as many democratic sites as possible hoping people would forward it. I get very mixed reactions. From people who really will try to people who are so hurt and offended by the Trumpers these past 4 yrs that they have no intention of even trying to become ‘United’ again. It is very worrisome this split in your country. I just wonder what the human glue could be that glues you together again. Not money. Too much research has already proven that money is a very short lived bandaid. May be the potable water needs to be diluted with cannabis oil. Cannabis mellows people up. However the Trumpers I contacted are so frustrated and angry now, reacting like upset children ready to start fighting. And some - even on the support group page - have admitted they will start the 2nd civil war. I try to mellow up 1 Trumper at the time, but they are convinced the election was stolen. How do you reason with angry people if reasoning is not what they are capable of and revenge is?

 

II. Best interest of our Country
Donald Trump has now used the words "in the best interest of our Country." Discussions about what is in the best interest of our Country might be productive.



III. Is this crazy? [added 12/12/20]
I have succeeded in accomplishing one conversation, which is set out below:

Beat back baseless election fraud claims

It seems that Trump will plunge America into an orgy over his baseless claims of election fraud.

The Trumpster side in Alabama is going full tilt at fomenting doubt about the legitimacy of the election that will put Joe Biden in the White House.

They have their political agenda, and that political agenda will undermine President Biden in leading America through the pandemic.

Those who want President Biden to succeed in leading America through the pandemic need to battle against the baseless election fraud claims that the Trumpster side is seeking to foment.

This includes Alabamians who want President Biden to succeed in leading America through the pandemic.

A roster needs to be established of Alabamians who will battle back against the Alabama Trumpsters who are spreading Trump's baseless election fraud claims in Alabama.

Brian Lyman can be put first on this roster. 


11/30/20
This blog entry needs updating.
For 4 weeks Trump's has been relentless in making his election fraud claims.
The more Trump has failed in the courts with his fraud claims, the more outlandish Trump and his team have become with conspiracy theories.
Yesterday, Trump extended his conspiracy theories to include the FBI and the Department of Justice participating in rigging the election.
On Twitter there continues much backing of Trump's election fraud conspiracy theories. See hashtag #StoptheSteal on Twitter.
In Alabama, the battle against Trump's baseless election fraud claims goes on.
Brian Lyman and other print reporters have been doing good work.
Alabama TV news programs, in reporting on Trump's election fraud claims, report on Trump's mounting losses in court, and they frequently include "editorial" statements about there being no evidence of fraud that warrants any changing of election results.
Some in ALGOP and "conservative" commentators and radio talk shows are continuing with purveying baseless election fraud claims.
For additional work I have done the past 4 weeks, see Where are Alabama's leadersWill John Merrill get blamed, and Contradicting Trump.

Trump and truth and facts
For four years, Trump supporters have accepted that Trump says whatever he wants, regardless of truth and facts.
They have also accepted that Trump does questionable things that no other politician would do. 
Trump's motivations in saying what he says, regardless of truth and facts, and for doing things no other politician would do, are best known to Trump.
Other persons, including Trump supporters, are left to speculations about Trump's motives, particularly when it seems Trump is hurting and not helping himself with things he says or does.
With things that are contrary to truth and facts, it unclear whether Trump knows the things are contrary to truth and facts, or whether Trump does not believe there are truth and facts so he does not know what is contrary to truth and facts (i.e., Trump is detached from reality).
Regardless of what Trump thinks, other persons, including Trump supporters, have their own beliefs about truth and facts and have opinions about whether things Trump says are contrary to truth and facts. 
Trump supporters may themselves be like Trump and be indifferent to truth and facts or not believe in truth and facts.
Persons who believe there are truth and facts consider truth and facts to be important for various reasons, including for making their personal decisions in life, for their employers making good business decisions from which they benefit, and for their government making policy decisions and taking actions that affect them.
Trump is extremely problematic for persons who believe that there are truth and facts because, as President, Trump affects matters of the country's governance and, if he makes decisions with indifference to truth and facts, those decisions may be bad for the country. 
This gets exacerbated if Trump supporters believe things Trump says that are contrary to truth and facts, or they are indifferent to truth and facts like Trump, which increases Trump's power to disregard truth and facts in making decisions.
The foregoing has come to a culmination in Trump's month long pursuit of his claims of election fraud.
Fair elections, and citizens' beliefs in there being fair elections, are critical to our democracy.
Because of Trump's election fraud claims, untold numbers of Americans believe there was massive fraud in the 2020 election and the election was "stolen" by the Democrats.
There are also Trump supporters who believe that Trump's election fraud claims are baseless but who nonetheless support and participate with Trump in purveying his election fraud claims.
These latter Trump supporters especially need to be beaten back.

12/10/20
Voter reliance on election machinery
Election machinery in the United States is ponderous, diverse and a work in progress.
Tens of thousands of government officials and citizens strive mightily to make the machinery work well.
We vote in reliance on and trust of these officials and citizens and the hard work they do and the machinery they have in place for the voters to have a democratic election. 
An election loser cannot afterwards contend the election machinery on which the voters relied in having the election should have been different machinery or operated differently, and, based on such contention, get the election invalidated or get the loser declared the winner contrary to the results that were produced.
That does not prevent the loser or anyone else from seeking to get the election machinery changed for future elections.

Monday, November 2, 2020

What did you do to reduce polarization?

1/9/21
I posted this blog entry in blank form on Nov. 2, 2020, the day before election day November 3rd.

I left this blog entry in blank form until Jan. 9, 2021.

I will now write in this blog entry and discuss the future as well as the past, and also be more generally asking and discussing "what the hell will you do now politically."

To reduce polarization, I have been long calling for conversation between the two sides. See Can the two sides talk?

To reduce polarization, I have also done much tweeting and blogging on the Fake News problem, which is connected to the problem of the two sides not talking to each other. For accessing this, go to https://twitter.com/search?q=fake%20news%20(from%3Arobshattuckal06)&src=typed_query&f=live


8/17/21


9/11/21

Sunday, October 25, 2020

Will John Merrill get blamed

In 2020 the most important task for Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill is to assure there is good election in Alabama, and there is not election chaos in Alabama on November 3rd and during the days following.

A main possible contributor to election chaos in Alabama are voting lawsuits that are unresolved on, or that are commenced after, November 3rd.

If there is election chaos in Alabama, immense heat will be turned on Secretary of State Merrill.

Secretary of State Merrill knows of the heat that can get turned on him. For his own good, he has presumably been thinking a lot about being sure the things he has been doing along the way in the run up to November 3rd will ultimately be judged "right," and will not be judged "wrong" as results in much political and professional damage getting inflicted on himself.

What weighs on John Merrill
John Merrill is relatively insulated in Alabama, but he could still wind up in a cauldron if a lot of violence breaks out around the country on November 4th and days following.
Violence seems more likely if the election is close, a winner is not quickly determined, and there are aggressive charges that the election was flawed.
Blame will be cast on Secretaries of State for election problems. If Trump is blamed for election problems because of the doubts he has sowed regarding the election, Secretaries of State will be called on to defend that they acted as best they could to counter the doubts Trump sowed regarding the election.
If there is violence, voter suppression and reaction to voter suppression may be cited as a cause of  violence. Secretaries of State will drawn in to defend themselves that they cannot be criticized for engaging in voter suppression.
Further, if there is violence, Secretaries of State will be called on to defend their decisions relative to accommodations to Covid.

November 6, 2020
Trump is claiming fraud in the election and trying to rile his allies and supporters to ratchet up Trump's claim of election fraud to the maximum extent possible. Trump supporters carrying weapons have protested vote counting facilities and may try to breach the facilities and attack vote counters.
John Merrill's job has been to make sure the Alabama elections were conducted fairly and honestly and to defend the integrity of Alabama elections now that they are over.
John Merrill is a member of the National Association of Secretaries of State. 
Other Secretaries of State have the same responsibilities for their State's elections as John Merrill has for Alabama elections.
Their National Association should be promotive of the member Secretaries of State collectively fulfilling their responsibilities, and the member Secretaries of State should be supportive of one another fulfilling their responsibilities.
This should be manifested by the National Association endeavoring to vouch for all their Secretaries of State fulfilling their election responsibilities. 
Alabamians can legitimately want to know what John Merrill's involvement has been with the National Association of Secretaries of State and how he has worked with the National Association to promote collective confidence in the integrity of all State's elections.
For now, John Merrill is making utterances that are undermining the engendering of a collective confidence in all State's elections and that may contribute to Trump protesters resorting to violence against the election process.
First, see the utterance indicated in below tweets.

Further John Merrill has issued a press release today, which says in part: 

Days after one of the most significant elections in our nation’s history, America is still waiting anxiously and earnestly on several states to conclude the processing of ballots.
While claims of ‘fraudulent voting’ are running rampant in the media and by campaigns, the public’s confidence in American elections is quickly diminishing.
America deserves election results in a timely, secure, and efficient manner.

The press release then levels a criticism of other Secretaries of State as follows:

However, many of the states we are currently waiting on to report results have inconsistent election laws that vary county by county or parish by parish. Many of the changes we witnessed in election administration during this time came without legislative approval or the guidance of other state officers, which have in-turn resulted in lengthy wait times and the inconsistent reporting of results.

Claims of "fraudulent voting" are running "rampant" because of Trump. 

John Merrill should request his National Association to issue a pronouncement that either vouches for the integrity of all State's elections (and condemns Trump for his election fraud claims) or confess that there has been a failure by the National Association to address election integrity failure by individual Secretaries of State.

(See also https://al6thcongdist-ihaveuntiljan13.blogspot.com/2020/08/silent-majority-election-manifesto.html.)


December 13, 2020
Shame on John Merrill
2/18/21
The below information is copied and pasted from https://yellowhammernews.com/7-things-severe-weather-continues-impacting-alabama-rush-limbaugh-passes-away-merrill-wants-to-restore-the-integrity-of-the-election-and-more/

 4. Merrill to help restore faith in elections

    • A new commission that will work in partnership with the Republican State Leadership Committee (RSLC) aims to restore “the American people’s confidence in the integrity of their free and fair elections.” Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill will be the co-chair of the commission.
    • The commission will work to determine the best practices in running elections and advise state officials. Merrill said that “every state in the nation should be working to assess and improve their respective election laws.” He added that they’re going to identify the best methods for elections “and make sure those are available for legislative bodies in the 50 states to consider as options.”
3/6/21 Existential political war over voting access
The 2020 election is over; the votes have been counted; Trump went to extreme lengths to get the election results overturned in the courts, by pressuring state legislatures to select electors contrary to the vote results in the state, and by pressuring Secretaries of State to change the vote counts in their state.

Throughout the time after November 6th Trump, using the biggest megaphone on Earth, proclaimed that there was widespread voter fraud, the election was rigged, and he was the winner of the election. Trump called on his supporters to come to Washington DC for a "wild" day on January 6th when Congress would meet to approve the electoral college's results. On January 6th he held a Save America Rally and told his supporters in attendance to march on the Capitol. They did so, and they violently assaulted the Capitol with the intent of killing Pence, Pelosi and other members of Congress. The insurrection was stopped before the worst possible things happened.

After January 6th Trump has continued to tell his supporters that there was widespread voter fraud, and the election was rigged and stolen from him. Millions of Trump's followers believe that there was widespread voter fraud and the election was stolen.

In the House of Representatives, the Republicans gained seats and the Democratic majority has been reduced to 222 to 211 (with two additional seats not in that count). The Senate is evenly divided 50 to 50, and Vice President Harris can break a tie vote, so the Democrats are considered the majority in the Senate.

To avoid losing more elections and losing more power, the Republicans are undertaking nationwide efforts to make it harder for Democrats to vote in the 2022 and 2024 elections. The main justification the Republicans are advancing for making it harder to vote is that there is an unacceptable level of voter fraud if the procedures that make it harder to vote are not in place.

This situation creates an existential political war between Republicans and Democrats over voting access, with Republicans exerting themselves mightily to get laws passed making it harder to vote, and Democrats resisting to the utmost. This political war is existential because the winner will potentially be in a stronger position of power that the loser may have great difficulty to reverse for many years to come, if ever.

In this situation, it is reasonable to predict that, for the next 2 years, our nation's politics and governance will be consumed by the existential political war between Republicans and Democrats over voting access. The nation's governance will be adversely affected because the two sides need to show a unified strength against the other side, and there will be immense pressure on individual Senators and Representatives to stay with their side in casting votes in Congress.

Relations between the two sides are becoming toxic because the Republicans are saying to the Democrats that Biden is President due to widespread voter fraud and  a rigged election, and the Republicans are using that as a justification for moving nationwide to restrict voting access for the Democrats.

The situation is further exacerbated by how evenly divided Congress is, by the great power that is provided by a few seats in the House of Representatives or by one Senate seat; and by the same token the fragility of the majority party's hold on that power, and this intensifies the efforts in the existential political war where only a small difference in electoral outcomes is needed to gain the power or lose the power.

In the situation, division and polarization are getting transmuted into a hatred by each side of the other side. These strong emotions are felt at the higher levels and lower levels of the two political sides.

How the foregoing existential war between the two political sides will play out cannot be predicted.

One element that can potentially mitigate the toxicity is for the two sides to engage in a fair minded way about the voter fraud question and to endeavor to reach an agreed characterization of the 2020 election and of the amount of voter fraud and whether or not the election was stolen (as Trump says). If it is not a fair characterization that the 2020 election was stolen, the ideal outcome would be for Trump to say it was not stolen. That will probably never happen, but, if it is not a fair characterization to say the election was stolen, it would go a long way to get Senators such as Cruz, Hawley, Cotton and Graham, and Representatives such as Alabama's Republican members of Congress to say that.

Republicans may refuse to engage on the voter fraud question and keep on saying there was widespread fraud and the election was stolen, just as Trump says.

Because of the primacy of the existential political war over access to voting, and because of the deleterious consequences to the nation of that political war, it would behooves parties with influence (such as the media) to press Republicans on whether or not they will engage with Democrats in a fair minded way on the voter fraud question.

Wednesday, October 14, 2020

Plea to Judge Barrett

Dear Judge Barrett,

The country has witnessed that you are an extraordinary jurist and person, who is superbly qualified to be a Supreme Court justice, and who can inspire the utmost trust in your goodness, humanity and integrity.

Our country is in dire straits. Our country needs you more than just as a Supreme Court justice.

Please listen to these two pleas.

FIRST PLEA
Can you give a response to the letter that more than 50 faculty members of your University of Notre Dame sent to you (which letter is at https://teacher-scholar-activist.org/2020/10/13/an-open-letter-to-judge-amy-coney-barrett-from-your-notre-dame-colleagues/ ). 

Please particularly respond to the following summation in the letter: 

Finally, your nomination comes at a treacherous moment in the United States. Our politics are consumed by polarization, mistrust, and fevered conspiracy theories. Our country is shaken by pandemic and economic suffering. There is violence in the streets of American cities. The politics of your nomination, as you surely understand, will further inflame our civic wounds, undermine confidence in the court, and deepen the divide among ordinary citizens, especially if you are seated by a Republican Senate weeks before the election of a Democratic president and congress. You have the opportunity to offer an alternative to all that by demanding that your nomination be suspended until after the election. We implore you to take that step.
We’re asking a lot, we know. Should Vice-President Biden be elected, your seat on the court will almost certainly be lost. That would be painful, surely. Yet there is much to be gained in risking your seat. You would earn the respect of fair-minded people everywhere. You would provide a model of civic selflessness. And you might well inspire Americans of different beliefs toward a renewed commitment to the common good.
We wish you well and trust you will make the right decision for our nation.

Regardless of what your response is, I think Americans will take heart in in your goodness, humanity and integrity, and that will help them in seeing their way through the dire straits that the country is in.

SECOND PLEA
A main component of our country's dire straits is that 350,000,000 Americans believe contradictory things about their President or do not know what to believe about their President, and these 350,000,000 Americans do not have one person of national standing to whom they are all willing to listen for guidance.

In the country's witnessing your potential to inspire the utmost trust in your goodness, humanity and integrity, you could be that person.

Moreover, for you to be that person would not take you out of the area in which you have expertise as a professor of law and a jurist.

In particular, upwards of 350,000,000 million Americans would listen to you if you talked to them along the lines of the following (subject to exactly how you would prefer to express yourself on the matter):

I am profoundly grateful to have been nominated to be a United States Supreme Court justice.

It has been suggested to me that your and my country is in dire straits and that 350,000,000 Americans believe contradictory things about their President or do not know what to believe about their President. It has been suggested to me these 350,000,000 million Americans do not have one person of national standing to whom they are all willing to listen for guidance, and that I could be that person. I don't know if I can be that person but I would like to say the following to you about matters as to which I have expertise as a professor of law and a jurist.

The United States constitution provides for the three branches of government of the legislative, the executive and the judicial. 

The legislative branch has the responsibility for making the law. The executive branch has responsibilities for implementing the laws that the legislative branch has enacted. The judicial branch is responsible for applying the law in legal cases that are brought before the judicial branch.

The three branches of government are separate and independent.

The independence of the three branches is not absolute, and there are limitations ("checks and balances") on the independence of the three branches.

The President is obligated to implement the laws that Congress enacts, and the President cannot act contrary to the laws the Congress has enacted or do things that are not authorized under the laws enacted by Congress. Under "checks and balances", both the Congress and the judicial branch have capacities to prevent the President from doing that, including through the power of the purse, the impeachment power, and the deciding of specific legal cases.

Also, there are practical necessities that allow for intrusion of one branch of government into another branch. The legislative branch needs information about how laws are being implemented by the executive branch and has powers to demand and get information from the executive branch.

This includes getting information about whether there are conflicts of interest in the executive branch that are causing the laws to be improperly implemented to advance private interests and resulting in laws not being implemented to achieve the public purposes of a law.

The ultimate check and balance under the constitution is the power of the people to vote out of office the President for any reason, including that the people believe the President is disobeying the laws Congress has enacted (whether or not Congress and the judicial branch have done anything to stop the President), and the power of the people to vote out of office members of Congress because the people want different laws or because the people believe that Congress has failed to keep the President from disobeying the law. 

I hope that saying the foregoing helps you to know what you believe about your and my President.


10/25/20
[Below is email I have sent to the contact person for the website where Notre Dame faculty letter was published]
From: Rob Shattuck <rdshatt@aol.com>
To:
Sent: Sun, Oct 25, 2020 9:56 am
Subject: Notre Dame faculty letter to Judge Barrett Open Letter to Judge Amy Coney Barrett From Your Notre Dame Colleagues
Dear Professor Jensen,
I believe Judge Barrett owes it to the American people to respond publicly to the "Open Letter to Judge Amy Coney Barrett From Your Notre Dame Colleagues" dated October 10, 2020, which is published on your website at https://teacher-scholar-activist.org/2020/10/13/an-open-letter-to-judge-amy-coney-barrett-from-your-notre-dame-colleagues/.
I see that there are currently 550 thoughts (comments) posted underneath the open letter on your website.
I have put on my blog a "Plea to Judge Barrett" (which can be found at https://al6thcongdist-ihaveuntiljan13.blogspot.com/2020/10/plea-to-judge-barrett.html), in which I reference the Notre Dame faculty letter and request Judge Barrett to particularly respond to the following summation in the letter:
Finally, your nomination comes at a treacherous moment in the United States. Our politics are consumed by polarization, mistrust, and fevered conspiracy theories. Our country is shaken by pandemic and economic suffering. There is violence in the streets of American cities. The politics of your nomination, as you surely understand, will further inflame our civic wounds, undermine confidence in the court, and deepen the divide among ordinary citizens, especially if you are seated by a Republican Senate weeks before the election of a Democratic president and congress. You have the opportunity to offer an alternative to all that by demanding that your nomination be suspended until after the election. We implore you to take that step.
We’re asking a lot, we know. Should Vice-President Biden be elected, your seat on the court will almost certainly be lost. That would be painful, surely. Yet there is much to be gained in risking your seat. You would earn the respect of fair-minded people everywhere. You would provide a model of civic selflessness. And you might well inspire Americans of different beliefs toward a renewed commitment to the common good.
We wish you well and trust you will make the right decision for our nation.
I think it would have been entirely legitimate and appropriate for the Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee to have called the Notre Dame letter to the attention of Judge Barrett and to have asked her to expressly respond to the summation part of the letter quoted above.
Even now I think the 47 Senate Democrats and Independents should send a letter to Judge Barrett and invite her to come to the Senate floor before the final vote and to please express her response to the letter for the benefit of both the United States Senate and the American people.
If Judge Barrett has expressed any response to the Notre Dame faculty letter, either in writing or orally, I think you should post Judge Barrett's response on the webpage underneath the letter and above the the thoughts (comments) section on the webpage.
After I send you this email, I will look at the 550 thoughts (comments) that are posted beneath the letter, I may post the body of this email as a thought (comment) on the webpage, and I will probably copy and paste this email on my above "Plea to Judge Barrett" blog entry.
Thank you for your attention to this email.

10/27/20
See also J'accuse our judiciary

Thursday, October 1, 2020

My critique of debate

A. Truth and honesty

Given the constancy and intensity with which charges about lying and dishonesty have been hurled back and forth during the past four years between the two political parties and at, by and between Trump and Biden, Chris Wallace should have started the debate with a question such as:

"Given the constancy and intensity with which charges about lying and dishonesty have been hurled back and forth during the past four years between the political parties and at, by and between yourselves, would you please say how truthful and honest you consider yourself to be in the things you say to the American people, and please say how truthful and honest you believe your opponent to be in the things he says to the American people. President Trump, you go first."

[to be continued]



Friday, September 25, 2020

Where are Alabama's leaders

In this 2020 election, the two political sides are making extreme charges that, if the other side wins, there will be monumental damage to, if not destruction of, the country's institutions, functioning, economy and/or way of life.

Many are referring to this as the most consequential Presidential election in the past 100 years.

Alabamians are in need of help to evaluate the extreme charges the two political sides are making. Some Alabamians may have heard only the charges being made by one side.

Alabama leaders should feel an obligation to help Alabamians in learning about and evaluating the extreme charges.

Some Alabama leaders may think the charges are hyperbole, and Alabamians should not have significant concern about the charges. In this case, these Alabama leaders should discuss and explain the charges for the benefit of Alabamians to help them understand why the charges are hyperbole that should not create significant concern in the minds of Alabamians.

Other Alabama leaders may believe that the charges being made by one of the political sides are very serious and deserving of understanding by Alabamians. This too requires discussion and explanation by the Alabama leaders in this category.

Still other Alabama leaders may believe that the charges being made by both sides are very serious and deserving of understanding by Alabamians about the particulars of the charges and their seriousness.

[to be continued]

I. John Merrill

John Merrill is a special Alabama leader because he is in charge of the casting and counting of ballots in Alabama.

Trump is making extreme charges that the only way he will lose is if there is cheating in the election and that mail-in ballots are "a whole big scam."

That is very alarming to many Alabamians.

I think John Merrill has been clear publicly that what Trump says is not true about Alabama, and that Alabamians can have confidence in the integrity of the 2020 elections in Alabama. 

Because Trump will likely keep on making his charges to try to cause doubt in the minds of Alabamians about the election, John Merrill should continue to speak vociferously that what Trump says is false about Alabama.

Secretary Merrill should take this a step further with the National Association of Secretaries of State. Secretary Merrill should inform NASS of what he has done to vouch for Alabama and should request NASS to get all the Secretaries of State to do similarly as Secretary Merrill has done regarding Alabama and to vouch similarly for their respective states. NASS should then make proclamation to all Americans that they should have confidence in the integrity and fairness of the 2020 Presidential election. NASS should denounce any actor, including Trump, who tries to cast doubt on the 2020 Presidential election.


[Update 11/16/20]

[Update 11/19/20]
I have sent the below email to the National Association of Secretaries of State.
From: Rob Shattuck <rdshatt@aol.com>
To: nass@sso.org <nass@sso.org>
Cc: mbenson@sso.org <mbenson@sso.org>; John.Merrill@sos.alabama.gov <John.Merrill@sos.alabama.gov>; eburkhalter@alreporter.com <eburkhalter@alreporter.com>; jsharp@al.com <jsharp@al.com>; blyman@gannett.com <blyman@gannett.com>
Sent: Wed, Nov 18, 2020 7:46 pm
Subject: Complaint about my Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill
My Alabama Secretary of State John Merrill is saying and doing things in Alabama to cast doubt on the election.
I object to what Mr. Merrill is saying and doing.
Mr. Merrill is non-responsive to my complaint about him.
As a result I am writing this email to the National Association of Secretaries of State to register my complaint with the Association, for whatever use the Association thinks is appropriate in furthering the role of the Association and its members as set out on your website, to wit:
40 members of the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS) serve as their state's designated chief election official, overseeing the conduct of elections according to law. Ensuring the integrity of the voting process is central to this role, which includes cybersecurity and contingency planning, as well as providing administrative and technical support for local election officials.
Thank you.
 
II. Gov. Ivey [added 11/16/20]
Trump has, since November 3rd, been increasingly derelict in his duty under the Presidential transition law and abdicating his duties as POTUS generally, and this is endangering the national security and the health and safety of Americans.

Instead of fulfilling his obligations to the American people, Trump has been using groundless claims of election fraud as an unjustifiable basis for not doing what he is required to do under Presidential transition law.

With a few exceptions, the GOP Senators and representatives are abetting Trump in his dereliction of duties, either by actively spewing Trump's groundless election fraud claims and/or by failing to tell Trump to fulfill his duties under the Presidential transition law.

Over the weekend GOP Govs. Mike DeWine of Ohio and Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas started pushing the Trump administration to begin the transition process with President-elect Joe Biden.

In Alabama, John Merrill is unwilling to affirm what his National Association of Secretaries of State says of the security and integrity of the election and instead seems complicit in casting doubt on the election.

Insofar as Gov. Ivey does not issue a statement that Trump needs to forthwith full his obligations under the transition law, she is abetting Trump's dereliction of duties and Trump's endangering the national security and the health and safety of Americans.

Update 1/5/2022
I am charging Gov. Ivey with moral depravity (or reckless stupidity) in doing all she can to prevent federal state, local and private vaccine mandates. See Dear Gov. Ivey re controlling COVID.


III. Alabama's business leaders [added 12/10/20]

Tuesday, September 22, 2020

J'accuse our judiciary

Many people believe that polarization in our country has broken the Congress.

There is reason to think the country's polarization is about to break the Supreme Court.

If that is about to happen, it needs to be understood, with a view to finding a way, if any, to keep it from happening.

The constitutional framework

The United States constitution provides for the three branches of government of the legislative, the executive and the judicial.

The legislative branch has the responsibility for making the law. The executive branch has responsibilities for implementing the laws that the legislative branch has enacted. The judicial branch is responsible for applying the law in legal cases that are brought before the judicial branch.

The three branches of government are separate and independent.

The independence of the three branches is not absolute, and there are limitations ("checks and balances") on the independence of the three branches.

The President is obligated to implement the laws that Congress enacts, and the President cannot act contrary to the laws the Congress has enacted or do things that are not authorized under the laws enacted by Congress. Under "checks and balances", both the Congress and the judicial branch have capacities to prevent the President from doing that, including through the power of the purse, the impeachment power, and the deciding of specific legal cases.

Also, there are practical necessities that allow for intrusion of one branch of government into another branch. The legislative branch needs information about how laws are being implemented by the executive branch and has powers to demand and get information from the executive branch.

This includes getting information about whether there are conflicts of interest in the executive branch that are causing the laws to be improperly implemented to advance private interests and resulting in laws not being implemented to achieve the public purposes of a law.

The ultimate check and balance under the constitution is the power of the people to vote out of office the President for any reason, including that the people believe the President is disobeying the laws Congress has enacted (whether or not Congress and the judicial branch have done anything to stop the President), and the power of the people to vote out of office  members of Congress because the people want different laws or because the people believe that Congress has failed to keep the President from disobeying the law.

Country's polarization has broken Congress

Readers should first think about how bad the country's polarization has become and about how broken Congress is as a result of the polarization. This is not a disquisition on that subject, and readers should decide what they think based on their own awareness and knowledge. For purposes of this discussion, readers should particularly think about whether the impeachment revealed Congress to be broken in the most fundamental way by polarization that Congress was disabled from being able to utilize its impeachment power to remove a President who has committed impeachable offenses. The polarization resulted in the Democrats saying the President abused his power and the Republicans accusing the Democrats of abusing their power by impeaching Trump in the House. See Who abused their power.

Country's polarization is about to break the Supreme Court

Before 2013, there was a degree of insulation of the judiciary from the growing polarization in the country and the resultant debilitation of the functioning of Congress.

This was by reason of the Senate filibuster rule that effectively imposed a 60 vote supermajority requirement for Senate approval of judicial nominees and that forced a degree of bipartisanship in the approval of judges. 

In 2013 the filibuster rule was changed to allow majority approval of judges in the Senate, but the filibuster rule continued to apply to Supreme Court justices.

In 2017 the exception for Supreme Court justices was eliminated, and a simple majority of the Senate can approve a Supreme Court justice.

Combined with the raging polarization in the country, the 2017 change in the filibuster rule has  destroyed bipartisanship in the approval of Supreme Court justices (it being acknowledged that Gorsuch got 54 votes, which included three Democrats). 

The elimination of the filibuster rule for approval of judges has arguably injected full blown partisanship and polarization into the judiciary, and judges are viewed as divided into Republican judges and Democratic judges.

The judiciary can judge for itself the extent to which the foregoing has happened and is becoming ever more pronounced, and whether the judiciary is becoming impaired by polarization in fulfilling its proper role under the constitution.

Right now Congress will not do anything to arrest the polarization in the judiciary, and Congress is plunging headlong towards infecting the Supreme Court with more polarization.

A sidelined majority of Americans may deeply lament the raging polarization of Congress that is proceeding to infect the Supreme Court and that may break the Supreme Court. This sidelined majority of Americans is powerless to do anything against the raging polarization. 

The power of the judiciary to resist the country's polarization

The judiciary can capitulate to the polarization and go along with judges being divided into Republican judges and Democratic judges, and individual judges being on one side or the other in the polarization. The judiciary can capitulate to becoming impaired by polarization in fulfilling its proper role under the constitution.

This need not be. The judiciary is an institution that has the capacity to arrest the ruinous polarization. The judiciary can decide that the judiciary will not capitulate and will resist being broken by the polarization in the country..

This requires a will of the judiciary not to capitulate and to resist the polarization in the judiciary. 

Such a will can come if the judiciary agrees how calamitous the country's polarization is becoming, and how critical it is for the judiciary not to be impaired in fulfilling its constitutional role.

This calls for soul searching by the judiciary. No other institution or actor can do anything to arrest the polarization. The judiciary needs to decide what will be the judgement of them if they do not resist at this crossroads in American history.

To arrest the polarization that only the judiciary can arrest, the judiciary needs to make a pact among themselves and exert maximum pressure on all in the judiciary to comply with the pact.

The pact of the judiciary is that no judge who is nominated by the President to become a justice on the Supreme Court will serve as such a justice unless the judge has received at least 60 votes in the Senate.

Line of questioning to Judge Barrett

The foregoing suggests a line of questioning that the Dems could put to Judge Barrett.

The line of questioning should draw out from Judge Barrett her views related to the things that are discussed above. Judge Barrett may seek to avoid, and find ways to avoid, giving her views about the things discussed above.

Even if Judge Barrett does not give her views, the questioning will convey important things to the American people.

The ultimate goal of the questioning is to get Judge Barrett to say whether she thinks great damage is being done to the Supreme Court by the polarization that is happening and whether, to resist that from happening, she is willing to make a promise to the American people that she will not serve as Justice of the Supreme Court unless at least 60 Senators vote to approve her.

A. RULE OF LAW QUESTIONS:

1. Please explicate your understanding of the rule of law under the constitution, including  the separation of powers in the three branches of government, "checks and balance" among the three branches, conflicts of interest and private interests  versus public interests, constraints on President derived from Congressional, judicial and Department of Justice oversight and review of President, Congressional right to information from the President as part of oversight, and relevance of express constitutional provisions and constitutional norms that come into being over time.

2. As regards what is an impeachable offense of the President under the constitution, if the House impeaches a President and the Senate convicts, what room is there, if any, for judicial review of the Presidential conduct or actions that are the subject of the impeachment and conviction, i.e., do you think the Supreme Court can substitute its judgment for that of the House and the Senate about whether the conduct and actions are impeachment? Do you think the President has any due process rights in an impeachment, and that the impeachment and conviction of the President could be set aside by the Supreme Court based on a claim by the President that he was denied due process?

3. Do you believe a sitting President can be indicted?

4. What limitations, if any, do you believe there are regarding the exercise of the pardon power by the President? If a President was bribed to exercise the pardon power, do you think the pardon could be invalidated by the Supreme Court through appropriate judicial proceedings? Do you think exercising the pardon power for a bribe is a crime for which the President can be indicted (whether while sitting or after term of office)? Short of exercising the pardon power for a bribe, can an exercise of the pardon power be so exclusively for personal or family benefit that the pardon could be invalidated by the Supreme Court and/or be criminal?

5. What do you consider the importance of determining facts or truth for the purposes of the judicial branch properly fulfilling its role?

6. In going about determining truth and facts, what significance does the judiciary give to contemporaneous notes made by a party to a conversation about the conversation for establishing at a later date what was said in the conversation?

7. In your time as an appellate judge, as regards lawyers and others appearing before you and making statements to you or in front of you, do any instances stand out in your memory of your believing someone was not being truthful? Can you describe one or more of such instances without breaching any confidentiality constraints you feel bound by?

B. POLARIZATION QUESTIONS

1. What are your views about the positive and/or negatives effects on the judiciary of the Senate changing the filibuster rule in 2013 so that it did not apply to lower courts and of the 2017 change that eliminated the filibuster rule for Supreme Court justices?

2. What are your views about whether the country's polarization has affected the judiciary, and how so?

3. From the perspective of what you desire for the Supreme Court as an institution, do you wish for reinstatement of the filibuster rule, and, if so, how strongly do you wish for the same?

4. Do you believe that the absence of the filibuster rule contributed to how Judge Kavanaugh was treated in 2018? If you favor reinstatement of the filibuster rule, would a reason for that be that such result in better treatment of Supreme Court nominees?

5. If you promised you would not serve as Supreme Court justice unless you received at least 60 votes, do you think that would achieve a significant benefit for the Supreme Court as an institution?

C. CIRCUMSTANCES SURROUNDING YOUR NOMINATION

1.Do you think there could be circumstances surrounding your nomination for Supreme Court nomination that, if you were aware of the circumstances, you would consider it wrong for you to accept the nomination and you would not accept the nomination?

2. To what extent did you give thought to circumstances surrounding your nomination? If had any such thoughts, can you tell us what those thoughts were?


10/27/2020
See also Appeal to Judge Barrett

3/24/22