Letters from an American - January 17, 2025
Episode Date: January 18, 2025Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
January 17th, 2025. As President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris prepare to
leave office at noon on Monday, and President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect J.D.
Vance prepare to be sworn in, on the one hand, last-minute orders are being made and
goodbyes are being said, while on the other, the incoming administration is
setting expectations. On Thursday, Biden issued an executive order to strengthen
the cyber defenses of the United States after hackers from China, Russia, and
other countries have broken into federal agencies. The executive order requires software manufacturers like Microsoft to prove that their products
meet security requirements before the federal government will buy them.
Today, Biden issued a statement declaring his belief that the Equal Rights Amendment, guaranteeing
all Americans equal rights and protections under the law regardless of their sex is the law of the land. Congress passed the amendment in 1972 and sent it off to the
states for ratification, imposing on that ratification a seven-year deadline. 30 states
ratified the ERA within the next year, but a fierce opposition campaign led by right-wing
activist Phyllis Schlafly eroded support among Republicans.
And although Congress extended the deadline by three years, only 35 states had signed on by 1977.
And, confusing matters, legislatures in five states, Idaho, Kentucky, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Tennessee,
voted to take back their earlier
ratification.
In 2017, Nevada became the first state to ratify the ERA since 1977.
Then Illinois stepped up.
And finally, in 2020, Virginia became the 38th state to ratify the amendment, putting
it over the required three-quarters of states needed for the amendment, putting it over the required three quarters of states needed
for the amendment to become part of the Constitution. But the radical right worried that women's legal
equality to men would protect abortion rights and that, as Catholic bishops of the United States
wrote to senators, it would prohibit discrimination based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and other categories. Opponents
have challenged the amendment's ratification over both the original deadline and whether the state's
rescinding of previous ratifications has merit. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, a Democrat of New
York, agrees that the amendment would help to protect abortion rights and has spearheaded efforts to get Biden to direct the National Archivist,
Colleen Shogan, to certify and publish the ERA, pointing out that the American Bar Association agrees that it has been ratified.
But the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel says it considers the ERA expired,ratified in 1982 and Shogan says she will defer
to the opinion of the Office of Legal Counsel. The executive branch doesn't
have a role in the ratification of constitutional amendments and Biden's
announcement did not direct the archivist to certify the amendment but a
president's public disagreement with the Office of Legal Counsel will add weight to the argument that the amendment has been ratified.
We, as a nation, must affirm and protect women's full equality once and for all, Biden said.
Biden also set out to right the wrong embedded in the 1986 Anti-Drug Abuse Act. That law imposed a mandatory minimum of five
years in federal prison without the possibility of parole for possession of
five grams of crack cocaine, which urban black Americans favored, while the same
penalty applied to 500 grams of powdered cocaine, the form of the drug favored by
white Americans. That disparity has been a symbol of racial injustice
in the federal justice system.
And the US Sentencing Commission called for its reform
in April of 1995.
Today, Biden shortened the sentences of 2,490
non-violent drug offenders convicted of crimes
related to crack cocaine.
Biden and administration officials have been saying goodbye to their teams.
On Thursday, Biden bid farewell to U.S. service members, thanking them for
your service to our nation and for allowing me to bear witness to your courage,
your commitment, your character.
He asked them to remember your oath and to protect American values, our commitment to
honor, to integrity, to unity, to protecting and defending not a person or a party or a
place but an idea that we're all created equal.
Attorney General Merrick Garland also bid his team farewell yesterday,
thanking them for their work confronting fentanyl dealers who threaten our communities,
disrupting threats from both foreign and domestic terrorists
and from authoritarian leaders that threaten the country's security,
protecting economic competition and prosecuting fraud and corruption, and
defending civil rights. You have worked to pursue justice, not politics, he said.
That is the truth and nothing can change it. Today, Secretary of State Antony
Blinken thanked those in the State Department for building partnerships and
strengthening alliances, rallying the
world in common cause.
�We come from different places, different experiences, different motivations and backgrounds,�
he said.
�But I think what brings all of us together in this place, in this time, is that unique
feeling that you get going to work every single day with the stars and stripes behind your back, working every day to make things just a little bit
better, a little more peaceful, a little more full of hope, of opportunity.
Blinken told members of the department, the custodians of the power and the
promise of American diplomacy, that he would always be their champion, but that he was returning
to the highest calling in a democracy, that of being a private citizen.
As Biden administration officials leave, the incoming Trump administration is vowing to
unleash shock and awe in the first days of Trump's presidency as the new president issues what Senator John Barrasso, a Republican of Wyoming, called a blizzard of executive orders to reshape
the country according to his policies. In the bulwark today retired US Army
Lieutenant General Mark Hurtling, former commanding general of the United States
Army Europe and the Seventh Army, explained that the concept of shock
and awe calls for gaining an advantage over an enemy with overwhelming firepower followed
by brilliant execution.
The plan anticipates paralyzing the enemy with such overwhelming force that resistance
is futile.
For his part, Hurtling seems unimpressed, noting that if your plan calls for your side
being all-knowing, all-powerful, perfect in execution, and immune to surprise, when you're
working with human beings and you presume your enemy is stupid, weak, and all but inanimate,
the plan probably isn't worth all that much.
Aaron Zittner and Javier Martinez of the Wall Street Journal reported
today on a new Wall Street Journal poll revealing that American voters want what they call MAGA
light rather than extra strength MAGA. More than 60% opposed Trump's plan to replace non-partisan
civil servants with loyalists. More than 60% also oppose Trump's plan
to eliminate the Department of Education.
Almost 75% of voters oppose his plans
for sweeping deportation raids,
wanting only those with criminal records
to be removed from the country.
More than two-thirds oppose calls
to take control of Greenland,
and only 46% approve of his choices for cabinet positions.
But the Republican-dominated Senate seems poised to approve Trump's picks for cabinet
secretaries and other appointees that require Senate confirmation.
As they have been appearing before the committees responsible for vetting those candidates before
they go on to the vote of the full Senate, key appointees have been demonstrating that their primary qualification is their loyalty to Trump.
Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth revealed that he knows close to nothing about the actual
requirements for the job, but declined to say he would refuse an unconstitutional order.
Trump's pick for Attorney general, Pam Bondi,
said she would study the 14th Amendment
after being asked about the birthright citizenship
embedded in it, and she refused to say
that Biden won the 2020 election.
In the House, Speaker Mike Johnson,
a Republican of Louisiana, has apparently caved
to Trump's demand that he remove Representative Mike Turner, a Republican of Ohio, has apparently caved to Trump's demand that he remove Representative
Mike Turner, a Republican of Ohio, from the chair of the House Select Committee on Intelligence,
an action that will remove him from the committee altogether because of term limits for those
committee members who are not the chair.
Turner was well respected in that post by members of both parties, but was a staunch defender of Ukraine who last April had warned that it is absolutely true that Republican members
of Congress are parroting Russian propaganda.
We see directly coming from Russia attempts to mask communications that are anti-Ukraine
and pro-Russia messages, some of which we even hear being uttered on the House floor.
Alice Miranda Olstein, Caitlin Oprisco, and Iris Centner of Politico reported yesterday
that experts expect Trump and his allied political action committees to pull in as much as $250
million for Trump's inauguration. But much of the cost of the inauguration is actually covered by taxpayer dollars, they
report.
And while laws require the inaugural committee to disclose its donors, there is no requirement
to say where the money goes.
Trump's inaugural committee fundraiser told the reporters that any money not spent on
the inauguration will likely go toward Trump's presidential library.
The weather forecast for Washington DC from Monday's inauguration predicts a high in the
low 20s, approximately negative 5 degrees Celsius, and late this afternoon Trump announced on his
social media company that he was moving the inauguration inside to the capital Rotunda because of the cold.
This leaves workers less than 72 hours to change the plan for an outdoor inauguration
they had begun preparing for on September 18th.
Members of Congress have been distributing tickets to their constituents, but because
of the change, the Joint Inaugural Committee of Congress has told the public that the vast majority of ticketed guests will not be able to attend the ceremonies
in person.
The House Sergeant at Arms suggested to members of Congress that they should tell their constituents
that their tickets should now be considered commemorative.