Letters from an American - October 3, 2024
Episode Date: October 4, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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October 3rd, 2024. Former Republican Representative Liz Cheney of Wyoming joined Vice President
Kamala Harris on a stage hung with red, white, and blue bunting and signs that said country
over party. As Cheney took the stage, the crowd chanted, thank you, Liz. The two were on the
campaign trail today in Ripon, Wisconsin, the town that claims to be the birthplace of the
Republican Party. It was in that then tiny town in 1852 that Alvin E. Bove, who had recently
emigrated from New York, called for a new political party to
stand against slavery. The idea of a new party took off in 1854 when it became clear the Kansas-Nebraska
Act, permitting the westward expansion of human enslavement, would become law. When they met in
February of that year, people in Ripippon were early participants in the movement
of people across the North to defend democracy. Rather than standing against slavery alone,
those organizing in 1854 stood against an entire political system, opposing the small group of
elite enslavers who had taken over the U.S. government in order to establish an oligarchy,
and were quite clear they rejected the self-ev. government in order to establish an oligarchy, and were quite clear
they rejected the self-evident truth in the Declaration of Independence that all men were
created equal. Instead, they intended to rule over the nation's majority, whose labor produced
the capital that Southern leaders believed only elites should control. In the face of this existential threat to the country,
party divisions crumbled. Pundits have described today's event as a component of Harris's ongoing
outreach to Republicans, and in part it is. That outreach, begun under President Joe Biden and
continuing even more aggressively under Harris, is bearing fruit as in an open letter today,
two dozen Republican former officials and lawmakers in Wisconsin endorsed Harris and her running mate,
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.
We have plenty of policy disagreements with Vice President Harris, the Republicans wrote,
but what we do agree upon is more important.
We agree that we cannot afford another four years of the broken
promises, election denialism, and chaos of Donald Trump's leadership. Lately, there have been
indications of what returning Trump to office might mean. On Tuesday, Trump suggested that the
U.S. soldiers who sustained traumatic brain injuries, or TBI,
when Iran attacked an Iraqi base where they were stationed, were not truly injured, but simply had
headaches. Trump's statement brought back to light a 2021 CBS report by Catherine Herridge and Michael
Kaplan that found the injured soldiers had not been recognized with a purple heart
awarded to service members wounded or killed in the line of duty, despite qualifying for it.
This slight meant they were denied the medical benefits that come with that military decoration.
The soldiers told Herridge and Kaplan that they were pressured to downplay their injuries to avoid undercutting
Trump's attempt to keep the casualty numbers in that incident low. With the story back in the news,
Kaplan posted that after the report, the army awarded the soldiers the Purple Hearts they
deserved. Journalist Magdy Jacobs recalled the argument of Trump's lawyers before the Supreme Court
that Trump could not prod a SEAL team to assassinate a rival because service members
would adhere to the rules of their institutions. The army officers bowing to Trump's political
demands proved that argument was wrong and set off major alarm bells, Jacob posted, suggesting that the military
would not stand firm against Trump in a second term, especially now that the Supreme Court says
a president cannot be prosecuted for crimes committed as part of official duties. Scott
Waldman and Thomas Frank of Politico's E&E News, covering energy and the environment,
reported today that two former White House officials said that Trump was flagrantly partisan
when responding to natural disasters.
One said that in 2018, Trump refused to provide disaster aid after wildfires to California,
perceiving it as a democratic state. To get
disaster money, the aid showed Trump polling results revealing that Orange County, which had
been badly damaged in the fires, had more Trump supporters than the entire state of Iowa.
Defending the big lie that Trump had won the 2020 presidential election,
Defending the big lie that Trump had won the 2020 presidential election,
former Colorado County Clerk Tina Peters in 2021 gave a security badge to a man associated with MyPillow owner Mike Lindell to enable him to breach the county's voting systems in an unsuccessful attempt to find evidence of voter fraud.
A jury found Peters guilty of four felonies related to the scheme. Today, District Court Judge
Matthew Barrett sentenced Peters to nine years in prison. But there are other stories these days of
what the government can accomplish when it is focused on the good of all Americans. About 45,000
dock workers in the International Longshoremen's Association
went on strike Tuesday when the union could not reach an agreement with the United States
Maritime Alliance, or USMX, employer group over a new contract. The strike shut down 36 ports
from Maine to Texas, affecting about half the country's shipping, just as the areas
hammered by Hurricane Helene desperately needed supplies. Dock workers wanted a pay increase of
up to 77 percent over six years and better benefits, as well as an end to the automation
that threatens union jobs. President Joe Biden reiterated his support for collective bargaining,
President Joe Biden reiterated his support for collective bargaining,
despite the threat of an economic slowdown from the strike.
The Wall Street Journal editorial board excoriated Biden in the union, saying, President Biden wants unions to have extortionary bargaining power,
and he's getting a demonstration of it on election eve. Congratulations.
But today, the International Longshoremen's Association
suspended the strike after USMX agreed to wage increases of 62 percent over six years.
The two sides agreed to extend the current contract until January 15th to address the
issues of benefits and automation. Administration officials,
White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients,
top White House Economic Advisor Lael Brainard,
Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Hsu,
and Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg
helped broker the temporary agreement.
The government's power to make things better
is also on display among the rubble and ruin left behind by Hurricane Helene.
Yesterday evening, after taking an aerial tour of western North Carolina to survey the damage and before receiving a briefing in Raleigh,
President Biden thanked both the Republican governor of South Carolina and the Democratic governor of North Carolina and all of the elected officials who focused on the
task at hand. In a moment like this, we put politics aside. At least we should put it all
aside, and we have here. There are no Democrats or Republicans. There are only Americans,
and our job is to help as many people as we can, as quickly as we can, and as thoroughly as we can.
as we can, as quickly as we can, and as thoroughly as we can. Biden explained that the federal government had a thousand first responders in place before the storms hit and that he had
approved emergency declarations as soon as he received the requests from the governors.
Yesterday, he directed the Defense Department to move a thousand soldiers to reinforce North
Carolina's National Guard to speed up the delivery of supplies like food, water, and medicine
to isolated communities, some of which are accessible now only by PACMULE.
He has already deployed 50 Starlink satellites for communication,
and more are coming.
Teams from the Federal Emergency Management Agency
are offering free temporary housing as well as delivering food and water.
They're helping people apply for the help that they need.
While Trump and MAGA Republicans insist that Biden is botching the response to Helene, CNN fact checker Daniel Dale noted that the response has gotten bipartisan praise.
noted that the response has gotten bipartisan praise.
Republican Governors Henry McMaster of South Carolina and Glenn Youngkin of Virginia
both thanked Biden by name
for what McMaster called a superb response.
So today's bipartisan event in Ripon
suggests far more than democratic outreach to Republicans.
It appears to be a commitment to a government that
advances the interests of ordinary people and protects the right of everyone to be treated
equally before the law and to have a say in their government. Republican Abraham Lincoln articulated
this worldview for his fledgling party in 1859 as it took a stand against oligarchs.
Believing these principles accurately represented
the aspirations of the nation's founders,
Lincoln called them conservative.
People from all parties rallied to the party
that promised to defend those principles.
The president of the United States
must not look at our country
through the narrow lens of ideology
or petty partisanship or self-interest, Harris said today.
The president of the United States must not look at our country as an instrument for their own ambitions.
Our nation is not some spoil to be won.
The United States of America is the greatest idea humanity ever devised, the nation that
inspired the world to believe in the possibility of a representative government.
And so, in the face of those who would endanger our magnificent experiment, people of every
party must stand together.
In this election, putting patriotism ahead of partisanship is not an
aspiration. It is our duty, Cheney said. I ask all of you here and everyone listening across
this great country to join us. I ask you to meet this moment. I ask you to stand in truth to reject the depraved cruelty of Donald Trump. And I ask you
instead to help us elect Kamala Harris for president. I know that a President Harris will
be able to unite this nation. I know that she will be a president who will defend the rule of law.
And I know that she will be a president who can inspire all of our children.
And if I might say so,
especially our little girls,
to do great things.
So help us right the ship of our democracy
so that history will say of us,
when our time of testing came,
we did our duty and we prevailed
because we loved our country more. Michael Moss.