Letters from an American - September 13, 2024
Episode Date: September 14, 2024Get full access to Letters from an American at heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/subscribe...
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September 13th, 2024. After bomb threats today, officials had to evacuate two elementary schools
in Springfield, Ohio and move the students to a different location. They had to close a middle
school altogether. This is the second day bomb threats have closed schools
and public buildings after MAGA Republicans have spread the lie that Haitian immigrants there have
been eating white people's pets. Haitian immigrants, who were welcomed to Springfield by officials
eager to revitalize the city and who are there legally, say they are afraid. Hunter Walker and Josh Kovensky of Talking Points Memo today
explained where the lie had come from and how it had spread. More than two months ago, they wrote,
Ohio Senator J.D. Vance, who is Trump's vice presidential running mate, began to speak about
Springfield at a Senate banking committee hearing, trying to tie rising housing prices to immigrants.
The next day, at the National Conservatism Conference, Vance accused illegals of
overwhelming the city. On August 10th, about a dozen neo-Nazis of the Blood Tribe organization
showed up in Springfield, where one of their leaders said the city had been taken over
by degenerate third-worlders and blamed the Jews for the influx of migrants. The neo-Nazis stayed
and on August 27th showed up at a meeting of the city council, where their leader threatened
council members. On September 1st, another white supremacist group, Patriot Front, held its own
protest to the max influx of unassimilable Haitian migrants in the city. Right-wing social media
posters pushed the story, usually with witnesses to events in the city coming from elsewhere.
In late August, posting in a private Facebook group, a resident said they
had heard that Haitian immigrants had butchered a neighbor's cat for food. Vance reposted that
rumor to attack Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris, on whom he is trying to hang
undocumented immigration, although it was Trump who convinced Republicans to kill a strong
bipartisan border bill this spring.
Springfield police and the city manager told news outlets there was no truth to the rumors.
Nonetheless, on September 10th, Vance told his people to keep the cat memes flowing,
even though, or perhaps because, the rumors were putting people in his own state in danger.
Trump repeated the lie at the presidential debate that night, claiming,
in Springfield, they're eating the dogs, the people that came in. They're eating the cats.
They're eating the pets of the people that live there.
Today, President Joe Biden demanded Trump stop his attacks on Haitian
Americans, but Trump doubled down, promising to deport the Haitian immigrants in Springfield if
he is elected, although they are here legally. The widespread ridicule of Trump's statement has
obscured that this attack on Ohio's immigrants is part of an attempt to regain control of the Senate.
Convincing Ohio voters that the immigrants in their midst are subhuman could help Republicans
defeat popular Democratic incumbent Senator Sherrod Brown, who has held his seat since 2007.
Brown and Montana's Jon Tester, both Democrats in states that supported Trump in 2020,
are key to controlling the Senate. Two Republican super PACs, one of which is linked to Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Republican of Kentucky, have booked more than $82 million
of ad space in Ohio between Labor Day and the election and are focusing on immigration.
Taking control of the Senate would enable Republicans not only to block all popular
Democratic legislation, as they did with gun reform after the 2012 Sandy Hook massacre,
but to continue to establish control of America's judicial system. So long as their judges are in place
to make law from the bench, what the majority of Americans want doesn't matter.
In 1986, when it was clear that most Americans did not support the policies put in place by
the Reagan Republicans, the Reagan appointees at the Justice Department broke tradition to ensure that candidates for judgeships shared their partisanship.
Their goal, said the president's attorney general, Ed Meese, was to institutionalize the Reagan revolution so it can't be set aside no matter what happens in future presidential elections.
That principle held going forward.
Federal judgeships depend on Senate confirmation,
and when McConnell became Senate Minority Leader in 2007, he worked to make sure Democrats could
not put their own appointees onto the bench. He held up so many of President Barack Obama's
nominees for federal judgeships that in 2013, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid,
a Democrat of Nevada, prohibited filibusters on certain judicial nominees. McConnell also made
it clear that he would do everything he could to make sure that Democrats could not pass laws,
weaponizing the filibuster so that nothing could become law without 60 votes in the Senate.
so that nothing could become law without 60 votes in the Senate. McConnell became Senate Majority Leader in 2015 when voters gave Republicans control of the Senate. And when
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia died in February 2016, McConnell refused even to hold
hearings for President Obama's nominee for the Supreme Court, Merrick Garland. McConnell's justification for this unprecedented
obstruction was that Obama's March nomination was too close to an election. But the underlying
reason for the 2016 delay was at least in part his recognition that hopes of pushing the Supreme
Court to the right, especially on the issue of abortion, were likely to get evangelical voters to the polls.
Trump won in 2016, and Republicans got control of the Senate. In 2017, when Democrats tried to
filibuster Trump's nomination of Neil Gorsuch to fill Scalia's long empty seat, then-majority
leader McConnell killed the filibuster for Supreme Court nominees. The end of the filibuster for Supreme
Court nominees meant that McConnell could push through Trump's nominees Brett Kavanaugh with
just 50 votes and Amy Coney Barrett with just 52 in late October 2020 with voting for the next
president already underway. Throughout his tenure as Senate Majority Leader, McConnell made judicial
confirmations a top priority, churning through nominations even when the coronavirus pandemic
shut everything else down. Right-wing plaintiffs are now seeking out those judges, like Matthew
Kazmarek of Texas, to decide in their favor. Kazmarek challenged the FDA's approval of the drug
mifepristone, which can be used in abortions, thus threatening to ban it nationwide.
Meanwhile, at the Supreme Court, Trump appointees are joining with right-wing justices Clarence
Thomas and Samuel Alito to overturn precedents established long ago, including the right to abortion.
Controlling the country through the courts was the plan behind stacking the courts with
Republican nominees and weaponizing the filibuster to stop Democrats from passing legislation.
In March 2024, in Slate, legal analyst Mark Joseph Stern noted that McConnell realized you don't need to win
elections to enact Republican policy. You don't need to change hearts and minds. You don't need
to push ballot initiatives or win over the views of the people. All you have to do is stack the
courts. You only need 51 votes in the Senate to stack the courts with far-right partisan activists,
and they will enact Republican policies under the guise of judicial review, policies that
could never pass through the democratic process.
And those policies will be bulletproof because they will be called law.
When he took office, President Joe Biden went to work putting his own mark on the federal
judiciary. Almost two-thirds of his appointees are women, and 62% are people of color. He appointed
the first Black female justice, Katonji Brown Jackson, to the Supreme Court. But now, Republicans
are hoping to retake the Senate to make sure that those appointments will stop,
along with any more legislation. Their right-wing appointees to the courts will take the business of lawmaking out of the hands of American majorities. Republican leaders are throwing
everything they've got at the Senate races in Montana and Ohio, where they hope they can pick up the seat they need to take
control of the Senate. Attacks on immigrants in Ohio might move that needle. In 1890, Republicans
faced a similar problem. They had lost the popular vote in 1888, although they installed Republican
President Benjamin Harrison in office through the Electoral College
and knew the Democrats would soon far outnumber their own voters.
So they set out to guarantee that they could never lose the Senate,
which should enable them to kill popular Democratic legislation.
But they misjudged the electorate, and in the 1890 midterm election,
voters gave control of the House to the Democrats
by a margin of two to one, and control of the Senate came down to a single seat,
that of a senator from South Dakota. In those days, state legislatures chose their state senators.
And shortly after it became clear that control of the Senate was going to depend on that South Dakota seat,
U.S. Army troops went to South Dakota to rally voters by putting down an Indian uprising in
which no people had died and no property had been damaged. Fueled on false stories of savages who
were attacking white settlers, the inexperienced soldiers were the ones who
pulled the triggers to kill more than 250 Lakotas on December 29th.
But the Wounded Knee Massacre started in Washington, D.C.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Denham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
This is the world.