The last two Democratic primaries of May will be held today, in Kentucky and Oregon. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) is likely to win both of them. Hillary Clinton's remarks about putting coal companies and coal miners out of business will not play well in Kentucky, which depends heavily on coal (although it will play very well in Colorado and New Hampshire, which are swing states, while Kentucky is not). Oregon is a very liberal state similar to Washington, and Sanders won Washington easily (though one thing working against him in Oregon is that it's a closed primary, while Washington was open). A total of 116 delegates are up for grabs today, but as usual, they will be divided proportionally. If Sanders manages to get 2/3 of the vote, he will net about 39 delegates, denting Clinton's lead of 283 pledged delegates, but not enough. After tomorrow, the only contests before the big June 7 event when six states vote, are the Virgin Islands on June 4 and Puerto Rico on June 5. (V)
The New York Times has a piece on how Donald Trump might attack Hillary Clinton in the general election and why many of the attacks might fail. These include the following:
Bill Clinton's affairs. Trump will go after Hillary for "enabling" Bill's affairs, protecting him and trying to blame the women. While no other politician would dare go there, with Trump it is possible he could say or insinuate that if she were better in bed he wouldn't have strayed. This line of attack, however, puts Trump's own philandering in the spotlight, including his very public affair with Marla Maples while he was married to wife #1, Ivana Trump. Also, women may be very upset at the idea of blaming the wife for the husband's misdeeds.Now, Trump is a master at pulling surprises, so rather than talk about these subjects, all of which are predictable, he could bring up something not on anyone's radar. Maybe at her third-grade school picnic she spilled milk on the teacher and refused to apologize because she said it was someone else's fault. Or maybe she once put only one quarter into the newspaper dispenser, but took two papers. And where exactly was she when Kennedy was shot, again? (V)
In 2000, 92,000 people voted for Ralph Nader in Florida. If 1% of them had voted for Al Gore instead, his 537-vote loss would have become a 383-vote victory and Gore would have become President. Many Democrats have never forgiven Nader. If Bernie Sanders wants to have any lasting influence on the Democratic Party, he must at all costs avoid becoming Nader, the sequel. A PPP poll with and without Green Party candidate Jill Stein and Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson shows that the inclusion of these minor-party candidates take about 2% off Clinton's margin of victory over Trump. If Sanders storms off after the convention and his supporters largely vote for Stein or Johnson, it could tip a close election to Trump.
Sanders really doesn't want that, of course. The Nader supporters thought that they would force the Democrats to the left in 2004, for fear of losing them again. In fact, the reverse happened. The Democrats came to regard the left as flaky and unreliable and nominated a Vietnam veteran in 2004. If Sanders' supporters go off and sulk and Trump wins, the Democrats are likely to move to the right again in 2020. This means that Sanders has to operate very carefully if he wants to influence the Party.
Jesse Jackson faced the same situation in 1988, when he came into the convention with 38% of the pledged delegates. He told his delegates that they should be in it for the long haul, but strongly support the current nominee, Michael Dukakis, in 1988. Sanders could ask for some platform planks he thinks are important and he could ask for a veto over some personnel choices, but if he gets what he wants, his all-out support in the fall would have a bigger effect in the long term than taking his marbles and going home in a pout. (V)
In 2000, George W. Bush faced an electorate that was 81% white, 10% black, and 7% Latino—and lost the popular vote. The 2016 electorate is going to be much more diverse than that. White will represent around 69% of the total, according to Pew Research, with Latinos and black voters tied for second place at 12% each and Asian-Americans at 4%. This change is going to hurt the Republicans up and down the line, as minorities tend to vote Democratic. In 2012, Barack Obama got 71% of the Latino vote and Hillary Clinton could get even more this time, given Donald Trump's many derogatory comments about Mexicans. Getting the minorities to actually vote is something of a challenge, but the handwriting is on the wall: If they turn out in large numbers, Clinton will win and the Democrats will capture the Senate. (V)
After the Supreme Court struck down major portions of the Voting Rights Act, many states with Republican-controlled legislatures adopted much more restrictive voting laws, generally requiring state-issued ID to vote and/or reducing the availability of polling places. The official explanations given for these moves were to (a) combat fraud and (b) save taxpayer money. The real reason was to reduce Democratic turnout.
Predictably, this has resulted in lawsuits in several of the affected states. The latest to go forward, in Wisconsin, got underway on Monday with Obama appointee James Peterson as judge. True to form for a Democratic appointee, his questions and his general demeanor suggested that he is going to strike the Wisconsin law down. We will know for sure after two more weeks of testimony, and however much time it takes him to prepare his ruling. Republican appointees, meanwhile, have affirmed the new voter laws in several states, including South Carolina and Texas. There can be no doubt that this is eventually going to end up on SCOTUS' docket again. The only questions are whether that will happen in time for this year's election, and if it does, whether the eight-person court can actually reach a binding (i.e., not 4-4) ruling. (Z)
Speculation on who will be Donald Trump's running mate will continue until he makes an announcement. Chris Cillizza is taking the opposite tack and made a list of people who will almost certainly not be Trump's Veep, as follows:
Also off the list, of his own volition, is Gov. John Kasich (R-OH). On Monday, he sat for his first major interview since dropping out of the presidential race, and declared that he was unwilling to be #2 to a candidate with whom he is "fundamentally incompatible." This still leaves Sarah Palin, Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ), Rudy Giuliani, Rick Perry, Gov. Mary Fallin (R-OK), and many more, though. (V)
The Washington Post article linked above had only been up for a few hours when it caught the attention of Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), who did not like what he saw. He also did not care for a companion piece that said the Florida Senator hates his job (definitely true) and has essentially checked out until his time is up in January (very possible). Given his unhappiness, Rubio decided to take a page from Donald Trump's playbook, using Twitter to lambaste the newspaper. Given the late hour of the tweets (near midnight, EST) and their rambling quality, one might be tempted to guess that the Senator had been imbibing.
Meanwhile, we also cannot help noticing how many of the defeated candidates (at least, on the Republican side) have worked valiantly to keep their names in the headlines in various ways. That includes Ben Carson, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and his would-be VP Carly Fiorina, John Kasich, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Chris Christie, and Rubio. Among candidates who regularly qualified for the main stage at the GOP debates, only Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) seems to have gone away. Escaping the exhausting work of running for office must be a relief, in many ways, but the loss of attention appears to be very difficult for the candidates to handle. (Z)
Speaking of candidates who yearn to remain in the limelight, Ted Cruz released a five-minute ad/short film on Sunday entitled "No Regrets." It is ostensibly a thank you to his campaign staff and volunteers, though it is mostly self-congratulatory. It also makes the curious assertion that the Texas Senator was not defeated, only his campaign was. We will have to get out our Ouija boards and share the good news with Adlai Stevenson, Thomas Dewey, Alf Landon, Al Smith, William Jennings Bryan, and all the others who have apparently been incorrectly labeled as losers all this time.
The clip ends with a shot of Cruz's campaign bus, followed by a title card that says "To Be Continued." Surely there is no other way to read that other than that we have just seen the first campaign ad of the 2020 cycle. He'd better hurry and grab his domains, though—tedcruz2020.com and cruz2020.com have already been taken. (Z)