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In the face of an ongoing congressional blockade on local reform, Washington, D.C. Council members filed a new marijuana sales legalization bill that includes a reparations program with direct payments to people harmed by cannabis criminalization.https://t.co/lcsAXv2j2Mpic.twitter.com/hoxq9AOAUT
The “Reparations for Victims of the War on Cannabis Fund” would pay out people impacted by criminalization in amounts that are at least $5,000 and at most $80,000.https://t.co/lcsAXv2j2M
Pope Francis criticized laws that criminalize homosexuality as “unjust,” saying God loves all his children just as they are. The pontiff called on Catholic bishops who support the laws to welcome LGBTQ people into the church. #TheAPInterviewhttps://t.co/bNIKm0dg9Xpic.twitter.com/V76gScc3RR
The controversy over the nomination of Hector LaSalle to serve as chief judge of New York’s highest court – and his recent rejection by the state Senate Judiciary Committee – has led to predictable punditry casting this dispute as another battle between left and center, between progressives and moderates. But as is typical when an establishment power structure fails to see the ground shifting beneath its feet, the conventional wisdom is wrong. The sides here do not fit into neat ideological boxes so much as they reflect the conflict between outsiders and insiders, between reformers and the establishment.
LaSalle’s nomination was an establishment selection backed by the powerful judicial fraternity and the machinery of both political parties. They saw in this selection an assurance that the status quo they have constructed and enjoyed would remain in place, and that the paradigm that has already failed too many New Yorkers would not change.
Some of the arguments in defense of this nomination bordered on absurd. We were told not to judge a judge based on his actual work product, which displays an affinity for those in more powerful positions, or on which political parties he has chosen to align with and financially support. We were told not to value the opinions of those with real concerns who fight on the front lines on behalf of organized labor, reproductive rights and civil liberties. The gaslighting by LaSalle’s supporters demonized those who simply wanted to scrutinize this nomination, instead advocating deference to a historical dereliction of duty that gave governors unfettered discretion to appoint anyone with virtually no imposition of checks and balances.
But this state Senate is committed to repairing the mistakes of the past, not using them as a guidebook. The Senate Democratic conference rose to prominence (and a historic supermajority) as an antidote to old-style, backroom Albany politics, and our efforts to reshape the system were – and are – vigorously opposed by Republicans and establishment Democrats alike, including so-called leaders of our own party. Under the transformative direction of state Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, we vowed to govern from our values and remain accountable to the people – not the consultant class. We got back to basics and reconnected with the Democratic Party’s original mandate: to fight for average New Yorkers, heed the solutions they believe are needed to improve their lives and give them a fighting chance for success.
As a result, we’ve honed in on issues that empower people intentionally left out of government decision-making by those already in charge. We enacted sweeping voting reforms to expand access to our democracy like early voting, automatic voter registration and, most recently, the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Act.
Our state Senate endeavors to give outsiders the same seat at the table already enjoyed by those who have been in these halls for decades. And that’s how we’ve conducted ourselves as a conference. Our senators put forth effective, data-backed legislation that targets the underbelly of a problem to cut it out for good. In the few short years we have held power, and we have sought to change the system itself. We advanced some of the strongest climate legislation in the nation with our Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act, and successfully passed the Environmental Bond Act ballot proposal to help implement it. We raised taxes on the wealthy and reinvested in our future by funding public education and child care. And, most recently, we stood strong on reproductive rights, establishing New York as a destination state in the wake of the dreadful Dobbs decision.
That’s why it’s striking that in the 2022 election postmortem, while analysts picked apart the failures of New York’s Democratic Party, few mentioned the clear winners: New York’s state Legislature. While those running on the dogged politics of appeasement did poorly at the ballot box, both our senators and our Assembly colleagues advanced a bold vision for change and secured unprecedented back-to-back supermajorities while other candidates faltered. Our winning strategy hinged on the very disruptive reforms that the party establishment faults. Clinging to old tactics may have put them in power decades ago, but it will ultimately lead down a path of failure.
The Senate’s rejection of LaSalle’s nomination is not our first break with the old way of doing business, and it won’t be our last. We are forging ahead with a new style of governance that our state has never seen before. We will continue to champion the best interests of those outside the political apparatus, remain tethered to the practical implications of our work and always legislate on behalf of people before power. As evidenced last week, those who fail to adapt to these changing realities will continue to be out of step with the people of our state and will eventually fade into history.
A note to all of you journalists who have or who plan to write pieces about how DeSantis is the smarter, more polished, more restrained alternative to Trump. He’s none of that. https://t.co/HuZrGmoEug
— Chris “Subscribe to Law Dork!” Geidner (@chrisgeidner) January 23, 2023
Happy to be here. I had another medical procedure done today, this one was invasive but a wee bit less painful. Decided to open the doors at least. I don’t mind getting older in years, but my body needs repairs more often than I used to.
The alliance between sleazy centrist Dems and Republican plutocrats to defeat progressives deserves more attention. We saw a lot of this in the 2022 primaries. https://t.co/7gBfDf06Td
One person makes $100 million a year. Another person makes $160,000 a year. Both of those people put the exact same amount of money into Social Security.
We must scrap the cap on the wealthy and expand Social Security benefits — not cut them. pic.twitter.com/cE4ehxCrc0
I paid (no lie) $10 for 2 Beatle tickets. Sure, it was back in 1966, but there were NO monopolies like this ripoff BS between Ticketmaster and Live Nation. You also have to factor in all the scalper brokers who are another layer of ripoffs. Hubster worked in sports entertainment his whole career, and I heard the blow-by-blow horror stories first-hand. 🙁
My sense is Feinstein will retire, now that Schiff has declared his intentions. Another point by Emma Vigland who works at the Majority Report, but occasionally subs for Cenk at TYT.
Barbara Lee and Katie Porter better sort this shit out quickly. Splitting the field to give an easier path to this goober helps no one.
I know it's a jungle primary, but it's important to build as large of a coalition as possible before the general. https://t.co/sahywKwAXO
If she retires, Newsom will pick her replacement. (Who knows who that will be. He will pick someone that he thinks will help him in his quest for the White House.)
Hopefully Ro doesn’t jump In to further fracture the field. Someone like Swalwell would be welcome to take votes from Schiff. With the field as is, if there is only one prime Republican candidate, the danger in California’s top two jungle primary would be the Republican and Schiff as top two. Some extra Republicans splitting the vote would make an all Dem top two more likely (like last time it was Feinstein and DeLeon). You would think a Schiff vs. Porter general election would favor Schiff because the Republicans (the ones who decide to vote) would favor the more conservative candidate, but a lot of Republicans hate Schiff because of the Trump impeachment (Look what McCarthy is doing to him on his committee assignment.)
Very true. I always felt Porter was a longshot though I’m glad she declared. Newsom is nothing Progressive either, so it depends on what dementia Feinstein does. She’s is totally unfit to serve. My mother died from full blown dementia, and she was much younger. I know all too much about it!
I don’t believe she retire before her term is up. My sentiment is that she will not seek re-election, therefore, she will retire from the senate at the New Year 2025 unless her health continues to decline.
Ro’s got some issues that I’m not confident are gonna be popular. Since 2019, he has commissioned edging near 2300 securities trades. You can see them all on https://unusualwhales.com/politics.
Adam Schiff has only 4. Katie Porter- you guessed it. Zero.
Good for him. I like him even though he made a bonehead move running in NYC but I blame SPM and Dem establishment more for forcing him out of his district. They wanted him to run against Bowman but he refused to do that. Perhaps he can use this platform in a run next year for his old seat in Congress against the Republican who defeated SPM.
Surprised CNN is hiring him. He’s definitely more progressive than I thought they could stomach since they turned more right.
A congressional report commissioned by Bernie Sanders finds that the 1 percent now own one-third of all wealth, while the bottom half of Americans hold only 2 percent. It’s another sign of the slide into oligarchy that Sanders has warned about for years.https://t.co/dciicewJPN
Not that Hawley is interested least for this bill to be voted on and passed. The title is more catch-y than anything else.
From the deputy majority leader of the NY state senate, Mike Gianaris.
https://www.cityandstateny.com/opinion/2023/01/opinion-lasalles-rejection-was-defeat-albany-backroom-politics/382061/
Well said, deputy majority leader. Continue on.
+270!
Can we have 49 more state leaders throughout the country like this?
This yahoo is so full of bullshit that there really aren’t words in American English to accurately describe it.
@wi64 where’s that cool gif you have in your possession to illustrate orl’s point?
Feel free to pick the level of💩💩💩🙄
Thank you! +540
One of my favorite grafix!!! +2700!! 🙂
T and R x 2, Ms. Benny!! 🙂
Happy to be here. I had another medical procedure done today, this one was invasive but a wee bit less painful. Decided to open the doors at least. I don’t mind getting older in years, but my body needs repairs more often than I used to.
Wishing you a smooth recovery!
Ditto. 🙂 Enjoy looking at the snow, too.
x2700 Benny
That’s been going down for quite some time. But, Progressives are gradually increasing their numbers in Congress and throughout the states. 🙂
She’ll just win re-election in a landslide. Shows you how brain dead McCarthy is.
Well his x-rays were released;
AMEN, Senator Sanders!!!!!!!!
I don’t care about Taylor Swift. It’s more that Live Nation is a monopoly – they have up to 90% of ticketing market for the NFL stadiums.
I paid (no lie) $10 for 2 Beatle tickets. Sure, it was back in 1966, but there were NO monopolies like this ripoff BS between Ticketmaster and Live Nation. You also have to factor in all the scalper brokers who are another layer of ripoffs. Hubster worked in sports entertainment his whole career, and I heard the blow-by-blow horror stories first-hand. 🙁
Well, that’s just too damned bad about the .001%’s beloved stock dividends and buybacks, ain’t it?!/s
My sense is Feinstein will retire, now that Schiff has declared his intentions. Another point by Emma Vigland who works at the Majority Report, but occasionally subs for Cenk at TYT.
If she retires, Newsom will pick her replacement. (Who knows who that will be. He will pick someone that he thinks will help him in his quest for the White House.)
Hopefully Ro doesn’t jump In to further fracture the field. Someone like Swalwell would be welcome to take votes from Schiff. With the field as is, if there is only one prime Republican candidate, the danger in California’s top two jungle primary would be the Republican and Schiff as top two. Some extra Republicans splitting the vote would make an all Dem top two more likely (like last time it was Feinstein and DeLeon). You would think a Schiff vs. Porter general election would favor Schiff because the Republicans (the ones who decide to vote) would favor the more conservative candidate, but a lot of Republicans hate Schiff because of the Trump impeachment (Look what McCarthy is doing to him on his committee assignment.)
Very true. I always felt Porter was a longshot though I’m glad she declared. Newsom is nothing Progressive either, so it depends on what dementia Feinstein does. She’s is totally unfit to serve. My mother died from full blown dementia, and she was much younger. I know all too much about it!
I don’t believe she retire before her term is up. My sentiment is that she will not seek re-election, therefore, she will retire from the senate at the New Year 2025 unless her health continues to decline.
Ro’s got some issues that I’m not confident are gonna be popular. Since 2019, he has commissioned edging near 2300 securities trades. You can see them all on https://unusualwhales.com/politics.
Adam Schiff has only 4. Katie Porter- you guessed it. Zero.
Good for him. I like him even though he made a bonehead move running in NYC but I blame SPM and Dem establishment more for forcing him out of his district. They wanted him to run against Bowman but he refused to do that. Perhaps he can use this platform in a run next year for his old seat in Congress against the Republican who defeated SPM.
Surprised CNN is hiring him. He’s definitely more progressive than I thought they could stomach since they turned more right.
Agree here, too. Interesting move on CNN’s part.
We’ll see how long he lasts there you don’t tow the craprate news line, the axe man cometh…
Keep telling it on the mountain (so-to-speak), Senator!!