Wednesday, November 30, 2016
Monday, November 28, 2016
How The Recounts Pose A Risk To Mike Pence
At
American Thinker, Richard Baehr
explains:
The
recount in Wisconsin, and the coming ones in Michigan and Pennsylvania will not
change the outcomes in any of the states. No recount ever changes thousands of
votes. I do not think that is the purpose.
The
recounts, if done by hand, which can be demanded, may take longer than the last
day for completing the official counts in a state and directing Electoral
College voters. If all 3 states miss the deadline, Trump is at 260, Hillary at
232. No one hits 270.
Then
this goes to Congress, where the House voting 1 vote per state elects Trump,
and Senate selects Pence. This would be first time this happened since 1824,
but in that case, John Quincy Adams won in the House, though he had fewer
electoral college votes than Andrew Jackson.
If
this goes to the US House and Senate, and the result is the same as result from
the Electoral College without the recounts, why do it? The answer is to make Trump seem even more
illegitimate, that he did not win the popular vote (he lost by over 2.1 million), he did not win
the Electoral College (did not reach 270), and was elected by being inserted
into the presidency by members of his own party in Congress.
Richard
Baehr, The Democrats’ real strategy in
launching recounts, American Thinker
(Nov. 27, 2016), http://tinyurl.com/gllh85f. Baehr is right, but the
Stein-Democrat recount strategy only works if all 3 states fail to recount
their states’ votes in time and fail to appoint a Trump-slate of electors. As
long as 1 of the 3 states completes a timely recount, Trump-Pence are
home-and-dry.
Still
if all 3 states fail to make a timely recount and fail to appoint their slate
of Trump-Pence electors…then the presidential race will be thrown into the
House where each State has one vote. Under Article II and the Twelfth
Amendment, Trump has to carry a majority of state delegations (26 of 50). There
is a separate quorum requirement: 2/3 of the States (34 of 50) must have one or more
members present. Trump can probably meet this bar: 32 of the state delegations
in the 115th Congress will have Republican majorities (albeit some are narrow
majorities), and 11 other state delegations have 1 or more Republican members.
So the Republicans should be able to reach a quorum of 34 States with one or
more members present.
However,
if all three 3 states fail to make a timely recount and fail to appoint their
slate of Trump-Pence electors…then the vice presidential race will be thrown
into the Senate. Under Article II and the Twelfth Amendment, Pence will need a
majority of the “whole number” of senators. The Republicans have such a
majority. But the Twelfth Amendment also has a quorum requirement: “two-thirds
of the whole number of Senators.” [2/3 is 67 of 100 senators, assuming all elected Senators are alive and sworn during the proceedings to select a Vice President.] The Republicans cannot meet this bar, at
least not absent Democratic participation. By absenting themselves, the Democrats
can block the narrow Senate Republican majority from selecting Pence.
Worst
or best case situation…depending on your point of view…the Senate fails to
elect a Vice President and the House fails to elect a President. How could the
latter happen? Paul Ryan will be in the chair. Ryan might delay the vote or he
might allow the vote to be delayed by dilatory opposition motions. If something
like that should happen, and if no President and no Vice President are elected
by the House and by the Senate, respectively, then the Presidential Succession
Act of 1947 kicks in…and the acting presidency will fall to…the Speaker of the
House (if he chooses to take it), and if the Speaker fails to take it, then to
the Senate President Pro Tempore (“SPPT”) (if he chooses to take it), and if
they fail to take it, then to cabinet members. By this time, most (perhaps,
all) of President Obama’s cabinet will have already resigned, and so the acting
presidency might fall to someone not holding a highly significant cabinet post.
There
is now a significant academic literature suggesting that it is unconstitutional
for the acting presidency to fall to House and Senate officers, such as the
Speaker or SPPT. (I note that I do not share this view, which is now a commonplace in academia.) Based on this view, should the Speaker or SPPT (as opposed to Donald J. Trump) succeed
to the (acting) presidency, it is likely that an outgoing Obama-era cabinet
member would sue to displace (as in “replace”) the Speaker or SPPT who is
acting as President.
None
of the eventualities described above would be good.
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, Where
My Views Were Discussed, Quoted, or Cited: Volokh, Daily Caller, Bloomberg, New
York Mag, NY Times, etc, The New Reform Club (Nov. 22, 2016, 12:58 PM). [here]
Saturday, November 26, 2016
Falwell II nixes top Edu job; Snowflakes safe for now
According to John Fea's The Way of Improvement Leads Home blog, we learn that Jerry Falwell Jr. turned down Pres-elect Trump's offer of the bully pulpit at the Department of [Mis]Education.
It would have been glorious: One of the biggest swamps in America, sorely in need of a good draining.
It would have been glorious: One of the biggest swamps in America, sorely in need of a good draining.
“I let them know one of my passions is reforming higher education and education in general,” Falwell said in an interview Tuesday.
Falwell said higher education has to “get back to the basics of teaching” and eschew the “ivory tower” mentality that has led to “salaries that are out of this world.”
In public K-12 education, Falwell said, school vouchers could “transform the country and the inner cities” by giving parents an educational choice that provides “a whole generation of young people a new lease on life.”
Falwell said he also favors a repeal of the so-called Johnson Amendment, a portion of the federal tax code, named for then-U.S. Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas, that prohibits tax-exempt institutions like schools and religious organizations from directly endorsing political causes.
Falwell had harsh words for how he believes liberal colleges reacted to Trump’s election, “having these little cry sessions and canceling classes and basically saying the wrong guy won.”
“Those are nonprofit schools. They are subject to the Johnson Amendment ... and they’re saying, ‘We’ll help you mourn since the wrong guy won,’” Falwell continued. “If Liberty had done that after Obama had won, we would have been called on the carpet on the Johnson Amendment and our tax exemption would have been at stake.”
Tuesday, November 22, 2016
Where My Views Were Discussed, Quoted, or Cited: Politico, Volokh, Daily Caller, Bloomberg, New York Mag, NY Times, etc
Jonathan H. Adler, The
Emoluments Clause—Is Donald Trump violating its letter or spirit?, The
Washington Post—The Volokh
Conspiracy (Nov. 21, 2016, 7:15 PM), http://tinyurl.com/h5d7863
Josh Blackman, Can Congress Impose Ethics Requirements on the President or the Supreme
Court?, Josh Blackman’s Blog (Nov. 23, 2016),
http://tinyurl.com/hoekdgv
Madeline Conway, The 229-year-old sentence liberals hope will sink Trump, Politico (Nov. 22, 2016, 07:46 PM EST), http://tinyurl.com/j3k8zg7
Kevin Daley, Here’s Why Trump’s Business Interests Could Trigger A Constitutional Crisis, The Daily Caller (Nov. 21, 2016, 1:46 PM), http://tinyurl.com/hhgwpuz
John Fea, What is the Foreign Emoluments Clause?, The Way of Improvement Leads Home (Nov. 26, 2016), http://tinyurl.com/z5ms68g
Noah Feldman, Trump’s Hotel Lodges a Constitutional Problem, BloombergView (Nov.
21, 2016, 2:45 PM EST), http://tinyurl.com/jc6wstt
Eric Levitz, Daily Intelligencer, The Constitution (Probably) Won’t Save Us If Trump Becomes a Kleptocrat,
New
York Mag (Nov. 21,
2016, 3:12 PM), http://tinyurl.com/hkebq5u
Adam Liptak, Donald
Trump’s Business Dealings Test a Constitutional Limit, NY Times (Nov. 21,
2016), http://tinyurl.com/z936g7x
Michael
Ramsey, Seth Barrett Tillman on Foreign
Gifts to Presidents, The Originalism Blog
(Nov. 20, 2016, 6:46 AM), http://tinyurl.com/hecosgc
Glenn Reynolds, Seth Barrett Tillman: Constitutional Restrictions on Foreign Gifts
Don’t Apply to Presidents, Instapundit (Nov. 19, 2016, 6:35 PM),
tinyurl.com/zvq764v
Ruthann Robson, Brief
History of the Emoluments Clause—and Argentina, Constitutional Law Prof Blog (Nov. 22, 2016), http://tinyurl.com/hevge8n
Steven D. Schwinn, Tillman
on Trump and Emoluments, Constitutional Law Prof Blog (Nov.
20, 2016), http://tinyurl.com/hcuuq44
Sébastian Seibt, États-Unis: Donald Trump nie toute possibilité de conflit d'intérêts
pour le president, France24 (Nov.
23 2016), http://tinyurl.com/zgpyetk
Jeff Stein, Donald Trump and the Emoluments Clause, explained, Vox (Nov 23, 2016, 12:13 PM EST), http://tinyurl.com/jbkuxad
Rachel Stockman, Trump is Right, Conflict-of-Interest Rules Don’t Apply to Him, Law Newz (Nov. 23, 2016, 9:54 AM), http://tinyurl.com/z8o23tj
Rachel Stockman, Legal Scholar: ‘Wildly Inaccurate’ to Accuse Trump of Violating
Constitution With His Businesses, Law
Newz (Nov. 22, 2016, 12:29 PM), http://tinyurl.com/hzbhs5r
S.B. Tillman, Constitutional restrictions on foreign gifts don’t apply to the president, Hot Air (Nov. 20, 2016), http://tinyurl.com/hkn2dmq
Seth Barrett Tillman, The NY
Times’ Room-for-Debate: Constitutional Restrictions on Foreign Gifts Don’t
Apply to Presidents, The New Reform Club (Nov. 18, 2016, 10:45 AM), http://tinyurl.com/hyfl7yt
Olivia B. Waxman, What Is an Emolument? Donald Trump Has People Talking About This Part
of the Constitution, Time
(Nov. 22, 2016, 4:07 PM ET), http://tinyurl.com/j85dnpu
Debra Cassens Weiss, Is Donald Trump about to violate the emoluments clause?, ABA Journal (Nov. 22, 2016, 10:03 AM CST), http://tinyurl.com/zddfdkv
What
is an emolument and why do we care?, National
Constitution Center: Constitution Daily (Nov. 22, 2016), http://tinyurl.com/h6bbthw
Interviewed by NPR’s Marketplace.
Sabri Ben-Achour, This arcane constitutional clause could be trouble for Trump, Marketplace (Nov. 22, 2016, 3:32 PM), http://tinyurl.com/hu8s8s4 (“Some scholars argue it does not apply to the President.”)
Sabri Ben-Achour, This arcane constitutional clause could be trouble for Trump, Marketplace (Nov. 22, 2016, 3:32 PM), http://tinyurl.com/hu8s8s4 (“Some scholars argue it does not apply to the President.”)
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, The NY
Times’ Room-for-Debate: Constitutional Restrictions on Foreign Gifts Don’t
Apply to Presidents, The New Reform Club (Nov.
18, 2016, 10:45 AM), http://tinyurl.com/hyfl7yt
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Twilight of the Sneer
The career empathyzer suffers a complete lack of any genuine empathy. When it comes to empathy for those between I-5 and I-95, the career empathyzer is always short on funds. This election was a giant NSF notice: of the 700 counties that twice voted for Obama, 1/3 flipped to Trump.
And yet, still, and although, they might have forgiven the career empathyzers their snub; they might have continued bearing our economy on their backs, with the corporatists riding on the top deck – fancying they were aloft a hover-car that runs only on their own cleverness. And they might have overlooked being called stupid by the managers and college kids “who don’t know shit about how to do anything but are full of ideas about how I have to do my job," even though the working class are less likely to trust either major party, or to believe common stupid liberalisms, like Hiss wasn't a spy; like Marx isn't wrong; like OJ didn't do it; like Americans won't lose their doctor; like Clinton can't lose; like Trump can't win.
But sticking the “deplorables” with the tab for America’s moral sins, real or imagined, roused their attention. Even a dog knows the difference between being stumbled over and being kicked. Indeed, even the locution -- "basket of deporables" -- is an act of conscious literary inventiveness, weaponizing the adjective "deporable" into a neologism: "deplorable" as a noun -- as a person -- as a fellow American. This was not a slip of tongue. This was malice aforethought.
The conservative NeverTrump movement, for its part, gave the "deplorables" the cover of a safe bargain: Trump is no conservative! Why, in fact, he is a lifelong Democrat! 'Even better,' reasoned the working class: 'we will defeat the hated Democrats without handing victory to the hated Republicans.' The careerists will buy stock in more programming calling Trump voters "stupid," without a thought to the possibility that these voters might have learned a trick or two about politics -- even though they aren't paid a handsome salary to write op-eds about it.
Will the working class continue supporting Trump, and will that support transfer to Republicans? To begin to answer, first ask: Will careerists finally learn to speak with empathy about a long-thought-politically-dead voter group? Freshly chastened, it's likely they will try. And thus the winner of the contest for the working-class vote will be: which party can rack up the most distance from its old, corporatist ways? Who can make the federal government less relevant to their lives? Who will learn simply to say, without sneering, and indeed with conviction: Make America Great Again?
And yet, still, and although, they might have forgiven the career empathyzers their snub; they might have continued bearing our economy on their backs, with the corporatists riding on the top deck – fancying they were aloft a hover-car that runs only on their own cleverness. And they might have overlooked being called stupid by the managers and college kids “who don’t know shit about how to do anything but are full of ideas about how I have to do my job," even though the working class are less likely to trust either major party, or to believe common stupid liberalisms, like Hiss wasn't a spy; like Marx isn't wrong; like OJ didn't do it; like Americans won't lose their doctor; like Clinton can't lose; like Trump can't win.
But sticking the “deplorables” with the tab for America’s moral sins, real or imagined, roused their attention. Even a dog knows the difference between being stumbled over and being kicked. Indeed, even the locution -- "basket of deporables" -- is an act of conscious literary inventiveness, weaponizing the adjective "deporable" into a neologism: "deplorable" as a noun -- as a person -- as a fellow American. This was not a slip of tongue. This was malice aforethought.
The conservative NeverTrump movement, for its part, gave the "deplorables" the cover of a safe bargain: Trump is no conservative! Why, in fact, he is a lifelong Democrat! 'Even better,' reasoned the working class: 'we will defeat the hated Democrats without handing victory to the hated Republicans.' The careerists will buy stock in more programming calling Trump voters "stupid," without a thought to the possibility that these voters might have learned a trick or two about politics -- even though they aren't paid a handsome salary to write op-eds about it.
Will the working class continue supporting Trump, and will that support transfer to Republicans? To begin to answer, first ask: Will careerists finally learn to speak with empathy about a long-thought-politically-dead voter group? Freshly chastened, it's likely they will try. And thus the winner of the contest for the working-class vote will be: which party can rack up the most distance from its old, corporatist ways? Who can make the federal government less relevant to their lives? Who will learn simply to say, without sneering, and indeed with conviction: Make America Great Again?
Saturday, November 19, 2016
Friday, November 18, 2016
The NY Times' Room-for-Debate: Constitutional Restrictions on Foreign Gifts Don’t Apply to Presidents
President-elect Trump
has many extensive and diverse business interests, including some abroad, and some
of his interests involve foreign government entities. In order to ensure
against ethical conflicts, both real and perceived, Trump should place his
interests in those holdings beyond his personal control, i.e., into an
independently managed blind trust. Such a move would be wise: consistent with America’s
best political traditions and practices.
Still the Constitution
does not always demand that we and our government act wisely. And that is the situation
here. The Foreign Gifts Clause provides: “[N]o Person holding any Office of
Profit or Trust under them [i.e., the United States], shall, without the
Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of
any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State.”
Does the Foreign Gifts Clause and its office under the United States language apply to the presidency?
There are three good reasons to believe that it does not.
First, the Constitution does not rely on generalized “office” language
to refer to the President and Vice President. Where a provision is meant to
apply to such apex or elected officials, the provision expressly
names those officials. For example, the Impeachment Clause applies to the
“President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States ….”
Second, the Foreign Gifts Clause was given an early construction by
George Washington. While he was President, Washington received two gifts from
officials of the French government—including a diplomatic gift from the French
ambassador. Washington accepted the gifts, he kept the gifts, and he never
asked for or received congressional consent. There is no record of any anti-administration
congressman or senator criticizing the President’s conduct. As Professor Akhil
Amar has reminded us: the precedents set by President Washington and his
administration deserve special deference in regard to both “foreign affairs”
and “presidential etiquette.”
Finally, in 1792, again during the Washington administration, the Senate
ordered Secretary of State Alexander Hamilton to supply a list of persons
holding office under the United States
and their salaries. Hamilton’s 90-page responsive list included appointed officers in each of the three
branches, but did not include any elected
officials in any branch. In other words, officers
under the United States are appointed; by contrast, the President is
elected, so he is not an officer under the
United States. Thus, the Foreign Gifts Clause, and its operative office under the United States language,
does not apply to the presidency.
Again, as a matter of
constitutional law, Trump is not obligated to divest himself of his foreign business
interests. Still, his coming up right smack against the ill defined boundary of
constitutional propriety, and perhaps going over that line, as arguably the
Clintons and the Clinton Foundation did, will not endear Trump to his voters. Millions
of voters took a chance on Trump on election day: what Trump does here will be
a good first test to determine if those voters were right to take that chance.
The above appeared in: Seth Barrett
Tillman, Room for Debate, Constitutional
Restrictions on Foreign Gifts Don’t Apply to Presidents, The NY Times, Nov. 18, 2016, 10:41 AM, http://tinyurl.com/jpbhom5
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman (
@SethBTillman )
My prior
post: Seth Barrett Tillman, National Conference Of State Legislatures:
Number Of State Legislative Seats Held By Each Party, The New Reform
Club (Nov. 16, 2016, 2:36 AM). [here]
On the "Fake News" Controversy
“Perhaps an editor might begin a reformation in some such way as this. Divide his paper into four chapters, heading the first, Truths; the second, Probabilities; the third, Possibilities; the fourth, Lies. The first chapter would be very short, as it would contain little more than authentic papers and information from such sources as the editor would be willing to risk his own reputation for their truth. The second would contain what, from a mature consideration of all circumstances, his judgment should conclude to be probably true. This, however, should rather contain too little than too much. The third and fourth should be professedly for those readers who would rather have lies for their money than the blank paper they would occupy.”
I must say that with my friends on the left, if I only got my information from their "trusted" sources, I would think and vote as they do. I don't disagree about what they know, only about what they don't.
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
National Conference Of State Legislatures: Number Of State Legislative Seats Held By Each Party
As of November 7, 2016 (pre-election), the Ds held 3,163 state legislative seats across the 50 states, and the Rs held 4,118 seats.
As of November 10, 2016 (post-election), the Ds hold 3,135 state legislative seats across the 50 states, and the Rs hold 4,162 seats.
The Ds lost 28 seats nationally.
The Rs picked up 44 seats.
[Seats held by third-parties and independents or on a non-partisan basis are not included.]
[Some seats are yet to be determined.]
[Some seats are yet to be determined.]
Bottom line: the Rs picked up over 40 state legislative seats in 2016.
The shift to the Rs represents just over 1/2 of 1% of all state legislative seats (i.e., (44) / (7,297)). Interesting, 12 House state legislative chambers and 2 Senate state legislative chambers are controlled by 5 or fewer seats. Small changes in seat distribution can have highly significant effects.
The shift to the Rs represents just over 1/2 of 1% of all state legislative seats (i.e., (44) / (7,297)). Interesting, 12 House state legislative chambers and 2 Senate state legislative chambers are controlled by 5 or fewer seats. Small changes in seat distribution can have highly significant effects.
Seth
See generally http://www.ncsl.org.
See http://www.ncsl.org/portals/1/documents/elections/Legis_Control_2016_Post11_10_603pm.pdf (after).
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman on Irish
TV & Radio, The New Reform Club (Nov.
11, 2016, 11:10 AM). [here]
Monday, November 14, 2016
Trump's Team of Rivals
My first reaction to Pres-elect Trump giving "alt-right" [for lack of a better term] Breitbart boss Steve Bannon a top slot—even if more symbolic than substantive—was that he's determined not to let his right flank slip, and indeed turn and rend him.
Jimmy Carter's biggest political failure was losing control of his own party, and as Douglas Brinkley fascinatingly chronicles here,* it was Carter's disaffected left flank that did him in more than Ronald Reagan.
I don't know if Trump [or his advisors] learned from history, but so far at least he just avoided a major snare—losing your own side without whom you cannot hope to lead or govern. That and hiring GOP chair Priebus as Chief of Staff—Reince knows all the players: Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
___________
*"Tales of Carter's contempt for and ineptitude at politicking were legion on Capitol Hill throughout his term in office. "When it came to the politics of Washington, D.C., he never really understood how the system worked," Tip O'Neill wrote in his memoirs. "And although this was out of character for Jimmy Carter, he didn't want to learn about it either." In fact, O'Neill couldn't escape the feeling that Carter was working against fellow Democrats--including the Speaker himself. "Once, when the city of Boston applied for a government grant for some roads, I called the Carter people to try to speed it along," O'Neill wrote. "Instead of assisting me, however, they did everything possible to block my way."
Other perceived slights were more subtle..."
Jimmy Carter's biggest political failure was losing control of his own party, and as Douglas Brinkley fascinatingly chronicles here,* it was Carter's disaffected left flank that did him in more than Ronald Reagan.
I don't know if Trump [or his advisors] learned from history, but so far at least he just avoided a major snare—losing your own side without whom you cannot hope to lead or govern. That and hiring GOP chair Priebus as Chief of Staff—Reince knows all the players: Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
___________
*"Tales of Carter's contempt for and ineptitude at politicking were legion on Capitol Hill throughout his term in office. "When it came to the politics of Washington, D.C., he never really understood how the system worked," Tip O'Neill wrote in his memoirs. "And although this was out of character for Jimmy Carter, he didn't want to learn about it either." In fact, O'Neill couldn't escape the feeling that Carter was working against fellow Democrats--including the Speaker himself. "Once, when the city of Boston applied for a government grant for some roads, I called the Carter people to try to speed it along," O'Neill wrote. "Instead of assisting me, however, they did everything possible to block my way."
Other perceived slights were more subtle..."
Friday, November 11, 2016
Seth Barrett Tillman on Irish TV & Radio
Prime Time, RTÉ (Nov. 10, 2016, 9:00 PM)
(interviewer, guest, and Tillman), http://tinyurl.com/jhw6jhd;
The Pat Kenny Tonight Show, TV3 (Nov. 9,
2016, 9:30 PM) (panellist), http://tinyurl.com/zp7ovku, https://www.tv3.ie/3player/show/1032; and,
Cormac Ó
hEadhra, The Late Debate: U.S. Election
Night, RTÉ Radio 1 (Nov. 8, 2016, 9:00 PM) (panellist), http://tinyurl.com/jy3ngp4.
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, Staff of the
Great Northern Railway who fell in World War I and World War II, The
New Reform Club (Nov. 11, 2016,
9:29 AM). [here]
Staff of the Great Northern Railway (Ireland) who fell in World War I and World War II
Below is a photograph of a plaque in Connolly Station: the primary railway station in Dublin, Ireland.
I thought it a fitting image for Veterans Day / Armistice Day. It is a side of Ireland that is little known.
It reads: "In memory of the following members of the Staff of the Great Northern Railway (Ireland) who laid down their lives for their Country in the Great War, 1914-1919 <names> Also the Following who made the Supreme Sacrifice in the Second World War. 1939-1945 <names>".
On two prior occasions, I have written on these issues:
Seth Barrett Tillman, Ireland and World War II, The New Reform Club (Sept. 19, 2016, 2:34 PM), http://tinyurl.com/jjwqujq; and,
Glenn Reynolds, This Doesn’t Reflect Well on Ireland: Why Irish Soldiers Who Fought Hitler Hide Their Medals: An Update from Seth Barrett Tillman, Instapundit (Jan. 2, 2012, 6:16 PM), http://pjmedia.com/instapundit/134529.
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, A Summary of the 2016 Governors Races, State Legislative Races, and State-level Death Penalty Referenda, The New Reform Club (Nov. 11, 2016, 5:15 AM). [here]
I thought it a fitting image for Veterans Day / Armistice Day. It is a side of Ireland that is little known.
It reads: "In memory of the following members of the Staff of the Great Northern Railway (Ireland) who laid down their lives for their Country in the Great War, 1914-1919 <names> Also the Following who made the Supreme Sacrifice in the Second World War. 1939-1945 <names>".
On two prior occasions, I have written on these issues:
Seth Barrett Tillman, Ireland and World War II, The New Reform Club (Sept. 19, 2016, 2:34 PM), http://tinyurl.com/jjwqujq; and,
Glenn Reynolds, This Doesn’t Reflect Well on Ireland: Why Irish Soldiers Who Fought Hitler Hide Their Medals: An Update from Seth Barrett Tillman, Instapundit (Jan. 2, 2012, 6:16 PM), http://pjmedia.com/instapundit/134529.
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, A Summary of the 2016 Governors Races, State Legislative Races, and State-level Death Penalty Referenda, The New Reform Club (Nov. 11, 2016, 5:15 AM). [here]
A Summary of the 2016 Governors Races, State Legislative Races, and State-level Death Penalty Referenda
State
and local races show some significant net gains by the Republican Party,
notwithstanding the occasional Democratic Party pickup. There were 12 governors
races. 8 left the incumbent or the incumbent's party in power. These states
included: Delaware, Indiana, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Utah, Washington,
and West Virginia. The Republicans picked up Missouri, a very significant bellweather [spelling corrected!] state, and also Vermont and New Hampshire, illustrating that the
Republican Party continues to enjoy some significant support in New England.
North Carolina is yet to be decided. If the Democrat emerges the victor, it will
be a significant Democratic Party pickup in the South.
As
to state houses, the National Conference of State Legislatures reports:
Three
chambers switched from Democratic to Republican control: Kentucky House, Iowa
Senate, and Minnesota Senate.
Four
chambers switched from Republican to Democratic control: New Mexico House, Nevada
Assembly, Nevada Senate, and Washington Senate (albeit, Republicans, however,
will have functional control as one Democrat will caucus with the Republicans).
The Connecticut
Senate, which had been under Democratic Party control, will be tied. And the NY Senate,
which also had been under Democratic Party control, is yet to be decided, as one seat
remains contested.
See http://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/2016-pre-and-post-election-state-legislative-control.aspx.
In total, the Republicans had some net gains, but not dramatic gains.
In terms
of state legislative seats, after the 2014 election the Ds held 3,172 seats, and
the Rs held 4,124 seats: an R advantage of 952 seats. We do not yet know if the
Rs expanded on their 952 seat lead, or if it contracted. That will be clarified
later today, by Monday, or over the course of the next few business days.
In
2016, there were 154 referenda** at the state level. Several dealt with the death
penalty. For example, California voters rejected a proposal to abolish the
death penalty, and in a separate vote appear to have passed a proposal to speed
up the pace of executions, but the results are not yet official. Nebraska
voters restored the death penalty, after the legislature had passed a bill to
end the procedure. And Oklahoma voters passed an amendment to the state
constitution stating that the procedure was not “cruel and unusual punishment.”
The latter passed 2-to-1. See http://www.ncsl.org/research/elections-and-campaigns/ballot-measures-database.aspx.
Seth
**I usually use Atlantic Archipelago spelling and usage. In Ireland, the plural for “referendum” is “referendums.” Perhaps in the future I could write this way, but today, I cannot bring myself to do it.
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, The Supreme
Court Temptation, The New Reform Club (Nov. 9, 2016, 8:59 AM). [Here]
Wednesday, November 09, 2016
The Supreme Court Temptation
Making
a nomination to the Supreme Court to fill the Scalia seat is easy, and it will
permit Trump to control the news cycle. Trump will be tempted to make this his first substantial order of business, but it is a
temptation to which the future president ought not succumb, even if he risks losing
some political popularity while delaying the eventual nomination.
Why
should Trump delay? Because to make this nomination his first order of business
is to break faith with those who elected him. Those who elected him do not
trust the federal courts, and they do not believe that a change in personnel will make
it a source of succour for their problems.
Moreover,
for Trump’s voters, this election was not about the past: it was not about
abortion, affirmative action, gun rights, states rights, etc, etc. That past is
dead. This election was about something else, about building a new and different future, and
what those voters want are new Executive Branch policies and concrete proposed
bills surrounding today’s one key issue: immigration and border control policies
focusing exclusively on the interests of America’s citizens. It is that simple, and it was
always that simple.
Once
Trump issues some concrete executive orders and proposed bills, then he can
turn to the lesser business of the Supreme Court of the United States and also to the interests of the academic elites, transnational bureaucrats, and other professional policy
wonks (few of which supported him) who remain immersed in the world that is now gone.
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
Seth Barrett Tillman, The Supreme Court Temptation, The New Reform Club (Nov. 9, 2016, 8:59 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2016/11/the-supreme-court-temptation.html>.
Seth Barrett Tillman, The Supreme Court Temptation, The New Reform Club (Nov. 9, 2016, 8:59 AM), <https://reformclub.blogspot.com/2016/11/the-supreme-court-temptation.html>.
Seth Barrett Tillman, The Undecideds, The
New Reform Club (Nov. 7, 2016,
7:45 AM). [here]
Monday, November 07, 2016
The Undecideds
In the first poll above, with Trump at +2%, 8% are undecided, in the second poll, with Clinton at +3%, 9%, are undecided.
For who will the undecideds vote? Is there a shy Tory/Wilder effect, or are enough Democratic votes already locked up, that even if there is a Wilder effect, it will be negated by the Democrats' better ground game?
Seth
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, Why the Anti-Trump Commentariat are not Trusted, The New Reform Club (Nov. 7, 2016, 4:43 AM). [here]
Why the Anti-Trump Commentariat are not Trusted
A
Response to Professor David Post, I’m,
with her (and with Orin), too, The
Volokh Conspiracy (Nov. 6, 2016, 12:24 PM), http://tinyurl.com/hh65hfe
I
did not know when I came home [to the UK] from Australia in September 1939
whether these islands could defend themselves against the German armies and
air-fleets. To be [morally] impelled to fight for one’s country it is not
necessary to be certain that one’s country is going to win.
….
At
the beginning [of this address] I refused to define patriotism; but now at the
end I venture it. Patriotism is to have a nation to die for, and to be glad to
die for it—all the days of one’s life.
—E.P.,
Address On Patriotism, St. Lawrence
Jewry, London (1977).
A
significant part of the commentariat, including the legal professoriate, has
again and again stated, with a regularity that belies conviction, that the American
public’s choice, the choice between Trump and Clinton, is not a choice, not in
the sense of a normal election, but a choice in which one is morally or
prudentially impelled to choose Clinton because Trump poses an existential threat
to the country. Their position is that to vote for Trump is to put the nation
and its people at a profound risk approaching certainty. Why? Because Trump
will be dictator-strongman of sorts: one
election, one time. Or because Trump will plunge the nation into
destructive wars. Or because Trump will wreck the fabric of the economy. Or
because Trump will destroy the constitutional order and the rule of law.
I
am not going to comment on the substance of the anti-Trump message. You have
heard it all before, and you have or will very soon make up your own minds
whether Trump or Clinton deserves your vote. What I will say here is that the
messengers of the anti-Trump message are not believable because their actions
(or, more accurately, the lack thereof) do not accord with their message.
Moreover, because these messengers are not believable, on balance, I suspect they
are helping Trump, not Clinton.
Let
me explain. If you have a country (a country you are attached to, a home, as
opposed to a mere place of residence), and if you value its future and its
people’s future, and if you believe that country faces an existential threat,
then you will do something
significant and concrete for your country to help it avoid that existential threat
(or, at least, to minimize its untoward consequences). What you do not do is to
merely offer advice and opinion. Offering advice and opinion is what you do in
a normal election when your party faces a loyal opposition: i.e., one having
merely different aims and policies. If all your actions accord with what one
does in a normal election, then those who hear your opinion cannot be expected
to believe your message: that one of the two democratic alternatives poses an
existential threat to the country. In Professor David Post’s recent blog post
on The Volokh Conspiracy, all he
offers is opinion and advice. I doubt there are many whose positions or vote
will be affected by what Professor Post has to say, except for a few who will
find the advice insincere** and for that reason, they just might vote for Trump.
I
recently posed a query on Conlawprof
along these lines. I noted that many see Trump as posing an existential threat.
I asked what have these anti-Trumpers actually have done, other than post
opinion and advice on Conlawprof? The
answers were staggering. One person responded offline that he rejiggered his
personal portfolio; one responded online that he did the same. And one suggested
that it would be imprudent to do more than that, as Clinton was leading in the
polls and should Trump prevail or should a close race be contested, he and
others would then volunteer to help
Clinton in litigation. I suggest that all this is too little and too late. If
you believe that Trump poses an existential threat to our country, then there
are things you could do now (which are not only needed but will also have the added
benefit of making your opinions appear sincere). What could you do? You could
donate all, a half, a third, a quarter, or even a tenth of your net worth, or your
liquid assets, or your current (post-tax) salary. In other words, you could do
something that indicates your genuinely held belief in regard to the purported
Trump threat and your willingness to take on some meaningful and significant personal
and shared sacrifice to meet that threat. If you have little, you could
volunteer all your time to Clinton’s campaign: you could take temporary leave
from your employment, or use your vacation time, or just use all your waking
hours outside of work to help Clinton. Again, you could do something that
indicates your genuinely held belief in regard to the purported Trump threat
and your willingness to take on some meaningful and significant personal and shared
sacrifice to meet that threat. But if you don’t do things like this and don’t take
actions illustrative of some significant personal sacrifice, then many who
think the choice between Clinton and Trump is a regular normal election-time choice,
will hear your opinion as insincere, or, worse, that you don’t really have a
country.
I
did receive one response to my Conlawprof post that bears repeating. One respondent wrote it would be irrational to make a
significant personal monetary sacrifice along the lines I suggested because it
is doubtful whether such a sacrifice would be determinative. What an
interesting rule of action that would be if generalized to the public at large.
I volunteer to do nothing—notwithstanding my country’s facing an existential threat—unless
I have a guarantee that my side will prevail. If that is the way most people
think, then, indeed, the country’s future is miserable.
After
the Brexit referendum, Frank Field, a long serving Labour MP, explained why Vote Leave eked out a majority. Too many
in the elite told ordinary voters how they must vote and that the alternative
was madness, chaos, and anarchy. Adults just don’t take kindly to being told
what they must do in a democratic election, particularly from those who are
going about their lives just as they always seem to do. The elite’s strategy
backfired, or at the very best, it convinced no one. The same may happen in the
United States. And if it does, we will know who is responsible for the result.
Our
election is on November 8. Three days later is Veterans Day, or what in some of
the other Allied countries is known as Remembrance Day, Poppy Day, or Armistice
Day. For a country to survive, much less prosper (and I speak in more than the mere
financial sense), it must have citizens who—if they believe the country at real
risk—will do more than write a blog post addressed to their grandchildren. See Professor David Post, I’m, with her (and with Orin), too, The Volokh Conspiracy (Nov. 6, 2016,
12:24 PM), http://tinyurl.com/hh65hfe (“I offer this
for my grandchildren, just so they’ll know, when they grow up, that I did what
I could.”). Patriots and citizens would do more, much more.
In Flanders fields
the poppies blow
Between the
crosses, row on row,
That mark our
place; and in the sky
The larks, still
bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid
the guns below.
We are the Dead.
Short days ago
We lived, felt
dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were
loved, and now we lie,
In Flanders
fields.
Take up our
quarrel with the foe:
To you from
failing hands we throw
The torch; be
yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith
with us who die
We shall not
sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders
fields.
—John McCrae
[**To be sure, I do not suggest that the
advice is insincere, only that it is likely to be seen that way.]
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/SethBTillman ( @SethBTillman )
My prior post: Seth Barrett Tillman, The Case of the Ship Money, R v Hampden 3 State Trials 381 (1640), and
its relevance today, The New Reform Club (Nov. 6, 2016, 7:30 AM). [here]