Monday, October 21, 2024

A Lie Is Hslf-Way Around The World…

...while Truth is still getting its boots on.
However, the Washington Post tracked down the real Matthew Metro who attended Walz's high school, and it turns out that he never had Walz as a teacher. 
What's more, the Post reports that Metro is dismayed that someone seems to have stolen his identity and used it to smear the Democratic vice presidential nominee. 
"It’s an invasion of my privacy and my personal life," Metro told the Post. 
As the Post noted, the hoax involving Metro has quickly become a reality that political candidates have to deal with while running for office in the age of X CEO Elon Musk's anything-goes approach to content moderation.
Free speech, right, Elmo? Now tell us about the cellar under the pizza joint in D.C.

Caveat Emptor ๐Ÿ—ณ️

Beware all dire predictions which do not reference, much less understand, the ECRA. Because they aren’t worth the paper they aren’t printed on. (Kyle really isn’t very good at this.)

Fear mongering is not just the province of MAGA.

Trump On His Policies

Some people say: The man who would be POTUS relies on what “some people say.” Right... And about this kind of stuff: Fuck federal employees! Trump’s trying to stay out of jail!

Meanwhile Harris won’t talk to NYT or explain how she differs from Biden (the MTP interview of Josh Shapiro focused almost exclusively on that topic).

Elmo Amuck

"There's no problem with having a lottery, at least from the point of view of election law, to pay people to sign a petition," said Hasen. "The problem is to sign the petition, you have to be, if you go to their website of his PAC, you have to be a registered voter in a swing state. So, this is essentially a lottery to either induce people to register to vote. 
He specifically cited 52 USC-10307c as the law Musk could be breaking. 
"You can't pay people to register to vote. The DOJ election crimes manual says that lotteries count as a kind of payment," Hasen cited. "So, it seems pretty open and shut to me. The fact that you're signing a petition is pretty irrelevant. It's like saying we'll have a lottery where people who wear glasses can participate. But you have to be a registered voter, and it's to pay people to register to vote."

Probably Not My Last Word On The Matter

From MSNBC:
Once Congress completes the electoral count on Jan. 6, the process is over and its results are final, except in the unlikely event that no candidate has won the necessary majority of 270 electoral votes. In this scenario, under the 12th Amendment, a “contingent election” would be held, with the House electing the president (under an unusual procedure where each state delegation casts one vote) and the Senate would choose the vice president. 
To the maximum degree consistent with the Constitution, ECRA sought to put electoral disputes into the courts rather than being decided by Congress. Any arguments over which candidate, and thus which party’s slate of electors, has won a state’s popular vote is to be decided in federal court prior to when the Electoral College meets in December. In all cases, state law as it stands on Election Day is decisive, and states may not change the rules after the fact. 
Congress, with the vice president presiding ceremonially but having no say in the matter, is empowered to address only a narrow set of questions about whether the otherwise valid electors have cast their votes in a permissible manner under the Constitution, such as for a candidate who is not a natural-born citizen or who is not at least 35 years old. But the role of Congress will not be to relitigate disputes over how each state conducted its election. 
Once this process is complete — state laws implementing a popular election for members of the Electoral College, courts deciding any disputes over the outcome of those elections, the duly appointed electors meeting and casting their votes, and Congress counting the electoral votes — the winner will be sworn in at noon on Jan. 20, a date and time set in stone by the 20th Amendment.
Most of the ECRA bans the stunts Trump tried to pull in 2020:
As with most other matters under ECRA, states must apply their election laws as they stood on Election Day, with no later alterations permitted, such as by the legislature convened in a special session. In each state, a possible emergency invocation of these extended voting procedures is assigned to a designated official, who may be the governor, secretary of state or a state elections board. This rule also forecloses the idea, advocated by some during the 2020 election, of state legislatures or other officials attempting to overturn the results of the state’s popular vote.
That’s one.
The next step in the process is the counting of votes and the ascertainment of a winner in each state. Here, ECRA provides a remedy intended to address problems not just from 2020 but also from the notorious 2000 election. Instead of the usual cumbersome procedure for federal litigation, where lawsuits must be filed first in a district court and then appealed to one of the circuit courts before finally reaching the Supreme Court, a special three-judge panel is provided, consisting of two circuit judges and one district judge. This court’s rulings are then directly appealable to the Supreme Court, ensuring a prompt resolution of both legitimate legal objections and possible rogue actions by state officials. If any state official refuses to comply, the courts are empowered to order another official to provide the necessary certifications.
And another.

An interesting wrinkle occurs here. The Supreme Court recently ruled that only Congress can enforce art. 3 of the 14th Amendment. Which means a majority of Congress could disqualify Trump on those grounds in January 6, 2025. Congress, after all:
… is empowered to address only a narrow set of questions about whether the otherwise valid electors have cast their votes in a permissible manner under the Constitution, such as for a candidate who is not a natural-born citizen or who is not at least 35 years old.
Or who is disqualified under the 14th amendment.

Don’t expect it to happen; but it would be allowed. Presidential immunity doesn’t extend to non-Presidents.

And there you have it. Please note Congress has authority under Article III to create courts and establish their jurisdiction, so establishing a three judge panel to decide vote count disputes with appeals directly to the Supreme Court is perfectly regular.

There’s a reason Trump and his cronies are suing to block voters from voting. It’s because the ECRA pretty much shuts off all avenues to suits over voting results, at least for the President. Which is the only result they care about, or ever allege could be fraudulent.

Funny, that.

๐Ÿ—‘️

Writing in the New York Times, John Della Volpe — the director of polling at the Harvard Kennedy School Institute of Politics — described seeing young men flock to the GOP presidential candidate’s campaign. 
It’s the result of a dedicated effort to win young males over to the MAGA movement, he wrote. 
“If effective, his effort could peel enough away from the Democratic Party to transform the country’s electoral math for years to come,” he wrote. 
He said his research has shown an, “Increasing political rift between young men and women under 30, two groups critical to Democrats’ success in recent elections. 
“Almost exactly equal shares of young men and young women say they will definitely vote in this election or have already done so. But since the spring of 2020, the share of young men identifying as registered Democrats has dropped by seven percentage points, while those identifying as Republicans have increased by seven points.”
Or:
While white non-college voters still make up the bulk of Trump's base, he won them by 31 percentage points in 2020 after winning them by 33 points in 2016 -- and recent polls show Trump winning this demographic by 27 points this year. 
"Now that may not seem like a lot," acknowledged Enten. "But given that we're seeing these double-digit gains among Black voters or among Hispanic voters in some of the polls, the fact that we're seeing this core group of supporters actually moving away from him... I think that's a rather interesting development." 
"Shrinkage," host John Berman commented wryly before asking Enten why even a small loss of support from non-college white voters could make a real difference in the 2024 race.
Polls and the political analysis they support are both pretty much for shit. Garbage in, garbage out. 

E. Jean Carroll Paved The Way

Short Takes

๐Ÿ’ธ Or, Why Trump Is Outsourcing GOTV

I told you all those motions and briefs and appeals cost money.

๐Ÿคฆ‍♂️

Hmph. Yeah.

Polls Are Not Reality

That’s part of a very long thread on polls which, ironically, accepts the MAGA framing that polls matter more than election results. It is reassuring that recent poll reports are just so much dust in the air, but the underlying MAGA point remains: if polls are so important, why are election results so different? Same song, different verse. Although that one draws some interesting responses: Frankly, all polling is no more reliable than this: And is touted for pretty much the same purpose.

It is the reliance on polls that underpins MAGA’s claim that elections are stolen. The polls can’t be wrong (although their methods and even data gathering are less than transparent and subject to all manner of arcane gobbledygook:
), but still we all use them to predict the future, and then decide they are the future! And then when they aren’t, we fight the future! Anything but discard the polls as a fiction we make up to make ourselves feel like we’re in control of what we can’t really control.

Which, again, is what MAGA is all about: reacting to changes in a world that it doesn’t like and can’t control. And here we are giving that foolish argument ammunition, all the while worrying about how MAGA is going to affect the future. 
“Many of these suits seem like vehicles to spread conspiracy theories and misinformation,” she said. “In other words, they read more as press releases than serious legal claims.” 
David Becker, who runs the nonpartisan non-profit Center for Election Innovation and Research, meanwhile, similarly told the Guardian that while the lawsuits are "very unlikely to get the relief they’re seeking, this could later fuel claims that the election was stolen." 
Yes, they could. So maybe it’s time to get off this not so merry-go-round. Spurious claims of in-citizens voting (non-white people!) are more easily swatted away as unserious, but we still think polling is serious and reliable. It is neither. Like recognizing racism is real and systemic (and we can do something about that), it’s time to recognize polls are the problem.

And do something about that. 

Closing Time

Well, that explains this: The reek of desperation comes through the screen. (And Eric left out “”I’m not close to 80.”)

Sure Enough, It Gets Worse

Everyone worries what happens if Trump loses and refuses. But the same isn’t said about Trump winning and then Vance deposing him under the 25th. The argument is that it is scarier to imagine Vance behind the resolute desk, than for Trump to be there. It’s an interesting political argument, but the real problem is: the 25th doesn’t work that way.

For the simple reason that removal of a President is governed by section 4 of Article. II. The 25th doesn’t modify that; it just provides a mechanism to temporarily replace the sitting President.
Whenever the Vice President and a majority of either the principal officers of the executive departments or of such other body as Congress may by law provide, transmit to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives their written declaration that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Vice President shall immediately assume the powers and duties of the office as Acting President. Thereafter, when the President transmits to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives his written declaration that no inability exists, he shall resume the powers and duties of his office unless the Vice President and a majority of either the principal officers of the executive department or of such other body as Congress may by law provide, transmit within four days to the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives their written declaration that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office. Thereupon Congress shall decide the issue, assembling within forty-eight hours for that purpose if not in session. If the Congress, within twenty-one days after receipt of the latter written declaration, or, if Congress is not in session, within twenty-one days after Congress is required to assemble, determines by two-thirds vote of both Houses that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Vice President shall continue to discharge the same as Acting President; otherwise, the President shall resume the powers and duties of his office.
This would be the real nightmare scenario. If Vance gets the Cabinet to back his play, Trump is sidelined. If Trump says “I’m not dead yet!,” the ball’s in Vance’s court. If he’s serious about it, the Congress has to decide whether we have a President, or an Acting President.

Considering the Congress has never removed a sitting President via impeachment, what does Congress do with this dilemma? A VP who has effectively moved against the POTUS, but who can’t himself be sidelined and likely won’t be impeached (we’ve never done that before, either). Sure, the POTUS can exile him to the Naval Observatory for the duration, but what about the cabinet? Mass firings that make the Saturday Night Massacre look like a mild turnover of personnel?

This would be the true constitutional crisis you’ve heard so much about.

And what happens if Congress makes Vance Acting President? What legitimacy does he have? What’s the retaliation against Congress? You know that’s what Congress would be worried about.

This is the “Constitutional crisis” we’re always being warned about. The least likely outcome is that Vance completes Trump’s term quickly and seamlessly. The most likely is we are plunged into a crisis the likes of which we haven’t seen since Nixon was forced to resign, only with less public support for his removal from office powers (worse, because he wouldn’t be removed, simply sidelined). Vance would only be legitimate insofar as Congress said so. Trump’s suspension would be the act of Democrats and Commies and fascists ( I know, but tell me I’m wrong) 
Trump would still be upstairs in the White House…or would he be removed to the Observatory? You see how this quickly becomes, er…messy. Can Vance be acting POTUS from outside the White House? Does he want to be? He would presumably have the authority to displace Trump; but how ugly would that be?

Truth be told, the 25th doesn’t really imagine this kind of coup. It envisions a President who is absolutely incapacitated and incapable. Basically, a President confined to a hospital bed, a la Wilson. It tacitly contemplates a POTUS who is a raving lunatic, but then the Constitution doesn’t envision the raving lunatic being elected. I mean, do you really imagine Trump changes so much after inauguration? Unless he has a stroke or other debilitating medical crisis, how does Vance challenge Trump? For seeking a 20% tariff? Rounding up whoever he considers an “immigrant”? Isn’t that what Congress is for? (Congress could revoke his authority to impose tariffs; overrule his actions with legislation; and defund any effort at mass deportation, which would certainly undermine the economy and national security.)

The truth is, Kamala Harris could have a stroke or a serious heart attack/other medical crisis. I’m not saying she will, but who knows the future? The usual speculation assumes Trump is erratic, not incapacitated.  But he’s already erratic, and arguably incapable. He’s already stumbling mentally as badly as Biden did in the debate. Trump is actually worse, but if that’s not a barrier to his election….

Trump wouldn’t really be different from the guy who ran in 2016 (aside from mental acuity, little else has changed in 8 years). So if he wins, his decline has been accepted. No matter how much worse he gets, so long as he can speak, he’d insist he was POTUS and could do the job. There would hardly be a public consensus that Trump was unfit.

The nightmare scenario is Trump being elected outright. Either Vance would eventually move to remove him for incompetence; or he’d never do so. Either scenario is a nightmare compounding the nightmare.



Sunday, October 20, 2024

Whata Regular Guy!

NBC provides the news you can use!
During his half-hour shift Sunday, Trump traded his suit jacket for an apron and received a brief tutorial from a fry cook. He then took a turn at the deep fryer himself, dropping two batches of potatoes into hot oil and waiting for them to cook. He mostly followed instructions, though he forgot to fully drain the oil from one batch and appeared to be more generous with the salt. Trump marveled repeatedly about how the fries are packaged, with the aid of a scooper-like device.
I don’t know what’s funnier: that he couldn’t cook two batches of fries ๐ŸŸ correctly; or that he marveled at the technology of a fry scoop.

He’s never so much as stood at the counter of a Mickey D’s. He always sends in the errand boys.

Wotta man o’ the peoples!

Tidbits

Be careful about the publicity you wish for. You just might get it. So... Of course he did. Q: is this effective campaigning? Or just ego stroking? Does Trump know the difference? Or care? Or an oven. Or a deep fryer. I’m guessing Trump’s never so much as made toast and doesn’t even know how to boil water. It’s true. He’s “got no cognitive” at all. What could go wrong? ๐Ÿ˜‘  Refusing to be a father to those children is an act of Elmo. Or Trump.. Is he even acknowledging the world has moved on in 8 years? Even Nixon knew he couldn’t run against Humphrey on the same campaign he used against Kennedy. Uh...sure. I’m not getting tired of this anytime soon.๐Ÿ”œ 

“I’m Not Dead Yet!”

"I'm not 80 and I'm not that close to 80," Trump said when criticizing President Joe Biden's age. In fact, Trump would be 80 less than half way through his term if he were elected.
On November 27, in a courtroom in NYC, he’ll suddenly find himself too close to 80 (it’s 18 months away for him) to be sentenced to prison at all.

So…That Happened…

Pictures are worth 1000 words. And a smaller... no, I promised myself I wouldn’t go there. I will allow that.

Turnout Trumps The Polls: A Continuing Series

“Spam Risk Egypt”

The summary of an 11 tweet thread reviewing the (redacted) evidence filed by Smith and released by Chutkan. Interesting to us because it provides (in digestible form) some insight into how much work it took  to get to J6 2021. And how much work it would take to do it again.

Mostly work Trump can’t do anymore.

A few examples: When the POTUS calls the Michigan speaker, you take the call (ask Raffensperger). When candidate Trump calls, you might take a message. POTUS Trump might be able to protect you (although how’d that work out?). Candidate Trump will probably reverse the phone charges (can you still do that?).

And Trump doesn’t have a VP to lean on.

So:

-No VP to overturn or force aside for an amenable Senator 
-Fraud issues in the states? Enough to get a majority of both houses to reject a slate? So? Just reduces the number needed to certify. That’s not the magic bullet they imagine.
-Fake electors? Nobody wants to put their head in that noose.

Trump is in deep shit in Chutkan’s court. His chances of cheating his way into victory are worse than they were in 2020.

“Don’t, Don’t, You Know, Blame Me”

The POTUS has an obligation to consider ALL the facts and reach a considered conclusion.

Unless you’re Trump.
But when you said, you know, it's gone viral, they're eating the dogs, they're eating the cats," Kurtz noted. "But why not say now, well, look, that turned out not to be true." 
"I don't know if it's true or not true," Trump replied. 
"You don't know if it's true or not true," Kurtz pressed. "It's been debunked by the officials." 
"What about the goose? The geese?" Trump asked. "They're all missing. It was one guy with two geese." 
"I have no idea. I said something. The big problem is that you can't put 30,000 people into a 50,000-person town or city and expect this city to even survive or do well," he continued. "What they've done to Springfield, Ohio, is very, very unfair. And I mean, there are a lot of stories." 
"There are a lot of other stories that I've heard that are horrible stories... Don't, don't, you know, blame me." 
"Well, I think it's been debunked by local officials," Kurtz said. 
"I don't think it's been debunked at all," Trump griped. "I think nobody talks about it except you."
"I don’t know if it’s true, and I don’t know if it’s not true” is a damning statement from a POTUS. Even worse is “I don’t think anybody talks about it except you.” When the subject has been widely, and nationally, discussed.

Presidents live in a bubble, by necessity. Trump lives in the bubble of his own mind. That is not a condition imposed by the office.

One important job of the President is to sort through the stories, because there are always “lots of stories.”

And, as Truman’s sign on the Resolute Desk said: “The Buck Stops Here.”  

I wouldn’t rely on Trump to feed my cat.

Coda:

O Dear, What Can The Matter Be?

I tried to read this last night, but I had to register (Nope! Not gonna do it.). Now I have it in tweets. Skip the handwringing and get to the nub. The real precondition(s) is/are:

A) The Electoral Count REFORM Act; (keep it in mind), and 

B) Trump is not POTUS. According to the J6 report, that made a HUGE difference in 2020-21. But that was a long government report ๐Ÿฅฑ, and level-headed analysis doesn’t make headlines.

Trump’s legal resources are split between his woes and his need to win this race. Money spent on one, is money taken from another.  The zero sum game is real.

“Leveraging R’s” is the linchpin to the “be very afraid” argument. It’s a very thin reed (to toss metaphors in a blender) to lean on.
What Johnson thinks doesn’t mean jackshit. For one thing, he may not be Speaker in 2025. For a second thing, under the ECRA, Johnson can ignore it all he wants, it doesn’t matter. 1/5 of BOTH the House and Senate have to object to a slate in order to trigger a vote by each house separately, and then if the objection is upheld by each chamber, they must vote jointly to uphold it. Failure to achieve a majority at any step defeats the objection. 

I guess Johnson could try to suspend procedure for an emergency appeal to the Supremes, but under separation of powers, Congress could vote to tell the Supremes to pound sand (as well as ignore Johnson, who wouldn’t have standing as an individual). Or even vote to conform their procedures to the ECRA. Either way, the Supremes can’t save Trump on J6 2025.

Now, will state legislatures go rogue?
Note the analysis presumes nobody else wants to go to jail. In 2021 participants could convince themselves Trump would pardon them when they prevailed, or that there were so many of them they’d be lost in the crowd.

Yeah, how’d that work out? And fake electors are all claiming they didn’t know it was illegal! Tell it to the judge. 

So now we’re back to state legislatures. And the ECRA.
And here the ECRA is backed by the 12th Amendment. If state legislatures try to go rogue, Congress can simply reject their slates and lower the electoral threshold. Again, are the Supremes going to step in months after the fact and overturn the election? As if. They are still burned by Bush v Gore, and that didn’t overturn a settled outcome, that just enforced the ECA. Roberts is already upset by the reaction to Trump v U.S. He’s not about to vote to give Trump the election long after the fact, and completely upend the legitimacy of Articles I and II.

The “willingness to reject federal law” would require the complicity of the majority of Congress, and I really don’t see that happening.

And if a Congressional majority yields to a pressure campaign from a rogue state or two, we might as well just dump the Constitution in a shredder and declare the American Experiment a failure. Because if we can’t keep it, the Republic can’t be kept by words on parchment.๐Ÿ“œ 
We return to states blocking matters and missing deadlines. The scenario of Bush v Gore, IOW. Hated that decision may be, but it set as the ground rule the ECA. The ECRA didn’t change any deadlines, just how objections are made (again, complaints about the reform rendering the statute unconstitutional are weak. And how do you present objections to the Court, without asking the Court to overturn a Presidential election?). Bush v Gore means any state that doesn’t meet the federal deadline loses their electoral votes (this is why the Court suspended the Florida recount). Which state legislatures really want to do that? (The courts won’t let state agencies do it.)

Trump declared victory in 2020. He lost 60 court cases, spawned a thousand criminal cases, and faces one himself. History is just going to repeat itself, this time as farce. 

More Questions About Christian Ethics

Everything Old…

If that is, this is: That speech was in 2017. It was wildly inappropriate in many ways. The more things change…

Saturday, October 19, 2024

⛳️ It’s About Time

Shot ⬆️. Chaser ⬇️ Both a lot better than this: Never underestimate the need for the horse race narrative. ๐ŸŽ

๐ŸˆSaturday Night (College) Football

Earlier Later that same day: I find retirement has made me have to think about what day of the week it is, because I’m not on a work schedule. I’m also not campaigning to be POTUS, so it kinda doesn’t matter.

The Grey Lady Has A Fit Of The Vapors

Wonder how they covered Trump telling the Boy Scouts about orgies?

Hair Weave

Pretty sure we already have. ๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚

๐Ÿ„‍๐ŸŸซ

What in the world are they talking about? Waaaaiit for it! [SNL frantically rewrites tonight’s cold open. Decides truth is weirder than comedy. Writers resign in frustration and despair.]

Reading The Market Entrails

I don’t know that it’s criminal fraud, but it is a scam.

First, as a predictor of the future, it’s as reliable as examining chicken entrails. According to Wikipedia, Polymarket said there was 68% likelihood Harris would make Shapiro her VP, and only a 23% chance she’d choose Walz.

The second thing about Polymarket is that bets are placed with cryptocurrency. Which makes it an unlikely reflection of Joe and Jane American, who don’t own much in the way of crypto, and aren’t likely to bet with it. And it is a “market” that can easily be manipulated by those with enough money. Like billionaires; or governments.
On October 7, 2024, Polymarket showed a spike in the odds Donald Trump would win the 2024 election, to 53.3%, with a corresponding decline in Kamala Harris's odds, to 46.1%. Two Polymarket competitors continued to show Harris with better odds of winning, at about 51%; Polymarket also showed a slight edge for Harris throughout September. That day, the FiveThirtyEight simulation model found Harris had a 55% chance to win the election, while elections statistician Nate Silver said his model gave Harris 54.7% odds. Forbes reported on theories for the Polymarket divergence, including that one or more major wagers had been placed on Trump, possibly because Elon Musk had spoken at a Trump rally two days earlier, and had previously promoted Polymarket. On the day of the Trump spike, Musk reposted an X post that asserted "Kamala is collapsing before our eyes." However, due to Polymarket lacking a cap on individual investor amounts, large wagers by one or a few bettors may not reflect a material change in the election landscape. Silver, a Polymarket advisor, said the shift in Trump's favor was a "larger swing than is justified." Polymarket competitor Predictit had since shown Trump with better odds of winning after previously favoring Kamala Harris. 
The divergence continued into mid October 2024, showing Trump with 60% odds on October 18. The Wall Street Journal reported the market moves might be a mirage created by four bettors with $30 million in Trump wagers, though the bets were not necessarily nefarious. The four bettors behaved in similar fashion, leading at least one blockchain analyst to conclude there was "strong reason to believe they are the same entity." Polymarket initiated an investigation of potential market manipulation for an influence campaign in favor of the Donald Trump 2024 presidential campaign.

I’m wondering: influence who? Early voters in North Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin? Seriously? Voters in America are gonna say: “Trump has the Big Mo, Polymarket told me so?”

๐Ÿคฃ๐Ÿคฃ๐Ÿคฃ

Sure! ๐Ÿ‘ That’ll happen!

As for any criminal exposure, I just don’t think so:

As of September 2024, Polymarket operates its election prediction operations offshore, as domestic operations would be regulated by the CFTC.

Taking America Back From Who?


Legacy Media Establishing Its Legacy

Meanwhile: Horse race coverage is SO much easier!

Almost Tempted

I’m a sucker for a Reinhold Niebuhr reference.

The View From The Institutions

It seems the trial court agreed. I will confess I’m not sure Trump is in “mental decline” so much as old age (disinhinbition) and public exposure has finally rendered it undeniable that the Emperor is naked. No matter; the blood is finally in the journalistic water, and the sharks are frenzied. And then there are the voters: The storm-impacted portions of NC are still in early recovery (it will be years). Which means either people in those areas are determined to vote; or people in other areas of the state are turning out in truly record numbers (the data relied on by Axios is not particular enough to tell). Either way, big turnout in early voting states is now a common story. I don’t think the enthusiasm for Trump is that strong (he’s been running too long). So it’s enthusiasm for Harris, or just a desire to end this interminable election campaign.

We’ll see.