Slotpark online casino games downloadable content apk.Enjoy Free 888+200 Daily Legal Bonus https://www.academytrans.com/author/darrell-ehrlick/ Shining brightest where it’s dark Fri, 19 Jul 2024 01:03:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.academytrans.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-Kentucky-Lantern-Icon-32x32.png Darrell Ehrlick, Author at Kentucky Lantern https://www.academytrans.com/author/darrell-ehrlick/ 32 32 Fighting for his own reelection, Democrat U.S. Sen. Jon Tester of Montana urges Biden not to run https://www.academytrans.com/2024/07/18/fighting-for-his-own-reelection-democrat-u-s-sen-jon-tester-of-montana-urges-biden-not-to-run/ https://www.academytrans.com/2024/07/18/fighting-for-his-own-reelection-democrat-u-s-sen-jon-tester-of-montana-urges-biden-not-to-run/#respond [email protected] (Darrell Ehrlick) Fri, 19 Jul 2024 01:03:09 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=20063

U.S. Sen. Jon Tester talks with President Joe Biden at the White House in 2022 (Photo via Getty Images).

Montana’s senior U.S. senator and only Democratic member of the state’s congressional delegation is calling on President Joe Biden, also a Democrat, to not seek reelection in November.

Tester is only the second Democrat in the Senate to make the call on the Biden candidacy, but other media report that former President Barack Obama, U.S. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-New York, and Senate Majority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-New York, have visited with Biden recently, privately asking him to reconsider his decision to stay in the race.

“Montanans have put their trust in me to do what is right, and it is a responsibility I take seriously. I have worked with President Biden when it has made Montana stronger, and I’ve never been afraid to stand up to him when he is wrong,” Tester said. “And while I appreciate his commitment to public service and our country, I believe President Biden should not seek re-election to another term.”

Only Vermont’s Sen. Peter Welch, a fellow Democrat in the Senate, has publicly called for Biden not to seek re-election.

Tester said that Biden should continue to finish out his current term, which ends in January 2025, despite some calls from pundits and politicians for him to exit early in order to give Vice President Kamala Harris better exposure.

Tester supports an open nominating process to select a nominee from the Democratic Party.

On Wednesday, Rep. Adam Schiff, a Democrat from California who is running for a U.S. Senate seat there, also called on Biden to not seek re-election, becoming one of the most prominent members of the House Democrats to call for him to step aside. Schiff is perhaps best known as one of the chief members on the January 6th committee.

Tester is running for re-election this November to keep his Senate seat against political neophyte Tim Sheehy, a Bozeman Republican businessman and former soldier, hand-picked by Montana’s other senator, Steve Daines, who leads the Republican effort to flip the United States Senate back to GOP control.

Despite what many polls and analysts consider a tight race in Montana, which has swung to the right in recent elections, Tester has a track record of winning close competitions. In fact, former President Donald J. Trump came to Montana on three different occasions during Tester’s last re-election bid, something that could have doomed other Democrats in red states. However, Tester remains one of the few politicians to survive such a frontal political assault.

Meanwhile, on Wednesday, Biden cancelled a speaking event in Las Vegas when he was diagnosed with COVID-19. It is the second time Biden has gotten COVID-19, and video of the president walking gingerly up the stairs of Air Force One was aired on television and social media. The positive COVID test came on the heels of several notable gaffes and other problems, most prominently, a disastrous television debate on CNN on June 27? in which Biden appeared rattled and at times was hard to follow.

That began what became a growing chorus of people calling on the 81-year-old president to step aside.

Like almost every member of Congress, Tester was asked about his opinion of Biden’s chances of success after the debate, to which he replied that the president “has got to prove to the American people — including me — that he’s up to the job for another four years,” according to media reports.

Even after the debate, the polls showed little change, possibly suggesting an entrenched electorate. A National Public Radio/Marist/PBS News poll that was released last week shows Biden and Trump in a statistical tie in nationwide results.

Biden deciding not to seek another term would trigger states to lean on their own laws for what happens to replace a presidential candidate on the ballot. Those procedures widely vary state-by-state.

This story is republished from the Daily Montanan which, like the Kentucky Lantern is part of the nonprofit States Newsroom, network.

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The complete failure of Thursday night https://www.academytrans.com/2024/06/28/the-complete-failure-of-thursday-night/ https://www.academytrans.com/2024/06/28/the-complete-failure-of-thursday-night/#respond [email protected] (Darrell Ehrlick) Fri, 28 Jun 2024 16:25:56 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=19299

There’s nothing quite like watching your democracy fail in real-time, with chyrons and everything.

I’ve had some long moments in my life, but few seemed more elongated than the 90-minute debate between your great-grandpa and an aspiring authoritarian.

As much as I was watching the debate, I was watching social media and came to realize that there was nothing good about Thursday’s CNN Presidential Debate.

I mean nothing.

In live-TV reality, unscripted, unrehearsed, and completely unhinged, it was like an MRI machine peering slice-by-slice into the rot that has gripped us, and if you haven’t been scared before the debate about the fate of this country, it’s time to start fretting.

The thing that has most made America seem like the world’s spontaneous and thrill-seeking cousin is what proved to be our most ugly reality: We value style over substance.

Former President Donald J. Trump was poised and gave a flawless factless performance that left the anchors dumbfounded — or at least that’s what I have to assume was the stunned feeling that should have washed over them as Dana Bash and Jake Tapper left absolutely no lie checked.

And that’s the problem: If this were an acting audition, Trump completely steamrolled President Joe Biden. But only one of the debate participants was acting.

Unfortunately, Biden used much of his time being speechless. And sadly, it showed.

Trump’s sheer blitzkrieg of bullsh—t completely overwhelmed Biden, leaving him not knowing where to start, or how to make sense of the nonsense and lies.

If we’re scoring the debate on factual accuracy, there is no question who won.

And that’s exactly the problem: No one was watching this debate, looking to be swayed or hoping to be inspired. Indeed, no one was scoring the debate.

We weren’t carefully considering the policy points, discussing them because we wanted information. Instead, the headlines declared that Trump won the debate based on public perception. The buzzkill fact-checkers among us, though, would tell a different story.

But seriously, how many voters went watching the debate searching for facts? Let’s face it, many went there to rubber-neck this 90-minute train wreck. Few probably expected to have it validate so many bad things so quickly.

That’s the worst part of it. We’ve had almost 249 years of history, and these two are the best we can do?

I don’t know if I am mad, or scared or resigned.

Trump’s performance was smooth in the way the devil bribed Robert Johnson — a deal done, but at a helluva price. Just like that deal, the devil promised glory, but didn’t say for how long. How many times can we trick ourselves into believing we can get the better end of the deal from a man who has made his career going bankrupt and stiffing average workers?

Trump’s popularity concerns me because if Trump’s first term was an exercise in allowing us to be our worst selves, the second term may be mandate for something even worse.

But the Republicans can be credited for giving their base what it would seem to want, which is the opposite way Dems have treated their voters.

The vanity of the Democrats to believe that their cause is so righteous, and the voters so desperate for an alternative, that they would blindly accept a knowledgeable, but ancient, octogenarian makes them every bit as guilty as anyone for not seeking out a candidate who could blow us away or at least blow out his own birthday candles.

Finally, the most heartbreaking moment of last night’s debate was the failure of journalism.

Often, journalists are called on to be moderators — well researched so they could keep factual sideboards on the often wily debates.

Bash and Tapper weren’t unprofessional in the way they treated the candidates, but they completely failed journalism.

Trump spewed a torrent of lies and both moderators seemed fearful or unwilling to call out even the most outrageous falsity. Moderating is holding a candidate to account, pressing them for answers. Without that, the debate became less than neutral, it had a corrosive effect on our democracy by allowing lies to perpetuate unchecked.

Because of the role both of those journalists play, especially on their own cable television shows, when they do not let politicians squirm away from difficult questions, the lay audience on Thursday was left to think that silence might have equaled approval.

It wasn’t so much a debate as a platform. At other times during the debate, it was something more sinister but not unlike watching a couple of grumpy old men argue over the TV remote in the nursing home’s communal lounge.

At a time when journalism has a chance to shine a bright light, helping to re-assert the inextricable role a free press plays in free society, it, like everyone else involved in the debate, failed.

This commentary is republished from the Daily Montanan, a sister publication to the Kentucky Lantern and part of the nonprofit States Newsroom network.

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