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I believe it, again, is not with any kind of ill intent. But in taking notes quickly, I probably — I mean, changing a name to a pronoun would be, again, sloppy. Manafort is the fourth Trump campaign surrogate to have lied to investigators about contacts with Russia. Manafort was convicted of various financial crimes in August, and then cut the deal to plead guilty to two charges of conspiracy and witness tampering in September.
Dan Patrick were also on the ride from Air Force One to the rally. Miller said he learned this while serving as the former chairman of the Texas House committee on Homeland Security and Public Safety. However, Axios has found no evidence to corroborate this claim. How do you do it? The Guardian has a list of undercover investigations conducted by the police against political groups. Robinson, whose real name was Bob Lambert, fathered a son with an activist while he was undercover. He then abandoned them both and they only found out the truth more than decades later. He also deceived three other women into intimate relationships while he was undercover.
In the s, Lambert was a senior member of the Special Demonstration Squad, supervising undercover officers while they infiltrated political groups. In terms of the intersection of criminal justice policy and racial politics, new polling provided exclusively to Vox from the leading Democratic data firm Civis Analytics shows that black voters — just like white ones — support the idea of hiring more police officers.
Black voters are likely aware that they are disproportionately likely to be victims of crime and disproportionately likely to benefit from extra police staffing in high-crime areas. Using daily crime data, they found that the level of crime decreased significantly on high-alert days, and the decrease was especially concentrated on the National Mall.
Critically, the finding was not that adding police officers leads to more arrests and then locking up crooks leads to lower crime in the long run. That seems to be the criminal justice ideal, in which fewer people are getting locked up because fewer people are being victimized by criminals. Subway commuters on the L line enjoyed a typically frustrating commute this morning, as Manhattan-bound trains mysteriously stopped running shortly after 8 a.
Swastikas had been spotted inside the cars, prompting the MTA to take an L train out of service in the middle of rush hour. But according to an NYPD spokesperson, the Citywide Vandals Taskforce actually showed up to investigate those Antifa-style stickers that have been showing up on the subway for years now. People still have to look at a swastika.
And as we learned this morning, the MTA can act swiftly and decisively, when it wants to. Special Envoy to Venezuela.
So, Nate Silver has a piece out today in which he warns that the huge field of Democrats expected to run for president may result in a fair bit of wackiness. He cites earlier examples of large primary fields, most recently the GOP in , and notes that the winners have tended to be outsiders like Trump, or someone nobody was really very happy with, like George McGovern in Do you think the large field necessarily means the splintering and semi-chaos that led to those kinds of candidates winning?
A few things will really tell the story here.
And if clear tiers start to form soon after that? So what would that wackiness look like? Just a Republicans-instyle series of polling bumps for a bunch of little-known candidates? That seems quite plausible. Separately, I think that Democrats want to beat Trump so badly that there might be a sort of revolt if the candidates start attacking each other too fiercely.
The likelihood of relatively abundant money, and strictly proportional delegate award rules unlike the Republicans , could make it possible for a lot of iffy candidates to survive for a good while. I think this is the most important point. Remind me — have they tweaked the delegate-proportion rules since last time? I know superdelegates are less important now…. But this is also why I said earlier that we need to see if clear tiers form. His presence in the field makes remembering them all virtually impossible.
So this sounds like Silver has a point; these are the kind of conditions that might, just might, lead to a fairly unexpected winner, or even — gasp — a brokered convention. To me, though, I think a lot of the talk about the size of the field misses something that Silver actually did mention, which is: This section needs additional citations for verification.
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