Blog Credo

The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary.

H.L. Mencken

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

How Trump's Lying Made Him President

 There are going to be a LOT of Hot Takes about why Trump was re-elected after losing four years ago. The simplest explanation - it was the inflation - has a lot of merit to it. We are seeing incumbent parties around the world get smoked in elections since Covid. I honestly think that if Covid had burst forth in the spring of 2019 rather than the spring of 2020, Harris would've won. People forget that he presided over a shitshow of a response and therefore give him a pass on a catastrophic aspect of his presidency.

I also think that his incessant lying actually helps him.

For normie libs like me, lying is bad. It show low character.

For low information voters, "all politicians lie" so they don't register it as such. This - I think - is how you get the wide discrepancies between support for Trump and support for protecting abortion in ballot measures. Trump was the instrument to overturn Roe and has bragged about it, but now he lies about it and there are actual voters who think he will protect abortion rights.

There read on him is that he's a libertine and wouldn't ban access to abortion. And he might not! Who the fuck knows?

It also gets you this.

In Michigan, Trump currently has 2,795,917 votes. Harris has 2,714,167

In the Michigan Senate race, Mike Rogers (R) has 2,672,303; Slotkin has 2,690,332.

You actually see more third party votes at the Senate level than the presidential. Add all the votes up and you have about 80,000 votes for president that don't vote for the Senate at all. There's an almost 100,000 vote gap between Trump and Rogers, as opposed to the 25,000 vote gap between Harris and Slotkin.

I think the past eight years has made a compelling case that Trump is sui generis. He's unique - for whatever reason that might be unfathomable - in that those normal rules don't apply to him. He's getting votes that normal Republicans won't. 

And I think that is linked to the fact that exactly those sort of Trump voters simply don't take his words at face value.

Now that he's won, he's dusting off Agenda 2025, which many of his voters will be surprised to discover what they have voted for. I fear that we won't flip the House, which could be disastrous for things like the Affordable Care Act. He's going to loose RFK, Jr on public health and Elon Musk on the federal bureaucracy. He told us he would, and those with ears to hear and eyes to see believed him. 

Many of his voters didn't, and we will all live with the consequences. Well, those of us who survive.

Correcting Course

 One of the consistent critics of the current Democratic Party has been Jon Chait, and while it's tough to take strong medicine after a complete shitshow like yesterday, I think he bears listening to

There's a whiff of Murc's Law in his piece, because I do think that Democrats were hampered by post-Covid macroeconomic conditions. There's not a ton they could have done differently. Also, I think the substance-free coverage of the race really hurt her, as she was unable to really plant the seeds of why Trump's economic plan could be disastrous. 

Where I think he's right is the descent of the Democratic Party into a bit of an echo chamber. I am incredibly guilty of this as well - though in different ways than Chait describes. I really thought that Trump would be unable to expand beyond his 2020 numbers because of January 6th and Dobbs and people apparently just did not give enough of a fuck about that.

Where I think he's right is that a successful party seizes the center. He rightly admits that Harris did all she could to do that. Campaigning with Republicans was - I thought - a powerful symbol of that movement. She was hammered, though, by a few offhand remarks during the 2020 primary - especially about trans rights for prisoners. Now, trans rights for prisoners is simply not a legitimate reason for vote for fascism and oligarchy. However, Democrats will need to re-position themselves on some of these cultural issues.

I saw a tweet last night that said something about how "I am really afraid of what the Democratic Party will become in the wake of this election." I get it. If I'm advising Josh Shapiro or Jon Ossoff or any other contender for 2028, I'm telling them to avoid ANY statements that smack of "faculty lounge politics." Stop saying "Latinx". Stop listing your pronouns. Is that ugly? Yeah, some of it will be. Barack Obama ran as a social moderate - Biden actually publicly supported same sex marriage before him. Lots of people do mistrust Democrats on some hot button social issues. 

What's more, Joe Biden becomes a really complicated figure both within the Democratic Party and history. There were a lot of "Best President of My Lifetime" takes that seemed so overblown. He's been a very good president, but Obama exists. Hell, Bill Clinton exists. The idea that he was the "Best President of My Lifetime" comes from his embrace of some fairly doctrinaire left wing positions. 

It's also worth remembering that the country remains very, very closely divided. As it turns out, the polls were spot on about that. I thought they were broken and they aren't. I remain in forlorn hope that Democrats eke out control of the House, simply to stop the worst aspects of Trump's agenda (ACA repeal, rolling back Dog knows how many regulations, gutting Social Security). If we cling to a Democratic House, then there is a small chance of checking some of the worst abuses that Trump and the GOP will foist upon us. 

Eight years ago, I wondered what Trump could do that couldn't be undone. We have lived through dark and benighted times in this country. We might very well be headed there again. Obviously, the prospect of elections slipping into autocratic territory is the greatest fear. Again, Trump can't run again, but Vance and the Project 2025 people will be running the show before too long. 

If we have elections that truly matter, we will crawl back once more. The fact that that is an open question scares the shit out of me. Rushing to the left won't make that easier. If - as I expect - Trump unleashes Netanyahu on Palestinians, Democrats can't start wearing keffiyehs and putting watermelons in their bios. 

This is about saving democratic governance in America. This is about triage. 

ADDED: mistermix has a nice summary.

ADDED: This is good from Ed Burmila:

It will be very easy with time and hindsight to criticize choices the Biden-then-Harris campaigns made but the Trump campaign was so ludicrously bad and ridiculous that you have to wonder if doing anything differently would really have mattered.

I Barely Know What To Say

 I can - somewhat - understand why Trump was elected in 2016. The novelty, the celebrity. I cannot grok how so many people could look at what his presidency was and want more.

I can't help but wonder at the compassion and intelligence of the American voter. You had very solid majorities of people in places like Missouri and Florida vote to protect abortion rights but then turn around and vote for Trump and Hawley and Scott. 

I think she ran a pretty impressive campaign. I think he ran a poor one. He's a mumbling, incoherent mess. Yet how many stories were about the actual impact of what he says he wants to do? There is that assumption that Trump doesn't mean what he says. Since he lies so much, why worry about 25% tariffs or gutting the federal bureaucracy or deportation camps. To a certain degree, there was some truth to that, but he is going to hit the ground running with an absolutely dedicated group of broligarchs, incels and Nazis who are going to impose real costs on the world.

Ask people what they want and they tend to list Democratic policies. The exception to this would be immigration and possibly trans rights. They are generally hostile to "woke", whatever that means. I do think that it's highly unlikely that Democrats will nominate a woman any time soon. 

At this point, part of me hopes - masochistically - that Trump does do some of the shit that he wants to do and crashes the economy. Maybe that's the only way to get the message across.

Scott Lemieux is right:

Misplaced nostalgia and anti-immigration sentiment worked — they got an decrepit and open fascist elected. The American people have got what they wanted, and they’re going to get it good and hard. The only silver lining is that Dems are a slight favorite to hold the House, which would actually be a pretty big deal.

Tuesday, November 5, 2024

Nauseously Optimistic

 So, here we are. 

I - nor anyone else - has any idea what's about to happen or even when. Maybe we go to bed tonight profoundly relieved or maybe we wait a couple of days to have our faith shaken once more in the basic human goodness of our countrymen. 

If it were anyone other than Trump, I think we would feel that Harris has it in the bag. She has amazing energy, bipartisan support and a lot of fundamentals on her side. Trump seems pre-defeated. He's such a bizarre creature, though, that his low-energy gloom at his rallies could be because he has gotten bad news from his polling or simply because his rallies are mostly empty, sad affairs. 

Anyway, good luck tonight and possibly for the next 48 hours as we decide whether or not we will continue this republican experiment or backslide into demagogic autocracy.

Monday, November 4, 2024

Serwer On Trumpists

 Adam Serwer has been, arguably, the best observer of Trumpistan. Today, he makes a critically important observation about Trumpists: they live in a state of unreality.

For most people, this is sort of obvious, but Serwer does a good job of explaining WHY they live in unreality. Some of it is that they simply don't believe what he is saying or that it won't apply to them. 

The two most interesting observations are that Trump is the avatar of every species of conspiracy theory. He basks in them and bastes his speeches with them. If everything is a conspiracy, then you can't trust the elites. News stories with facts in them are fake news, because the shadowy elites have decided that they are.

Of course, Serwer leaves unsaid the interesting link between the rise of Trumpism and the Right Wing Wurlitzer that is headed by Faux News, but now includes all sort of tendentious bullshit. 

The other unstated observation is that nothing could more clearly crystalize the growing educational polarization in the electorate. Yes, of course, there are conspiracists with college degrees. Hello! Ted Kaczynski! However to create an entire political movement, you have to convince tens of millions that the words coming out of Trump's mouth don't mean what they obviously mean. 

If - as I fervently hope - Harris wins tomorrow, the "lightly educated White male" problem (to quote Erik Loomis) isn't going anywhere. Paradoxically, a Trump defeat - especially a crushing one - will only amplify their conspiracist ideas. It's not even clear that a successful Harris administration could ever really win them back, because no economic message wedded to actual economic performance is going to shift their beliefs, because their beliefs are, themselves, unreal.

Biden Could Not Do What Harris Has Done

 As we see (I hope, I pray) a surge of support for Harris as the election draws to a close, there have been some voices on Twitter arguing that this represents a repudiation of Trump rather than a validation of Harris and that Biden would be seeing a similar surge. 

It's not impossible, but it's highly unlikely.

As Josh Marshall argues, Harris has run a pretty flawless campaign. One metric he uses is that you want more days on offense than defense. You want the other side to be responding to your attacks and bad new cycles. Last week, Biden garbled a jab about the views espoused at Trump's MSG rally into making it seem like he was calling all Trump supporters garbage. It was a stupid story about whether he said "supporters" or "supporter's" and the press ran three days of coverage on it. Harris simply hasn't had to face things like that. Plus, it's pretty clear the media hates Joe Biden for reasons that defy explanation.

Yes, there are attempts to land punches on her. Early on she wasn't doing many interviews. Then she did interviews and nailed them, even on Faux. She nailed the debate. She has held amazing rallies that pulse with the sort of energy we haven't seen since Obama's 2008 run. 

And she did all this after inheriting a sinking ship in July. 

Will she win? I think the signs look good, namely that Trump is camped out in North Carolina, because he has no path to victory without it and things must look grim there. Yes, the Selzer poll. Yes, the rageful flopsweat coming from Mar A Lardo. Yes, the tone and tenor of each campaign. Yes, the backstabbing exposes from behind the scenes of the Trump campaign. But...2016, so who knows.

It's fashionable to say that the GOP would be running away with this race if they hadn't nominated Trump. Maybe. That won't be clear until later this week and we get a sense of how Trump fared compared to Cruz or Scott or other Republicans. I think Nikki Haley is a much more effective messenger of change than the guy who was already president.

What Harris has done so skillfully is to make herself the agent of change, the challenger. As a woman of color, she has a built in vibe as an "outsider" the same way Obama did as a Black man. All of these were smart choices - "weird", "we're not going back" - that have her on the brink of finally, finally shattering that glass ceiling.

Fingers crossed.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

That Selzer Poll

 Ann Selzer only polls Iowa. That's her whole thing. When she says Harris has staked a 3 point lead in Iowa, that's important. Here's why.

First, Selzer is insanely accurate at doing her "one thing."  Here are some other polls and actual results.

2022 Senate: R+12 (R+12) 2020 President: R+7 (R+8) 2020 Senate: R+4 (R+7) 2018 Governor: D+2 (R+3) 2016 President: R+7 (R+9) 2014 Senate: R+7 (R+8) 2012 President: D+5 (D+6)

So she missed in 2018, otherwise she's been spot on or least within the margin of error. In particular, her poll was the canary in the coal mine in 2016, when she showed Trump winning a state that Obama had carried comfortably. What she measured was the movement towards Trump in the Midwest more broadly.

So, there's still very much a chance that Trump wins Iowa, because that would be within the margin of error. However, Trump winning Iowa by a razor thin margin is likely to signal the sort of movement away from Trump that dooms him in the Blue Wall.

What's more, the polls shows a massive defection from Trump amongst older white women. They are simply sick of his shit.

Finally, it matters because of one big methodological quirk to Selzer's polling. She measures the data in front of her. You would think every pollster does this, but - as I wrote the other day - pollsters herd together. Even the Red Wave pollsters are starting to move slightly towards Harris in order to preserve their viability in future elections. 

Pollsters are afraid of a 2020 level miss, so they herd together to show a tight race. If either candidate could win than either result would "validate" their polls. 

Selzer is basically "fuck all that" and simply reports what she sees. That's why she was right in 2016. Everyone knew Trump would lose, but she saw what she saw and what she saw was accurate.

All this means less about Iowa in particular and more about the shape of the race in general. It also suggests that my theory of the election might be right after all, and Harris is headed to comfortable win on Tuesday.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Inside Crazytown

 Tim Alberta at The Atlantic has an interesting story about the internal workings of the Trump campaign. Like most access reporting, Alberta tries to paint some of his sources in a flattering light, and some of the reading can seem curious. Was Trump REALLY well-disciplined all year?

Still, the chaos of how things are done in Trumpworld is profound. One telling anecdote is about how young staffers were excited to win and get jobs in the White House and now they are so burned out by the drama, anger and backstabbing that they are reconsidering their life choices.

Again, the article simultaneously paints aspects of Trump's campaign and Trump himself as "normal" all while selling out other people, like Corey Lewandowski. What's really important is that people are talking to Alberta, before the election results come in.

For the "normie" GOP operatives like Chris LaCivita and Susie Wiles, their professional reputations are at stake here. If they are leaking stuff to the press about the dysfunction - or their junior aides are - that is because they see a losing campaign and they want to preserve their professional reputations.

Good campaigns don't leak like this.

The Plural of Anecdote Is Not Data, But....

 You see a lot of these postings. Now, the women voting for Harris is definitely backed up by data of actual early voters. I think that this could be the story of 2024. However, the other postings that interest me are self-identified Republicans saying they are voting for a Democrat for the first time. 

Look, it's social media. People lie to get clicks. Still, we also have identifiable Republicans, even office holders, saying they are done with this fucking guy. Whether it's the rallies, the yard signs, the viral videos, one side sure looks like it's winning and growing their coalition.

Friday, November 1, 2024

Polls Polls Polls

 When it comes down to writing about an election that hasn't happened yet, we have a LOT of analysis of polling and what it's "telling us." 

Except, what if it's lying?

Brian Klaas wrote a penetrating piece at The Atlantic that should be required reading for the poll obsessives. Here are some excerpts:

He begins by noting what should be obvious, but I don't think is:

The widespread perception that polls and models are raw snapshots of public opinion is simply false. In fact, the data are significantly massaged based on possibly reasonable, but unavoidably idiosyncratic, judgments made by pollsters and forecasting sages, who interpret and adjust the numbers before presenting them to the public. They do this because random sampling has become very difficult in the digital age, for reasons I’ll get into; the numbers would not be representative without these corrections, but every one of them also introduces a margin for human error.

We think of polling as a quantitative measurement of the electorate. It simply is not. It's a qualitative lens we put over numbers and present them as quantitative truth. Yet, polls have been a staple of political coverage for a long time. Early polling was crap, so they introduced ways to collect a random sampling and then model from there. He writes:

The basic logic of the new, more scientific method was straightforward: If you can generate a truly random sample from the broader population you are studying—in which every person has an equally likely chance of being included in the poll—then you can derive astonishingly accurate results from a reasonably small number of people. When those assumptions are correct and the poll is based on a truly random sample, pollsters need only about 1,000 people to produce a result with a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.

The caveat here is you get a good, random sample of 1000 people. This was easier when we had land lines and people actually answered their phones. 

These shifts in technology and social behavior have created an enormous problem known as nonresponse bias. Some pollsters release not just findings but total numbers of attempted contacts. Take, for example, this 2018 New York Times poll within Michigan’s Eighth Congressional District. The Times reports that it called 53,590 people in order to get 501 responses. That’s a response rate lower than 1 percent, meaning that the Times pollsters had to call roughly 107 people just to get one person to answer their questions. What are the odds that those rare few who answered the phone are an unskewed, representative sample of likely voters? Zilch. As I often ask my undergraduate students: How often do you answer when you see an unknown number? Now, how often do you think a lonely elderly person in rural America answers their landline? If there’s any systematic difference in behavior, that creates a potential polling bias.

To cope, pollsters have adopted new methodologies. As the Pew Research Center notes, 61 percent of major national pollsters used different approaches in 2022 than they did in 2016. This means that when Americans talk about “the polls” being off in past years, we’re not comparing apples with apples.

I suppose there's a bit of bias by asking young people if they answer unknown numbers, but...does anyone answer unknown numbers?

Then you get the "weighting" of various demographics.

No matter the method, a pure, random sample is now an unattainable ideal—even the aspiration is a relic of the past. To compensate, some pollsters try to design samples representative of known demographics. One common approach, stratification, is to divide the electorate into subgroups by gender, race, age, etc., and ensure that the sample includes enough of each “type” of voter. Another involves weighting some categories of respondents differently from others, to match presumptions about the broader electorate. For example, if a polling sample had 56 percent women, but the pollster believed that the eventual electorate would be 52 percent women, they might weigh male respondents slightly more heavily in the adjusted results.

Again, pollsters are guessing as to who will show up and actually vote. They make these guesses with an eye not towards accuracy but towards not repeating past mistakes. 

Let's turn to the NYTimes polling guru, Nate Cohn.

...pollsters have made major methodological changes with the potential to address what went wrong four years ago. Many of the worst-performing pollsters of 2020 have either adopted wholesale methodological changes or dropped off the map. Some have employed a technique called “weighting on past vote,” with the potential to shift many otherwise Democratic-leaning samples neatly in line with the closer result of the 2020 election.

Basically, pollsters do not want a repeat of 2020 when they did dramatically underestimate Trump's strength - EVEN THOUGH HE WOUND UP LOSING.

Also, there was a pandemic going on. It was in all the papers. 

Then there is this bit which...yeah.

It’s hard to overstate how traumatic the 2016 and 2020 elections were for many pollsters. For some, another underestimate of Mr. Trump could be a major threat to their business and their livelihood. For the rest, their status and reputations are on the line. If they underestimate Mr. Trump a third straight time, how can their polls be trusted again? It is much safer, whether in terms of literal self-interest or purely psychologically, to find a close race than to gamble on a clear Harris victory.

At the same time, the 2016 and 2020 polling misfires shattered many pollsters’ confidence in their own methods and data. When their results come in very blue, they don’t believe it. And frankly, I share that same feeling: If our final Pennsylvania poll comes in at Harris +7, why would I believe it? As a result, pollsters are more willing to take steps to produce more Republican-leaning results. (We don’t take such steps.)

Basically, he admits that other pollsters weight their samples weirdly, but the Times would never do so.

None of this address Klaas' points about the unreliability of the data in the first place, but it does suggest why we have seen an unbelievable amount of "herding" towards the same results across prestige polls.

The central conceit of a tied race has been the default of the political horse race press for months now. It goes back to before the primaries. What it leaves out is some basic facts of an actual robust sample size:

- Trump lost the 2020 election as an incumbent in the midst of a national emergency. You don't often see that. He has never been popular, yet polls show him more popular than ever, because....?

- In the GOP primaries, even after she dropped out, Nikki Haley was getting between 10-20% of the Republican vote. That's a remarkable protest vote.

At the same time, since Trump last lost an election, he has 

- launched a coup against electoral democracy
- been impeached a second time
- seen his judges overturn Roe
- been convicted of 34 felonies
- ducked additional debates
- ducked the 60 Minutes interview
- has been more and more erratic in his speech
- his campaign appearances are just low energy
- threatened various forms of vengeance on his enemies
- had numerous members of the Republican Party come out against him
- held a hate rally at Madison Square Garden

Yet, according to Nate Cohn and other pollsters, we are supposed to believe that he has enlarged his electoral coalition?

The Harris Campaign made a decision in July to wed a campaign of joy with a fundraising and GOTV campaign based on fear. They actually are pretty OK with public polls saying that the swing states are tied. They have their own polling, which is traditionally more rigorous than public polls. Plouffe says that the late-breaking deciders (who the fuck are these people) are breaking overwhelmingly towards Harris. Early voting sure seems to favor Harris, if we account for gender dynamics.

It is still possible that Trump can win, because... he did so before. 

Still, the novelty seems to have worn off. He still has Cult 45, but I just don't see how he's expanded beyond that.

I'm Sorry, What?

 Trump and Musk are out there admitting that Trump's economic plan is going to be very, very painful. Economists have been saying this, but now the Trumpists are admitting it.

I don't see it on the Times home page. It is alluded to at the Post

I would think that's a bigger deal than that.

Thursday, October 31, 2024

"Nothing Matters"

 I've come to notice that commentators - left or right - have settled on a narrative of "nothing matters" when to comes to Donald Trump. There are so many iterations of this, but a few would be 

- Joe Biden's age is the central feature of the presidential race, but Donald Trump's is not.
- Trump has launched a coup against electoral democracy, but everyone knows that so it's not a story.
- Trump's judges have overturned Roe, but everyone knows that so it's not a story.
- Trump is a convicted felon, but everyone knows that so it's not a story.
- Trump has ducked debating Harris again, but that doesn't matter.
- Trump has ducked hard interviews like 60 Minutes, but no one cares about that, unless it's Harris not going on Joe Rogan's podcast.
- Trump, yesterday, struggled to get into a truck and has not released medical records, but his supporters don't care.
- Trump held a veritable Nazi rally on Sunday, but Joe Biden called those Nazis garbage, so bothsides.
- The people around him are nuts and want to bring back polio and the measles.

In short, media commentators - with a few exceptions - have all decided that whatever Trump does or doesn't do simply isn't relevant, because he's done atrocious disqualifying shit before and won in 2016. so it doesn't matter now.

I have to wonder if that's true.

Trump lost the popular vote in 2016, he was soundly beaten in 2020, he has since launched a coup, seen Roe overturned, been convicted and then run an objectively terrible campaign all fall.

And the race is tied?

Look, maybe it is. Trump has defied the laws of political gravity before. He should not be the nominee of a major party, but he is. 

Perhaps I'm hopelessly naïve and Pollyannaish, but I can't help but have some faith in the American people. I know that for many people the very fact that Trump wasn't thrashed in 2016 has shaken their faith, but I think that people are tired of him. 

I think this shit actually does matter.

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

To Recap

- On Sunday, Trump hosted a hate-filled rally in NYC, where a "comedian" called Puerto Rico a "floating pile of garbage."

- Republicans scrambled to try and distance themselves from the comment or explain it away.

- Trump holds a presser yesterday where he does not apologize for the comment or say that it is wrong.

- Harris holds a "Closing Argument" rally on the Ellipse in DC that brings 75,000 people and she delivers a compelling speech, even if it does not mention sharks, Hannibal Lecter or how unfairly she's been treated.

- Biden deplores the Trump rally and mangles a line about the speakers at the rally being garbage. Biden mangles lines like this a lot, but he immediately clarifies that he was talking about Tony Hinchcliffe.

- Right wing media immediately pounces on this to try and deflect away from the Puerto Rico is garbage story and Harris' speech.

- Credulous Beltway media types actually amplify it.

The conclusions are that it really is a good idea that Biden stepped aside. He is - especially at this point in his career - a very poor communicator, and that's part of the job. However, he did step aside, and you have a reporter saying the "Biden campaign" clarifying the comment.

People at the Washington Post are pleading with people not to cancel their subscriptions, but Bezos' killing of the endorsement is not just a broligarch protecting his government contracts, but a clear example of the Beltway Press's mendacity and desire to put their thumbs on the scale by sanewashing every vile utterance that leaks forth from Trump's puckered piehole, while holding others to a standard or perfection.

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

This Seems Significant

 We have a new verse in the Closing Argument:

The Broligarchs in Trump's orbit are going to crash the economy. On purpose.

This is the Musky Libertarian Nonsense in which society's edgelords create ruin to weed out the weak and emerge in their techno-utopia to rule us all.

I hope we can appreciate how bad an idea this is, unless you are some ketamine addled accelerationist waiting for the collapse of civilization to prove that you are an Ubermensch.

They Can't Help Themselves

 Trump is supposed to speak this morning, and of course, the presumed topic is damage control from Sunday's hate rally at Madison Square Garden. Recent revelations include the fact that Trump's people struck Hinchcliffe's use of the c-word, which means they approved the rest. We've now seen North Korean State Television Fox News make rhetorical gestures towards explaining away the slur against Puerto Rico as being about waste management issues. Last night, a Republican commentator on CNN said to Mehdi Hassan "I hope your pager doesn't go off." I bet he thinks he was funny.

But of course, they are not funny. Hinchcliffe is cruel, which is occasionally funny, if you're roasting Tom Brady, but not when you're on a political stage. Someone said, before Biden stepped down, that he hoped he would and Harris would get the nomination, just so the Trump campaign would self-destruct in an orgy of racism and sexism.

I guess we will see. Anyway, the Puerto Rican stuff is playing on a loop on Spanish language media.