tirsdag 12. mai 2026

USA i dag

 

Trump og gjengen sliter med å "få noe" på Kelly. (Red.)

Hvordan ødelegge et demokrati ved hjelp av demokratiske midler? Oppskriften finner du i The Heritage Foundations` Project 2025 som Trump følger til punkt og prikke. (Red.)


by Zachary B. Wolf


: Trump enlists the USPS in his election scheme; SCOTUS gives Alabama Republicans the go-ahead

 

I feel like a broken record with this newsletter, but the real-time changes at the margins of the US democracy are an incredible thing to see.

There is obviously the ongoing redistricting war — in which Republicans appear to be gaining the upper hand, at least for this year.

The breaking news Monday is that the US Supreme Court's conservative ruling bloc will allow Alabama to eliminate a congressional district held by a Black Democrat. CNN's John Fritze is tracking the development.

Separately on Monday, Virginia Democrats appealed to the Supreme Court to overturn the state Supreme Court's rejection of voter-approved maps that could have greatly reduced the number of Republican members of Congress in the state.

It'll be a case that hits home for some of the justices. Three members of the conservative bloc — Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas and Amy Coney Barrett — live in Virginia.

Meanwhile, Republican-led states in the South are still moving to gerrymander out of existence districts held by Democrats under maps that were previously drawn to protect Black representation.

The coming midterm elections much more racially charged as mostly White Republicans, suddenly with new power from the Supreme Court, do everything they can to erase districts held by Black Democrats in the South.

But there are other tweaks in the works.

CNN's Gabe Cohen and Jeremy Herb explore how an executive order Trump signed in March would deputize the US Postal Service to police mail-in ballots. Trump has never trusted them even though he frequently votes by mail.

Cohen and Herb write:


 

 

After years of baselessly casting vote by mail as a fraud magnet, Trump in March issued an executive order that would push USPS far beyond delivering ballots — and into the business of deciding who gets one.

 

That order has raised alarms inside the Postal Service over whether it can or should take on such a complicated and controversial role, sources told CNN, especially when it may need help from Trump and Republicans to steady its finances.

 

Under the order, the Postal Service would work with states to determine who can vote by mail and enforce that eligibility, flagging or rejecting ballots tied to people not on those lists. Voting-rights groups and some Democratic-led states say that’s an unconstitutional power grab: The Constitution gives states — not the president or USPS — control over election administration.

 

Their full report is for subscribers.

 

Th executive order is also the subject of lawsuits, so it's not clear what will happen by Election Day. But recall the Supreme Court's conservatives already expressed skepticism of mail-in ballots that arrive after Election Day in oral arguments for a separate case earlier this year.

Still, no amount of tinkering may protect the slim Republican majority in the House — or even the Senate — from a potential Democratic wave.

If Democrats gain either chamber of Congress in November's election, it would continue an unprecedented streak of power changing hands with each US election in recent decades. I've looked at this in the past — CNN's Annette Choi did the visuals for our December story "Every election is a change election now."

CNN's Ronald Brownstein on Sunday looked at why exactly that's the case. He found multiple interconnected reasons:

  • Partisanship has calcified and feels immovable, so a small set of voters are determining who wins each election.
  • In an era of more ideological politics, much of the country can't imagine being happy if their political opponents are in charge.
  • No party has been able to win a significant governing majority in recent decades, which makes it harder to achieve much with legislation.
  • Both parties, rather than work together, are using moves like budget reconciliation to keep the out-of-power party from getting a say. (Tax cuts, Obamacare and the supercharging of ICE were all enacted in this one-party way.)
  • Presidents are seizing more and more power from Congress — and overreaching when they do. 

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