Monday, March 22, 2021
BY SARAH LAZARUS & CROOKED MEDIA

-Rep. Jody Hice (R-GA), spouting enough garbage to negate his own point

The push for DC statehood has gained fresh momentum as Democrats line up behind urgent pro-democracy reforms, with statehood advocates boldly prioritizing equal representation over the famous All States Must Have An Airport (As Soon As We Invent Those) Act of 1816.
 

  • The House Oversight and Reform Committee held a hearing on legislation to grant statehood to Washington, DC, which would shrink the federal district to two square miles of federal buildings and overpriced salad franchises, while turning the rest of the city into the State of Washington, Douglass Commonwealth. It’s a straightforward fix to an undeniable problem: More than 700,000 people live and pay federal taxes in DC—a larger population than the states of Wyoming and Vermont—but they have no representatives or senators in Congress.
     
  • Mayor Muriel Bowser and other statehood advocates at Monday’s hearing focused on disenfranchisement as a civil-rights issue: DC is a plurality-Black city, and has a long, gross history of white lawmakers denying its residents equal voting rights for that reason. Advocates also argued that DC’s lack of autonomy and authority to call in the National Guard without federal approval has left the city powerless to protect itself, particularly from violence incited by federal actors. If DC had been a state on January 6, the attack on the Capitol might have ended very differently.
     
  • The Republicans opposed to granting full political rights to Black people and losing some of their artificial structural advantages in the Senate can’t very well say that, so their arguments on Monday centered around calling DC statehood unconstitutional (nope), framing it is a partisan power grab by Democrats (because denying representation to 700,000 Americans who are more likely to elect Democrats is the very opposite of a power grab, you see), and, uh, complaining about the unchecked power of DC residents’ lawn signs. Lawn signs AND a voice in the political process? Who do these people think they are?

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) introduced the first statehood bill nearly three decades ago, but the effort has never enjoyed the visibility or popularity it has today.
 

  • The underground bill used to playing in local basements has hit the congressional Billboard (Bills-board?) charts. (Sorry.) Last year, the House approved statehood legislation for the first time. Senate Democrats introduced a bill in January with a record 38 cosponsors, and nearly all 50 Democrats have indicated they're on board. President Biden officially backed the effort on Thursday. With Democrats now framing DC statehood as a central voting-rights priority, public support has risen accordingly: A new Data for Progress/Democracy for All 2021 Action poll found that a record 54 percent of likely voters agree with making DC a state.
     
  • At the risk of sounding like a broken record, this very good and popular proposal has little chance of making it through the Senate unless Democrats do something about the filibuster. At the risk of sounding like a broken record that nevertheless slaps, it seems like they just might! On Friday night, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) became the latest Democratic holdout to come out as reform-curious. Senate Disenfranchisement Leader Mitch McConnnell has published an op-ed in the Courier-Journal screeching that the filibuster is the last xxxxxx against socialism (while accidentally strengthening a pro-reform argument), evidently sensing that his filibustering days are numbered.
     

The case for making DC a state has always been unassailable, but Democrats suddenly have a unique opportunity to actually do something about it. The confluence of radical GOP attacks on democratic institutions and a literal insurrection have ramped up the urgency, and (most) Democrats have realized that unless they use their power to mitigate the partisan bias of the Senate, they may never get to do anything else. Time for the rest of us to get loud about it.

You love reading What A Day the newsletter every night, which means you’ll probably love listening to What A Day the podcast every morning. Akilah and Gideon pick up right where we leave off and keep you updated on all the latest news. 

It’s quick, it’s fun, and it’s smart and thoughtful—all the things you love about this (we hope!)—and it’s available every morning Monday through Friday at 4am EST.  Give it a listen and subscribe to What A Day wherever you get your podcasts

President Biden’s economic advisors intend to present Congress a roughly $3 trillion Build Back Better package, which will contain measures to improve infrastructure, reduce carbon emissions, implement free community college and universal prekindergarten, and make a few fantastic-but-temporary provisions in the American Rescue Plan—like expanded health care subsidies and tax credits aimed at reducing child poverty—permanent. The economic team intends to finance that package, at least in part, by taxing the rich.

In a conveniently timed study, IRS researchers and economists found that high-income tax avoidance is a much bigger problem than the IRS had assumed: The top one percent of households failed to report an estimated 21 percent of their income, using a variety of strategies that audits (when the IRS even bothers, which is less and less often if you’re wealthy) don’t necessarily catch. Tax rich people who have only gotten richer during the pandemic, figure out how to make sure they actually pay it, and use the money to create jobs and avert climate disaster: Seems like a solid next project.

The reverse coattail effect is a very real thing, according to a new study from Run For Something. The group analyzed 3,953 precincts in Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, and Texas, comparing precincts where Republicans ran for state House or Senate seats uncontested to those where they faced Democratic opponents. The study found that even when Democratic candidates didn’t win, their mere presence on the ballot in state-legislature races provided Joe Biden with a boost of anywhere from 0.3 to 1.5 percent. In other words, simply having more Democrats run in down-ballot races can drive up voter participation and help swing national elections. That finding won’t come as a big surprise to anyone involved in local politics. And though we should await confirmation from further research across more elections, it’s a strong argument for Democrats to make bigger investments (of both time and money) in down-ballot candidates. 

Refresh your breakfast rituals with plant-based JUST Egg – a better egg for you and the planet. Made from mung beans, JUST Egg uses 98% less water and emits 93% fewer carbon emissions than a conventional egg. It’s protein-packed and has no cholesterol. Compare that to just two conventional eggs which, alone, surpass your daily recommended amount.

JUST Egg is delicious – and it cooks and tastes just like conventional eggs. Use it in an omelette, scramble, French toast, banana bread, Pad Thai…whatever you like to do with eggs. So if you’re making a weekend brunch for the whole family or just trying to take your own first step toward a healthier, plant-based diet, give JUST Egg a try.  

JUST Egg is available at most grocery stores, your local co-op, Amazon Prime Now and Instacart. Look for JUST Egg in the egg fridge, or find the frozen JUST Egg Folded for easy breakfast sandwiches. JUST Egg is a great product, and from a company with a great mission. Learn more here →

The U.S. trial for AstraZeneca’s coronavirus vaccine found it to be safe and 79 percent effective overall, and 100 percent effective against severe illness. 

Over three-million shots per day all weekend, baby.

The USDA announced that it will increase SNAP benefits by 15 percent using pandemic-relief funds, providing around $3.5 billion to 41 million people in households experiencing food insecurity. 

The Interior Department, under the newly confirmed Secretary Deb Haaland, has withdrawn a Trump-era opinion that stripped ownership of a portion of the Missouri River from the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation.

. . . . . .


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