Sean Hannity wants to have it both ways: he has repeatedly claimed not to be a journalist when that has served as a convenient defense against criticism. Now we have the unedifying spectacle of his attorney, Mr. Sekulow, raising the spectre of 1st Amendment freedom of the press issues as an excuse for Hannity not to testify before Congress. Again, and in the immortal words of Dana Carvey's Church Lady, "How ConVEEENient." —Scott K., California
Your article on gerrymandering could have very appropriately included Utah's failure to honor a highly successful voter initiative establishing an independent redistricting commission. For several months after the 2020 Census, a highly respected redistricting commission that included a former Utah State Supreme Court justice spent hundreds of hours with focus groups across the state, computer simulations and open, public debate submitted to the Republican-dominated Utah Legislature 12 options for redistricting. Without blushing and almost no discussion, the Legislature rejected all 12 options and voted in their own map they had drawn behind closed doors. They did it because they could. —Lee B., Utah
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