Sad

PALM BEACH, FL — The day after scoring a sweeping win to retake the White House, President-Elect Donald Trump stunned the American people and proved true what so many had tried to warn about by sporting a new mustache for his victory speech.

The facial hairstyle, which evoked comparisons to a prominent European leader from the 1930s as well as silent film star Charlie Chaplin, was a drastic change from the traditionally clean-shaven Trump -- a clear indication that America should expect the worst.

"Don't say we didn't warn you about this," said one despondent journalist. "We've been telling everyone for the last decade that this guy was literally Hitler. Did anyone listen? No! Now look at him. You see that little mustache? He means business. I suggest we all accept reality and start packing for our trips to the concentration camps. Goodbye, America. Hello, Hitler Part 2."

….

At publishing time, Trump's campaign had also unveiled new red armbands to be worn by all of his supporters.

Maybe it's unwise to trust the predictions of a rabid, Trump-hating necromancer

the chicken entrails have betrayed me

Moment ‘polling Nostradamus’ who predicted Kamala Harris would win election realizes he was wrong

Despite recent polls giving former President Donald Trump an edge in the 2024 presidential election, American University professor Dr. Allan Lichtman is standing by his prediction that Vice President Kamala Harris will come out on top.

Lichtman, 77, has been dubbed by some the election “Nostradamus” due to his track record of predicting nine of the past 10 presidential contests. In September, he went all in on a Democratic win.

“Nothing has changed to change my prediction that I made on September 5, deliberately before the supposed ‘pivotal’ Trump-Harris debate — according to the pundits — which proved to be pivotal not one bit, if you believe the polls,” Lichtman explained during a livestream Tuesday.

The prof revealed that he’s since been peppered with questions about whether he intends to switch his prediction in light of polls showing Trump edging in front of Harris in swing states.

The RealClearPolitics average of polls showed Trump, 78, leading Harris, 60, by 0.4% nationwide as of noon Wednesday, all but ensuring a Republican Electoral College victory if it comes to pass.

“This is the first moment of the night where I’ve lost hope a little bit,” Sam Lichtman said as media outlets called Pennsylvania for Trump.

The elder Lichtman rubbed his eyes, visibly frustrated by the data, and said: “Good thing I have nothing to do tomorrow. And I’m not doing any interviews.”

Lichtman, an American University professor widely known as the “Nostradamus” of US presidential elections, put his money on the VP this year despite polling data hinting another Trump presidency was in the cards.

The prof is the co-creator of the “Keys to the White House” metric, which entails 13 categories assessing the prospects of the two major-party candidates. This year, according to Lichtman, Harris had the edge in eight of those metrics, compared to Trump’s three.

As the livestream neared its end, with both Lichtmans growing noticeably frustrated by the numbers showing Trump ahead in all seven swing states, Allan Lichtman said there was “nothing positive” for Harris in the data.

“Oh, the democracy’s gone,” a defeated-sounding Lichtman said. “Once democracy’s gone, it’s almost impossible to recover. The way to recover is by the dictators losing wars.”

“It’s unfathomable,” Lichtman concluded the stream.

Out:

In (if you’re a Republican): court-packing — pick ‘em young and healthy, protect the country for the next 40 years.

Robert Shibley:

WE STILL ON FOR THE COURT-PACKING? Sure, a good economy would be nice, but what I am really looking forward to is 6 new conservative justices for some solid 12-3 decisions on the Commerce Clause and Tenth Amendment.

D.C. makes Bridgeport look almost like a bastion of clean government

Trayon White Cruises To Reelection After Getting Caught On Camera Allegedly Taking Wads Of Cash In Bribes

A Democrat D.C. City Councilmember previously charged with bribery overwhelmingly won his reelection Tuesday night.

Trayon White Sr. won his race with around 76% of the vote, according to the D.C. Board of Elections.

White was charged with bribery this past August. (RELATED: DC Councilman Who Claimed Jews Controlled The Weather Charged With Bribery)

He allegedly agreed to accept $156,000 in cash payments in exchange for using his position to pressure government employees at the D.C. Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services ((DYRS) and the Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement (ONSE) to extend multiple city contracts, according to the Department of Justice.

“Because the investigation into the alleged bribery scheme involved contracts that could soon be awarded and other potential official acts that could be taken, our Office took swift steps to address the alleged crimes we were investigating,” U.S. Attorney for D.C., Matthew M. Graves, stated.

“What you need me to do, man? I don’t, I don’t wanna feel like you gotta gimme something to get something. We better than that,” White told a confidential source when offered an envelope with $15,000 in cash, according to an arrest affidavit from the FBI’s D.C. Field Office.

However, White allegedly took the envelope and put it in his pocket.

White was accused of making anti-Semitic comments in 2018 after he suggested that Jewish bankers — the Rothschilds — controlled the climate, The Washington Post reported. He later apologized for his comments.

New: DC Council member Trayon White issues apology on Instagram after blaming snow on Jewish bankers controlling climate in earlier post. pic.twitter.com/AH6viLZDvc

— Van Applegate (@vbagate) March 19, 2018

We can only hope that he wasn't a Kamalla fan — two disappointments on the same day would be unfortunate

25 Upper Cross Road, 10.96 acres in Conyers Farm and currently priced at $4.250 million, is finally under contract after beginning at $5.875 million on September 21, 2021. Insult to injury, the owner had paid $5.475 for the property just three months before, on June 8th, 2021.

Give the seller’s position in the world of finance, my guess is that the loss he’s about to take will be chalked up as a mere rounding error, so the St. Bart’s villa is not in jeopardy and he’s in no danger of being un-fortunated, but still, as I said, disappointing.

Of course, Trump or Harris supporter, he probably made up this loss by 10:00 this morning. , so any sadness, if any, at Harris’s defeat has certainly been mitigated.

Schadenfreude

(“ A gleeful delight in another’s misfortune”)

I wanted to dip my toe into the losers’ woes this morning so I tried the two most likely sources, Daily Kos and Politico, and was rewarded. First up, Daily Kos, confidently predicting that the Democrats own their blacks and hispanics, so there was no need to worry about a Trump victory, even as the vote count piled up in his favor (and don’t tell this expert, it it appears that Trump will also win the popular vote “Preserve the Electoral College!”)

Daily Kos November 05, 2024 at 10:59:13p EST

Even when they win, Republicans are losers—and have been for 20 years

…. Fast forward to 2020, and the landscape has changed dramatically. In 2020, despite Donald Trump winning the white vote by a large margin—58% to 41%—he lost the presidency to Joe Biden.

And that shows the daunting challenge that the Republican Party faces. The past two decades have seen a significant shift in voter composition, especially among racial and ethnic groups. The once-dominant share of white voters has steadily declined, from 77% in 2004 to just 67% in 2020—a warning signal for a party that has heavily relied on the white vote, according to an analysis from writer Myra Adams.

These electoral shifts not only signal a demographic transformation but also highlight the Republican Party's struggle to adapt its message and policies to a broader—more diverse—audience.

Part of the GOP’s conundrum surely stems from an agenda that is increasingly out of step with popular opinion. Take, for example, the issues of gun reform and abortion rights. Voter sentiment leans heavily in favor of more progressive policies on these topics, which puts the GOP at odds with a substantial portion of the electorate.

Even Trump acknowledged his party's uphill battle for the popular vote during a rally in Virginia on Saturday. 

“When you have New York, Illinois, and California, you have automatically, it’s like ridiculous, automatically goes to a Democrat, it’s tough to win the popular vote because they’re three big states,” he said. 

Despite his win in 2016, Trump’s failure to secure the popular vote against Clinton and later against Biden in 2020 marks a failed Republican electoral strategy. As the party looks to the future, it must confront the reality that demographic changes and shifting public opinions are reshaping the political landscape in ways that may not favor them.

And then we have this live report, from Politico. By now — 9:30 AM Wednesday — I’m sure the mainstream media’s up and howling, but this excerpt from earlier, as the magnitude of their figurehead’s loss became apparent, is just delicious.

POLITICO 11/06/2024 01:50 AM EST:

Democrats sink into despair after Trump win

Democrats are living their nightmare. Again.

As Election Day gave way to Wednesday, Democrats were reckoning with the reality that the party was in for a repeat of 2016. Donald Trump was outperforming his 2020 margins across the map and had won key battleground states, including Pennsylvania and Georgia. Kamala Harris, meanwhile, was struggling to match Joe Biden’s margins across broad swaths of the country, from light-blue counties that swung towards Democrats in 2020 to deep red ones where Trump has continued to grow his leads.

With each successive swing state that fell to the former president, Democrats’ ever-present anxiety gave way to shock, despair and, finally, acceptance: Harris was going to lose.

“Really never fully took in that this could happen again,” said one former Democratic Party official, granted anonymity to speak candidly. “It is beyond any words I can use to describe.”

The warning signs for Harris began cropping up even before the results from most states started rolling in. Exit polls showed Trump making inroads with Black men in North Carolina and in Georgia, which the Republican wrested back from Democrats not long into election night. Harris also underperformed nationally with Hispanic voters and young voters compared to Biden in 2020, exit polls found. Those surveys even showed so-called double-haters — voters who held unfavorable opinions of both candidates — breaking for Trump.

Then Trump started running up the score across the map. With more than 2,500 counties reporting at least 95% of the vote, Trump has outperformed his 2020 margins in roughly 92 percent of them, according to a POLITICO analysis of preliminary results from the Associated Press. And Trump made gains even in deep-blue areas like his former home of New York City. Harris, meanwhile, was lagging Biden in key counties he won four years ago — including Pennsylvania’s Lackawanna County, which includes the president’s native Scranton.

“He expanded his base a little and they came out,” said Neil Oxman, a Pennsylvania-based Democratic strategist. And that, combined with Harris underperforming Biden, “is the difference in switching a state.”

With each minute that Harris’ potential paths to the White House narrowed, the mood within her campaign and among Democrats more broadly grew grimmer.

In an attempt to assuage anxieties, Harris’ campaign manager, Jen O’Malley Dillon, circulated a memo, obtained by POLITICO, to staffers late Tuesday night that said: “We have known all along that our clearest path to 270 electoral votes lies through the Blue Wall states. And we feel good about what we’re seeing.”

Barely two hours later, Harris no-showed her own party at her alma mater of Howard University, where the mood was already souring. A clip of Beyoncé’s “Freedom,” which the vice president had used as her walk-out song at campaign events, was greeted with groans. Attempts to start “Kamala” chants fell flat.

As former Rep. Cedric Richmond, a co-chair of Harris’ campaign, came onstage to disband what Democrats had hoped would be a victory celebration, some members of her campaign were still holding out hope that ballots yet to be counted would break her way. But others had begun bracing for defeat.

“We still have votes to count, we still have states that have not been called yet,” Richmond said. “We will continue overnight to fight to make sure that every vote is counted, that every voice has spoken.”

But “you won’t hear from the vice president tonight,” he told the dejected crowd. “You will hear from her tomorrow.”

Beyond Washington, Democrats were rapidly losing faith that Harris could keep the party’s bulwark intact.

It “feels more like 2016 than 2020,” said Rep. Jared Huffman, a California Democrat.

“That’s what’s troubling,” he added. “Those of us that had hoped for a resounding repatriation of Trump, we’re left to hope for a nail biter through the Blue Wall.”

And some Democrats’ calls to not despair — “everybody fucking relax,” said Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, “there’s still a ton of votes to get through” — were falling on increasingly deaf ears. In a callback to the beginning of Harris’ campaign, one Democratic operative wondered: “Is it brat to lose an election?”