The Daily Escape:
Sunrise, Grand Teton NP, MT – June 2022 photo by Charyn
On Monday, Robert Hubbell had a very useful column about how some of the anti-Trump narratives are already baked into the politics of the mid-terms (barring some huge unforeseen event): (emphasis by Wrongo)
â…it is likely that the political throughlines are set for the midterms. That is both good and bad for America and Democrats. The topics for debate have been identified and the rules of engagement have been set….Let the media do its job, which, in this instance, will consist of talking about the same half-dozen stories non-stop.â
Hubbell outlines that the narratives that will dominate the news from now until November 8 are unlikely to produce political earthquakes:
âIt is unlikely that the DOJ will indict anyone in Trumpâs inner circle (including Trump) before the midterms. For example, in a filing last week, the DOJ said its investigation regarding the improper removal and retention of defense secrets was in the âearly stages.â Nearly every Trump administration witness appearing before a federal grand jury was examined by the J6 Committee six to eight months ago. And the only grand jury subpoenas published in the press indicate that the investigations were opened in 2022 and that the subpoenas were issued in June.â
Wrongo agrees. This is also true for the Georgia grand jury investigation into Trumpâs efforts to overturn Bidenâs 2020 win in Georgia. Few realize the grand jury that Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is presenting evidence to cannot indict anyone. According to the Georgia Recorder: (emphasis and brackets by Wrongo)
âIn contrast to a typical grand jury, the 23 members on the special grand jury do not have the power to indict anyone but can [only] make recommendations to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.â
So, when DA Willis has sufficient evidence to indict, she must then impanel a new grand jury, present evidence, and ask for an indictment. Not likely to happen before November.
While the FBI search of Mar-a-Lago (MAL) has Trump on every front page, the DOJ says its investigation regarding the Mar-a-Lago search is in the âearly stages.â The way Americaâs legal back and forth works, it is doubtful that we will see any facts contained in the affidavit the FBI used to justify the application for the search warrant before November.
Trump made a court filing requesting a Special Master (instead of the DOJ) review the documents removed from MAL. However Trumpâs new request is decided, itâs likely to be appealed to the Eleventh Circuit, if not the Supreme Court, which will take time. That means we can expect Trump and the GOP to continue undermining the DOJ and FBI right through the mid-terms.
And there will be few new facts to indict Trump in the court of public opinion.
It’s likely we will see a steady drip of information about the recovered documents, just like Tuesdayâs NYT article saying that, including the FBI seizure, Trump took more than 300 classified documents when he left office. That seems to say it couldnât have been an oversight.
Finally, the January 6th Committee returns to work in September, but as of today, there are no hearings scheduled. Mike Pence will never testify. Since he still has presidential ambitions, testifying would put him on the wrong side of Trump supporters, making a run in 2024 problematic.
While the January 6th hearings have moved the needle on US public opinion, itâs difficult to what they will add to what we know in the time remaining for this 117th Congress.
Of course, running against Trump is the Demâs dream, but there are other issues out there, like abortion. In the new NBC News poll, abortion rights was only the seventh most important issue:
But itâs only one poll, and voter enthusiasm and turnout win races. The Morning Consult has the Democratsâ enthusiasm at 62%, up dramatically from 52% on July 31. Thatâs comparable to the GOPâs 65%.
Dan Pfeiffer believes the political environment has shifted in Democratsâ favor because of the abortion issue:
âDemocratic efforts to turn this midterm from a progress report on Democratic governance into a referendum on GOP extremism failed to connect until the Dobbs decision. That was when Republican extremism went from an abstract argument to lived reality.â
Dems need to remind voters that unemployment is at record lows, that its Democrats who fight for economic progress, and to preserve womenâs right to an abortion. Democrats canât keep people from worrying about inflation, but they can influence whether it is the top issue to voters. They can keep the heat on Republicans for their extremist views on abortion and on Trumpâs extremism and his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection.
The hope is that these realities overtake concern about inflation as the main issue for a big swath of Independent voters.
That could be the difference.