Sam Smith - The last time a sizable number of Trump supporters entered the US Capitol together was earlier this month and resulted in 5 deaths, 174 police officers injured and $2.7 million in damages. Just wondering what will happen on Inauguration Day.
UNDERNEWS
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
January 17, 2025
JUST WONDERING
VOTING
Fair Vote- Ranked choice voting
(RCV) is back in the public eye this month – as it will be used for the
2025 Oscar nominations on January 23, and again to select the Best
Picture winner on March 10. The 2025 Oscar nominations – which
have been delayed several days because of the devastating wildfires in
Los Angeles – are a reminder that RCV is used in many places and
contexts beyond public elections. RCV is recommended in Robert’s Rules of Order, and is commonly used in elections for well-known associations. (To learn more about how RCV is used to pick the Best Picture winner, check out FairVote’s explainer from last Oscar season.)
DEMOCRATS
AP News - Texas and Florida are growing rapidly. California, Illinois and New York are shrinking. With America’s population shifting to the South, political influence is seeping from reliably Democratic states to areas controlled by Republicans. Coming out of a presidential election where they lost all seven swing states, Democrats are facing a demographic challenge that could reduce their path to winning the U.S. House of Representatives or the White House for the long term.
If current trends hold through the 2030 census, states that voted for Vice President Kamala Harris will lose around a dozen House seats — and Electoral College votes — to states that voted for President-elect Donald Trump. The Democratic path to 270 Electoral College votes, the minimum needed to win the presidency, will get much narrower.
“At the end of the day, Democrats have to be able to win in the South or compete in the South” if they want to control the levers of government, said Michael Li, senior counsel for the Democracy Program at New York University School of Law’s Brennan Center for Justice. “Otherwise, it’s a really uphill battle every time.”