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Brexit may have begun but it is not over, indeed it may never be finished.

Abbreviated Pundit Roundup: There's much to learn from Arizona and Colorado

Brexiter

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AZ Central:

Here are all of the challenges to Arizona's 2022 election so far

Cochise County refuses to certify​


Two of the three county commissioners voted Friday to wait until they had "proof" the county voting equipment and the testing lab that certified it both were properly accredited.

They rescheduled a vote for Nov. 28, the last day counties have by law to certify their election.

The Secretary of State's Office has pledged to seek a court order directing the county to certify if the supervisors don't do it themselves Monday, and, failing a court order, will move on with the statewide certification without the heavily Republican county's nearly 50,000 votes.

Wednesday, one of the two supervisors holding up the certification confirmed to The Arizona Republic that she intended to certify the results as required by law on Nov. 28.

"I'm good," Supervisor Peggy Judd said.

We appreciate that it’s all performative bullshit. Let the toddlers have the tantrum, then move on.

Nick Fuentes, while young, has gained major traction in these spaces. He links himself and his followers to core tenets of Trumpism by chanting “America First” and uses monologues in the style of Alex Jones to gain notoriety with a cackling, racist, and grim take on modern U.S.

— Robert Costa (@costareports) November 26, 2022


Jim Geraghty/WaPo:

For evidence that GOP ‘angertainment’ isn’t working, take a look at Colorado

Heading into Election Day, Colorado’s problems looked like those of a lot of other states: Inflation is high, crime is increasing and President Biden’s approval rating in Colorado was just 40 percent, according to Civiqs polling. Yet voters reelected the state’s Democratic governor, Jared Polis, by 19 percentage points, reelected its U.S. Democratic senator, Michael Bennet, by 14 percentage points with easy victories for many down-ballot Democrats and Democratic majorities in the legislature now made lopsided…

Yes, the GOP underperformed in a lot of places this year, but the limits of “angertainment” were perhaps most vividly illustrated here, a rough lesson in the diminishing returns from an approach to governing that mistakes “owning the libs” for getting things done for constituents.


Following Nancy Pelosi's announcement that she is stepping down as Speaker of the House, 44% of voters now say they have a favorable view of her, up from 39% last week. Favorable: 44% (+5) Unfavorable: 50% (-6)https://t.co/Z6dbWnsdyz pic.twitter.com/BWYVLtAKUm

— YouGov America (@YouGovAmerica) November 25, 2022

If she steps down every week, her favorables will be at 100% in no time flat. But she’s still the GOAT, regardless of whether her favorables budge at all.

CJR:

The bot that saw the Times

A FEW WEEKS AGO,
the person behind the New York Times Pitchbot—not a bot at all, but a Twitter account whose posts satirize New York Times headlines and articles—was at his home, in Rochester, New York, doing laundry with one hand while tapping out, with the other, one of his most frequent refrains on Twitter: “Dems in Disarray.” But the tweet—a parody of what NYT Pitchbot considers one of the media’s laziest constructions—wouldn’t send. “Whoops!” read an alert from Twitter. “You already said that.”

That’s part of the shtick; all told, NYT Pitchbot has tweeted “Dems in Disarray” more than four hundred times. In this case, the Twitter app had malfunctioned. NYT Pitchbot had already sent identical versions of the tweet seconds apart, and was attempting to send a third to his 150,000-plus followers. All the better, he supposed.


“With the vote over, however, the rightwing news channel appeared to decide things weren’t that bad after all, and decreased its coverage of violent crime by 50% compared with the pre-election average.” https://t.co/LPSvi6zW39

— Resistbot ?️‍⚧️?? (@resistbot) November 25, 2022


Taylor Lorenz/WaPo:

‘Opening the gates of hell’: Musk says he will revive banned accounts


The Twitter chief says he will reinstate accounts suspended for threats, harassment and misinformation beginning next week

The mass return of users who had been banned for such offenses as violent threats, harassment and misinformation will have a significant impact on the platform, experts said. And many questioned how such a resurrection would be handled, given that it’s unclear what Musk means by “egregious spam” and the difficulty of separating out users who have “broken the law,” which vary widely by jurisdiction and country.


Jack Smith points out that’s a lie. First, it was the government’s idea for a special master in the Rudy case. Second, Rudy’s a lawyer. Third, docs were released on rolling basis. Finally, Rudy didn’t have a civil proceeding invoking bullshit jurisdiction. LOL BAD ASS! END/

— Mueller, She Wrote (@MuellerSheWrote) November 25, 2022

Nevada Independent:

Indy Explains: Nevada passed the ranked-choice voting, open primary ballot question. What happens next?

By a slim majority, Nevada voted in favor of a ballot question proposing to overhaul the Silver State’s election system through the implementation of open primaries and ranked-choice voting in general elections.

But another hurdle in the form of a second statewide vote in the 2024 election remains before the measure — known as Question 3 — could make Nevada the third state (after Maine and Alaska) to establish ranked-choice voting for statewide elections.

Question 3 passed with the support of more than 524,000 voters (or 53 percent), succeeding despite vehement opposition from the Nevada Republican Party and the state’s top Democratic officials, including Gov. Steve Sisolak and Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto. Support in populous Clark and Washoe counties propelled it to victory, though a majority of voters in all of the state’s rural counties (save Mineral County) opposed the measure.

Given the two-step process for approval, Nevada residents should expect to see continued messaging leading up to the 2024 general election.


net favorability of various industries among Dems vs Repubs. Biggest partisan gaps are in: news media; entertainment; higher ed; mining; broadcasting; education services; oil & gashttps://t.co/FXD1uVBekf pic.twitter.com/OsOJTW8DNn

— Catherine Rampell (@crampell) November 25, 2022

Public Notice:

Molly Jong-Fast on why she'll keep tweeting until the lights go out

"Maybe Elon will have a come to Jesus moment and it will be normal again. I think that’s unlikely, but it’s possible."

As is the case with trainwrecks, it’s hard to look away. But Twitter’s sudden decline is actually tragic. The platform has been a game changer for lots of journalists and creators, including those in marginalized communities and authoritarian countries where information is restricted. There’s lots of valid fear that an indispensable tool for promoting things you’ve been working on and meeting like-minded people is already damaged beyond repair.

Some disaffected tweeters are migrating to Mastodon, but not everyone’s happy with its complexity. A lot of people are hoping Twitter will somehow survive Elon’s incompetent leadership, or maybe a sleek alternative will enter the scene. No one is sure what’s going to happen — especially Elon, who seems to be winging it.

US News:

Kevin McCarthy Hits the Campaign Trail in Bid for House Speaker


In the absence of a ‘red wave’ and as the GOP points fingers about who is to blame, Kevin McCarthy’s campaign for House speaker carries on as he pieces the caucus back together.


Accidentally had dinner with a white supremacist while intentionally having dinner with an antisemite. Oookaaaaay https://t.co/5lzZ1ZW3yM

— Gabriel Malor (@gabrielmalor) November 25, 2022

Tara Palmeri/Puck:

The Trump Twitter Dance

When Truth Social was being developed, there were conversations about exemptions to Trump’s eight-hour exclusivity window with Truth if he were to become a candidate. Now it’s something his team is exploring.

In the meantime, Trump and his team are enjoying the attention. “I think Elon has to show some leg to get his attention,” said a source close to Trump. For his part, I’m told that Trump is satisfied with the feedback he gets from Truth, but that “in his heart, he knows the difference,” said the source close to him. (A Trump campaign official told me “He plans to use Truth exclusively so [the exemption] won’t apply.”)

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