Cultist Who Trolled Biden Is Now Playing The Victim

https://twitter.com/imillhiser/status/1474885179349024769?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1474885179349024769%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.joemygod.com%2F2021%2F12%2Fcultist-who-trolled-biden-is-now-playing-the-victim%2F

Daily cartoon / meme roundup: The US public is beginning to see how we have been lied to and taken advantage of for over 50 years to steal everything from the lower incomes and give it to the wealthy

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Scottie’s world today

Thrive on irony

they change the questions

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Workers unite! Labor solidarity is spreading. The tipping point is coming.

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Off the Mark Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Peanuts Begins Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

merry christmas except joe manchin

Steve Kelley Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

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Doonesbury Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

All I want trump arrested

Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Frazz Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

religion-is-a-mental-illness:
“Happy Christmas Yule.
”
For three hundred years after the supposed birth of Jesus, Christmas had literally nothing to do with him.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_and_paganism#Names_and_dates
“In its first...

You don’t have to be a rocket scientist to see that Christmas is a 1600 year old religious tradition that was the misappropriation of a 2500 year old pagan tradition.
Taking the Jesus out of Christmas is like taking out the wedge of lemon you didn’t...

religion-is-a-mental-illness:
“The only part of Christmas that is Xian is the stolen desert myth invented 300 years after the supposed events.
”
… and that the church resisted and objected...

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Jeff Stahler Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Nope, it is spreading worldwide.

Clay Jones Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

They were transgender, male reindeer do have antlers but they fall off in the winter.  

Dreams of alters

Transgender did not kill feminism.

Brought to you by the same idea that atheists are killing Christmas, gays are destroying the country, same sex marriage is killing opposite sex marriages,  Lesbians are killing feminism, feminism is destroying traditional women’s roles, and so on.   This is simply the traditionalist refusing to accept new ideas and understandings.    Why can’t it stay the way it was, even though when our idea was new some people fought against it also with these same words.  I have never found a feminist against transgender who can deny this or answer why their using the same words against others that were used against them is not wrong.    Accept that things change with growth and enlightenment causing greater understanding.     Scottie

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Misleading right wing media cartoons / memes

Michael Ramirez Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Barely out of Christmas and back to the stupid.   Everything is projection with the right.   Toss out RW tropes until something sticks. It never does. Factually, the GOP is the group on the road to extinction and they know it, which is why they are pulling out all the stops to try and maintain their dwindling hold on power through gerrymandering, disenfranchisement, and praying the judges the last occupant put in help them.  

The right elects a fascist dictator wannabe, pampers the wealthy with tax cuts, screws the blue collar worker over time and again (and somehow gets them to thank them for it), inspires an insurrection, destroys democracy daily, and is so close to party-fracture that you need white supremacists and Nazis to survive and you think the left is near extinction?

The right hasn’t won a majority of votes in a presidential election in the 21st century.

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And now some for fun

learned from last year wrapping

Non Sequitur Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Farcus Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Steve Breen Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Herman Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Speed Bump Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Strange Brew Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Aunty Acid Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Dog Eat Doug Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Marmaduke Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Real Life Adventures Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Pickles Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Pluggers Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Cornered Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Stone Soup Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

The Buckets Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Lola Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Daddy's Home Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Drabble Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

For Better or For Worse Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

One Big Happy Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

Candorville Comic Strip for December 26, 2021

THE WASHINGTON POST: Cruise passengers on holiday trip deal with outbreaks: “We’re sailing o n a petri dish”

Yet DeathSantis is trying to forbid the cruise industry from requiring vaccinations.

Cruise passengers on holiday trip deal with outbreaks: “We’re sailing on a petri dish”
Ports turn away ships that have confirmed coronavirus outbreaks, trapping people in quarantine long after the trip should’ve ended.

Read in The Washington Post: https://apple.news/Aq-dqRJacROmrJbVqr7XbFQ

Shared from Apple News

Sent from my iPad,Hugs and Best wishes,
Scottie

Straight people often more sexually fluid than they think, study suggests

A study has found that straight people’s perceptions of their own sexualities can become more fluid when they are exposed to different theories of sexuality.

The study, published in Scientific Reports, was initially conducted on 180 university students, all of whom identified as straight.

 

Researchers showed participants an article which found that most people experience attraction to both men and women at some level. Evidence was included from multiple studies, including one which measured genital blood flow and pupil dilation among people watching erotic videos of men and women.

A separate control group of participants was presented with a different article on climate change

Among the group presented with evidence that sexuality is a spectrum and can change over time, fewer participants reported themselves as entirely heterosexual.

They also reported being less sure of their heterosexuality and more likely to engage in same-sex encounters in future.

This trend was less noticeable among participants who identified as politically conservative.

Following their findings, the group of researchers conducted a second experiment. This involved a larger pool of participants, with 460 people from varied walks of life. This latter experiment involved showing participants either the article about sexuality being a continuum, a control article, or an article which reported on sexuality as ‘fluid’, with the capacity to change over a lifetime.

 
 

After reading their respective information sheets, under 10 per cent of controls claimed to be non-exclusively straight. Of the group who read about sexuality being a continuum, 36 per cent answered as such, as well as 20.7 per cent of those in the fluid sexuality group. 

Just over 41 per cent of those who read about the continuous nature of sexuality also reported being uncertain about their heterosexuality, along with 34.8 per cent of participants who read about the fluid nature of sexuality, and 19.6 per cent of controls.

 

Unlike its predecessor, the second experiment didn’t find that political alignment had any bearing on participants’ answers at the end of the experiment. However, although those who had read on sexuality as a continuum reported being more open to same0sex experiences in future, the same was not true of those who read on sexuality’s fluidity.

“Did we change people’s sexual orientation via our interventions? Surely not,” said lead study author Dr James Morandini in a statement.

“I think our study may have changed how people interpreted their underlying sexual feelings. This means two people with identical sexual orientations could describe their sexual orientation quite differently, depending on whether they have been exposed to fluid or continuous ways of understanding sexuality.”

I am not only interested in studies on sexuality and gender, but in videos that explain these subjects in easy to understand language.   Their value for young people is well understood.  So many kids have the “Am I normal” “should I have these feelings” questions and need information not only about feelings but physical stuff also.   Here is the really interesting part, young adults need the information also.    I have known guys who had no clue well into their 20’s.   

I have always been open about being gay, even to a more limited extent when in the military.   This was in the 1980’s.  I did a lot of dating.    There were a lot of honest questions, and I will tell you the above study is true, people are far more fluid than they understand.   And they had questions.    When we moved here we were the first openly out gay couple.   There were gay people here of course but we were the ones that were clear we were gay and together.  No need for rumor, we did not hide it.  This was 2004.   Turned out people were curious and would start out hesitantly asking questions that I would answer until they got to the real question they wanted to ask.   I never took offence, why would I, and the conversations often start with “Uhm, I have no one else to ask …”  or “You are the only gay people I know …”   Which I knew was not true but remember this was a 50 year old and older park filled with a lot or retired folk or close too it, so I was the youngest here because my disability made it so those rules did not apply.   There were all these adults who were either curious or had just learned their grandkids were …  that way …  A lot of debunking myths and explaining all of which I did not mind.   The internet has cut a lot of that down I admit, but there is still some questions.   Scottie

NEW YORK POST: Baby uses sign language to say ‘Help’ while on Santa’s lap

Baby uses sign language to say ‘Help’ while on Santa’s lap
Terrified, the toddler resorted to using his baby version of ASL to sign “help” to his mum while the photographer at the Provo Town Center Mall in Provo, Utah, snapped a picture.

Read in New York Post: https://apple.news/AxqNuC5fiR0-LtlpT4hty8g

Shared from Apple News

Sent from my iPad,Hugs and Best wishes,
Scottie

Trump Boosters

clayjonz's avatarCLAYTOONZ

CjonesRGB12282021

Happy Christmas eve, my dear readers.

While on tour with Bill O’Reilly (yes, that’s an actual thing), Donald Trump said he got a booster shot. He got booed…by his own cult. It was like he admitted he ate a salad.

Trump didn’t volunteer this information. O’Reilly nudged him to admit it. Now keep in mind, Donald Trump didn’t want anyone to know he got his first vaccine shot. While Presidents Biden, Obama, Bush, and Clinton all publicized their vaccinations, Donald Trump kept his a secret until it leaked out weeks after he had left the White House. And of course, Trump didn’t let his cult know he was being boosted either.

Trump is now trying to take credit for the vaccine and President Biden has given him some stating earlier this week, “Thanks to the prior administration and our scientific community, America is one of the first countries to get…

View original post 816 more words

Daily cartoon / meme roundup: The public is stretched to breaking and Merry Christmas.

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Scottie’s world today

Merry Christmas from SantaWhat can I get with out being good

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https://twitter.com/sleepisocialist/status/1470950275330588673?s=20

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https://twitter.com/LeftJaddi/status/1471194283919265807?s=20

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Working It Out Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

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Manchin betrayal is obvious. He must redeem himself.

did not object to their own win.

what happened t the magic

But he is magic, not limited to the physical problems of supply and demand plus his workers are a branch of elves and they love their jobs because Santa treats them great.   

I hope this is photoshopped

I hope this is photo shopped, but this is the goal of some people who are convinced they need this arsenal to protect themselves from their own government.   Hugs

Clay Jones Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

homer is the smartest

covid ornaments collection

zoombie rushing real now

wise women would have brought hand sanitizer

Drew Sheneman Comic Strip for December 23, 2021

ViewsBusiness Comic Strip for December 24, 2021

in stead of coal, solar panel

Candorville Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

https://twitter.com/MMAEejit/status/1473385161123373057?s=20

Randy sent this to me with the note some one did not get their list requests!   I say some one is working out some issues.   

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Misleading right wing media cartoons / memes

There was none I felt the need to publish

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And now some for fun

Calvin and Hobbes Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

When was this drawn?   No one got paid so little to babysit even when I was young. 

Andy Capp Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

Speed Bump Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

Eek! Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

Reality Check Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

Herman Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

Real Life Adventures Comic Strip for December 25, 2021

How to Get Lauren Boebert Out of Office – Steve Hofstetter

The clear and present danger of Trump’s enduring ‘Big Lie’

https://www.npr.org/2021/12/23/1065277246/trump-big-lie-jan-6-election

 

Pro-Trump rioters storm the U.S. Capitol following a rally with President Donald Trump on Jan. 6. His supporters gathered in the nation’s capital to protest the ratification of Joe Biden’s Electoral College victory.

Samuel Corum/Getty Images
 
It’s been nearly a year since the United States suffered an unprecedented attack on constitutional democracy.

When a violent mob stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, the goal was to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election and install Donald Trump to a second term.

Call it an insurrection or a coup attempt, it was fueled by what’s known as the “Big Lie”: the verifiably false assertion that Trump won. Joe Biden won 306 votes in the Electoral College, while Trump received 232. In the popular vote, Biden won by more than 7 million votes.

Many are warning that over the past year, that “big lie” of a stolen election has grown more entrenched and more dangerous.

“I’ve never been more scared about American democracy than I am right now, because of the metastasizing of the ‘big lie,’ ” says election law expert Rick Hasen, co-director of the Fair Elections and Free Speech Center at the University of California, Irvine.

“This is not the kind of thing I expected to ever worry about in the United States,” Hasen says. “I kind of feel like a climate scientist from five years ago or [an] expert on viruses a couple of years ago, sounding the alarm and just hoping that we’re not too late already.”

A “big lie” with roots in history

In rallies across the country, Trump continues to hammer on the fiction that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.

Speaking at a rally in Georgia in September, Trump trumpeted his familiar, baseless claim that the election was “corrupt” and “rigged.”

“I have no doubt that we won, and we won big,” Trump said. “The headlines claiming that Biden won are fake news — and a very big lie.”

A couple of weeks later, he repeated the fiction at a rally in Iowa. “We didn’t lose,” he insisted to a crowd that rewarded him with chants of “Trump won!”

By inverting the narrative, attempting to slough off the “big lie” and pin it instead on his opponents, Trump exploited an age-old tactic, says Yale University history professor Timothy Snyder.

Former President Donald Trump repeated his lies about a “totally corrupt” election at a rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds on Oct. 9. “We didn’t lose,” he told the crowd, which rewarded him with chants of “Trump won!”

Scott Olson/Getty Images

“Part of the character of the ‘big lie’ is that it turns the powerful person into the victim,” he says. “And then that allows the powerful person to actually exact revenge, like it’s a promise for the future.”

Snyder, author of the books The Road to Unfreedom and On Tyranny, has spent years studying the ways tyrants skewer truth. Snyder points to Hitler’s original definition of the “big lie” in his manifesto, Mein Kampf and the ways he used it to blame Jews for all of Germany’s woes.

“The lie is so big that it reorders the world,” Snyder says. “And so part of telling the big lie is that you immediately say it’s the other side that tells the big lie. Sadly, but it’s just a matter of record, all of that is in Mein Kampf.

A lie that’s become embedded in public opinion

Over the past year, Trump’s lie that election fraud cost him the White House has become firmly anchored in public opinion.

According to a CNN poll conducted this summer, fully 36% of Americans do not believe that President Biden legitimately won the election. Among Republicans, that number leaps to 78%.

In an NPR/PBS Newshour/Marist poll conducted in October, just 34% of Republicans say they trust that elections are fair, while 75% of Republicans say Trump has a legitimate claim that there were “real cases of fraud that changed the results.” Just 2% of Democrats agreed with that statement.

What’s more, says Timothy Snyder, “the ‘big lie’ is not just in people’s minds. It’s also now in the law books.”

Snyder points to the raft of new laws passed in Republican-led states that restrict voting. Over the past year, at least 19 states have passed laws limiting ballot access.

Thousands came to Washington for the March On For Voting Rights on Aug. 28. Martin Luther King III, the Rev. Al Sharpton and Texas Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee are among those pictured.

Tyrone Turner for NPR

In addition, Trump loyalists in battleground states are running for powerful offices that control elections. These are candidates who are endorsed by Trump, because they’ve embraced his lie that he won the 2020 election.

And some Republican-controlled state legislatures have moved to seize power over elections, opening a path where they could overrule voters and substitute their own slate of electors to choose the winner.

All of it, Snyder says, is a direct outcome of Trump’s “big lie” and is deeply troubling for the future.

“All of those things set us up for a scenario where the candidate who loses by every measure, not just by the popular vote, but by the Electoral College, the candidate who loses by every measure will nevertheless be installed as president of the United States,” Snyder says. “I think that is probably the most likely scenario in 2024 as things stand now.”

That scenario needs to be confronted immediately, Snyder says: “It’s right in front of our eyes. The most interesting and the most distressing thing about American news coverage right now is that we don’t treat the end of democracy in America as the story. That is the story.”

We delude ourselves, Snyder says, if we think we’re immune from an anti-democratic turn. “We imagine that there’s somehow this immovable American democratic background, which doesn’t really exist,” he says. “We can lose democracy just like anybody else can, just like most people have in the history of democracy. We can lose it, and we’re losing it right now.”

“The fierce urgency of now”

As of yet, the Democratic-led Congress has been unable to pass legislation to protect voting rights, a fact that Carol Anderson, professor of African-American Studies at Emory University, finds appalling.

She argues that passing voting rights laws would “short-circuit the damage that the ‘big lie’ is doing and will do.”

Anderson sees “a Democratic Party that does not understand that American democracy is hanging by a thread, and does not grapple with the fierce urgency of now.”

We have been, in her words, “baptized in American exceptionalism” — the naive belief that the demise of democracy can’t happen here.

“Even after you have had the insurrection,” Anderson says, “even after you have had these legislatures write these laws figuring out not only how to stop Black people, brown people, indigenous people from voting, but also how to lower the guardrails of democracy that prevented Trump from being able to overturn the results in these states; so even after seeing this, to not move and do what needs to be done to protect this nation?” Anderson sighs. “It’s unconscionable.”

Guests arrive for a rally with former President Donald Trump at the Iowa State Fairgrounds. Like Trump, his fans continue to perpetuate the “big lie.”

Scott Olson/Getty Images

For Anderson, author of the books White Rage and One Person, No Vote: How Voter Suppression Is Destroying Our DemocracyTrump’s lie about the election sprouts from the same twisted roots as his birtherism lie, which is the conspiracy theory Trump peddled, falsely claiming that Barack Obama was born outside the U.S. and therefore ineligible to serve as president.

Linking both, she says, is a clear racist throughline.

“Foundational to that is the devaluation and the dismissing of American citizenship for Black people,” Anderson says. “This is about, ‘My nation is about the real Americans. And all of those folks aren’t real Americans.’ It is so vile. It is so racist. And it works. That’s the thing, it works.”

After all, Anderson says, if you repeat the lie enough times, it starts to sound like the truth.

A failed coup is practice for a successful one

In Congress, the House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol has interviewed hundreds of witnesses to establish the truth of what happened that day.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., is one of just two Republicans on the committee. An outspoken Trump critic, he has announced he won’t run for reelection.

Kinzinger compares conspiracy theories to a cancer eating away at the Republican Party, and feeding that cancer, he says, is the “big lie.”

“The thing that’s most concerning is that it has endured in the face of all evidence,” he says. “And I’ve gotten to wonder if there is actually any evidence that would ever change certain people’s minds.”

Beyond his committee’s mission of uncovering what happened on Jan. 6 itself, Kinzinger has broader questions.

“More importantly in my mind, what is the rot in the system that led up to Jan. 6? And where have we come since? And how do we stop anything like this from happening again?” he asks. ” ‘Cause even though Jan. 6 technically failed, there’s a lot of areas where you can learn from, if your goal is to overthrow a legitimate election and potentially do it successfully next time.”

And that is precisely the lesson from history, says Yale professor Timothy Snyder.

“It wasn’t enough, but next time, it could well be enough. And the fact that it’s been rehearsed makes me worry,” he says. “This is what historians and political scientists who study coups d’etat say. They say a failed coup is practice for a successful one.”

Virginia National Guard soldiers march across the east side of the U.S. Capitol on their way to their guard posts on Jan. 16. After the riots at the U.S. Capitol Building, the FBI warned of additional threats in the nation’s capital and in all 50 states.

Samuel Corum/Getty Images

What we’re potentially looking at, Snyder warns, is nothing less than the end of the democratic United States as we’ve come to know it.

“That’s just the reality,” he says. “And in order to prevent things from being frightening, you have to look right at them and say, ‘OK, that’s the monster. How can I disassemble it? How can I take it to pieces? How can I make sure that that story isn’t our only story?’ But it will be unless we tell it to ourselves straight.”

We have to confront that reality, Snyder says, if we are to find the courage and conviction to do something about it.

 

Tell the truth, Gov. DeSantis. Florida doesn’t need an election-crime investigation office | Editorial

https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/editorials/article256735862.html

File photo of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on May 6 in West Palm Beach after he signed a sweeping elections bill into law that he and other Republicans said would place guardrails against fraud, even though there were no signs of voter irregularities in the November presidential election.

File photo of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on May 6 in West Palm Beach after he signed a sweeping elections bill into law that he and other Republicans said would place guardrails against fraud, even though there were no signs of voter irregularities in the November presidential election.  AP

No one is “for” election fraud, but Florida lawmakers returning to Tallahassee next month should still reject Gov. Ron DeSantis’ unnecessary, expensive — and potentially mischief-making — proposition that the state needs a 52-person, $5.7 million Office of Election Crime and Security.

The immediate outcry from prosecutors — and the lukewarm reaction of even some Republicans — should be a clue: This is an attempt to exploit the fears of the public while allowing DeSantis to cast himself as the superhero of election integrity. And it’s no coincidence that this effort also dovetails with the false narrative that Donald Trump — DeSantis’ mentor — only lost the 2020 election because of fraud.

The state already has the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, counties already have states attorney and there are federal prosecutors to boot. This new office would have the power to take control over any investigation conducted by local police or prosecutors. That’s unwise and unnecessary. And don’t forget, Florida is already in court defending another DeSantis-driven law supposedly aimed at election security by making it more difficult to vote by mail.

 

VOTING FRAUD RARE

The main issue, though, is that election fraud in Florida is relatively rare and — here’s the cynical part — the governor knows it. He even bragged about the wonderful success of the 2020 election under his stellar leadership.

Let’s hear it from DeSantis himself, back on Nov. 4, 2020:

“People are actually looking at Florida and asking the question, ‘Why can’t the states be more like Florida? Florida was able to handle 11 million ballots,’” he said then, fresh off the election that delivered Florida to President Trump, though Trump lost the White House. “The way Florida did it, I think, inspires confidence. I think that’s how elections should be run.”

He went on: “Perhaps 2020 was the year that we finally vanquished the ghosts of Bush vs. Gore.”

That doesn’t sound like a man who is so wracked with worries about election integrity in Florida that he needs to create an entirely new office with more staffers than most police departments to combat the problem.

His own secretary of state jumped in as well. “Florida’s election in 2020 was accurate, transparent and conducted in compliance with Florida law,” Republican Laurel Lee said, as quoted in the Orlando Sentinel. “Florida has already conducted both pre- and post-elections audits, and we are confident in the security and integrity of our 2020 election results. . . . The post-election audit confirmed that Florida’s 2020 election was secure and accurate.”

 
 

And yet, take a wild guess at who would get to oversee this vast new office that is suddenly required to root out election fraud. Lee, of course.

2020 ELECTION WAS ‘GOOD’

DeSantis has said the office is needed because local prosecutors and police aren’t always pursuing election problems with the vigor that he apparently thinks is required — even though he said he also believes the most recent election went well. As recently as Oct. 12, he tried to split the difference, telling the media at a St. Petersburg press conference that the 2020 election had been “good” but then adding: “I think the issue is, Do you want to make sure you continue doing that, going forward?”

That sounds an awful lot like he wants to create a $5.7 million, 52-person office purely on spec. But of course, it’s not his money paying for it.

His spokeswoman, Christina Pushaw, continued to sound the “curbing future crime” theme, telling the Herald Editorial Board that, “Having a dedicated team responsible for investigating alleged election-related crimes will function as a powerful deterrent to would-be perpetrators of election fraud. Alongside other election-integrity reforms, this measure will go a long way toward strengthening public trust in elections.”

 

In 2018, as Pushaw noted, Palm Beach County ran into trouble completing state-mandated recounts for the November election. DeSantis replaced the elections supervisor there shortly after he got into office.

Certainly, some election-law violation cases are being prosecuted right now — but that is happening with existing law-enforcement resources. Three residents of The Villages in Central Florida were arrested this month on charges they cast more than one ballot in the 2020 election. (Two were Republicans and the other had had no party affiliation.) There’s also the ongoing case of former GOP state senator Frank Artiles, who has been accused of recruiting and paying a no-party candidate, Alexis Pedro Rodriguez, to sway the outcome of a Miami-Dade state Senate race.

No doubt, there are some cases that should be pursued, but aren’t. The Miami Herald noted that local prosecutors have a “mixed track record” on going after election-related allegations.

DEMANDING FLORIDA AUDIT

And yet, there is little evidence that vote fraud is rampant, despite the GOP’s focus on this issue nationally. A recent Associated Press review of voter fraud in the six battleground states disputed by Trump found fewer than 475 cases. They didn’t look at Florida because its results weren’t disputed. In other words, even Trump’s camp believed the election here went fine.

 

That hasn’t stopped a small number of Florida Republicans from loudly demanding that the state conduct an audit of the 2020 election results, an obvious nod to Trump. DeSantis has resisted — hard to do anything else after he proclaimed that Florida’s handling of elections “inspires confidence” — but he’s also under fire from Trump’s pal, Roger Stone. Stone has threatened to challenge the governor in the gubernatorial primary next year as a way to siphon off votes unless DeSantis says he won’t run for president, especially against Trump.

What’s a governor-slash-potential-presidential-candidate to do? Create a diversion, in the form of a new state office with unprecedented authority to investigate claims of vote fraud — even if it’s overkill. This would have been the perfect time for the governor to stand up to a bully, to make clear that he will base his career on doing what’s right, not what’s politically advantageous. Unfortunately, that has never been DeSantis’ M.O. So, he knuckled under, to Floridians’ detriment.

If the governor truly wants bolster confidence in Florida’s election system, we have a radical idea: Just tell the truth — that we all can be proud that there’s little election crime in Florida, and that his election-crimes office is totally unnecessary, after all.

But don’t hold your breath for that one.