Not The Sunday AM Shows!

Rather, lots of useful info instead. ๐ŸŒž

Sunday Morning Wrap Up by Joyce Vance
Read on Substack

This week, as I noted last night when I wrote to you, a lot was going on. Really, too much, which seems to be a definite feature and not a bug of this second Trump administration. They donโ€™t want us to be able to take in everything thatโ€™s going on. So Iโ€™m starting a Sunday morning wrap-up feature to help you keep up with anything you may have missed during the week.

  • Iโ€™m going to cheat by a day and start with the column from Saturday, August 2nd,ย Itโ€™s 1984, which is the perfect lead in for starting the conversation about our Book Club book, George Orwellโ€™sย 1984, now that weโ€™ve had some time to start reading. If you havenโ€™t started, weโ€™ll have a Substack Live discussion about it later this week, so now is a great time to get started. In the column, following Trumpโ€™s firing of Bureau of Labor Statistics commissioner Ericka McEntarfer because he didnโ€™t like the jobs numbers, I wrote, โ€œIn the novelย 1984, facts are not a barrier. Rewriting history is a central tenet of the totalitarian regime, carried out by the Ministry of Truth.โ€ We need to take note as this becomes a feature of the Trump administration. We live in a post-truth society now.
  • Inย The Week Aheadย last Sunday, we kicked off a conversation about the Voting Rights Act, which had its 60th anniversary last week. The irony of the Supreme Courtโ€™s announcement late on the Friday night ahead of that anniversary, that it would hear a case with an issue designed to gut much of what remains of it, was far too measured to be coincidence. Hereโ€™s your essential refresher on the Act, and the way the Supreme Court has eroded it. Most importantly, this is not hopeless! Electing majorities in the Senate and the House at the midterms would almost certainly make restoring the Act, which the Supreme Court invited Congress to do, a top priority. We took that issue up in conversations later in the week, which youโ€™ll want to see if you missed them during the week.
  • On Monday,ย Marc Elias and I discussed the Voting Rights Act. There is no sugar coating here, but realism about where we are, and also what the path forward could look like if we donโ€™t give up.
  • Thereโ€™s no nice way to put it. Iโ€™m heartsick about whatโ€™s happening at DOJ and the FBI. Discussed in this post,ย Desecrating DOJ. Pam Bondi is proving to be exactly the Attorney General we expectedโ€”someone with loyalty to Donald Trump instead of to the Constitution. But even here, there are guardrailsโ€”even if DOJ tries to indict its revenge cases, grand juries may refuse to go along. If they indict, trial judges and juries must be persuaded of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Make sure you read this piece to the end, because part of Trumpโ€™s shtick is persuading people to give up because heโ€™s already won, already taken the system apart, and he has not. There is still some play in the joints, and every reason for us to persist.
  • We had no chicken pictures this week, but theย Turkeysย that were roaming around in the woods while I finished proofreadingย my bookย were pretty engaging. I appreciated all the people who wrote to tell me this was a pack of males roaming around in the pre-mating season. The things you can learn here atย Civil Discourse!
  • If you missedย my conversation with Alabama Congressman Shomari Figures, do yourself a favor and go listen now. Shomari was elected out of Alabama 2, the new district created last term after the Supreme Court ruled Alabamaโ€™s legislature engaged in racial discrimination when it drew new maps after the decennial census and ordered them redrawn. Iโ€™m a little biased here, Shomari was my Obama-era colleague working on criminal justice reform and other issues, and his parents are civil rights icons in Alabama, but he makes you feel proud to be a Democrat. This is a conversation filled with hope but tempered with realism. Shomari is part of the new generation of leaders we need.
  • This weekโ€™sย Five Questionsย column featured Maineโ€™s Secretary of State (and gubernatorial candidate) Shenna Bellows, who recently told the administration to โ€œGo Jump in the Gulf of Maine,โ€ when it asked her to give them information on Maineโ€™s voters. This is someone who knows what it takes to run an election, but in addition to being smart, she also reminds us that elections are about us and about grassroots American patriotism. Weโ€™ll follow up with a Substack Live with her soon.
  • Finally, last nightโ€™s,ย A Tough Week for the Rule of Law, catches us up on more of the difficult legal news from last week. โ€œIn order to resist what Trump is doing in our country, you need to be informed; you need to know whatโ€™s at stake.โ€ It can be awfully tempting to look away right now, but donโ€™t. This is our generationโ€™s fight for democracy, and this week confirmed my sense that I landed on the right title for my book, when I called it โ€œGiving Up is Unforgivable.โ€ Get mad. Get angry. Feel the sadness of the moment. But donโ€™t give up.

I hope youโ€™ll use the weekโ€™s posts to stay up to speed and that youโ€™ll share them widelyโ€”itโ€™s going to take every last one of us to reset guardrails in Congress in the 2026 election. There will be nothing more important, and the time to start educating people around you is now. Thanks for being here with me at Civil Discourse, as we take on the challenges ahead!

Weโ€™re in this together,

Joyce

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