Ron DeSantis has flip-flipped on the First Step Act and is now attempting to attack Donald Trump over his signature criminal justice reform agenda. It's an interesting, though not all that surprising, strategy.
I say that for a few reasons.
First, the most obvious. He absolutely supported the U.S. House version and indeed voted for it, despite now claiming he doesn't and didn't support the final version passed into law by the U.S. Senate. He praised the passage of the bill for years and even said it would make a good template for reform in Florida.
His entire team of once-Trump supporting now-turned NeverTrumpers, to include Christina Pushaw, Ken Cucci, and my old pal Steve Cortes, all praised it before and after passage.
Secondly, when we polled the First Step Act, is was immensely popular. I'll get those results when I come back from Texas and will probably talk about this on Friday. I'd love to poll it again now because, even if Republicans no longer support it by majority, it's likely Democrats and Independents still strongly support it, meaning it'll still have majority support.
This would hurt, even cripple DeSantis in a general election. No non-white support outside of statistical norms and weaker non-college support.
Lastly, the argument in opposition on the merits is extremely weak. While there are always exceptions, those released by the First Step Act reoffend at far lower rates than the overall population of offenders.
Penalizing offenders to the max regardless of mitigating circumstances or provisions outlined in this bill, then throwing them out on the streets after serving a max, is stupid and results in higher recidivism rates.
That's a fact. Undisputed.
Food for thought: Wyatt Earp was a drunken violent offender and horse thief scheduled to hang from the neck before he became the most famous lawman in the West. He was given a second chance due to mitigating circumstances and his families good reputation.
Thank God for both the good citizens of Dodge City and Tombstone that he did.
https://www.cnn.com/2023/06/28/politics/kfile-ron-desantis-prison-reform-first-step-act/index.html
Opium Production in Afghanistan Cratered Following U.S. Withdrawal | Side Stories on Between the Numbers
Former CIA Officer John Kiriakou recently told Tucker Carlson a story about opium production in Afghanistan.
It skyrocketed after the invasion and cratered once the U.S. withdrew. The U.S. government has a long, dark and ugly history of selling drugs.
The One-Two Combo that Knocked Out MAGA + What's the Difference Between Ignorance and Stupidity?
#Epstein set it up with a left jab... POP 🤛! Iran came with the big overhand right... and POW 👊!
Down went #MAGA. Count to 10. Hell, count to 100. It's over.
Watch Live 3:00 PM EST — Robert Barnes and Rich Baris discuss in detail bombshell results within the Public Polling Project for Early Spring 2021, and more civil unrest amid the trial of Derek Chauvin for the death of George Floyd.
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This is an interesting one for you guys to follow, and is an "odd" Trump endorsement given his desire to constantly have a perfect or "near perfect" record on endorsements. One could argue it's the consultants getting payback for the money Randy Feenstra has spent on their invoices, but honestly I can't confirm that and do not yet know. I'll try to figure that out.
However, this poll suggests Feenstra was down to businessman and farmer Zach Lahn, 27%-24%, over the two days PRIOR to the endorsement. In all honesty folks, Randy has run a really terrible campaign and Lahn is flush with cash from self-funding and outraising Feenstra.
Republicans have internally been hitting the panic button on this race for months. I cannot understate how badly this campaign was run.
Can't the president's mark dramatically change the race?
Well, yes.
Data from the Iowa Secretary of State’s office shows county auditors had received 17,908 Republican ballots as of the morning of May 29. For comparison, just ...
"13 races to watch in California, Iowa, New Jersey & elsewhere" is the DDHQ preview on DDHQ Votes, the tool we use to show you results.
I've been a little derelict in sharing them, but need to start.
https://decisiondeskhq.substack.com/p/june-2-primary-california-iowa-montana-new-jersey-new-mexico-south-dakota
The American dream is getting harder to reach for regular people. Most incubators chase the next AI app or sit in research mode. My crew at Pioneering Deep Tech Institute is laser-focused on building hard things that bring the American dream within reach for regular people
The F-35 priced past two trillion and performs like garbage when it matters. AI data centers cannot handle real workloads no matter how many nuclear plants get spun up to feed them. They hallucinate at 38 percent on domain-specific tasks. They cannot replace experienced people and never will. But scared managers under pressure from above lay off experienced workers anyway. Low-hire, low-fire. The remaining team buckles. The cycle starts over.
We need fresh companies that ship physical products and employ Americans.
PDTI begins its initial 2 million dollar fundraising round while we await the IRS Reaffirmation Letter on our 501(c)(3) continuity. Seven capability clusters: Compute & Data, Robotics & Mechatronics, Materials & ...
Watching people attempt to "unskew" polls conducted by all walks of this industry—ranging from Nate Cohn at The New York Times to Spencer Kimball at Emerson College to Tim Malloy at Quinnipiac—all to deny Donald Trump's gains against Joe Biden with various voting blocs, is more than a little sad.
The slew of recent polls over two weeks—to include no less than four today alone—have simply confirmed prior findings published from other pollsters who have previously been "unskewed". That includes your's truly and our work at BIG DATA POLL, Mark Penn at Harvard University, Patrick Ruffini at Echelon Insights, and many others.
I'm temped to equate this with an Occam's razor-like situation. But this debate is more about likelihood than simplicity.
Here's the Presidential Vote Preference Trend for Biden v. Trump going back to August 2020. The Public Polling Project did not begin asking the Rematch Question for 2024 until September 2021. However, we can still make some pretty important and interesting observations.