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2024 Is the Inflation Election

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In retrospect, the most important incident along the road to this Election Day may not have been the Democratic Party's decision to shove aside President Joe Biden, or the unprecedented (and undemocratic) elevation of Vice President Kamala Harris to the top of the ticket. It wasn't the Republican Party's inability to break out of the thrall that Donald Trump holds over it, or the two assassination attempts aimed at him.

The thing that most shaped this election happened long before all that. It was a decision made in the early days of the Biden administration. With the last election barely in the rearview window, Biden pushed a major stimulus bill through Congress—a bill that spent $1.9 trillion, nearly all of it borrowed—despite warning signs that the already recovering economy might not be able to handle the full-throttle infusion of more dollars.

"Now is the time for big, bold action to change the course of the pandemic and begin economic recovery," Biden promised. Bloomberg termed it a "big bet on run-it-hot economics," and noted that the White House had "shrugged off warnings that the economy may overheat as a result."

It was a wager that didn't pay off the way the White House had hoped.

A year later, inflation had surged to over 9 percent, its highest level in 40 years. As I've written before, that fact undersells the historical context: Before 2021, the last full year in which America experienced an average inflation rate of more than 4 percent was 1991. There was only a single year (2008) from then through 2020 when the annual inflation rate exceeded 3 percent. In other words, peak inflation in the first half of 2022 was two to three times worse than the worst bout of inflation that most Americans could easily recall.

For those of us who follow political and economic news for a living—or even as a serious hobby—all of this probably feels like, well, old news. Prices have been rising at a much more normal pace for the past year or more. In September, the annualized inflation rate was 2.4 percent. Higher than the prepandemic norm, but nothing that should cause an electoral freak-out.

But the average voter isn't a political or economics junkie, and much of America sees 2024 as the inflation election: a referendum on the federal policies that caused that brief and horrific surge in prices. (That causation is well established by now: A study by the St. Louis Federal Reserve found that "domestic stimulus" played a "sizable role" in driving inflation to 40-year highs.)

An Ipsos poll in August found that 50 percent of voters said inflation was their top concern heading into the election. In October, Gallup found that 90 percent of voters rated "the economy" as being "extremely important" or "very important" to their vote—the highest it has scored since the 2008 election in the depths of the mortgage crisis. Polling guru Nate Silver crunched the numbers further and found a stunning correlation: "Each additional $100 of inflation in a state since January 2021 predicts a further 1.6 swing against Harris in our polling average vs. the Biden-Trump margin in 2020," he posted on X last week.

It's been impossible for the Biden-and-then-Harris ticket to escape the inflation issue for two reasons. First, Harris has been unwilling or unable to distance herself from the Biden administration. And, second, because the Biden White House made economic policy so central to its message for three years—even coming up with the counterproductive "Bidenomics" slogan.

"Bidenomics was, at heart, a philosophy of throwing money at programs, people, political allies, and favored constituencies. That spending contributed directly and significantly to the rapid rise in inflation that helped fuel voter dissatisfaction with the state of affairs," Reason's Peter Suderman summarized in a March 2024 cover story. "Thanks to misallocation, poor implementation, and self-contradictory regulatory requirements, the substantive public payoffs to that spending have been weak at best and counterproductive at worst."

Of course, there are logical counterpoints to the feelings voters have about inflation ahead of Election Day. For example, wages have gone up faster than prices. Moody's estimates that the average American household is now spending $1,120 more per month to buy the same goods and services as in January 2021, but is also earning $1,192 more per month. Some products have even defied inflation: Plane tickets are cheaper now than they were before the pandemic, as liberal commentator Matt Yglesias pointed out this week.

It's also true that former President Donald Trump's economic agenda seems likely to cause prices to rise. Mass deportations and huge new tariffs will cause all sorts of economic disruptions and will make Americans poorer. It seems bizarre that voters seeking a stable economy after the past four years would put their trust in an erratic populist, but if this election season has proven anything, it's that humans get pretty irrational about inflation. In part, that's because our brains attribute economic gains to our own accomplishments but look for someone (or something) else to blame when things go the other way. In other words, your paycheck got fatter because you worked harder, but your groceries got more expensive because Biden (or the big corporations) are out to get you.

Of course, that's not true—both things happened for the same reason—but inflation breaks our brains and Election Day is not a time for deep thinking about political science or psychology. Elections are decided by how people feel, and lots of Americans still feel pretty grumpy about how much it costs to go to the grocery store these days. It's really that simple.

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mareino
7 hours ago
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I have to agree. It's a shame, because there are lots more options for politicians of all stripes if voters wouldn't care about inflation in the 3-10% range. But they do care.
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freeAgent
18 hours ago
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It's Election Day!

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Well, today’s the day! There is not a lot to say at this point, and I don’t want to waste your time by pretending anyone wants to read about anything else today.

From a content planning standpoint, the difficult thing about this week is not only do we not know who’s going to win the election, we don’t even really know when we’ll know who won. Whatever happens, though, we’ll be rolling content out over the next few days. Brian and I will be live in the Substack app this evening, once enough is known to have something to talk about. That video will be on the site (and in the Politix feed) when it’s processed and available on Wednesday. I’ll do some chats (that’s also in the app).

We’ll see what happens. Stay posted.

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What I want to leave you with today, though, is a brief plea: Please, for the love of God, do not draw strong inferences about American society based on exit poll cross tabs, and please do not trust anyone who does this.

I get the temptation! One very intriguing development during this election cycle has been signs of a racial realignment, with white voters becoming more Democratic and non-white voters becoming less Democratic. We also have evidence of a growing gender gap. People are going to want to know what’s up with this stuff as quickly as possible, and exit polls seem like a good way to do this.

Except they’re not. Over and above the challenge inherent in any statistical sampling exercise, the basic problem exit pollsters have is that they have no way of knowing what the electorate they are trying to sample actually looks like, but they do know who won the election. They end up weighting their sample to match the election results, which is good because otherwise you’d have polling error about the topline outcome, which would look absurd. But this weighting process can introduce major errors in the crosstabs.

For example, the 2020 exit poll sample seems to have included too many college- educated white people. That was a Biden-leaning demographic group, so in a conventional poll, it would have simply exaggerated Biden’s share of the total vote. But the exit poll knows the “right answer” for Biden’s aggregate vote share, so to compensate for overcounting white college graduates in the electorate, it has to understate Biden’s level of support within this group. That is then further offset by overstating Biden’s level of support within all other groups. So we got a lot of hot takes in the immediate aftermath of the election about Biden’s underperformance with white college graduates, which was fake, while people missed real trends, like Trump doing better with non-white voters.

To get the kind of data that people want exit polls to deliver, you actually need to wait quite a bit for more information to become available from the Census and the voter files about who actually voted. Eventually, Catalist produced its “What Happened in 2020” document, and Pew published its “Behind Biden’s 2020 Victory” report. But those take months to assemble, and unfortunately, conventional wisdom can congeal in the interim.

So just say no to exit poll demographic analysis!

What you can do pretty rapidly is look at geography. Not every African-American lives in a Black neighborhood, and not every person who lives in a Black neighborhood is African-American. But if Harris does worse than Biden did in the predominantly Black neighborhoods of Philadelphia, Milwaukee, Detroit, and Atlanta, that’s probably because she did worse with Black voters overall. To be clear, if you pitch this inference in a statistics class, your professor will yell “ecological fallacy!” Back in 2001, David Brooks wrote a book based on the observation that richer places were voting for Democrats now and seemed to draw the inference that this meant richer people were voting for Democrats. That was not true in 2000 or 2004 or 2008 or 2012 — the rich states leaned blue but the rich people leaned red. Since that time, Republicans have started doing better with poor people and Democrats have started doing better with rich people, so Brooks looks like a prophet. But the statistical inference was still bad!

That said, we have enough neighborhood level racial segregation in the United States that there are plenty of examples of places where it’s hard to explain a geographic shift as revealing anything other than a shift internal to an ethnic group.

Unfortunately, geography doesn’t tell us anything about gender. As best we can tell, women were 53 percent of the electorate in 2022 and as high as 55 back in 2008, but in 2020, 2018, 2016, and most other years, they’re 54 percent. In this case, if you just assume women are 54 percent of the electorate and weight your exit poll accordingly, that’s probably going to be correct. But if there, in fact, is an interesting gender skew to turnout this year (which there certainly might be), this method would, by definition, miss it and give you all kinds of bad numbers as a result. The temptation to make that assumption and charge away with the takes is going to be hard to avoid, but I really do think you should try. There’s a statistical regularity around women being 54 percent of voters, but that’s not a law of nature. The sad truth is it’ll just take time for us to know.

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mareino
1 day ago
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The mental disconnect of Trump voters

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When Cody Heller hears former President Donald Trump denigrate immigrants and promise mass deportation, it infuriates him. His Heller Farms, a fourth-generation family dairy in Jackson County, relies on immigrant labor. Thirty-two of the farm’s 46 employees are from Mexico.

He's hardly alone. A 2023 UW-Madison survey of Wisconsin dairy farmers found that nearly 40% of farms have at least one foreign employee; other studies have estimated that immigrants account for up to 90% of the labor force in the dairy industry.

Mass deportation would have a dynamic, negative economic impact, to the point where it would destroy the food cycle in our country and literally change our food prices overnight” Heller said. A 2015 Texas A&M poll found that eliminating immigrant labor nationwide would increase retail milk prices by more than 90%.

Still, Heller, who said he does not identify with either political party, voted for Trump in 2016 and 2020 and said he will again this year.

In that, he's also far from alone — the UW-Madison survey found 59% of dairy farmers identified as conservative, while only 4% identified as liberal. The remaining 38% identified as moderate, progressive or libertarian. Yet, just 15% of respondents opposed creating a pathway to citizenship for undocumented farm workers.

With his vote for Trump this year, Heller is betting that Trump's deportation promises are nothing more than "white noise" intended to appeal to his white working-class base.

“He believes that immigrant labor is directly competing for labor with his base, and that is what they like to hear,” Heller said. But that isn’t true in the dairy industry, he noted, where farm jobs are often turned down by domestic workers.

“He can’t do it, nor would he ever do it,” he said of a mass deportation.

It's a sentiment echoed by several farmers who spoke to the Wisconsin State Journal for this story, none of whom had confidence that Trump could actually enact sweeping deportations...

Rosenow said he thinks there is a “tradition” of conservatism among his community that can be difficult to change.

“There’s also a lot of apathy involved,” he said. “If you don’t care, you don’t want to see another political ad, you don’t want to talk politics, then when you go to vote, you just think, ‘well I’ve always voted Republican, so I might as well vote Republican again.’”

TLDR:  Trump says he will do XYZ, but he wouldn't do XYZ if it would hurt me.

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mareino
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Botswana’s president concedes defeat after ruling party loses election | Semafor

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The News

Botswana’s President Mokgweetsi Masisi has conceded defeat after parliamentary elections in which voters overwhelmingly rejected the ruling party that had been in power for 58 years.

Official results were yet to be confirmed by the electoral commission early on Friday, but early tallies showed the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP) had lost its parliamentary majority.

“The evidence is overwhelming. We lost the election massively,” Masisi said in his concession speech.

In a post on X, he offered his “heartfelt congratulations” to Duma Boko, leader of the opposition coalition Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC), referring to him as the president-elect.

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Boko, a human rights lawyer, spent five years between 2014 and 2019 as the country’s leader of opposition. The UDC accused the ruling party of corruption and economic mismanagement in the run up to this month’s election.

Notably, ex-President Ian Khama campaigned against his former party, having fallen out with his protégé Masisi.

The BDP had been in power since the diamond-rich southern African country gained independence in 1966.

The opposition party’s victory is in line with various polls that showed the UDC leading the BDP by up to eight percentage points in some instances. Disapproval ratings for Masisi were also high, fueled by discontent over slow economic growth and lack of opportunities.

Botswana is one of the world’s biggest producers of rough diamonds by value. But global diamond sales have been hit by oversupply and poor demand, in part tied to rising sales of lab-grown gems.

At a presidential debate earlier in October, Masisi said shrinking revenues from the diamond market had affected economic growth, even as the country seeks to diversify its economy.

“Our diamonds have not been selling since April so yes, our revenues are down but the fundamentals are still intact,” he said.

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mareino
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Cop Who Fired Blindly Into Breonna Taylor's Home Is Convicted

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Louisville, Kentucky, police did a lot of questionable things before, during, and after the March 2020 drug raid that killed Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old EMT and aspiring nurse. Their lapses included a misleading, legally deficient search warrant affidavit; a reckless, middle-of-the-night home invasion that led to a lethal confrontation; and a conspiracy to cover up the misrepresentations that preceded the raid. But the most baffling aspect of the incident was Detective Brett Hankison's decision to blindly fire 10 rounds from outside Taylor's apartment through a bedroom window and a sliding glass door that were covered by blinds and curtains.

On Friday, after deliberating for more than 20 hours over three days, a federal jury in Louisville convicted Hankison of willfully violating Taylor's Fourth Amendment rights under color of law by firing five rounds through the bedroom window. Although none of the bullets struck Taylor, federal prosecutors argued that Hankison endangered her life by unlawfully using deadly force.

Because the charge "involved the use of a dangerous weapon and an attempt to kill," Hankison faces a maximum sentence of life in prison. The jury acquitted him of a second count under the same statute, which alleged that he violated the constitutional rights of Taylor's neighbors, who were endangered by bullets that penetrated their apartment.

Hankison, who was fired from his job with the Louisville Metro Police Department in June 2020, is the only officer directly involved in the raid to be convicted of a crime. In March 2022, a state jury acquitted him of wanton endangerment, a charge based on the same use of force. Hankison was indicted on federal civil rights charges five months later. Last year, his first prosecution on those charges ended with a mistrial after jurors failed to reach a verdict.

During his second federal trial, Hankison again testified that he was trying to help two fellow officers inside Taylor's apartment, Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly and Detective Myles Cosgrove, thinking they were under sustained fire. Here is what was actually happening, as described in a Justice Department press release about Hankison's conviction:

During the execution of the warrant at Taylor's home, officers knocked on Taylor's door and announced themselves as police at approximately 12:45 a.m. No one answered the door, and the officers saw no indication that anyone in the home was awake or had heard their announcement. The police then rammed the door open and Taylor's boyfriend, believing that intruders were breaking in, fired his handgun one time at officers, two of whom fired back, hitting and killing Taylor.

Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, has consistently said he heard no announcement and had no idea the intruders who had broken into the apartment were police officers. He was initially charged with attempted murder of a police officer, but prosecutors dropped that charge two months later, implicitly conceding that Walker had a strong self-defense claim. The bullet he fired struck Mattingly in the leg. In response, Mattingly and Cosgrove fired a total of 22 rounds down a dark hallway, where Taylor, who was unarmed, was standing near Walker.

Hankison, who could not see what was happening because he had moved from the doorway to the side of the apartment, testified that he mistook his colleagues' hail of bullets for gunfire from a semi-automatic rifle. "I saw those windows and doors lighting up," he said. "It looked like there was a strobe light in there….In my mind, an AR-15 is being shot, and it sounds like it's getting closer and louder." He added that it "sounded like a semiautomatic rifle making its way down the hallway and executing everybody."

Even so, Hankison's response is hard to fathom, since he had no way of knowing who might be hit by his rounds. The Associated Press notes that "several witnesses, including Louisville's police chief," testified that Hankison "violated Louisville police policy that requires officers to identify a target before firing."

Defense attorney Don Malarcik nevertheless insisted that Hankison had done nothing wrong. "He did exactly what he was supposed to do," Malarcik told the jurors during his closing argument. "He was acting to save lives."

Not so, said Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Songer. Hankison "violated one of the most fundamental rules of deadly force," Songer told the jury. "If they cannot see the person they're shooting at, they cannot pull the trigger."

According to Yvette Gentry, Louisville's former interim police chief, Cosgrove—who fired 16 rounds into the apartment, including the one that killed Taylor—did something similar. Gentry canned Cosgrove in December 2020, saying he had fired "in three distinctly different directions," which indicated he "did not identify a target" and instead "fired in a manner consistent with suppressive fire, which is in direct contradiction to our training, values and policy."

Like Hankison, Cosgrove said he mistook police gunfire (Mattingly's) for incoming rounds. He told investigators he was "overwhelmed with bright flashes and darkness," which led him to believe "there's still these gunshots happening due to those bright lights." Cosgrove, who later found work as a sheriff's deputy in Carroll County, Kentucky, suggested that he fired his gun without thinking. "I just sensed that I've fired," he said. "It's like a surreal thing. If you told me I didn't do something at that time, I'd believe you. If you told me I did do something, I'd probably believe you, too."

An investigation by Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron nevertheless concluded that both Cosgrove and Mattingly had fired in self-defense, meaning that criminal charges were not justified. The fact that Walker also seems to have fired in self-defense underlines the recklessness of the "dynamic entry" tactics that police reflexively used in this case.

Taylor's death inspired extensive local protests and became a leading exhibit for the Black Lives Matter movement, along with George Floyd's death in Minneapolis two months later. In September 2020, the city of Louisville agreed to a $12 million settlement of a lawsuit filed by Taylor's family. But except for Hankison's unsuccessful prosecution, the raid did not result in any state charges.

The Justice Department, by contrast, obtained indictments against Hankison and three other current or former Louisville officers connected to the raid: former Detective Joshua Jaynes, who filed the search warrant affidavit; Sgt. Kyle Meany, who signed off on it; and Detective Kelly Goodlett, who allegedly "conspir[ed] with Jaynes to falsify the search warrant for Taylor's home and to cover up their actions afterward."

Jaynes' affidavit, which linked Taylor to a former boyfriend's drug dealing based on little more than guilt by association, "contained false and misleading statements, omitted material facts, relied on stale information, and was not supported by probable cause," the Justice Department says. Jaynes, like Hankison, is charged with willfully violating Taylor's Fourth Amendment rights. The former detective, who was fired in December 2020 for lying in his affidavit, is also charged with falsifying records in a federal investigation and with conspiracy for "agreeing with another detective to cover up the false warrant affidavit after Taylor's death by drafting a false investigative letter and making false statements to criminal investigators."

Meany faces the same civil rights charge. He is also charged with making a false statement to federal investigators by claiming that police sought a no-knock search warrant for Taylor's apartment because the police department's SWAT unit had requested it.

Goodlett, the detective who allegedly conspired with Jaynes, pleaded guilty in August 2022, a few weeks after her indictment. Jaynes and Meany have not been tried yet. Last August, a federal judge dismissed enhanced civil rights charges against them, rejecting the claim that their alleged misconduct "involved the use of a dangerous weapon" or "resulted in Taylor's death." Jaynes and Meany were re-indicted in light of that ruling last month.

"Brett Hankison was found guilty by a jury of his peers for willfully depriving Breonna Taylor of her constitutional rights," Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said on Friday. "His use of deadly force was unlawful and put Ms. Taylor in harm's way." Although "this verdict is an important step toward accountability for the violation of Breonna Taylor's civil rights," Garland added, "justice for the loss of Ms. Taylor is a task that exceeds human capacity."

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freeAgent
1 day ago
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This is a win for justice, but Breonna Taylor is, unfortunately, still dead. Hopefully this conviction will serve as a deterrent to other cops in the future.
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mareino
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https://screenshotsofdespair.tumblr.com/post/766179407009333248

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mareino
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