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~ covering government and politics in Missouri – since 2007

Show Me Progress

Tag Archives: MSNBC

We remember when Melania (r) became a protest meme.

28 Thursday Aug 2025

Posted by Michael Bersin in media criticism, Resist

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#resist, gaslighting, media criticism, Melania Trump, MSNBC, Way Too Early

Spare us from the “she cares” hagiography, MSNBC.

From 2018:

I really do care. Do U? – June 24, 2018

I “restart communications” with Donald Trump (r)

18 Monday Nov 2024

Posted by Michael Bersin in media criticism

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Donald Trump, Fascist pig, Joe Scarborough, media criticism, Mika Brzezinski, MSNBC, normalization, Obey in Advance

“….What we did agree on,” Mika said, “was to restart communications….”

Previously:

The resistance (December 18, 2016)

Practical Dissent: Protest Signs (November 17, 2024)

Practical Dissent: Resistance – OSS Manual (1944) (November 17, 2024)

Breaking News: History Repeats Itself (November 18, 2024)

Breaking News: History Repeats Itself

18 Monday Nov 2024

Posted by Michael Bersin in media criticism, social media

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Donald Trump, Joe Scarborough, media criticism, Mika Brzezinski, MSNBC, Obey in Advance, old media, pledging fealty, social media

…Each of us have four choices once the Trump regime takes power in January: 1) Resist, 2) Silence, 3) Flight, 4) Collaborate…

“Obey in Advance”

Some people are going to choose collaboration.

This morning on MSNBC’s Morning Joe, Joe Scarborough and Mika Brezinski reported they made a pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago. I immediately changed the channel.

On social media:

Jeff (Gutenberg Parenthesis) Jarvis ‪@jeffjarvis.bsky.social‬
Oh, Lord. Joe and Mika went to Mar-a-lago. “What we did agree on,” Mika said, “was to restart communications.” Access. “He seemed interested in finding common ground with Democrats.” Credulity. They revert to their mean.
[….]
November 18, 2024 at 5:14 AM

Jeff Jarvis continued:

Mika: “We know this will be a consequential presidency. The question is whether it will be constructive. It will take a new approach from all sides from both parties and a leader who can bring them together and only time will tell whether Donald Trump is that leader.” Yeesh.

“Don’t be mistaken: We’re not here to normalize Donald Trump,” Joe says after having done just that. “Obey in advance.

Meacham pontificates on patriotism and nationalism. “Nationalism is a loyalty to people who are already in your tribe, in your clan, with a ‘c’.” That he had to clarify the spelling while getting it wrong. This is white, christian nationalism with a ‘k’.

Of course, there is no one on the panel to ask, “How the fuck could you?” as we all are at home. No Glaude, Molly Jong Fast, not even a Heileman. Instead, Ignatius and Meacham fall over their fumfering rhetoric in obeisance to this betrayal of MSNBC colleagues and us.

I’ll bet Comcast bosses are happy with them. It’s a Republican company. That is what makes the betrayal to colleagues all the worse, as some MSNBC hosts are all we have left in a field strewn with the #BrokenTimes, #BrokenPost, #BrokenCNN, #BrokenNPR, #MurdochJournal
.
The Scarborough doctrine: “You can’t root against the president of the United States without rooting against America.” He won’t root against authoritarianism, racism, misogyny (against his own wife), fascism. He won’t root for the people and our Constitution. There you have it.

Was there any journalism to come out of this? No. The meeting was “on background.” Joe assures they asked for an interview. Of course, they did: giving Trump just what he wants–airtime and attention. This is how they helped get him elected in the first place.

Right after that pathetic display, Mika reads headlines about attacks on LGBTQ people and Trump drawing up a list of military officers to court martial and there is no nod to the irony. Oh, yes, let’s get along–with the destruction of the nation.

I try to envision [Joy Anne Reid], [Rachel Maddow], Lawrence, Nicolle Wallace, [Chirs Hayes] and others watching Joe and Mika’s betrayal this morning. Did they throw coffee at their TVs or merely shake their heads, knowingly?

[emphasis added]

“[….] Rule #4: Be outraged. If you follow Rule #1 and believe what the autocrat-elect is saying, you will not be surprised. But in the face of the impulse to normalize, it is essential to maintain one’s capacity for shock. This will lead people to call you unreasonable and hysterical, and to accuse you of overreacting. It is no fun to be the only hysterical person in the room. Prepare yourself. [….]” – Masha Gessen – Autocracy: Rules for Survival – November 19, 2016

Some of the responses to Jeff Jarvis:

Timothy Snyder “Do not obey in advance”

Joe and Mika: “Actually, we think we will”.

Were they scared he would come for them. It’s pathetic

I changed the channel

Jesus on a 3 legged blind poodle. I just turned off Morning Joe. Just how fucking stupid are they? Who in their right goddamn mind thinks Hair Furor Donald is suddenly going to become reasonable & bipartisan & listen to/work w/Dems?

This is why I haven’t watched the show since the election.

I’m done with them

Trump: MSDNC are traitors and must be put against the wall

MSNBC: The question is whether the wall can absorb the bullets properly, and the guns are maintained efficiently.

WTF morning Joe are you in drugs… definitely I won’t be watching you nor msnbc if you keep talking about unity with this morons. After all the thing they have done and all the atrocities they are going to do. ITS NOT JUST POLITICS. No common ground with this fascist FU….

Groveling before the warlord’s throne. Very undignified, but they gave up any claims to dignity long ago.

We’re going to see much more of this bowing and scraping. One thing has always been true about Trump: he forces people to reveal their true selves—their genuine strengths, deepest weaknesses, fragile breaking points, willingness to compromise or buckle, and their most base qualities.

I have no patience for this. They’ve all capitulated. Every single one of them. From Polis to Mika. The “shock and awe” hasn’t even started yet and they are kissing the ring

Had to turn off morning Joe. If you really believe what you said and trust your convictions, what are you doing in Mar-a-lago?

This is part of the reason why their ratings will continue to tank. Turned off after the election, was considering turning back on today…but no thank you to normalizing America’s Hitler

Turned it off as soon as she said that. Access journalism at its worst.

Oh FFS these two

Their ratings will just continue to tank. Being Fox News Lite only alienates their audience; it doesn’t win new viewers. The only clear business choice for MSNBC after the election was to replace its Lincoln Project types with strong, unapologetic progressives.

I turned on this morning to give them another chance to be real journalists and got gobsmacked with the fact they not only interacted with Trump but went to Maralago to grovel. Beyond sickening. Never watch again and any of their guests will also lose credibility.

“He seemed interested in finding common ground with Democrats.” Oh, did he now, Joe? Did he? And did he have any suggestions about how he intends to do that after years of dragging the entire party through a stinking gutter of his made-up stories? Maybe he has some sort of a “weave” in mind?

So they think they could actually negotiate with a dictator. They believe he has met them on common ground.

How people manage to lie to themselves this way, I will never understand.

Definitely an “obey in advance” with these two. Goodbye to their show/podcast.

The state of the nation: literal nazis marching in the streets of Columbus, and these dipshits heading to Mar-a-lago to kiss the chief nazi’s ass.

Leopards, face, etc

The fact that the press had to go out to Trump’s compound to essentially kiss the ring should be far more troubling to them than anything he said.

He lies like he breathes, and this is not a great look for the media’s future.

Rich folks gonna do rich folks stuff. I’m done with them. There is no compromise with MAGA. Ever.

“We’re not here to normalize Trump!” they exclaim as they normalize Trump.

Historian will marvel at the abundance of cowardice in our generation.

“.. was to negotiate the terms of our surrender”

Mika looked like she was choking down vomit as she was saying the words on the teleprompter. She does not look on board or happy.

‘He seemed interested in finding common ground with Democrats.’

Yeah right. And I hear the cow just jumped over the moon.

Fools

Previously:

The resistance (December 18, 2016)

Practical Dissent: Protest Signs (November 17, 2024)

Practical Dissent: Resistance – OSS Manual (1944) (November 17, 2024)

Ignorance isn’t expensive, getting there is cheap

15 Saturday Apr 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in Missouri General Assembly, Missouri House

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budget, defunding, General Assembly, Jonathan Capehart, Katie Earnhart, missouri, MSNBC, Peter Merideth, public libraries

It’s what follows that makes everyone in the future pay.

Missouri House Republicans want to defund libraries. Here’s why
Politics Updated on Apr 14, 2023 11:39 AM EDT — Published on Apr 13, 2023 5:11 PM EDT

ST. LOUIS– Missouri’s Republican-led House voted to cut all funding for libraries in its version of the state’s annual budget, an unprecedented move that has angered librarians and patrons across the state who rely on the facilities for everything from books to educational programming and internet access.

The proposal is not yet final; it now sits before the state Senate’s appropriations committee along with the rest of the annual $45.6 billion budget, and Republican chair Sen. Lincoln Hough said it would be his intention to restore library funding.

But for those who manage or use the state’s 160 library districts, especially in rural areas where services are not as robust, the threat feels real, librarians and patrons told the PBS NewsHour.

[….]

Tamara King, a parent and resident of St. Charles County, told the NewsHour it feels like the state’s residents should still be concerned even if the budget is not yet final.

“You start by taking away small things, right? And then you do that, you gain your support and then you go for the jugular, right? So that’s what they did. They took away everything. Now, where are these kids supposed to go and learn and have those activities that involve books?” King said. “Books create imagination.”

[….]

The right wingnut controlled Missouri General Assembly, go figure.

Last night:

Jonathan Capehart: Representative Meredith, you’re on the Missouri house budget committee. What was your reaction to this budget proposal that [cross talk] seeks to essentially defund libraries?

Rep. Peter Meridith: I mean, honestly, you can just, [cross talk], that’s right, even just hearing you talk about the facts right now, walk through the circumstances, it’s hard to believe. And that’s how we felt when it was first presented to us, when the budget chair presented his proposal that Library funding be zeroed out. And then when we asked him why he actually went so far to explicitly say it was because of them suing over this book ban and how dare they sue against a bill that the Missouri legislature passed, that they believe is unconstitutional and has created a really big problem.

Jonathan Capehart: And Katie, help us understand why librarians in Missouri wanted to fight this state law creating criminal penalties for workers like yourself, um, criminal penalties for what the law says is distribution of sexually explicit material?

Katie Earnhart, director of the Cape Girardeau Public Library: Yeah, I mean, obviously we are for Americans’, uh, First Amendment freedoms. We want to make sure that people have access to information. That’s, that’s a core tenet of our profession and we rely on that. And right now that’s in jeopardy which puts our jobs in jeopardy and that’s, that’s something that is concerning for, for all people in this profession. And it’s not happening just here in Missouri, it’s across the country.

Jonathan Capehart: And to that point, Representative Meredith, um, this effort to cut the library’s budget isn’t just happening in Missouri. In Llano, Texas this week Republican Commissioners walked back their threat to close three libraries over their opposition to a book ban that residents argued violated First Amendments rights. You know, why do you think, uh, Republican elected officials turn to defunding libraries when there’s pushback over legislation restricting access to certain books?

Rep. Peter Meridith: Honestly, in places like this they have what feels like absolute power to them and they’re appealing to the furthest right in their base. And so, right now they have decided somehow that libraries and teachers and schools are, uh, the bullies they want to call the enemy and talk about brainwashing our kids. And, you know, like this library thing they can’t point to a single example in Missouri of, of something inappropriate and obscene being given to a kid. but they’re gonna manufacture this problem to work up their base. Uh, and then the defunding the libraries just feels like the next step to them and how they exert power and punish them for, uh, exercising their First Amendment rights. It’s, it’s, straight out of a dystopian novel in my opinion.

Jonathan Capehart: Right, you know ,Katie the majority of Missouri’s public libraries are in small and rural communities. Describe how a budget cut like this would impact libraries like your own in Cape Girardeau.

Katie Earnhart, director of the Cape Girardeau Public Library: Yeah, Jonathan, we’re set to lose roughly twenty-six thousand dollars with this cut, um, for our upcoming budget year. That’s money that we use for our collection development, to buy the books that you see behind me. And for us that makes up about twenty percent of our collection development [cross talk], collection development budget. You know, for, for us it, it’s only two percent of our overall budget, but for some libraries it’s a much larger, uh, percentage, a much larger impact that they’re going to have to, uh, withstand. Some libraries are going to have to evaluate whether or not they stay open as, as many hours whether or not they reduce services that they provide, very important services that they provide for their communities. And it’s something that we don’t want to have to, to worry about that. We already have shoestring budgets and when we have that money taken away, even a little bit ,it just makes our jobs that much harder to provide the needed resources and services that our communities rely on.

Missouri, where readin’ isn’t fundamental.

Peter Merideth (D) [2021 file photo].

Anything interesting going on today?

04 Tuesday Apr 2023

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

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Tags

arraignment, Claire McCaskill, Donald Trump, indictment, irony, MSNBC, Nicolle Wallace, social media, this historic day

Bad combover. Check. Too long red tie. Check. Orange spray tan. Check. Tiny hands. Check. Cluelessness. Check…

Just asking.

Yesterday:

Deadline White House @DeadlineWH
“For the first time in his life, Trump does not want a camera….He likes the idea of being a victim, he likes the idea of fundraising off this…but at the end of the day I’m not sure he’s excited about the idea of…being accountable to a judge” – @clairecmc w/@NicolleDWallace
[…..]
5:30 PM · Apr 3, 2023

A few of the responses:

Lock him up!
[….]

Lock him up

Ironic, eh?

Legacy – January 19, 2021

19 Tuesday Jan 2021

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

chyrons, Donald Trump, just go away, MSNBC

Tonight, the chyrons on MSNBC:

“Trump to leave White House after failed plot to steal election”

“Trump leaves White House as U.S. hits 400,000 COVID deaths”

“Trump leaves White House amidst security and COVID debacles”

“As Democrats retake White House and Congress [Speaker Nancy] Pelosi blasts Trump as national ‘stain'”

“Amidst insurrection and pandemic, D.C. preps for Biden era”

That sums up the last four years.

Bad combover. Check. Too long red tie. Check. Orange spray tan. Check. Tiny hands. Check. Cluelessness. Check…

Good riddance.

Erasure

19 Wednesday Feb 2020

Posted by Michael Bersin in media criticism, Resist, social media

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#resist, Chuck Todd, Claire McCaskill, debate, Elizabeth Warren, erasure, media criticism, MSNBC, NBC, Nevada, nomination, president, social media, thumb on the scale, Twitter

Former Senator Claire McCaskill (D) [2018 file photo].

This morning, after their polling and reporting yesterday evening erased Elizabeth Warren (D):

Claire McCaskill @clairecmc
This is going to be interesting. Bloomberg on the debate stage tonight. Tune in and join us for pre debate and post debate analysis. @msnbc @BWilliams @NicolleDWallace
6:46 AM · Feb 19, 2020

I just had to respond:

Michael Bersin
So, is the pre debate analysis going to erase @ewarren? Is the debate coverage going to pixelate her face and mute any of her responses? Just curious.
6:50 AM · Feb 19, 2020

Senator Elizabeth Warren (D) [2019 file photo].

Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D): “When the nation is at its worst it needs a Congress at its best.”

14 Sunday May 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in Resist

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5th Congressional District, AM Joy, Donald Trump, Emanuel Cleaver, independent commission, Joy Reid, Lindsey Graham, missouri, MSNBC, Resist, Russia

Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D) [2016 file photo].

Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D) made a brief appearance this morning on MSNBC’s AM Joy.

Representative Cleaver first handled a question from Joy Reid on Senator Lindsey Graham’s (r) remarks that Democrats’ treatment of Donald Trump as president is unprecedented while republicans were “somewhat respectful” of Obama. The good representative from Missouri had none of that.

Right wingnuts nor most old media have no capacity for memory longer than two weeks. Joy Reid is a welcome exception in the media.

In answer to a question, from Joy Reid, referring to Donald Trump’s (r) tweet threatening former FBI Director Jim Comey with a “taped” conversation Representative Cleaver was of the opinion that republicans should stand up and speak out

On another question, from Joy Reid, on establishing an independent commission on Russia – Representative Cleaver stated, “When the nation is at its worst it needs a Congress at its best. And we’re not at our best when our whole, when one whole side of Congress has already decided that the president is just, uh, being beaten up unfairly. And it’s, and it’s rather sick.”

It is sick.

Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D): word

18 Saturday Feb 2017

Posted by Michael Bersin in social media

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Tags

5th Congressional District, CBC, Congressional Black Caucus, Donald Trump, Emanuel Cleaver, Media, missouri, MSNBC, social media, Twitter

“…but I’m also really pleased that he didn’t ask her to, to sweep and mop, um, in the, uh, in the room where the press conference was being held…”

Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D) [2017 file photo].

Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D) [2017 file photo].

Donald Trump (r) held a press conference on Thursday:

[….]
Q    Well, when you say — when you say the inner cities, are you going to include the CBC, Mr. President, in your conversations with your urban agenda, your inner city agenda, as well as your —

THE PRESIDENT:  Am I going include who?

Q    Are you going to include the Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, as well as — 

THE PRESIDENT:  Well, I would.  I tell you what, do you want to set up the meeting?  Do you want to set up the meeting?

Q    No, no, no.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  Are they friends of yours?

Q    I’m just a reporter.
 
THE PRESIDENT:  No, go ahead, set up the meeting.

Q    I know some of them, but I’m sure they’re watching right now.
[….]

Yesterday, from MSNBC, via Twitter:

kylegriffin021717

The transcript:

MSNBC: Congressman Cleaver has, has there been any sort of dialog between either your office or the CBC’s office, any sort of informal dialog, perhaps, uh, with, with the new administration so far?

Representative Emanuel Cleaver (D): No, I, I don’t think there’s been any, uh, contact or communication. Uh, I don’t even think, to be one hundred per cent honest, that, uh, the president even knew what the CBC was yesterday. Uh [crosstalk].

MSNBC: Really, Congressman Cleaver, you don’t think that President Trump knew that?

Representative Cleaver (D): Uh, I don’t think he had any idea. And I’ve looked at that tape, uh, over and over again and he was like, what in the world are you asking me? And had April not said, uh, Congressional Black Caucus, had she continued to say the CBC, I think he would have said, I, I don’t know what you’re talking about. Uh, but I’m also really pleased that he didn’t ask her to, to sweep and mop, um, in the, uh, in the room where the press conference was being held. I thought it was disrespectful.

The word is mightier than the small fingered vulgarian.

Secretary of State Jason Kander (D): with Melissa Harris-Perry on MSNBC on voter ID

09 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

General Assembly, HJR 47, Jason Kander, Melissa Harris-Perry, missouri, MSNBC, Secretary of State, voter ID, voter suppression

“….it’s pretty simple, the, uh, bill is so blatantly unconstitutional that even the sponsors concede that the only way for it to ever take legal effect is to change our constitution….”

Missouri Constitution

Article I

BILL OF RIGHTS


Section 25

Elections and right of suffrage.

Section 25. That all elections shall be free and open; and no power, civil or military, shall at any time interfere to prevent the free exercise of the right of suffrage.

   Source: Const. of 1875, Art. II, § 9.

[emphasis in original]

Missouri Constitution

Article VIII

SUFFRAGE AND ELECTIONS


Section 2

Qualifications of voters–disqualifications.

Section 2. All citizens of the United States, including occupants of soldiers’ and sailors’ homes, over the age of eighteen who are residents of this state and of the political subdivision in which they offer to vote are entitled to vote at all elections by the people, if the election is one for which registration is required if they are registered within the time prescribed by law, or if the election is one for which registration is not required, if they have been residents of the political subdivision in which they offer to vote for thirty days next preceding the election for which they offer to vote: Provided however, no person who has a guardian of his or her estate or person by reason of mental incapacity, appointed by a court of competent jurisdiction and no person who is involuntarily confined in a mental institution pursuant to an adjudication of a court of competent jurisdiction shall be entitled to vote, and persons convicted of felony, or crime connected with the exercise of the right of suffrage may be excluded by law from voting.

   Source: Const. of 1875, Art. VIII, § 2 (as amended November 4, 1958).

   (Amended November 5, 1974)

[emphasis in original]

Think about that.

Yesterday Secretary of State Jason Kander (D) spoke on the Melissa Harris-Perry show against republican voter suppression efforts through voter ID legislation pending in the Missouri General Assembly:

http://player.theplatform.com/p/2E2eJC/EmbeddedOffSite?guid=n_mhp_6mo_140208

The transcript:

Melissa Harris-Perry: Missouri republicans are ready to give the Show Me State motto a whole new meaning by introducing a requirement for showing voter ID.The Republican controlled state legislature recently held a hearing on a bill that would put a proposed constitutional amendment on the ballot this November which, if approved by voters, would allow for a voter ID law. The law would require Missouri voters to show state or federal government issued identification in order to cast a ballot. Military IDs would count. Student IDs would not. Missouri’s state Supreme Court, back in two thousand six, struck down a voter ID law and the U.S. Supreme Court refused to revive it two thousand eight. But at the end of January the Washington Post reported that Missouri Republicans believe they’ve fixed the objectionable provisions by allowing residents without proper identification to receive the new IDs they’ll need without cost. Still, Missouri’s Secretary of State says the bill could keep hundreds of thousands of current Missouri residents from voting. Joining me now from Missouri is Jason Kander, the Secretary of State for the Show Me State. Nice to have you with us, Mister Kander.

Secretary of State Jason Jander (D): Great to be with you, thanks so much.                  

Melissa Harris-Perry: Okay, so, given this insistence on this new voter ID provision I assume that there must be a serious problem with voter fraud in your state. can you tell me about what you have encountered as Secretary of State?

Secretary of State Kander: Well, you know, the sponsors of this legislation say that it’s targeted at voter impersonation fraud, which is something that we actually haven’t had in Missouri. Uh, so, you know, this would be the most extreme law in the entire country if it were passed. Two hundred and twenty thousand registered voters, uh, could be disenfranchised. So, in fact, even calling it a photo identification law I think sort of underplays it. It’s really a law that requires a very specific form of identification. So, as you mentioned, student IDs wouldn’t be good enough, the voter identification card you receive in the mail wouldn’t be good enough, an expired driver’s license, and actually, a military ID that has expired, you know, like a lot of veterans, you know, I, I carry my military idea still, like a lot of veterans. It expired in November twenty thirteen. If this law were to pass I wouldn’t be allowed to present it and vote in twenty sixteen. So, you know, a law like that, anything that’s gonna disenfranchise a single eligible voter, that’s something that I’m going to fight against.        

Melissa Harris-Perry: So, Mister Kander, I think that that’s so important the, the clarification you made there because often when I’ve had this conversation with people who support voter ID here at the table they say to me, well, you know, you need an ID to get on a plane and all of those sorts of things. But the notion that, that is in fact quite hard to comply with this law, that it’s not just sort of reasonably demonstrate that you are who you say you are.  

Secretary of State Kander: Right. Well, it makes, the bill, it makes a show of trying to say, well, we’re gonna, we’re gonna get an ID for, ID for you, the state’s gonna pay for it. But it really just makes a show of it. I mean, at the end of the day there’s still underlying documents that cost money, there’s the fact that you have to take off work, spend your time and your money to go stand in line to get an ID. And we’re talking about a constitutional right. So, it’s pretty outrageous. And, you know, you mentioned that, uh, the Republicans in my state like to say that they’ve fixed it. I think you’d find their fix pretty interesting. What it actually is, is we have of all the state constitutions in the country our state has one of the strongest voting rights provisions in a constitution anywhere in the country. So the Republican strategy here is to amend our state constitution, to weaken the voting rights provision and then pass the most extreme version of this kind of law in the entire country. So, it’s pretty simple, the, uh, bill is so blatantly unconstitutional that even the sponsors concede that the only way for it to ever take legal effect [crosstalk] is to change our constitution.  

Melissa Harris-Perry: You know, that, look, let, so let me ask you this, because you as the Secretary of State being out this early in front of this, so you, you haven’t waited until, next week the, the state legislators, state legislators are voting on this, you’re talking at this point about trying to raise some awareness, about a change to a constitution. Why get in front of this so early?        

Secretary of State Kander: Well this is a constitutional right. I mean, it’s incredibly important. You know, as I said, two hundred and twenty thousand registered voters in my state could be disenfranchised by this. Melissa, that’s eight percent, that number is eight percent of the number of people who voted in my state in the twenty-twelve presidential election in Missouri. That is a substantial number. And I’m the chief election official in my state. I have a couple of jobs, you know, that, that go with that. The first is to make sure that only eligible voters vote, but it also is to make sure that the eligible voter has the opportunity to vote. I take both of those really seriously.    

Melissa Harris-Perry: Mister Kander, hold for me for just one moment. Dorian, I want to come out to you on this because it was striking to us that Missouri is now a state that I would be talking about in the context of voter ID law. And when you kind of look at the map of the fifty states you’re just seeing these expansive restrictive voter ID laws spreading. We did have it turned back in Pennsylvania. Uh, you know, both in Texas and North Carolina there that you see in yellow, those are being challenged by the DoJ. But all those states you see in red, these things are in place and, and now Missouri potentially bringing it up, too. What is happening here?

Dorian Warren: So, it, it’s clear, this is not just a southern strategy even though it’s [inaudible] in the south, but it is a strategy of the Republican Party. And if you can’t win by attracting new voters, what’s the alternative? Kick voters out, suppress the vote. And so this is essentially, we’re seeing the ghost of Jim Crow in all of these states come alive again. Republicans are breathing new life into Jim Crow laws, just under a different name. And it’s a strategy because they know they can’t attract new voters, so they have to restrict the entire electorate to try and rig the game to stay in power.          

Melissa Harris-Perry: Yep. Mister Kander, in addition to being out in front of challenging this you’ve also taken proactive steps, things you, uh, folks in Missouri can now register to vote on line. Is that right?

Secretary of State Kander: Yeah, you know, I appreciate you mentioning that. Um, I’ve been in office a year. I’m very proud of our record of, of, you know, really following through on our philosophy of making sure that every eligible voter, uh, should meet more convenience at the polls. I think that that makes sense, that’s why we’re the sixteenth state now to have an online voter registration form. We’re pushing for early voting, uh, we actually for the first time have bipartisan legislation on it. I’m gonna continue to work on that. But again, I just think that my job is to make sure that, uh, there’s more convenience for eligible voters. And, for some reason, there are Republicans in my state and around the country who are very uncomfortable with that. And I don’t really understand that. I think that it’s pretty fundamental.                  

Melissa Harris-Perry: Mister Kander, you’re so eminently reasonable [laughter] you, you [crosstalk]….

Secretary of State Kander: Well, thank you.

Melissa Harris-Perry: ….may not get a lot of play on this cable TV situation. [laughter] Your voice is all moderate and you have all this empirical evidence and such. I, I appreciate you for joining us on MHP Show.

Secretary of State Kander: Hey, thanks very much.

Melissa Harris-Perry: Thanks. Thank you for joining us from St. Louis….      

What the republican controlled House has proposed to change the Missouri Constitution:

SECOND REGULAR SESSION

HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION NO. 47

97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

INTRODUCED BY REPRESENTATIVES COX (Sponsor), DUGGER, DOHRMAN, WALKER, ENTLICHER, WILSON, KELLEY (127), ANDERSON, DAVIS, ROWLAND, SWAN, CRAWFORD, MORRIS, HOSKINS, KOLKMEYER, GANNON, BROWN, PFAUTSCH, CROSS, GATSCHENBERGER, LEARA, REDMON, BERNSKOETTER, HURST, WHITE, MCGAUGH, FITZWATER AND LOVE (Co-sponsors).

4459L.01I      D. ADAM CRUMBLISS, Chief Clerk

JOINT RESOLUTION

Submitting to the qualified voters of Missouri an amendment to article VIII of the Constitution of Missouri, and adopting one new section relating to elections.

Be it resolved by the House of Representatives, the Senate concurring therein:

           That at the next general election to be held in the state of Missouri, on Tuesday next following the first Monday in November, 2014, or at a special election to be called by the governor for that purpose, there is hereby submitted to the qualified voters of this state, for adoption or rejection, the following amendment to article VIII of the Constitution of the state of Missouri:

           Section A. Article VIII, Constitution of Missouri, is amended by adding one new section, to be known as section 10, to read as follows:

           Section 10. A person seeking to vote in person in public elections may be required by general law to identify himself or herself and verify his or her qualifications as a citizen of the United States of America and a resident of the state of Missouri by providing election officials with a form of identification, which may include requiring valid government-issued photo identification. Exceptions to the identification requirement may also be provided for by general law.

           Section B. The official ballot title for section A shall read as follows:

           “Shall the Missouri Constitution be amended so that it will be permissible under the Constitution of Missouri for the General Assembly to enact a general law requiring voters to show valid photo identification in order to vote in person at a public election?”.

[emphasis in original]

“….by providing election officials with a form of identification, which may include requiring valid government-issued photo identification….”

“….I mean, at the end of the day there’s still underlying documents that cost money, there’s the fact that you have to take off work, spend your time and your money to go stand in line to get an ID. And we’re talking about a constitutional right. So, it’s pretty outrageous. And, you know, you mentioned that, uh, the Republicans in my state like to say that they’ve fixed it. I think you’d find their fix pretty interesting. What it actually is, is we have of all the state constitutions in the country our state has one of the strongest voting rights provisions in a constitution anywhere in the country. So the Republican strategy here is to amend our state constitution, to weaken the voting rights provision and then pass the most extreme version of this kind of law in the entire country. So, it’s pretty simple, the, uh, bill is so blatantly unconstitutional that even the sponsors concede that the only way for it to ever take legal effect [crosstalk] is to change our constitution….”

Res ipsa loquitur.

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