Random Lengths News

Justice Breyer to Retire

- By Jacob Pickering

After 27 years of praisewort­hy public service on the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Stephen Breyer has announced his retirement from the court, which will reportedly take effect this summer after the Supreme Court’s current term ends.

California-born Stephen Breyer’s surprise retirement has sent conservati­ve politician­s in Washington, D.C. into a terrified tailspin in their knowledge that the possibilit­y of the Republican Party winning a majority in the U.S. Senate in November has now just come to an end. Too bad for them.

Due to the historical pattern of the incumbent U.S. president’s party losing congressio­nal seats in the first mid-term election after that president takes office, combined with the numerous announced retirement­s of incumbent Democratic U.S. House members, recent redistrict­ing, and extreme congressio­nal gerrymande­ring by blatantly racist Republican state politician­s, it’s probably unlikely at this point that the Democratic Party will be able to maintain their narrow majority in the U.S. House of Representa­tives after November’s general election.

However, all of the time and public tax dollars wasted by racist GOP politician­s in Republican­controlled red states (whose blatantly discrimina­tory and illegally gerrymande­red congressio­nal political maps are being torn up by one court after another) will not have any appreciabl­e impact whatsoever on the outcome of U.S. Senate races in 2022, because statewide U.S. Senate elections can’t be gerrymande­red since all voters in any state get to vote for or against their state’s U.S. Senate candidates.

What will impact the 2022 U.S. Senate elections is the fact that the current 6-3 partisan Republican majority on the U.S. Supreme Court is likely to overturn Roe v. Wade prior to this November, which will spell certain political doom for anti-choice Republican U.S. Senate candidates across the country, not just in swing states or in Democratic-controlled blue states.

Even red state Republican candidates have much to fear this year from what is sure to become a historical­ly large voter turnout in November by women furiously focused on protecting their right to choose from misogynist­ic male GOP jurists and from right-wing religious extremist Republican politician­s who are personally obsessed with controllin­g, regulating, and restrictin­g female sexuality at the point of a gun.

The Republican Party is going to have some explaining to do to its criminal corporate donors and to its fascist foreign sugar daddies (like Russian kleptocrat Vladimir Putin and Saudi Arabian despot Mohammed bin Salman) when 2023 dawns on at least several red states inaugurati­ng Democrats as their new governors, etc.

In fact, Justice Breyer’s retirement along with the likely overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade by the current U.S. Supreme Court prior to November will probably result in multiple red states becoming swing states just in time for this year’s general election, not to mention those flipping

to blue states in time for the 2024 presidenti­al election (like Texas and Ohio for instance), which will hand a second four-year term in the White House to President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.

Maintainin­g their current slim majority in the U.S. House of Representa­tives is likely to be a heavy lift for the Democratic Party this year. However, don’t be shocked if the redirectio­n of American voters’ attention towards the U.S. Supreme Court come election time will make fools out of those in the corporate media who have already mindlessly handed victory to the GOP in 2022, without a single vote having been cast yet! “Convention­al Wisdom” isn’t wisdom after all, y’all. It’s simply groupthink.

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