The Topline: Democracy's Daily Digest
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's public admission yesterday that his former Senate colleague Joe Biden has been elected president was a welcome development. But it was also a sign of how far we've fallen, because it should have been made five weeks ago. McConnell also urged fellow Republicans not to object to the election results when they come before Congress on Jan. 6. Again, this seems positive, but his reasoning wasn't that it would be damaging to our democracy for them to object, but that it would be damaging politically to Republicans to be put in the position of voting against Donald Trump. As a powerful establishment Republican who was just re-elected, McConnell should use his influence to steer the party away decisively from what he must know is wrong for the country. Instead, the subtext of his actions suggests an uphill climb for those hoping to reform the GOP. —Evan McMullin
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Will Trump fire another FBI director?
— The lawyers, led by White House counsel Pat Cipollone, were concerned that firing Wray could be seen as retaliation because the president has publicly pressured him to take specific actions on certain investigations—such as announcing a probe into President-elect Joe Biden's son Hunter—and then expressed frustration that Wray has not followed his suggestions.
— It's unclear how Trump's complaints that Wray hasn't done anything to investigate Hunter Biden might affect his job given the announcement last week that the FBI has already been conducting such an investigation since 2018. Trump had criticized Barr for not publicly disclosing that investigation before the election and also for publicly declaring that the DOJ has found no evidence of widespread election fraud.
— Trump recently threatened to fire acting Homeland Security Sec. Chad Wolf as well. The president blamed Wolf for public statements made by Christopher Krebs, the former head of the agency in charge of election security at the DHS. Krebs has called the 2020 election "the most secure in American history." —NBC News
MORE: Judge rejects Trump company's privilege claim in New York probe —Bloomberg
Krebs: The fight against disinfo must go on
"In order to maintain American resiliency, Congress and the incoming administration must continue to reinvent, fortify, and fund the American defense on the battlefield of disinformation through both centralized and regionalized interagency cooperation. Rumor Control was part of CISA's collaboration with the FBI, and I urge the transition team and the FBI leadership to expand this program in order to remain resilient against increasingly aggressive threats from foreign state actors and private domestic interests." —Christopher Krebs on CNN
Christopher Krebs is the former director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
MORE: Tackling disinformation is national security issue says former NSA general counsel —CBS News
Buttigieg nominated for Biden Cabinet
— The appointment is spurring optimism for a major infrastructure program, a popular legislative goal that has run into funding roadblocks and political dysfunction for years. If confirmed, Buttigieg would take over an agency with a nearly $90 billion budget and the lead in convincing Congress to approve a large enough package to fulfill Biden's campaign pledges.
— Buttigieg, the former mayor of South Bend, Ind., said his experience in that Midwestern city showed him the importance of transportation in a community's well-being. "America has given this administration a mandate to build back better," Buttigieg said. "Step one of building back better is literally to build."
— In other appointments, Jennifer Granholm has reportedly been tapped to run the Department of Energy. Granholm served two terms as governor of Michigan. In November, she penned an op-ed calling for Michigan’s auto industry to invest in a low-carbon economy. —Bloomberg
MORE: Biden picks former EPA chief Gina McCarthy as White House climate czar —The Washington Post
GOP turns up heat on Swalwell
— Swalwell had been targeted by an alleged Chinese Ministry of State Security operative named Christine Fang, who, according to reports, helped Swalwell’s fundraising during his 2014 re-election campaign. She also helped place an unpaid intern inside his office. Fang left the country in 2015 during the FBI investigation into her activities.
— The Republicans drew a parallel to Democratic calls for former Attorney General Jeff Sessions to resign after he met with a Russian ambassador without alerting Congress four years ago. The lawmakers said that Swalwell should be held to the same standard as Sessions, arguing that his interactions with the Chinese agent "were more dangerous."— Retiring Rep. Pete King, who previously sat on the Intelligence Committee, wrote in an op-ed, "I will accept Swalwell’s claim that he ended all involvement with Fang after he was informed by the FBI that she was a spy. Nevertheless, the fact remains that he was compromised and made susceptible to blackmail by the Chinese, who could threaten him with the disclosure of his involvement with their alleged agent." —The Hill
MORE: Dems call for ethics probe into Dan Crenshaw's alleged role in smear campaign of female vet —Newsweek
Mello: Pushing back on Brazil's toxic populism
"[Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro's] professed admiration of Trump is not just for convenience—it stems from shared beliefs and values. ... If the incoming Biden Administration only wishes to placate activists within the Democratic Party, naming and shaming Brazil as a 'climate outlaw' or denouncing it for democratic backsliding might be good politics. But if the U.S. is genuinely interested in pushing back against right-wing populism in Brazil, a better approach would be to work with the many actors within the country who have a genuine interest in improving the situation." —Eduardo Mello in World Politics Review
Eduardo Mello is assistant professor of politics and international studies at the Getulio Varas Foundation in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
MORE: In Brazil, law students targeted disinformation—then faced backlash —NBC News
How QAnon has hijacked the national conversation
— "QAnon is a disinformation network (that) has grown like a virus to attack the pillars of our democracy—systematically with specific forms of disinformation that are strategic," said Joel Finkelstein, cofounder of the Network Contagion Research Institute, which tracks misinformation across social media channels and has just released a report on QAnon.
— A previous report from Tufts University found that about 1 in 6 American adults trusts QAnon as a reliable source at least some of the time. Though most Americans still haven't heard of QAnon—and even among those who view it favorably, only 38% buy into its core beliefs—elements have leaked into the mainstream, with help from some celebrities, several Republican lawmakers, and the president himself.
— Rep. Denver Riggleman, a former Air Force intelligence officer who also has worked as a contractor for the National Security Administration, says he recognizes in QAnon messaging the distinct "language of radicalization." One of the GOP's harshest critics of the movement, Riggleman, whose term ends in January, warns, "This is very dangerous. I think we're on a bit of a knife's edge right now." —CNN
MORE: Charlie Dent: Why more Republicans should follow Rep. Mitchell's lead —CNN
Otis: The election is over. Reforms remain
"[W]hile the election has been settled—and most recently affirmed by the Electoral College on Monday—our divisions remain intense. We are a polarized nation of red and blue. We are cleaved along geographic, generational, racial, and education lines. Our political and cultural identities have become one. History shows us that these are the dangerous fault lines that tear many nations apart for good. ... We have an urgent need for structural reforms that might change the electoral incentives that help us repair the dysfunction and mistrust that grip our politics." —Deb Otis in The Fulcrum
Deb Otis is a senior research analyst at FairVote, a non-partisan electoral reform group that promotes ranked-choice voting.
MORE: Ex-Texas cop arrested for violent attempt to prove election conspiracy was hired by GOP activist group —The Texas Tribune
"Stunning. Today's classified briefing on Russia's cyberattack left me deeply alarmed, in fact downright scared. Americans deserve to know what's going on. Declassify what's known & unknown." —U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, Democrat from Connecticut (@SenBlumenthal)
I'm ready to leave the Republican Party. I'm aghast and ashamed at what's happened in the post-election maneuvers. And I don't see a correction coming soon for the party. So yes, give me your alternative to the Republican Party just as soon as the time is right. —Kim C., Oregon
I'm simply an American citizen that has left the Republican Party and am now a moderate Independent that is thankful for the Biden/Harris win. Other than a news piece I saw that indicated that the Russian press is pressuring Putin to offer Trump asylum once he leaves office, and the Russian interaction, which has been denied, of course, by Trump, my gut is telling me that Trump has a Russian tutor to guide him in this attempted destruction of our democracy. Trump isn't really that smart to attempt this on his own. —Kerry S., California
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