Laden...
View in browser December 15, 2020 You'd think now would be a good time for reflection for the nation's Republicans. After all, the Republican National Committee produced a whole "autopsy" in 2013 to get the party on the right track after Mitt Romney lost to Barack Obama. Then Donald Trump hit the scene, inviting Republicans to double-down on everything the autopsy would've had them change.
And in the aftermath of the 2020 election, the GOP will be doing the same, Hayes Brown argues, pressing forward with the attacks on democracy that got them here in the first place. Trump's lies about voter fraud are being turned into new restrictions on voting rights — and it's kicking off in Georgia.
Find the full analysis at the top of Tuesday's MSNBC Daily section at MSNBC.com.
UNDERSTANDING THE NEWS Top perspectives and analysis from our MSNBC columnists Ali Velshi If you thought Trump was the most dangerous threat to our democracy, you were wrong Did the fringe find Trump? Did Trump find the fringe? Either way, 2021 will be scary. Frank Figliuzzi Russia's brazen Treasury hack hints at Biden's coming Putin problem Perhaps this new hacking assault is just some last-minute shopping from Putin and his secret services. But it could also represent something bigger and more concerning. Hayes Brown The Electoral College is not necessarily the problem in our voting system There's an alternative to getting rid of the Electoral College. WATCH NOW Rachel Maddow Even after electors cement Biden win, Republican grip on reality remains tenuous Rachel Maddow Barr ends shameful tenure that began with a big public lie about the Mueller investigation All In Abrams: McConnell wants to burn it all down—and Loeffler, Perdue hold the matches The ReidOut Nurse who was among first to get Pfizer shot has message for Black people unsure about the vaccine LISTEN NOW Into America Since 2018, three hospitals in Chicago’s majority Black communities have closed. A fourth is slated to close next year. Trymaine Lee talks to an activist and a patient about what’s at stake for Black Chicagoans. The Oath Do No Harm As the Bright and Butler families confront Child Protective Services, their shared struggles raise difficult questions: Who’s really protecting children? And is this what it takes to keep them safe? MORE ON MSNBC Tell us what you think. Drop us an e-mail.
Were you forwarded this email from a friend? Subscribe to the MSNBC Daily here.
Follow MSNBC
Check out the MSNBC channel on Apple News
Download the NBC News Mobile App and watch MSNBC
Listen live to MSNBC on TuneIn
|
Laden...
Laden...
© 2025