Saturday, August 26, 2023

Biden’s Hispanic Vulnerability

Bad Hombres and Proud Latinas Reject Economic Stagnation and Cultural Radicalism


A growing cohort of Hispanics find themselves political orphans. Many of them have yet to fully align with the Republican Party, but they increasingly turn away from the economic mismanagement and leftist social extremism of the 2020’s Democrats.

As such, Biden finds a new and worsening problem headed into election year: hemorrhaging support among Hispanics, and especially among working-class Latino voters.

Per the latest NY Times/Sienna poll, his general election lead among non-college educated minorities has collapsed. Back in 2020, Biden captured a blowout 48% winning margin among blue-collar minorities, but that lead has plummeted to only 16% right now, asking voters their preference for 2024. For further context, consider that Obama won that demographic of working-class non-whites by a landslide 67% in 2012.

This worsening decline understandably alarms Ruling Class powerbrokers and Democrat partisans who previously took Hispanic allegiance for granted. Even Politico, the effective print PR arm of the DNC, recently ran a story headline wondering “What’s Behind Biden’s Latino Voter Problem?”

So, let’s answer that question for Politico!

The economy and culture are the macro  forces that explain this tectonic shift among Hispanics away from Biden and toward the political Right.

First, on the economy, middle- and lower-income workers suffer the ravages of rising prices most severely. Because Hispanics overwhelmingly fall into this economic category, inflation inflicts particular financial misery on Latino households. Granted, the pain of out-of-control prices for the staples of life knows neither color nor ethnicity. This harsh reality explains why only 16% of Americans overall report that their wages can keep pace with inflation, per the latest Investor’s Business Daily  survey.

Nonetheless, Hispanics more acutely feel this financial pinch and subsequently reject the intense economic mismanagement of Biden and the Democrats. For example, Biden’s “strong approval” rating among Hispanics is only 14%, which is the lowest of any demographic group. Digging into the NY Times poll crosstabs, the clear driver of the dissatisfaction is the economy. Specifically, a paltry 4% of Hispanics describe the economy as “excellent” while a whopping 47% malign it as “poor.”

Hispanic Americans proudly boast the highest entrepreneurship rate in the country. Hispanic men claim the highest workforce participation rate of any group in the United States. We are a community of laborers and risk-takers, but the economic malaise of Biden shrinks Latino wallets and saps start-up spirits.

Perhaps Hispanics could stomach some of the economic abuses from the radical Democrats if Biden and his media cronies showed some semblance of respect for the traditional sentiments and deeply-held religious beliefs of millions of Hispanics, overwhelmingly Catholic and Evangelical believers. But instead, Biden and the Democrats insist on a sustained campaign of radical secular humanist assaults upon communities that believe in such universal truths as the existence of two sexes. In Democrat-run states like Washington, children can be surgically, permanently sex-changed without parental approval.

Hispanics, more than other groups, recoil at such extremism. For example, on the political hot-button issue of abortion, Hispanics are the most pro-life demographic in America. Right now, 24% of Hispanics “strongly support” state bans of abortion after six weeks, almost twice the pro-life support found among black Americans. Similarly, 20% of Hispanics believe abortion should “always be illegal” compared to only 5% of blacks.

Precious few “bad hombres” can respect a commander in chief who pushes cultural radicalism constantly from the White House, especially when that extremism increasingly pollutes the armed forces of our great land, where so many brave Hispanics have honorably served.

Biden does indeed have a serious Hispanic problem…one sure to worsen into 2024. Conversely, this opening presents a historic opportunity for the patriotic populist movement to earn majority support from Latinos across America.




On the Fringe, Red Pill News, and more- August 26

 



Debate Fireworks Reflect Growing Divide over Biden’s Failed Ukraine Policy

Congress could end military aid to Ukraine starting in early 2024


With the apparent failure of Ukraine’s spring/summer offensive and the Biden Administration’s refusal to offer a peace plan, President Biden’s latest request for $24 billion in emergency aid for Ukraine landed with a thud on Capitol Hill. If approved, total U.S. aid to Ukraine since the war began in 2022 would reach $135 billion.

Sharp divisions over the Ukraine War at this week’s Republican primary debate reflect similar differences in Congress, with the two leading candidates critical of continuing U.S. military support. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis opposed more funding unless European states stepped up to “pull their weight.” Businessman Vivek Ramaswamy said he would immediately cut off U.S. military aid.

Former President Trump has taken a slightly different approach, calling on Congress to withhold military support for Ukraine until the Biden administration cooperates with congressional investigations into his son Hunter’s business dealings. The former President also has said that if elected, he would negotiate a quick end to the war.

Several debaters strongly disagreed with cutting off U.S. support for Ukraine, with former Vice President Mike Pence, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, and former Governor Chris Christie arguing that U.S. aid to Ukraine is crucial to the security of the United States, and NATO.

Although Congress is likely to approve the Biden Administration’s new Ukraine spending request, there is growing opposition by lawmakers and the American people over continuing to spend huge amounts of tax dollars on a war they view as an endless conflict in which no vital U.S. interests are at stake.

Biden Administration officials in the spring were optimistic that billions of dollars of additional military aid from the U.S. and European states would lead to a successful counteroffensive, enabling the Ukrainian army to retake a significant amount of territory and force Russia to the bargaining table. It didn’t happen. Russian forces had ample time to prepare a dense network of defensive structures to hold their ground, and Ukraine did not receive the type and quantity of weapons it needed—especially airpower.

President Biden finally agreed to Ukraine’s request to provide it with F-16 fighters in May. But the aircraft did not arrive in time for the counteroffensive and likely will be unavailable until next spring due to delays in training Ukrainian pilots.

The Washington Post reported on August 19 that a new intelligence community assessment does not anticipate Ukraine’s counteroffensive to make significant gains on the ground before the fighting season ends in early November. Although this conclusion tracks with other accounts, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said this week, “We do not assess that the conflict is a stalemate. We are seeing [Ukraine] continue to take territory on a methodical, systematic basis.”

According to the Financial Times, however, Biden Administration officials are gloomy about the counteroffensive’s prospects and have been critical of how it has been conducted. The Financial Times reports that U.S. officials believe Ukraine has been too risk-averse and misallocated its forces by concentrating on the east of the front instead of sending more troops to the south.

With the Biden Administration refusing to put forward a cease-fire or peace proposal, other nations have stepped up. Saudi Arabia hosted a 42-nation summit on the Ukraine conflict earlier this month. Although the summit did not make any progress to end the war, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman said the meeting set the stage for future peace talks and hopes to hold a follow-up summit. China stole the show at summit while the United States was sidelined.

At this week’s BRICS summit in South Africa, China attempted to build on the Saudi summit when it proposed a new joint China-South Africa peace plan that would make these two nations negotiators to end the Ukraine War.

Given Beijing’s growing relationship with Moscow, China is certain to use any role it might play in a Ukraine War peace process to negotiate an agreement that promotes Russian and Chinese interests at the expense of NATO and the United States.

The Biden Administration on August 10 submitted an emergency funding request for $24 billion for Ukraine, mostly military aid. To make it hard for congressional opponents of U.S. aid to Ukraine to vote against the funding request, the administration included it as part of a larger $40 billion spending package that includes disaster relief for the Hawaii wildfires, border security, and fighting fentanyl trafficking.

The emergency funding request was not well received by the House. Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) declared the Ukraine request is “not going anywhere” and would need to go through the normal appropriations process.

Although a bipartisan majority in Congress appears to support continuing U.S. spending to arm Ukraine, Axios on August 23 quoted a House leadership aide who said support is growing beyond House hardliners to cut off U.S. aid. The aide told Axios: “A lot of the rank-and-file members were pretty clear: We’ve done what we can do, we need to focus on some of our own internal problems now.”

Moreover, in a significant turnabout, U.S. Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.), formerly a staunch supporter of the war effort, said during an August 17 townhall that it is time to wind down direct U.S. aid to Ukraine. “I’m not sure it’s winnable anymore,” Harris said.

Other critics believe the Biden Administration has done almost nothing in the aftermath of the Maui wildfires and want the funds requested for Ukraine spent instead on disaster relief in Hawaii. In a Fox News interview, former Assistant Treasury Secretary Monica Crowley accused Biden of prioritizing Ukrainians over Americans in his response to the Hawaii wildfires and said he is putting America’s interests and the American people last.

Despite the adamant defense of continuing U.S. military aid to Ukraine by Pence, Haley and Christie at the GOP debate, their arguments were out of step with the facts on the ground in the Ukraine conflict and the views of a growing number of Americans and members of Congress who do not want their tax dollars supporting another endless war. Without a major reboot of the Biden Administration’s Ukraine strategy to either ensure a Ukrainian victory that includes recovering most of its territory from Russia (which I believe is impossible) or a comprehensive plan to end the war, there is a strong likelihood that growing opposition will lead Congress to end military aid to Ukraine, probably starting in early 2024.



Outlaw Country


The Duke boys, James Dean, Jesse James, Josey Wales...Donald J. Trump. 

The United States of America is an interesting creature. Despite it being a cultural melting pot, the one thing that's baked into its core is a sense of rebellion. Americans love an outlaw. They're so romanticized in our culture that we make movies and write books about them, and boy do they sell. 

Some of the most popular characters in our media are based on the swaggering rebel fighting the good fight against a bad system. Han Solo, Michael Corleone, Tyler Durden, and even lighter characters like Ferris Bueller and Ren MacCormack all play to America's love of the man operating by his own rules, outside the bounds of the system. 

So one has to wonder if the left has so completely lost touch with the American people that it didn't think about this very basic cultural standard when putting Trump up against a wall and taking his picture at a jailhouse. 

As Bob Hoge wrote on Thursday evening, the Democrats had been salivating for Trump's mugshot, and they finally got it. 

But do you know who wanted that mugshot even more than the left? The right, specifically Trump supporters. Because they knew what would happen the moment it was released. 

And it did happen. 

The photo became more than a photo, it became a rallying cry. People began posting it left and right, with the vast majority of them using it to speak out against an unjust, weaponized system utilized by elites to keep themselves in power. 

The left thought the photo would be the closest they could get to having Trump's scalp, but instead, it became a symbol of their corruption and their fear.

And why wouldn't it? Even people out there who don't want to vote for Trump can admit that the witch hunt against him is wildly unfair and based on little more than political and ideological hatred. The abuse of America's justice system is egregious whether you hate Trump or not. 

He is outside the system according to the system, and the system shows it by treating him like another. Someone who should be silenced and jailed at all costs. 

What about that wouldn't make him appealing to a very large swath of Americans? Especially as the people who control the system, the Democrats, continue to mishandle everything from the economy to the border, and everything in between. With this photo, they pointed at Trump and with the loudest bullhorn they could find said "Here is the outlaw Donald Trump, the greatest threat to our system." 

People are already putting this photo on t-shirts. I imagine wanted posters will start popping up soon if they haven't already. You're going to see this picture on stickers posted on light poles, storefront windows, car bumpers, and all over the DNC convention. 

They made Trump into a symbol, and symbols are way harder to bring down than a person. 

If anything, this proves the left has lost touch with America and fundamentally misunderstands it. Like any authoritarian, they hate rebellion, and maybe that's why they felt good about putting Trump into the "rebel" category. They really thought they were sticking it to him doing it, but instead, they just created a rallying point. 

I can't clap slowly enough. 



Trump Surges to 61% National Support, No Other Candidate in Double Digits


Rupert Murdoch owns the New York Post who commissioned the statistically valid poll of 1,800 voters. [DATA HERE]

Within the results, President Trump now commands 61% of the vote amid Republicans, with no other candidate reaching double digits.  Ron DeSantis has collapsed to 9% after losing two-thirds of his previous support.

[Poll Data Here]

Chris Christie and Asa Hutchinson no longer register any support.  Vivek Ramaswamy polls with 5%, the same as Mike Pence.

The poll was conducted after the Republican primary debate.

Latest artwork by Joshua Youngbluth:


CNN's Van Jones Says Dems Are Worried About Biden, but Afraid to 'Go on TV and Say It'


Mike Miller reporting for RedState 

Yo, Democrats — can we just be honest?   

Any Democrat who's paid even a modicum of attention to Joe Biden over the last three years who's not concerned about the nearly 81-year-old president's steadily declining state is in a serious state of denial. Trust me — I get it. 

I mean, I know you have to pretend your president is in tip-top shape, but in that place in your mind you don't like to go, you know the guy's on a slippery slide to complete incoherence, right? Of course, you do; you just don't want to say it out loud.

Welp, one Democrat who's surprisingly not afraid to say it out loud is CNN political commentator Van Jones, who on Thursday said Democrats are concerned about Biden with respect to the 2024 general election, but they talk "behind their hand" because they don't want to lose out on invitations to parties.

With all due respect to Van Jones, invitations to parties are — or should be — the least of concerns for Democrats concerned about Biden's declining mental and physical condition.

CNN anchor Jim Sciutto broached the "Biden problem" question with Jones:

President Biden's age came up and this morning [when] Nikki Haley said, 'There is no way Joe Biden is going to finish out the next term, we can't have an 81-year-old president, we have to have a new generational leader.' 

As you know, polls show, it's not just a Republican position but that Americans do have concerns about his age and frankly they would like choices other than not just Trump and Biden. 

If there is no credible effort now for the possibility of an alternative Democratic candidate, should there be in your view?

Sciutto's (and Haley's) point was valid, based simply on average life expectancy. Various sources report the average life expectancy for a white male in the U.S. is roughly age 77. Toss in the reality of life in Joe Biden World, and things get rather "tricky," as Jones suggested.

Well, that's a tricky one. I think people are concerned about Joe Biden. They really are. I mean, Democrats, they talk behind their hand. Nobody wants to go on TV and say it because we all like to be able to go to barbecues and house parties. But people are concerned. 

And I do think that anybody but Trump going up against someone like Biden given some of his challenges recently probably might have a good shot and could make that age an issue. The problem is when you put Biden up against Trump, Trump has so many other issues, he's not that much younger, that it becomes a little bit of a wash and then people just kind of go back to their respective corners.

Notice how Jones pointed to the "so many other issues" of Donald Trump, while totally ignoring the "so many other issues" of Joe Biden? 

Yet, from the Biden Border Crisis to the Biden Energy Crisis to Bidenomics, ample reasons exist that have zero to do with Joe Biden's advanced age and declining condition for Democrats to kick him to the curb and be rid of him once and for all. (Let's hope they don't, though.)

Yet, according to a New York Times/Siena College Poll that was released earlier in August, just 50 percent of Democrat primary voters said the party should nominate a different person for the 2024 presidential election. The only surprise here is that the number was only 50 percent.

The Democrat Difference

Unlike the Republican Party, the Democrat Party has generally done a good job of denying undesirable presidential candidates the nomination. We can look back to 2016 and 2020 for the most recent examples. In both election cycles, self-declared socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) threatened to win the Democrat nomination.

In 2016, the Democrat Party employed so-called superdelegates — superdelegates are seated automatically — to stave off Socialist Bernie. In 2020, establishment Democrats began coalescing around Biden in a successful attempt to bolster his campaign and stall Sanders’ momentum, as voters in 14 states prepared to cast ballots on Super Tuesday, the most consequential day of the presidential nominating contest.

That said, the Joe Biden of 2023 is a markedly different guy than the Joe Biden of 2020. One can only imagine what the Joe Biden of January 20, 2025 — Inauguration Day — will be like. 

Still, and perhaps I sound almost as bad as elder-abuser "Dr." Jill Biden, I'd like nothing more than for ol' Joe to be the Democrat standard-bearer on the 2024 Democrat Party's presidential ticket. 

You can watch the segment, here. 

The Bottom Line

Meanwhile, it would behoove the Republican Party to get its crap together. The 2024 presidential election will be the most consequential election in recent history. 

The very thought of four more years of a Democrat administration should send shivers down the spine of every constitutional conservative across the fruited plain. 



Steve Bannon Outlines National American Destiny as Attached to Trump Destiny



Steve Bannon did an excellent monologue today outlining how President Donald Trump is one of only three people who have the destiny of the nation attached to their own destiny. {Direct Rumble Link}

Together with President Abraham Lincoln and President George Washington, the destiny of our constitutional Republic as intrinsically tied to President Donald Trump.



Brenden Dilly has an excellent encapsulation also:

“The streets have never had a President. They’ve never had someone they could relate to, at least on some level, about a particular struggle or unjust circumstance…

Until last night. Last night, the streets were given a champion. They were given someone who they could see being set up, railroaded, arrested, and humiliated, just the way they have for decades.

Real recognizes real, and last night, the establishment uniparty made what will go down as the biggest mistake in modern history.

They martyred Trump and gave the streets a reason to love him.


Judge Presiding Over Trump’s Jan. 6 Trial Has Track Record of Politically Charged J6 Rulings

Judge Chutkan has repeatedly expressed strong and settled opinions about the issues at the heart of United States v. Donald Trump — the criminal case she is now presiding over.  



At her first appearance in the criminal case against Donald Trump for his alleged attempt to overturn the 2020 election, U.S. District Court Judge Tanya S. Chutkan repeatedly warned the former president’s lawyers that politics would not be tolerated in her courtroom. 

“The fact that [Trump is] running a political campaign has to yield to the orderly administration of justice,” Chutkan said during the Aug. 11 hearing. “If that means he can’t say exactly what he wants to say about witnesses in this case, that’s how it has to be.” 

But even as she warns Trump about his “inflammatory” language, Chutkan has routinely issued politically charged rulings and made incendiary statements of her own while presiding over some 30 cases involving Trump supporters charged in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, melee at the U.S. Capitol. 

A review of thousands of pages of hearing transcripts reveals that Chutkan has repeatedly expressed strong and settled opinions about the issues at the heart of United States v. Donald Trump — the criminal case she is now presiding over.  

These include her public assertions that the 2020 election was beyond reproach, that the Jan. 6 protests were orchestrated by Trump, and that the former president is guilty of crimes. She has described Jan. 6 as a “mob attack” on “the very foundation of our democracy” and branded the issue at the heart of the case she is hearing — Trump’s claim that the 2020 election was stolen — a conspiracy theory.   

Although judges often make comments from the bench, Chutkan’s strident language raises questions about her impartiality in handling the case against the presumptive GOP nominee for president in 2024. 

The U.S. code that addresses grounds for recusal states, “Any justice, judge, or magistrate judge of the United States  shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” One reason to recuse is if the judge has demonstrated “a personal bias or prejudice concerning a party.”  

GOP Rep. Matthew Gaetz of Florida recently filed a resolution to condemn and censure Chutkan for exhibiting “open bias and partisanship in the conduct of her official duties as a judge.”  

But if the aim among Trump loyalists is to get a new judge assigned to the case, it’s a steep legal hurdle. Stephen Gillers, a professor of law at New York University, said that typically a judge can be recused for bias or the appearance of bias “only when the purported bias comes from a source outside the judge’s work as a judge.” He continued, “Almost never will a judge be recused for opinions she forms as a judge — in hearing cases and motions. Judges are expected to form opinions based on these  ‘intrajudicial’ sources. It’s what judges do.”  

A Trump representative declined to comment about Judge Chutkan’s potential bias. The chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and the American Bar Association did not respond to requests for comment. Nor did Chutkan. 

Appointed by Barack Obama to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in 2013, Chutkan has been one of the toughest judges on Jan. 6 defendants. In several cases, she has given defendants longer prison terms than recommended by prosecutors. In at least two cases she sentenced defendants to jail time when prosecutors only sought probation. Chutkan herself admitted during a July 2022 court hearing that she is “one of the few judges that’s given a lot of terms of incarceration” in Jan 6. cases. 

On at least one occasion, Chutkan suggested in open court that Trump should have been charged for his alleged role in what she routinely describes as “an attempt to overthrow the government” on Jan. 6.  

Before sentencing Christine Priola, a Trump supporter from Ohio who pleaded guilty to obstruction of an official proceeding, to 15 months in jail, Chutkan appeared to lament the fact Trump was not yet in prison. “[The] people who mobbed that Capitol were there in fealty, in loyalty, to one man — not to the Constitution, of which most of the people who come before me seem woefully ignorant, not to the ideals of this country, and not to the principles of democracy,” Chutkan said on Oct. 28, 2022. “It’s a blind loyalty to one person who, by the way, remains free to this day” (emphasis added). 

Chutkan accused Matthew Mazzocco, another Jan. 6 defendant, of choosing Trump over the country. In rejecting Mazzocco’s argument that he traveled from Texas to Washington to engage in a legal political demonstration, Chutkan declared at his October 2021 sentencing hearing: “He went there to support one man who he viewed had the election taken from him. In total disregard of a lawfully conducted election, he went to the Capitol in support of one man, not in support of our country or in support of democracy.”   

Although Mazzocco only spent 12 minutes inside the Capitol and committed no violence, Chutkun rejected the government’s recommendation of three months of home confinement for pleading guilty to “parading” in the Capitol, a Class B misdemeanor, and instead sentenced Mazzocco to 45 days in jail.   

Despite President Trump’s explicit request that his supporters march “peacefully and patriotically” to the Capitol, Chutkan blamed Trump for the Jan. 6 violence while sentencing Robert Palmer, who pleaded guilty in June 2021 to one count of assaulting police officers with a dangerous weapon (a fire extinguisher). In that case, Palmer’s lawyer sought a reduced prison sentence by echoing the judge’s view of Trump.  

“Mr. Palmer went to the Capitol at the behest of the former president,” attorney Bjorn E. Brunvand wrote in a December 2021 sentencing memo to Chutkan. “Like many others who participated in the Capitol riot, Mr. Palmer blindly followed the many figures who falsely but persistently claimed that the election had been stolen from the president.”  

Palmer himself told Chutkan that Trump’s claims about a “stolen” 2020 election prompted him to travel from his Tampa home to the nation’s capital to participate in the Capitol protest. In a handwritten note dated November 2021, Palmer told Chutkan that he realized “Trump supporters were lied to by those that at the time had great power meaning the then sitting president, as well as those acting in his behalf.” 

Palmer apologized to Chutkan for his conduct and begged for mercy. 

His plea fell on deaf ears. Although Chutkan expressed no sympathy for Palmer, whom she sent to prison for more than five years, she amplified Palmer’s assertions that Trump bore some responsibility:

 

And it is true, Mr. Palmer you have made a very good point, one that has been made before – that the people who exhorted you and encouraged you and rallied you to go and take action and to fight have not been charged. That is not this court’s position. I don’t charge anybody. I don’t negotiate plea offers. I don’t make charging decisions. I sentence people who have pleaded guilty or have been convicted. The issue of who has or has not been charged is not before me. I don’t have any influence on that. I have my opinions, but they are not relevant. And you’re correct in that no one who was encouraging everybody to take the Capitol has been charged as of yet, but I don’t think that fact means that you should get a lower sentence. 

Chutkan’s references to the former president aren’t the only area of concern for Trump. Her comments from the bench also suggest that she shares the same view of Jan. 6 as the man prosecuting Trump in her courtroom, Special Counsel Jack Smith.

Tasked by Attorney General Merrick Garland with investigating “whether any person or entity unlawfully interfered with the transfer of power following the 2020 presidential election or the certification of the Electoral College vote held on or about January 6, 2021,” Smith indicted Trump in the District of Columbia on three conspiracy counts and one obstruction count last month.  

Throughout the 45-page indictment, Smith repeatedly accused Trump of knowingly promoting falsehoods about the 2020 presidential election. “[For] more than two months following election day on November 3, 2020, the Defendant spread lies that there had been outcome-determinative fraud in the election and that he had actually won. These claims were false, and the Defendant knew that they were false. But the Defendant repeated and widely disseminated them anyway — to make his knowingly false claims appear legitimate, create an intense national atmosphere of mistrust and anger, and erode public faith in the administration of the election.” 

Chutkan clearly shares that view. On numerous occasions, the judge has insisted the 2020 election was legitimate and fully vetted by the court system — a claim disputed by Trump that lies at the heart of the case she is now hearing.  

“He went to the Capitol because, despite election results which were clear-cut, despite the fact that multiple court challenges all over the country had rejected every single one of the challenges to the election, Mr. Palmer didn’t like the result. He didn’t like the result, and he didn’t want the transition of power to take place because his guy lost,” Chutkan also said during Palmer’s sentencing. (When not cryptically referring to Trump, Chutkan often describes the former president as “guy.”) 

She has accused individuals who believe the 2020 election was “stolen” as promoting “conspiracy theories.” In the case of Donna Bissel, who pleaded guilty to the nonviolent petty offense of “parading” in the Capitol, Chutkan cited Bissel’s personal beliefs as reason to sentence her to 14 days in jail rather than impose the three-year probation sentence recommended by prosecutors. 

“As noted in the government’s sentencing memo, the defendant appears to be susceptible to believing outlandish and absurd conspiracy theories,” Chutkan said during Bissel’s October 2021 sentencing. “To protect the public, it’s important to make sure that she does not fall victim to another lie or conspiracy and act out in a way that again jeopardizes public safety. It’s one thing to believe in conspiracy theories in your basement, and it’s another thing to act out on them and, for instance, to travel from Indiana to D.C. to storm the Capitol to overturn an election.” 

Court records show that Chutkan has repeatedly scolded defendants who question the integrity of the 2020 election — skepticism shared by 39 percent of Americans, according to a recent CNN poll. Here are a few examples of Chutkan’s comments on Jan. 6:  

  • USA v. Scott Ponder: “When you say you got caught up, Mr. Ponder, there’s a lot of rage and a lot of emotion and a lot of tension as you describe, and people felt very strongly, right or wrongly, that an election had been stolen. I think the evidence is quite clear that it had not, but that’s neither here nor there.” (July 26, 2022)
  • Larocca: Got an earful from Chutkan: “Everyone standing around with their cameras on that — in front of those doors, every single one of those people contributed to the mob that tried to intimidate those police officers; that tried to gain entry into that building; that were trying to stop the transfer of power and nullify a lawfully conducted election. This was a lawfully conducted election.” (Aug. 10, 2022)
  • USA v. Christian Cortez: “[He] was motivated to come because his candidate didn’t win and he somehow believed this election was stolen and he wanted to get it back. As I said, this wasn’t just a protest. He wanted to — that mob wanted to overthrow the government. They wanted to undo the results of what they considered a stolen election; their guy didn’t win.” (Aug. 31, 2022) 

Little Nuance: Chutkan’s View of Jan. 6 

For Chutkan, the events of Jan. 6 provoke strong emotions, which she freely volunteers from the bench. “[Every] single time I watch the videos and look at the photographs of what was going on that day, I am struck anew by how horrible this was, by how violent and terrifying, and how the outnumbered and vastly unequipped law enforcement officers were feeling that day as they were basically struggling for their lives and wondering if they were going to make it home to their kids,” Chutkan told defendant Matthew Caspel in December 2022. “I don’t know if we’ll ever recover from that.” 

A former public defender in Washington, D.C. — one of the country’s most perennially violent cities, and one generally lenient toward criminals — Chutkan argues that Jan. 6 is among the worst crime scenes she’s ever witnessed.  

“I watch these videotapes in almost every case, and every single time I am struck anew at how horrifying the events of that day were,” she volunteered to Benjamin Larocca, who pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct misdemeanor and received 60 days in jail. “And I’m struck as someone who is watching — has seen this kind of footage multiple times and was looking at footage on the day — and as somebody, frankly, who has seen a lot of crime scene footage. I was a criminal defense lawyer, I was a public defender for many years. I’m not easily shocked, but it’s shocking.”  

Many observers believe Trump already confronts a nearly insurmountable task in receiving a fair trial in the nation’s capital, a city that voted 92 percent for Joe Biden. Further, the Justice Department has a near-perfect conviction rate in Jan. 6 trials. Chutkan’s extensive record of comments suggests the judge presiding over his case will not make it any easier.