• Home
  • Opinion
  • Quizzes
  • Redistricting
  • Sections
  • About Us
  • Voting
  • Events
  • Civic Ed
  • Campaign Finance
  • Directory
  • Election Dissection
  • Fact Check
  • Glossary
  • Independent Voter News
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Subscriptions
  • Log in
Leveraging Our Differences
  • news & opinion
    • Big Picture
      • Civic Ed
      • Ethics
      • Leadership
      • Leveraging big ideas
      • Media
    • Business & Democracy
      • Corporate Responsibility
      • Impact Investment
      • Innovation & Incubation
      • Small Businesses
      • Stakeholder Capitalism
    • Elections
      • Campaign Finance
      • Independent Voter News
      • Redistricting
      • Voting
    • Government
      • Balance of Power
      • Budgeting
      • Congress
      • Judicial
      • Local
      • State
      • White House
    • Justice
      • Accountability
      • Anti-corruption
      • Budget equity
    • Columns
      • Beyond Right and Left
      • Civic Soul
      • Congress at a Crossroads
      • Cross-Partisan Visions
      • Democracy Pie
      • Our Freedom
  • Pop Culture
      • American Heroes
      • Ask Joe
      • Celebrity News
      • Comedy
      • Dance, Theatre & Film
      • Diversity, Inclusion & Belonging
      • Faithful & Mindful Living
      • Music, Poetry & Arts
      • Sports
      • Technology
      • Your Take
      • American Heroes
      • Ask Joe
      • Celebrity News
      • Comedy
      • Dance, Theatre & Film
      • Diversity, Inclusion & Belonging
      • Faithful & Mindful Living
      • Music, Poetry & Arts
      • Sports
      • Technology
      • Your Take
  • events
  • About
      • Mission
      • Advisory Board
      • Staff
      • Contact Us
Sign Up
  1. Home>
  2. Newsletter>
  3. newsletter>

Kevin, Tucker and wokism, D.C. voter suppression & the US banking crisis

The Fulcrum
March 14, 2023

Welcome to The Fulcrum’s daily weekday e-newsletter where insiders and outsiders to politics are informed, meet, talk, and act to repair our democracy and make it live and work in our everyday lives.


Podcast: Kevin, Tucker and wokism, oh my!

In this episode, David Riordan covers the narrative around Kevin McCarthy giving Tucker Carlson an exclusive. Debilyn Molineaux talks about the underlying reasons that woke and anti-woke are used to recruit voters.

Listen.

D.C. voter suppression by the Federal Government

How is it that 700,000 citizens of the United States are explicitly prevented from voting in Congressional elections? And what should be done about it?

In recent news, the residents of Washington, D.C., through their municipal government representatives, sought to make significant changes to their criminal code. Congress is poised to reject the new law on the basis that it will worsen public safety in the nation’s capital. President Biden has indicated that he will not veto that rejection. Among the controversial provisions are the elimination of the death penalty, and the elimination of mandatory minimum sentences for all crimes except first-degree murder. Supporters claim it is a necessary revision to century-old laws. The D.C. Council overrode Mayor Muriel Bowser’s veto of the law.

Read more.

Why SVB and Signature Bank failed so fast – and the US banking crisis isn’t over yet

Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank failed with enormous speed – so quickly that they could be textbook cases of classic bank runs, in which too many depositors withdraw their funds from a bank at the same time. The failures at SVB and Signature were two of the three biggest in U.S. banking history, following the collapse of Washington Mutual in 2008.

How could this happen when the banking industry has been sitting on record levels of excess reserves – or the amount of cash held beyond what regulators require?

Read more.

Podcast: A tricky dance

In this episode, Kyle Kondik discusses the 2024 Republican presidential primary field even though we’re still about a year away from actual voting. In the RealClearPolitics average of national polls, Donald Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (who has yet to declare a bid) together get about 75% of the total support. And Trump is leading by 25 percentage points among potential Republican primary voters, 53% to 28%. Is the Republican Party ready to move on from Trump?

Listen.

newsletter

Want to write
for The Fulcrum?

If you have something to say about ways to protect or repair our American democracy, we want to hear from you.

Submit
Get some Leverage Sign up for The Fulcrum Newsletter
Confirm that you are not a bot.
×
Follow
Contributors

Reform in 2023: Leadership worth celebrating

Layla Zaidane

Two technology balancing acts

Dave Anderson

Reform in 2023: It’s time for the civil rights community to embrace independent voters

Jeremy Gruber

Congress’ fix to presidential votes lights the way for broader election reform

Kevin Johnson

Democrats and Republicans want the status quo, but we need to move Forward

Christine Todd Whitman

Reform in 2023: Building a beacon of hope in Boston

Henry Santana
Jerren Chang
latest News

The Trump trap

Lawrence Goldstone
6h

Ten members of Congress named finalists for Democracy Awards for extraordinary public service

Our Staff
6h

Podcast: Can generative AI move politics from ‘shout with scale’ to ‘communications with scale’?

Our Staff
6h

Steel men for stalemates: Trump, Plato and the Sophists

Ryan Leack
17 May

Alaska's election innovation

Todd Connor
Eric Bronner
17 May

Podcast: Think inclusive: Facing the anti-CRT movement

Our Staff
17 May
Videos

Video: An inside look at the campaign to repeal Pennsylvania’s closed primaries

Our Staff

Video: Where the immigration debate stands today

Our Staff

Video: Bridging divides in the workplace

Our Staff

Video: DeTrumpis Hears a THEY: A Modern Day Parable

Paul Swearengin

Video: What is the debt ceiling, and why is it so important?

Our Staff

Video: Nearly 1,500 book bans implemented in the first half of this school year

Our Staff
Podcasts

Podcast: Can generative AI move politics from ‘shout with scale’ to ‘communications with scale’?

Our Staff
6h

Podcast: Think inclusive: Facing the anti-CRT movement

Our Staff
17 May

Podcast: The Abortion Talks: They found respect, but not common ground

Our Staff
17 May

Podcast: Fierce Civility: When and how to use it

Our Staff
16 May
Recommended
The Trump trap

The Trump trap

Big Picture
Ten members of Congress named finalists for Democracy Awards for extraordinary public service

Ten members of Congress named finalists for Democracy Awards for extraordinary public service

Congress
Podcast: Can generative AI move politics from ‘shout with scale’ to ‘communications with scale’?

Podcast: Can generative AI move politics from ‘shout with scale’ to ‘communications with scale’?

Podcasts
Steel men for stalemates: Trump, Plato and the Sophists

Steel men for stalemates: Trump, Plato and the Sophists

Big Picture
Alaska's election innovation

Alaska's election innovation

Elections
Podcast: Think inclusive: Facing the anti-CRT movement

Podcast: Think inclusive: Facing the anti-CRT movement

Podcasts