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#casar — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #casar, aggregated by home.social.

  1. #Texas, March 3: A gerrymandered scramble
    
It is a rare thing for the Lone Star State to have marquee races at the top of both the Democratic and Republican ballots,
    which is why the contests for the two parties’ U.S. Senate nominations are getting so much national attention.


    But the GOP-led legislature’s audacious mid-decade redistricting scheme to win five additional congressional seats has also set off a scramble making downballot primary races as crowded and confusing as the Dallas freeway system.
    
⭐️There are a dozen open-seat House contests,
    six of which have attracted 10 or more candidates.

    Some might advance to the May 26 runoff with the slimmest of pluralities.
    
Democrats have not been daunted by the many newly drawn districts that favor the GOP.

    When Rep. Greg #Casar’s reliably blue 35th District near San Antonio was gutted to favor a Republican,
    he bolted to run in the nearby 37th.

    In the district he left behind, however, four other Democrats have stepped up,
    hoping to be the one who challenges whoever among the 11 Republicans running manages to make it to the November ballot.

    “I’m surprised that only four Democrats are in this race, because I was preaching that this is a winnable seat for Democrats,”
    said Marine Corps veteran John #Lira,
    a Democrat running in the 35th
    who argues that the larger political shifts this year could be enough to overcome the 10-point margin by which Trump won the new district in 2024.
    
If so, it might turn out that 2026’s great gerrymandering gambit will have backfired.

  2. #Texas, March 3: A gerrymandered scramble
    
It is a rare thing for the Lone Star State to have marquee races at the top of both the Democratic and Republican ballots,
    which is why the contests for the two parties’ U.S. Senate nominations are getting so much national attention.


    But the GOP-led legislature’s audacious mid-decade redistricting scheme to win five additional congressional seats has also set off a scramble making downballot primary races as crowded and confusing as the Dallas freeway system.
    
⭐️There are a dozen open-seat House contests,
    six of which have attracted 10 or more candidates.

    Some might advance to the May 26 runoff with the slimmest of pluralities.
    
Democrats have not been daunted by the many newly drawn districts that favor the GOP.

    When Rep. Greg #Casar’s reliably blue 35th District near San Antonio was gutted to favor a Republican,
    he bolted to run in the nearby 37th.

    In the district he left behind, however, four other Democrats have stepped up,
    hoping to be the one who challenges whoever among the 11 Republicans running manages to make it to the November ballot.

    “I’m surprised that only four Democrats are in this race, because I was preaching that this is a winnable seat for Democrats,”
    said Marine Corps veteran John #Lira,
    a Democrat running in the 35th
    who argues that the larger political shifts this year could be enough to overcome the 10-point margin by which Trump won the new district in 2024.
    
If so, it might turn out that 2026’s great gerrymandering gambit will have backfired.

  3. #Texas, March 3: A gerrymandered scramble
    
It is a rare thing for the Lone Star State to have marquee races at the top of both the Democratic and Republican ballots,
    which is why the contests for the two parties’ U.S. Senate nominations are getting so much national attention.


    But the GOP-led legislature’s audacious mid-decade redistricting scheme to win five additional congressional seats has also set off a scramble making downballot primary races as crowded and confusing as the Dallas freeway system.
    
⭐️There are a dozen open-seat House contests,
    six of which have attracted 10 or more candidates.

    Some might advance to the May 26 runoff with the slimmest of pluralities.
    
Democrats have not been daunted by the many newly drawn districts that favor the GOP.

    When Rep. Greg #Casar’s reliably blue 35th District near San Antonio was gutted to favor a Republican,
    he bolted to run in the nearby 37th.

    In the district he left behind, however, four other Democrats have stepped up,
    hoping to be the one who challenges whoever among the 11 Republicans running manages to make it to the November ballot.

    “I’m surprised that only four Democrats are in this race, because I was preaching that this is a winnable seat for Democrats,”
    said Marine Corps veteran John #Lira,
    a Democrat running in the 35th
    who argues that the larger political shifts this year could be enough to overcome the 10-point margin by which Trump won the new district in 2024.
    
If so, it might turn out that 2026’s great gerrymandering gambit will have backfired.

  4. #Texas, March 3: A gerrymandered scramble
    
It is a rare thing for the Lone Star State to have marquee races at the top of both the Democratic and Republican ballots,
    which is why the contests for the two parties’ U.S. Senate nominations are getting so much national attention.


    But the GOP-led legislature’s audacious mid-decade redistricting scheme to win five additional congressional seats has also set off a scramble making downballot primary races as crowded and confusing as the Dallas freeway system.
    
⭐️There are a dozen open-seat House contests,
    six of which have attracted 10 or more candidates.

    Some might advance to the May 26 runoff with the slimmest of pluralities.
    
Democrats have not been daunted by the many newly drawn districts that favor the GOP.

    When Rep. Greg #Casar’s reliably blue 35th District near San Antonio was gutted to favor a Republican,
    he bolted to run in the nearby 37th.

    In the district he left behind, however, four other Democrats have stepped up,
    hoping to be the one who challenges whoever among the 11 Republicans running manages to make it to the November ballot.

    “I’m surprised that only four Democrats are in this race, because I was preaching that this is a winnable seat for Democrats,”
    said Marine Corps veteran John #Lira,
    a Democrat running in the 35th
    who argues that the larger political shifts this year could be enough to overcome the 10-point margin by which Trump won the new district in 2024.
    
If so, it might turn out that 2026’s great gerrymandering gambit will have backfired.

  5. Mit #Laser, #Röntgen und #KI 2.000 Jahre alte #Papyrus-Rollen sollen lesbar werden.

    Vor 2.000 Jahren zerstörte der Ausbruch des #Vesuvs auch eine große #Bibliothek. Hunderte #Papyrus-Rollen sind seitdem verkohlt, darunter wohl Schriften von #casar oder #Cicero. Neue Techniken sollen sie wieder lesbar machen

    Heute sehen die Schriftrollen teilweise aus wie verbrannte Äste oder wie Kohlebriketts.

    tagesschau.de/wissen/forschung

  6. Progressive lawmakers
    (AKA The Democratic Wing of the Democratic Party)
    condemned Donald Trump and Elon Musk on Monday,
    ➡️pointing to the attempted shuttering of the foreign aid agency USAid and the accessing of the treasury department’s federal payment system as the markings of a ⚠️“constitutional crisis”.

    After Musk declared that he was working to shut down USAid,
    Democratic members of Congress tried to enter the agency’s Washington headquarters
    but said they were turned away on the orders of Musk’s “department of government efficiency” (Doge).

    USAid staffers were also locked out of the building on Monday,
    as the White House confirmed plans to merge the agency with the state department.

    Addressing reporters outside the USAid headquarters, Representative Ilhan #Omar,
    a Democrat of Minnesota,
    accused Trump and Musk of attempting to
    “take away the constitutional power of Congress”,
    which has the authority to allocate federal funds.

    “We are witnessing a constitutional crisis,”
    Omar said.
    “We talked about Trump wanting to be a dictator on day one,
    and here we are.

    This is what the beginning of dictatorship looks like.

    When you gut the constitution and you install yourself as the sole power,
    that is how dictators are made.”

    The clash at USAid came one day after news broke that Musk’s associates had received access to the treasury department’s federal payment system,
    potentially exposing the sensitive personal data of millions of Americans.

    Democratic lawmakers reported receiving a deluge of calls from constituents expressing alarm over the possibility that their personal information might have been jeopardized.

    “Donald Trump has given unprecedented power over the federal government to an unelected, unaccountable billionaire,”
    Representative Greg #Casar, a Democrat of Texas and chair of the congressional progressive caucus, said in a statement.

    “Progressives will fight this in the courts, on the House floor, and with every tool at our disposal
    until Elon Musk is out of our government and no longer putting taxpayers, the sick, and the elderly at risk.”

    Senator Elizabeth #Warren, a Democrat of Massachusetts,
    sent a letter to Trump’s new treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, on Sunday
    to demand answers for his role in allowing Musk’s team access to the payment system.

    She warned that such access “puts the country at greater risk of defaulting on our debt,
    which could trigger a global financial crisis”.

    “It is extraordinarily dangerous to meddle with the critical systems that process trillions of dollars of transactions each year, are essential to preventing a default on federal debt,
    and ensure that tens of millions of Americans receive their Social Security checks, tax refunds, and Medicare benefits,”
    Warren wrote.

    “The American people deserve answers about your role in this mismanagement,
    which threatens the privacy and economic security of every American.”

    Representative Alexandria #Ocasio-#Cortez, a Democrat of New York,
    described the intervention of Musk,
    who spent more than $290m on the 2024 election,
    as a “five alarm fire” and a “grave threat to national security”.

    “This is a plutocratic coup.

    If you want the power, run for office and be chosen by the people,”
    Ocasio-Cortez said in a social media post.

    “Short of that, this is an exercise in vigilantism.”
    theguardian.com/us-news/2025/f