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In It to Win It

In It to Win It's Journal
In It to Win It's Journal
May 11, 2026

My gas prices weren't this high under Joe Biden

This is from the gas station closest to my house in South Florida. There are 8 gas stations within a 1 mile radius of my house, including this one. It usually has the cheapest of all the gas station near me, and that is still true today as far as I can tell. This is the current gas price:

May 10, 2026

John Roberts Is Always a Republican First - Jay Willis @ Balls and Strikes

https://ballsandstrikes.org/scotus/john-roberts-is-always-a-republican-first/


Published April 21, 2026

The New York Times published a flurry of internal Supreme Court memos related to its unsigned, unexplained February 2016 order that blocked the Clean Power Plan, an Environmental Protection Agency rule that required states to implement plans to reduce carbon emissions within their borders, from taking effect. At the time, this was (to use a legal term of art) pretty weird: When the Court issued its ruling, a Republican-led challenge to the rule was still pending before a federal appeals court in D.C. By leapfrogging that court, the justices extended special treatment to this country’s fossil fuels industry, effectively concluding that the viability of its business model was simply too important to leave to the usual legal process.

The Court’s order gave rise to what is now known as the Supreme Court’s “shadow docket”—a form of expedited review that the conservative justices have since wielded at their convenience to stymie Democratic presidents on the one hand, and, on the other, to give President Donald Trump just about anything he wants. The memos obtained by the Times make clear that one of the principal reasons the Court acted as it did is that Chief Justice John Roberts, a lifelong Republican, really did not like what would have been President Barack Obama’s signature climate initiative, and decided to use the powers of his office to spike it.

There is, as they say, a lot going on in these memos. But it is worth remembering that of the many, many justices who would bristle at the notion that the Court would ever allow partisan politics to taint its deliberative process in this manner, none do so quite as officiously as Roberts. In 2018, after Trump disparaged a particular court ruling as the work of an “Obama judge,” Roberts issued a rare public rebuke: “We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges,” he said. “What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before them.”

During his 2005 Senate confirmation hearings, Roberts tried to assuage concerns about his long career in Republican politics by emphasizing a judge’s obligation to demonstrate the “humility to recognize that they operate within a system of precedent.” This website takes its name from the baseball umpire analogy he adopted as a mantra during those hearings: If confirmed, Roberts said, he would always remember that his role is to apply the rules, not to make them—in his words, to “call balls and strikes, and not pitch or bat.”

The Times’s reporting is only the latest bit of proof that Roberts has been merrily lying to you all along.
May 10, 2026

Democrats set sights on protecting, adding to Ohio Supreme Court seats

Democratic judges have an uphill battle to change the 6-1 Ohio Supreme Court, where Justice Jennifer Brunner is an island unto herself in a sea of Republican justices. But she and another judge making a run for a seat in November sense a change in the winds when it comes to Democratic support, both in the judicial system and elsewhere.

“As I travel the state, I am taken by the movement, the energy, the sort of undertow that I’m sensing from the counties around the state,” Brunner said at the Ohio Democratic Party’s primary night event on Tuesday.

Brunner has been on the court since 2021, but until last year, she shared the bench with two other Democratic justices.

Races for the state’s top judicial positions were made explicitly partisan when Republican state lawmakers added party labels to the races starting in 2022. Since that change, the court has gone from 4-3 to 6-1 Republican.

“I don’t mind it,” Brunner said. “But I sure would like a little more company.”

The most recent general election in 2024 saw the defeat of Justice Melody Stewart and Justice Michael P. Donnelly, in favor of Republican justices Joe Deters and Megan Shanahan.

https://ohiocapitaljournal.com/2026/05/08/democrats-set-sights-on-protecting-adding-to-ohio-supreme-court-seats/
May 10, 2026

Elie Mystal on Velshi: Southern state redistricting, 'This is Jim Crow 2.0'




Elie Mystal says the Supreme Court’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais is reminiscent of the infamous Plessy v. Ferguson decision “in terms of the racism that the Supreme Court has ushered in.” “This is Jim Crow 2.0.”
May 9, 2026

Top Maryland Democrat is fighting for his job after resisting redistricting plan

Gift Link
WaPo


As Republican Indiana state senators lost their seats this week in a revenge-fueled primary after defying President Donald Trump on redistricting, the prominent Maryland Democrat who also sank partisan gerrymandering took note.

Maryland Senate President Bill Ferguson (D-Baltimore City) faces a Democratic version of that retribution, drawing the most difficult primary challenge of his 16-year career.

Like the ousted Indiana Republicans, Ferguson defied demands from his party’s leaders to create new congressional maps to boost chances of controlling the U.S. House. He, too, faces political consequences after rejecting efforts to eliminate the state’s one GOP-leaning House district.

While the Maryland-style payback from fellow Democrats does not resemble the overt revenge campaign waged in Indiana by Trump and his Republican allies, Ferguson is left aggressively defending a seat unlike ever before.

Gov. Wes Moore (D), who led the redistricting charge, pointedly did not include him in a list of more than 160 primary endorsements in state and local races released Thursday, boosting Democrats the governor said would “push back and push forward.”
May 9, 2026

Georgia Supreme Court Candidates Jen Jordan & Miracle Rankin - Heather Cox Richardson




Jen Jordan and Miracle Rankin are running for the Supreme Court of Georgia to protect the fundamental freedoms of all Georgians and to ensure equal justice under the law for all Georgians, not just the wealthy, powerful, and well-connected. Election Day is May 19th.

Jen Jordan is an experienced attorney who has spent her legal career representing families and holding the powerful accountable. Jen previously served as a State Senator.

Miracle Rankin is an Atlanta-based attorney. She has served as the 40th President of the Georgia Association of Black Women Attorneys.
May 9, 2026

This is the stupidest shit I've ever seen 😑

I've seen this floating around on Twitter, probably by a bunch of bots. The right-wingers eat this shit up. I've started to see this on reddit too.

Feel free to explain to us how Vermont gerrymandered their map in favor of Democrats 😂
You all tell us why the Republican governor and Republican legislature in New Hampshire didn't draw some comfortable Republican districts 😂
You all us how Trump wins Maine's 2nd congressional district, but Republicans lose that House seat at the same 😂

May 9, 2026

NAACP Tennessee files lawsuit challenging redrawn US House district map

The NAACP’s Tennessee chapter filed a lawsuit Thursday afternoon challenging the legality of the state’s new congressional map, redrawn so a majority-Black voting district was eliminated.

NAACP Tennessee President Gloria Sweet-Love filed an emergency petition to stop the map from going into effect in Davidson County Chancery Court. The lawsuit was filed less than three hours after Gov. Bill Lee signed the new map into law.

The Tennessee Legislature’s Republican supermajority passed the map — carving up a historic Democratic-held district in Shelby County — during a whirlwind special session called at President Donald Trump’s behest days after the U.S. Supreme Court weakened a key section of the Voting Rights Act. Protesters opposing the redistricting flooded the Capitol for the three-day session’s entirety.

When Lee called the special session, the lawsuit argues, he did not specifically state that its purpose included repealing or suspending a Tennessee law prohibiting mid-decade redistricting. The General Assembly passed a bill nullifying that law during the session, and Lee signed it into law shortly before the final vote on the new map.

The Tennessee Constitution stipulates that the General Assembly “shall enter no legislative business except that for which they were specifically called together,” and the map therefore violates “clear and unambiguous Tennessee statutory law and the mandates of the Tennessee Constitution,” the lawsuit states.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/naacp-tennessee-files-lawsuit-challenging-234127761.html

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