Milwaukee Shipped in 4,500 Cops From Across the US to Suppress Protest at RNC + More

Contestations over the Republican National Committee’s efforts to foreclose avenues for lawful protest outside this week’s Republican National Convention (RNC) were already heated months before GOP delegates started booking their flights to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for the convention.

Milwaukee Shipped in 4,500 Cops From Across the US to Suppress Protest at RNC

Related:

Fatal shooting of homeless man raises security questions about out-of-state police at RNC

Milwaukee officers will accompany all visiting police units after fatal shooting

Columbus police have killed more than 60 people since 2013

Columbus police shoot and kill more people than most of their peer cities, according to an analysis of police shootings data by the Columbus Dispatch, part of the USA TODAY Network.

ACLU of Wisconsin: Files open records requests seeking answers about police killing of Samuel Sharpe Jr. 

771 Superdelegates Can Thwart Will of Millions of Dem Voters, and 5/6 of Dems are Okay With That

I thought for sure there would be a top contributor with a rec-listed diary on how the candidates answered last night’s debate question regarding a likely brokered convention. Even Kos wrote about 8 takeaways from the debate, and somehow this wasn’t…
— Read on www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/2/20/1920693/-771-Superdelegates-Can-Thwart-Will-of-Millions-of-Dem-Voters-and-5-6-of-Dems-are-Okay-With-That

[2008] Not So Superdelegates

No matter what happens with the superdelegates this year, it’s unsettling to have a large bloc of party officials who are not answerable to the party’s electorate. “I certainly think their influence should be curtailed,” Hart says. In 1988 Jesse Jackson won the primary in Puerto Rico over Michael Dukakis. Yet a month later, Puerto Rico’s governor instructed his fifty-one delegates to back Dukakis. “This is clearly machine politics,” Jackson wrote then, “and should have nothing to do with the 1988 campaign.” The 2008 campaign has again exposed the undemocratic influence of the superdelegate elite. But just as the activists of ’68 pushed aside the party bosses, forty years later voters can demand that the party’s nominee reflect their choice.
— Read on www.thenation.com/article/archive/not-so-superdelegates/