Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Let Us Sit Upon the Ground and Tell Sad Stories of the Death of Kings

 

Politicians abhor a vacuum as much as nature does, and the sudden concession of NC Senate President Phil Berger late yesterday afternoon has created one of the biggest vacuums in North Carolina history. Berger had ultimate power over every bill that made it through to a vote, every appointment to every important post that the General Assembly controls, every ambition of every fellow Republican senator who wanted to rise. Berger was the undisputed king, and perhaps no one will celebrate his absence more than some of his own allies.

The resentment of putative allies got a surprise airing yesterday in the New York Times, when reporter Eduardo Medina outed Sen. Thom Tillis for secretly lobbying wealthy Republican donors against Berger. On a Zoom call last month, well before the primary, Thom Tillis was clear that Berger had to go because he's too power-hungry, too authoritarian, too dismissive of any idea not his own, and too already fat with campaign cash.

So I can only imagine the ambitions right now surging through the Berger troops still in the Senate, the ones who could not rise because Berger stood in the way. The rivalries will now show themselves in the Raleigh Thunderdome. And all the while the in-fighting goes on and consumes the Republican ecology, the date of the mid-term reckoning with voters advances apace. Who knows? Voters appear quite irritated with abusers of power, and perhaps all the GOP's corrupt gerrymandering may not be shield enough against the wrath to come.

Meanwhile, Sam Page can take his seat in January as a new back-bencher -- he may need two seats to accommodate that ridiculous chapeau. He'll soon learn that his vote has been pre-programmed by higher ups (and probably doesn't matter anyway, if the Republican super-majority holds. Ha!). What High Sheriff Sam Page doesn't know about being low-man in a new pecking order might possibly be a harsh and disappointing education.

 

3 comments:

  1. Anonymous7:57 PM

    Sam Page still has to beat the Democrat in the race. If Mar-A-Lago is now being represented by a Democrat, anything can happen!

    ReplyDelete
  2. With the 250th anniversary coming up everything is contingent.
    1. Uncertain climate
    2. Financial collapse from debt
    3. Iran War
    a. Possible nukes exchanged with escalation to extermination
    b. Defeat of US/Israel with reparations imposed
    c. Another 20 year quagmire (plus genocide)
    4. Suspension or rigging (SAVE Act) of midterms and even 2028 contests
    5. Civil breakdown

    And We can't be sure something similar would not have occurred had
    Harris taken office. Our Empire and our Ecology were already at a breaking point, and institutions were in Denial and pretending we'd have growth
    and things could continue with a little twerking. Dr. Steven Luking, (the Democratic Party opponent of Page in district 26) hopes to focus on public health, public education and transparency/integrity in
    government. He was a general practitioner in Reidsville with his brother
    for more than 35 years, and a Methodist missionary before that. He likes to fish. In normal times he'd be a paragon, but the realpolitik would wear him down quickly. Faith doesn't move mountains without fuel and money. I wonder where he goes to fish. (I don't eat fish.) Where's ANTIFA when they're needed?
    NO Kings Saturday the 28th.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Works for me if the Right does this.
    And before y'all protest, this is what you all will do when you can control of Washington next time.

    ReplyDelete