The Worst Political Predictions of 2021
We all make mistakes. But some people got things
really, really wrong this year.
Illustrations
by Pepe Serra
By ZACK
STANTON
12/24/2021
07:00 AM EST
Zack
Stanton is the deputy editor of POLITICO Playbook.
https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/12/24/worst-politics-predictions-2021-525853
What did
you get totally wrong about 2021? Here’s my answer: I was sure — sure — that as
soon as the Covid vaccines were widely available, all but an infinitesimally
small percentage of American adults would line up to take the shot, crush the
pandemic and get back to life as normal-ish.
That didn’t
happen. And sometimes, that’s the nature of a bad prediction: At the time it’s
made, it can seem not only totally rational, but obvious. It may have an
element of wishcasting (in my case, it certainly did).
Speaking of
wishcasting, 12 months ago, on Dec. 31, Trump skipped out on a party at
Mar-a-Lago to return early to the White House, where he quietly met with
Justice Department officials and pressed them to try to overturn the results of
the November election. Meanwhile, from Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, Biden remotely
joined “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest,” urged
Americans to get the vaccine and said he was “more optimistic about America’s
chances than I’ve ever been.”
As
predictions go, you could do worse in forecasting the issues that defined this
year than what those two men were focused on: Attempting to overthrow American
democracy and struggling to contain the pandemic. 2021 in a nutshell, before it
even began.
With the
year (blessedly) behind us, it’s time again for a treasured POLITICO Magazine
tradition: a rundown of some of the worst predictions of 2021. Some are
cocksure and smug; others have a tragic air of obsessiveness (cough, Mike
Lindell, cough); still others were totally fair and reasonable predictions at
the time, but the world spun in a different direction than it once seemed.
Here, more than two dozen predictions about 2021 that were, well, bad.
“Everything’s going to be fine” in the last few weeks
of the Trump administration
PREDICTED
BY: HUGH HEWITT, JAN. 6
On the
morning of Jan. 6, conservative talk radio host Hugh Hewitt appeared on Megyn
Kelly’s podcast and was asked a question on the minds of seemingly every
political observer in America: “Joe Biden’s going to get certified [as
president-elect] today. What does Trump do over the next two weeks before the
inauguration? … I mean, he’s still going to be saying what he’s saying about
the electoral process, and there’s a big rally in D.C. today, but what do you think
we can expect?”
Hewitt
responded by predicting a raft of new pardons before turning to the broader
concern about the peaceful transfer of power: “I would just say to everybody:
It will be fine. Everything’s going to be fine,” he said as Kelly voiced her
agreement.
A few hours
later, a violent pro-Trump putsch at the U.S. Capitol disrupted the peaceful
transfer of power and dragged the nation to the brink of a constitutional
crisis. Everything was not fine.
“If Biden is elected, there’s a good chance you will
be dead within the year. Republicans will be hunted. Police will stand down.”
PREDICTED
BY: SCOTT ADAMS, JULY 1, 2020
There are a
few reasons you might recognize the name Scott Adams. Perhaps you know him from
his repeat appearances on these annual “worst predictions” lists (e.g. that
Trump, Biden and Bernie Sanders would all contract Covid by election day 2020
and one would die). If you’re of a certain age, maybe you remember “Dilbert,”
the ’90s cartoon icon he created that satirized corporate office culture in the
years before “Office Space.” Or, if you’re part of the political cognoscenti in
the broader Trump era, you might know him as a self-described expert in the
rhetorical dark arts who has spun that ability into a second act as a MAGA-adjacent
political commentator with a large online following.
But unlike
many prominent voices of that persuasion, he exudes a calm clarity in his
thinking — as if what he says is the natural outgrowth of a deliberative
process — which gives his predictions a certain dispassionate confidence, as if
they are closer to scientific fact than wishcasting or doomsaying.
For
instance, on July 1, 2020, Adams made this prediction about American life in
2021 with Joe Biden in the White House: “If Biden is elected, there’s a good
chance you will be dead within the year.” Lest you think he was talking about,
say, the potential mismanagement of the pandemic or some natural disaster,
Adams clarified what he meant in two further tweets: “Republicans will be
hunted. Police will stand down.”
We are
nearly a full year into Biden’s presidency. Police have not stood down. In
fact, many cities have increased funding for police. Republicans, far from
being hunted, have made major electoral gains and stand poised to retake at
least one house of Congress next year. There are no killing fields. There has
been no purge.
In protesting the end of the eviction ban, “Cori
Bush’s antics generate publicity, but they won’t change political reality”
PREDICTED
BY: ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH EDITORIAL BOARD, AUG. 3
When Bush
staged a sleep-in on the steps of the Capitol to protest the lapse of the
pandemic-era eviction ban, her hometown St. Louis Post-Dispatch published an
editorial that reads like a pat on the head of the freshman Missouri
congresswoman and liberal Squad member.
Bush
“clearly misunderstands the complicated process required to restore the
moratorium,” they wrote. “As with many progressive ideals, righteous-sounding
aspirations never seem to take into account political reality. … Bush tweeted a
demand that President Joe Biden ‘extend the eviction moratorium’ and that House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer force legislative
action. It’s as if she believes those three can wave their wands and magically
make things better.”
Later that
same day, Biden announced a new 60-day eviction moratorium — prompted by
pressure and coverage generated by Bush’s TV-ready protest. With her “antics,”
she had changed political reality. Even as the ban ended weeks later after
being struck down by the Supreme Court, it came about not through magic, but
real-world politics.
The Afghanistan pullout won’t be like the fall of
Saigon, and the Taliban isn’t likely to take over
PREDICTED
BY: PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN, JULY 8
Last
summer, as U.S. forces withdrew from Afghanistan and the Taliban steadily
regained territory throughout the country, Biden held a press conference where
he was asked about the historical “echoes” some veterans of the Vietnam War saw
between the fall of Saigon and the Afghanistan pullout. Asked if he saw
“parallels” between the two events, Biden — who, by the way, was a U.S. senator
when Saigon fell in spring 1975 — was insistent.
“The
Taliban is not the South — the North Vietnamese army. They’re not — they’re not
remotely comparable in terms of capability,” he said. “There’s going to be no
circumstance where you see people being lifted off the roof of an embassy … of
the United States from Afghanistan. It is not at all comparable. … The
likelihood there’s going to be the Taliban overrunning everything and owning
the whole country is highly unlikely.”
Just over
one month later, in mid-August, Chinook helicopters airlifted Americans from
the U.S. Embassy in Kabul as it evacuated. The Taliban surrounded and retook
Kabul; it is now fully in control of the government of Afghanistan.
The $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill will be a “turning
point” in American politics that restores faith in democracy and stops the rise
of would-be “autocrats”
PREDICTED
BY: CHUCK SCHUMER, MARCH 10
Nope. The
Covid bill passed, checks went into pockets, shots went into arms — and the
political benefit for Democrats has been minimal. Politics hasn’t changed
drastically, and it certainly doesn’t seem like the pro-autocracy movement has
been put to bed in any way.
Biden is “gonna control how much meat you can eat”
PREDICTED
BY: KEVIN MCCARTHY, APRIL 28
Ahh, the
early days of the Biden administration — pre-Afghanistan pullout, pre-Delta
wave, pre-vaccine mandate — when the president’s poll numbers were strong and
Republicans flailed about for an issue, any issue, that could provide a
political foothold. Banning Dr. Seuss. No? Going to war against Major League
Baseball? No? What about meat? Yes, that’s the ticket.
Here’s what
happened: in late April, after Biden vowed to cut greenhouse gas emissions by
half, Fox News and its sister channels went to work promoting the falsehood
that Biden was going to effectively ban meat, as PolitiFact extensively
documented. Their promotion of that deception led House Republican Leader Kevin
McCarthy to reflect their outrage back at them: On April 28, he appeared on
“Hannity” and confidently predicted that the Biden administration “is gonna
control how much meat you can eat.” That is, of course, not the case: Biden did
not ban meat, nor is he controlling how much animal protein you consume, nor is
any plan in motion to do that.
Here, a
quick clarification may be useful: There’s a difference between a falsehood and
a bad prediction. A falsehood is something presented as fact when it is not. A
bad prediction is a forward-looking, if ultimately incorrect, assertion about
how the future will play out. What McCarthy said is both.
Trump will be reinstated as president after the
Supreme Court somehow overturns the 2020 election
PREDICTED
BY: MIKE LINDELL, MANY TIMES
March 26:
“All the evidence I have — everything — is going to go before the Supreme
Court, and the election of 2020 is going bye-bye. … Donald Trump will be back
in office in August.”
March 30:
“I said Donald Trump will be in [the White House] in August. And I fully
believe that myself: he’ll be back in.”
May 25:
“Donald Trump … will be back in by the end of August.”
June 2:
“These are facts: We have a clear path to pull this election down. … [On the
Supreme Court,] it’ll be 9-0 — down comes the election, and in August, here
comes Donald Trump.”
June 5: [On
the August prediction] “I could be off by a month or so, I don’t know.”
July 4: “By
the morning of August 13, it’ll be the talk of the world, going ‘Hurry up!
Let’s get this election pulled down. Let’s … get these communists out, you
know, [who] have taken over.’”
Aug. 21:
“It’s Trump 2021, 100 percent: Trump 2021. This election, when it does get
pulled down, there were so many down-ticket [races] affected, maybe the Supreme
Court, they’ll just do a whole new election.”
Sept. 21:
“I made a promise to this country that — with all the evidence I have — that we
would get it to the Supreme Court. And I predicted they would vote 9-0 to look
at the evidence. … Originally, I had hoped for August and September. … We will
have this before the Supreme Court before Thanksgiving. That’s my promise to
the people of this country.”
Sept. 24:
“We’re giving everything — all the evidence I have — [to] the Supreme Court.
That will be done before Thanksgiving. That’s in stone.”
Nov. 7:
“[The Supreme Court is] going to accept it 9-0. It will require a new election
across the board. … [They’ll] declare the 2020 vote void and order new
elections across the board.”
Nov. 17:
“One week from today, on Nov. 23, the states are suing the U.S. government at
the Supreme Court. It’s over!”
Dec. 17:
[On the timeline for his long-promised 9-0 Supreme Court case] “It was gonna be
today; it switched out til Monday.”
Let’s be
clear: Donald Trump lost the 2020 presidential election. He lost by every
possible measure. He lost the national popular vote (which doesn’t decide who
wins). He lost the Electoral College (which does). He lost the swing states of
Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. He lost each of
them by margins far too large to even possibly be changed by voter fraud. He
and his allies lost 61 state and federal lawsuits related to the election
results. His claims of widespread fraud or a stolen election are baseless and
themselves fraudulent. He has no rightful claim to the presidency.
And yet,
Mike Lindell, the MyPillow CEO-turned conspiracy theorist, continues to predict,
despite reality, that the election results will be deemed illegitimate, thrown
out, and that somehow, this will make Trump the White House’s rightful
occupant. How would this work? Unclear. Even if the election were somehow
dismissed, why would Trump be given the office? Also unclear. When will this
occur? Perpetually, someday soon.
What
Lindell has done — repeatedly and confidently predicting Trump’s return to
office time after time, missed deadline after missed deadline — isn’t just
moving the goalposts; it’s … well, metaphors fail. It’s moving the whole damn
field. It’s changing the sport entirely. It’s inventing a new game that only he
can win, and then managing to lose said game, repeatedly.
Terry McAuliffe will be (re)elected governor of Virginia
PREDICTED
BY: ROBERT MCCARTNEY (AMONG MANY, MANY, MANY OTHERS), JAN. 1
On Jan. 1,
when Washington Post columnist Robert McCartney published his 11th annual
“predictions quiz” about the year ahead, he gave readers six options from which
to correctly select the next governor of Virginia. Who would it be? Could
Virginia make history by electing a Black woman, like Democratic state Sen.
Jennifer McClellan or former Delegate Jennifer Carroll Foy? Would
scandal-plagued Lt. Gov. Justin Fairfax improbably resurrect his career after
sexual assault allegations? Perhaps a Republican lawmaker, like former state
House Speaker Kirk Cox, or the Trumpy state Sen. Amanda Chase?
No. The
next governor, McCartney wrote, would be Terry McAuliffe, as Biden’s 2020
victory showed “there’s still plenty of appetite for an old White guy.” In
November, of course, McAuliffe lost to someone who wasn’t even on the list:
Republican Glenn Youngkin.
Post-Jan. 6, Trump is “effectively tarnished for all
time and incapable of running in 2024”
PREDICTED
BY: KARL ROVE, FEB. 11
It won’t “be possible for Trump to come back”
PREDICTED
BY: JOHN KERRY, APRIL 27
“Trump is never coming back”
PREDICTED
BY: ANTHONY SCARAMUCCI, MAY 15
Apparently,
fomenting a violent uprising against the government isn’t a deal-breaker. With
his grip on the GOP still tight, the party’s nomination is certainly Trump’s if
he wants it. And this month, polls on a potential presidential election between
Trump and Biden show a tight race: Biden up by 1 (Wall Street Journal, Dec. 7);
Biden up by 3 (Echelon Insights, Dec. 14); Trump up by 3 (Harris, Dec. 6). By
all appearances, Trump is certainly capable of running in 2024 and winning.
Kamala Harris becomes president
“By the end of 2021, Kamala Harris will be the
President.”
PREDICTED
BY: SEAN DUFFY, JAN. 2
When, on
Jan. 2, “Watters World” guest host Dan Bongino asked Duffy, a former “Real
World” castmate-turned-Wisconsin GOP congressman-turned-Fox News personality,
for his predictions for the year ahead, there was not a moment’s hesitation:
“Listen, my crystal ball tells me … that you’re going to have a continued
cognitive decline for Joe Biden. By the end of 2021, Kamala Harris will be the
president.”
Right now,
it is Dec. 24, and while I’ll concede that it is possible that the next six
days bring some truly Earth-shattering news, Biden is still the president. Has
his fastball lost some of its zip as he’s aged? Sure. Whose doesn’t? But there
is nothing to suggest anything in the realm of debilitating cognitive decline.
And as 2021 ends, Harris is not only not the president, she’s been the subject
of much critical coverage that has fanned doubts about whether she could ever
really be the president.
Once Biden takes office, there’ll be a “depression the
likes of which you’ve never seen”
PREDICTED
BY: DONALD TRUMP, OCT. 22, 2020
You can
doubt the strength of the Biden economy, debate whether or not the inflation
we’ve experienced is transitory and question all the various statistics trotted
out to prove this or that. But it’s a simple fact that the economy is not in a
depression. It’s not even in a recession.
Since Biden
took office, the unemployment rate has dropped from 6.3 percent to 4.2 percent;
the Dow Jones Industrial Average has grown by roughly 14 percent; the S&P
500 is up roughly 21 percent; America’s gross domestic product grew by 7.8
percent over the first three quarters of 2021, even when adjusted for
inflation. If that’s a depression, then what would be the appropriate term for
the economy at the end of the Trump presidency?
“By Labor Day, Biden’s approval ratings will average
[in the] low 60s.”
PREDICTED
BY: TOM RICKS, JUNE 24
In his
tweet, Ricks conceded that it was a “reckless” prediction, but at the time,
maybe it didn’t seem too crazy. The economy was improving, the pandemic seemed
to be receding.
Two months
later, the botched Afghanistan withdrawal began to slash away at Biden’s
ratings. The political fallout from the debacle — punctuated by horrific
violence, humanitarian disaster and scores of deaths — continues to be an
albatross on the Biden administration.
By Labor
Day, in FiveThirtyEight’s average, Biden’s approval sat at 46.1 percent; his
disapproval was 48.3 percent. It was the end of the first full week of the
Biden presidency where his approval was underwater. It’s been there ever since.
“Pretty decent chance” Gavin Newsom loses the recall
election
PREDICTED
BY: NATE SILVER, AUG. 23
There was a
time this summer when it appeared that the recall election against California
Gov. Gavin Newsom might actually win — polls tightened substantially in early
August, sparking the typical apocalyptics from the blue-check Twitterati.
“Pretty decent chance Newsom gets recalled,” FiveThirtyEight’s Nate Silver
tweeted before jumping to explain how this reality revealed the foolishness of
Dems’ strategy of not putting forward a potential Newsom successor on “question
two” on the recall ballot: “Democrats could potentially keep the seat if they
urged their voters to consolidate behind an alternative Democrat but instead
they’re telling them not to vote on the replacement!”
Come
September, Newsom defeated the recall with 62 percent of the vote. And Dems’
strategy of not consolidating behind an alternative candidate helped Newsom
make the vote an up-or-down choice between him and Republican frontrunner Larry
Elder rather than giving Democratic voters a viable option on question two
(which might’ve sweetened the prospect of voting yes on question one).
Silver
might take issue with our call that his odds-making counts as a wrong
prediction, but the fact is, Newsom ultimately won handily. And his strategy
paid off.
“No, you don’t have to worry about inflation”
PREDICTED
BY: BRETT ARENDS, JAN. 22
“There’s no reason to worry about inflation in 2021”
PREDICTED
BY: MYLES UDLAND, DEC. 16, 2020
Turns out
there was a reason to worry about inflation. By October, the year-over-year
inflation rate was the highest since 1990. By November, it was the highest
since 1982. Between January and this writing, the chatter among economists has
evolved: It was something you probably didn’t need to be worried about. Then it
was transitory. Now, it is … maybe not so temporary. Hard to tell.
The issue
has badly disrupted the first year of the Biden administration, and has a
quality not unlike a beach ball in a swimming pool: Try as you might to wrestle
it down, it pops back up to the surface over and over again, stubborn to your
every effort.
Protests against critical race theory at Loudoun
County’s school board meetings weren’t an indication that the GOP might win the
Virginia gubernatorial race
PREDICTED
BY: JAMELLE BOUIE (AMONG MANY, MANY OTHERS), JULY 7
In July, my
colleague Maya King reported on a trend in suburban Virginia: Tense school
board meetings populated by growing numbers of parents angry about the supposed
teaching of “critical race theory” — often used by ideological conservatives as
a shorthand for how race and social issues are taught — in K-12 public schools,
even as Loudoun County school officials insisted that the theory was not
actually being taught. “Could a School-Board Fight Over Critical Race Theory
Help Turn Virginia Red?,” the headline read.
“No,”
responded Jamelle Bouie, a New York Times columnist who lives in Virginia. The
idea, he continued, was “an extremely credulous take on Republican
wishcasting.” (Worth noting: That wasn’t an entirely unreasonable assumption,
coming four years after stories asked aloud whether fears about the MS-13 gang
would spur Republicans to retake the governor’s mansion.)
It wasn’t.
Come November, Republicans won the elections for Virginia governor, lieutenant
governor and attorney general, and regained control of the state House. Was the
critical race theory backlash the sole reason why? No. But it appears to have
played a substantial role in winning Youngkin the election.
“By
promising at nearly every campaign stop to ban critical race theory … Youngkin
resurrected Republican race-baiting tactics in a state that once served as the
capital of the Confederacy,” wrote the Times’ Lisa Lerer. It was, wrote the
Times’ Trip Gabriel, his “best known pledge … embodying the anger that drove
the grass roots.” And, in a tidy answer to the question posed in the headline
of Maya’s piece, USA Today’s Ledyard King and Mabinty Quarshie reported that
the issue “sparked a movement that help[ed] turn Virginia from blue to red last
month.”
Republicans will win both Senate seats in Georgia
PREDICTED
BY: DANA PERINO, JAN. 4; MATT GROSSMANN, NOV. 9, 2020; ET AL
It’s an
understandable assumption: Georgia has been going hard for Republicans for
decades, and a reasonable observer might imagine that the GOP would have the
edge in the Jan. 5 run-offs. Down-ticket, Republicans in the state performed
strongly in the November elections: While Trump lost to Biden by about 0.3
points in the state, David Perdue led Jon Ossoff by 1.8 points on the same
ballot. The state’s other Senate seat had just undergone an inconclusive jungle
primary in which nobody received more than one-third of the vote; but in her
bid to defeat Democratic candidate Raphael Warnock, incumbent Republican Kelly
Loeffler was buoyed by a vast fortune and the reality that the Deep South had
elected only one Black man to the U.S. Senate since Reconstruction (Tim Scott
in neighboring South Carolina). Plus, without Trump on the ballot, Democratic
voters might be less inclined to turn out to vote against him.
Nope. With
Black voters coming out in huge numbers for Democrats and Republican turnout
depressed after Trump’s incessant, and false, claims of election fraud,
something surprising happened. Warnock and Ossoff won, and delivered Democrats
the narrowest possible majority in the U.S. Senate.
Nancy Pelosi won’t have the votes to become Speaker in
2021
PREDICTED
BY: JASON CHAFFETZ, JAN. 2
This one
was a bit of Republican wishcasting. Chaffetz, the former GOP congressman from
Utah, predicted on the night of Jan. 2 that Nancy Pelosi — whose mastery at
vote-counting has kept her atop House Democratic leadership for 20 years now —
would somehow lack the votes to be elected speaker the following day, despite a
Democratic majority.
The result
was entirely predictable: Pelosi had the votes. Of the 427 members of the House
at the time, 216 supported her — a margin comfortable enough that a handful of
House Democrats from swing seats were free to vote for someone other than her.
“Withdrawing troops from Afghanistan will turn out to
be the most popular action of Biden’s presidency”
PREDICTED
BY: G. ELLIOTT MORRIS, APRIL 25
In
fairness, this was not a bad prediction when it was made: Polls throughout the
spring showed overwhelming support for Biden’s plan to withdraw from
Afghanistan.
But by
Biden’s Sept. 11 deadline, the chaotic U.S. pullout had destabilized his
presidency, calling into question the core claims of competence that had long
been Biden’s ballast.
It’s
possible that over the long arc of history, Morris’ prediction will turn out to
be correct. But at this point, the pullout was extraordinarily politically
damaging for Biden’s presidency.
If Dems win in Georgia, “it’s a guarantee of
socialism,” amnesty for undocumented immigrants, statehood for Puerto Rico and
Washington, D.C., and so on
PREDICTED
BY: BEN WEINGARTEN, DEC. 30, 2020
A week out
from the Georgia Senate run-offs, Benjamin Weingarten, a contributor to the
Federalist, appeared on Fox News’ “The Ingraham Angle” and laid bare what would
happen if Ossoff and Warnock defeated Perdue and Loeffler, delivering Democrats
a 50-50 Senate majority. “If the Democrats take these two seats, it’s a
guarantee of socialism in this country because you’ll have D.C. and Puerto Rico
statehood. You’ll have mass amnesty. You’ll have socialized medicine. You’ll
have the evisceration of the vote integrity.”
Two things:
One: A
50-50 Senate could never be read as a mandate for any policy at the ideological
extremes of American politics, including “socialism.” The very nature of the
Senate, where members of the minority party have enormous power to block
legislation, makes it exceptionally difficult to enact any major policy change.
Two:
Clearly, the man has never met Joe Manchin. D.C. statehood? Opposed to it.
Puerto Rican statehood? Non-committal. Socialized medicine? Hardly: The man
opposed expanding Medicare to cover dental care. Forget socialism; they can’t
even pass Build Back Better.
You shouldn’t be worried about what might happen Jan.
6 — it “will go nowhere” and “will be fun to watch”
PREDICTED
BY: AMY SISKIND, JAN. 2
Amid the
run-up to Jan. 6 — as Republican senators like Missouri’s Josh Hawley announced
that they’d object to the count of electoral votes from certain swing states
that Biden carried, as pro-Trump die-hards planned a massive rally with the
goal of pressuring Congress to essentially discard the results of a democratic
election, and as the Big Lie about the 2020 vote metastasized within the Republican
electorate — a certain amount of (understandable) anxiety percolated among
liberals and moderates on Twitter.
Amy
Siskind, who rose to online prominence in the early days of the Trump
administration by recording and listing out the norms being broken on a weekly
basis, was one of the relatively few major voices on #Resistance Twitter urging
calm.
“Anyone
worried about Jan 6 impacting the election — don’t be,” she tweeted on the
night of Jan. 2. “It’s nothing more than a seditious stunt that will go
nowhere.” Then, a follow-up: “If you live in DC, stay off the streets on Jan 6.
Let the DC police take care of the white supremacists like they did in Oregon
yesterday. I actually think it will be fun to watch lol.”
What
ultimately happened on Jan. 6, of course, was a brazen attack on both
democratic institutions and the democratic process itself: a mob of pro-Trump
extremists assaulted police officers, broke into the U.S. Capitol building,
called for the hanging of Vice President Mike Pence (and, broadly, “heads on
pikes”), defiled the office of Speaker Nancy Pelosi (among others), sent
staffers and members into hiding for hours, took over the floor of the U.S.
Senate, caused law enforcement to draw their weapons and barricade the entrance
to the House chamber, led to the use of lethal force against a pro-Trump rioter
who attempted to enter the Speaker’s lobby as members fled, and halted the
counting of electoral votes for several hours until armed forces could secure
the Capitol complex. “Fun to watch lol”? Not so much.
With Trump banned from the platform, “Twitter will
disappear in one year”
PREDICTED
BY: DAVID FEGAN (AMONG OTHERS), JAN. 8
After a
half-decade during which @realDonaldTrump’s every missive was mainlined into
the bloodstream of American politics, it was hard to imagine Twitter without
him. Then, two days after the Jan. 6 attack, Twitter permanently blocked him.
Suddenly, @realDonaldTrump was no more. And after a couple days, it was not at
all hard to imagine Twitter without him. Nearly a year later, Twitter’s still
going strong.
Trump will resign, and President Mike Pence will
pardon him
PREDICTED
BY: DUNCAN ROSS (AMONG OTHERS), JAN. 3
Spoiler
alert: Trump remained in office until Biden took the oath on Jan. 20.
Joe Biden will “move to alter the U.S. Supreme Court”
PREDICTED
BY: PAUL STRAND, FEB. 17
Many
progressives wish he would. But Biden has made no move to expand the court, and
his blue-ribbon commission to study the issue did not endorse the idea.
Nancy Pelosi will take a “farewell tour,” and her
successor will be Linda Sánchez
PREDICTED
BY: FORTUNE MAGAZINE, DEC. 2020
There’s a
consensus that after 20 years at the helm of the Democratic Party in Congress,
Pelosi is nearing the end of her career. That much seems obvious. But there are
two big x-factors about her remaining time leading Democrats: when she’ll step
aside, and who her successor will be.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário