Detroit Rises From Rock Bottom With Its First Population Increase Since the 1950s
INSIDE: Michael Cohen ... Matt Gaetz ... Clarence Thoma
A lot of things happened. Here are some of the things. This is TPM’s Morning Memo.
What A Journey!
Detroit’s population has increased for the first time since the 1950s.
Its decades-long decline has long been emblematic of America’s industrial decline, the hollowing out of cities that followed the loss of factories, and the urban wasteland of poverty, crime, drugs and social decay left behind. It was always a bit more complicated than that, but damn Detroit had it rough.
The contrast between its heyday and its nadir were so stark. From gleaming mid-century capital of the automotive industry that drew immigrants from around the world and was a major destination of the Great Migration to a husk of a city with abandoned landmarks, a local economy in free-fall, and its national reputation in disrepair.
Detroit benefitted from an unbelievable population explosion in the first half of the 20th century. It didn’t crack the top 10 until 1910, but by 1920 it had doubled its population and was the fourth largest city in America. By 1930, it became the fourth U.S. city to top 1 million people, and it peaked in the 1950s with a population of nearly 2 million. It has the dubious distinction of being the only U.S. city to surpass 1 million people then fall back below that number.
The latest figures show a slight uptick of 1,852 people from 2022 to 2023. Not a huge swing, but deeply symbolic given its painful historical arc.
The Menace Of Stroads
While we’re on the topic of urban development, the WSJ had a good piece on “stroads” yesterday which reminded me of this really good explanation of how the stroad is the centerpiece of America’s misbegotten post-war development patterns, largely built around the automobile (sorry, Detroit, I giveth, then I taketh away):
Biden’s Blue Wall
Let’s me streeeetch and bring all of this back to politics. The Blue Wall of Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin remains President Biden’s simplest path to 270 electoral votes, and he’s spending a lot of time there. The WSJ looks at the numbers.
Biden-Trump Debates Are On
Things moved very quickly Wednesday morning, with President Biden ditching the traditional Commission on Presidential Debates and throwing down a gauntlet to Donald Trump to debate twice and on the early side. What looked initially like the beginning of a negotiation over the debates turned out to be the culmination of negotiations that had already been under way. By midday, the debate schedule was more or less locked in place (and the debate commission was entirely sidelined):
June 27: hosted by CNN in Atlanta and moderated by Jake Tapper and Dana Bash
Sept. 10: hosted by ABC News
In related news, former Biden White House chief of staff Ron Klain will take leave from his Airbnb job to help Biden with debate prep.
A Counterintuitive Supreme Court Decision
The Supreme Court cleared the way for Louisiana to use a new congressional district map with two majority-Black districts – a win of sorts for voting rights – but the dissenters were the liberal justices who feared that how the majority arrived at the decision will be used to undermine voting rights in future cases.
What A Colossal Waste
When the final tally is complete, Rep. David Trone (D-MD) may end up having spent more on his losing primary campaign than any Senate candidate has spent on their entire campaigns ever.
Michael Cohen Is Back On The Witness Stand
TPM’s Josh Kovensky is liveblogging the second day of the cross-examination of former Trump fixer Michael Cohen in the Stormy Daniels hush-money trial.
Menendez Trial: Opening Statements
Prosecutors gave their opening statements yesterday in the public corruption trial of Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ). Defense counsel are expected to give their opening statements today.
Just In …
President Biden is asserting executive privilege over the audio of his two-day interview with Special Counsel Robert Hur in the classified documents investigation that ultimately yielded no criminal charges. The move comes as House Republicans try to keep the issue in the news during an election year by pushing toward holding Attorney General Merrick Garland in contempt of Congress for refusing to cough up the audio of the interview. Biden invoked the privilege at Garland’s request, the White House said.
Gaetz Under The Gun
As part of its investigation of Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL), the House Ethics Committee earlier this week subpoenaed the Justice Department for records related to its investigation of Gaetz in a related sex trafficking case, Politico is reporting. The DOJ investigation ended without charging Gaetz.
Clarence Thomas And That RV Loan
Thomas is still refusing to reveal whether he repaid the principal on the $267,000 loan that he received from Anthony Welters, a wealthy health care executive and personal friend, to purchase his RV in 1999, according to a letter that senators Ron Wyden and Sheldon Whitehouse have sent to an attorney for Thomas.
Venezuela Loses Its Last Glacier
The loss of La Corona glacier was long expected but it marks a point of no return for the glaciers of the tropical northern Andes, which are expected to all be gone by 2050.
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As you note, Detroit is symbolic of the degradation of cities, people, industry and government since WWII. I was born there in 1945. My first memorable play ground was the Detroit Art Insitute with a giant plant filled fountain in the Diego Rivera gallery. J. L. Hudson department store was the tallest in the country at 25 stories of merchandise available to a growing middle class, with products made by US companies. (Macy’s had more area but Hudson’s modern building was more impressive.)
The public transport network was electric street cars…. Until the men of corporations focused on how to get us in cars. The first shopping mall came in the mid 1950’s. Hudson’s merged with Dayton’s of Ohio, and devolved into the Target stores, selling stuff from whichever country makes “it” cheapest to a society with low wages. The Art Institute removed its fountain and closed galleries as the city government edged toward bankruptcy, with leaders trying to sell its art to rich speculators. The riots burned down the early century mansions turned into apartments near the Art Institute.
Look at a movie actors from the late 1940’-50’s, Henry Fonda in The Grapes of Wrath; they were healthy and well fed but not the BMI of most of current people, and where were the tattoos…?
My wife and I are fortunate, having jobs that paid pensions. We just returned from 2 weeks in Vienna being frustrated with the stores in our town of San Francisco. My wife bought two pairs of soft cotton pajamas and we explored shopping without buying to see what was available to people that can’t find quality in US stores.
Detroit might have more people, the rich suburbs, might too. But Biden just placed a 100 percent tariff on environmental prudent electric cars because, with the exception of Tesla, US corporate leaders are failing society.
Re: those "debates"...a disaster in the making, let's face it. Can you actually imagine whoever CNN sits in the "moderator's" chair (Bash/Tapper) that they can exercise control over tRump? Even if an attempt to shut off his mic if he rants beyond a time limit, at the very next speaking turn tRump will bellow at length about "censorship", the "FAKE NEWS moderator", etc., and basically take over the show, or reduce it to a vulgar campaign rally minus a live audience. tRump will resolutely ignore a "debate" question by simply going nonlinear, which at least half the TV audience has tuned into to see and hear.
If there is a god, he will terminate this idea ASAP and spare Joe Biden the gross indignity of sharing a stage with the Orange Gobshite, who as well (hopefully) will be a convicted criminal felon by late June, which has far more vote-getting potential for the Biden campaign than any dumbass "debate" ever would.