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October 2012

Dear Gov. Romney: I apparently disagree with many (most?) of my philosophical compatriots in my assessment of your performance last night.  They think you did much better than I think you did.  But that’s no surprise.  We disagreed after both of the previous debates, too. Why is...

From frequent photographer Bill. This vehicle was spotted in St. Petersburg, Florida, and gives rise to some obvious word plays. ...

This was a strange debate. It was as if Romney were the incumbent and Obama was the challenger. I felt that Romney was running out the clock from the start, trying not to make any gaffes, proving he is worldly and reasonable. Obama was the aggressor, both in words and demeanor. To that extent, Obama scored "points" but not points that ultimately make a difference. If Obama's job was to disqualify Romney as a potential President, someone too reckless for the job, Obama completely failed. Which means that for Romney, tonight was Mission Accomplished. Tonight's debate will not change the trajectory of the election, and that is good for Romney. Here's how I summed it up: Here are the tweets as the action happened:

Starts at 9 p.m. Eastern. This should be fun.  Obama has to attack Romney, he just has to.  The momentum is going Romney's way.  A draw, nothing changes result is big for Romney. In theory this debate has the least risk for Romey, but I think that...

Each day until Election Day we will feature a previously unpublished photo sent in by a Legal Insurrection reader on National Empty Chair Day, September 3, 2012. The countdown continues with 15 days to go. Today’s great Empty Chair photo comes to us from Karen in Texas who writes, "...

This is a follow up to the email from duchessofkitty.. Not long after that post I received the link to this video: I hope you have 2 minutes to watch a hard hitting video I made called American Hero 2012. It should convince undecided voters and FIRE...

From commenter duchessofkitty: Hello Professor, Everyone, As you may already know by now, Early Voting for the General Election began today in TX at 8 a.m. I arrived to my local early polling precinct at 8:35 a.m. with my little girl, had my address checked by corroborating the...

Note: You may reprint this cartoon provided you link back to this source. To see more Legal Insurrection Branco cartoons, click here. Branco’s Facebook page is Cartoonist A.F.Branco ...

From Denise and Tom: Love your blog and thought you might appreciate this picture. Spotted this in Peoria, AZ which is a suburb northwest of Phoenix. Sorry couldn’t get a better pic, was the best we could do. ...

Each day until Election Day we will feature a previously unpublished photo sent in by a Legal Insurrection reader on National Empty Chair Day, September 3, 2012. The countdown continues with 16 days to go. Today’s Empty Chair photos were all taken by Glenn in Ohio (note: not "Oiho" as the Empty Chair Prez spells it).  They are all so good that I couldn't pick just one. First up, the Empty Chair in the empty field begs for a caption:

"Field of Obama's Dreams of His Father"? Maybe "You didn't build that, so no, they won't come"? Next up is the Empty Chair in the outhouse.

I'm not sure how I'd caption this, but the message seems rather clear.

At the first debate between Scott Brown and Elizabeth Warren, Brown raised the issue of Warren's Supreme Court legal representation of Travelers Indemnity Co. and related companies in asbestos litigation, for which Warren was paid $212,000. Brown made the point that while Warren was paid a small fortune, the workers ended up getting very little after Travelers was able to avoid paying the settlement it had promised. The issue played into Brown's campaign theme that Warren was "not who she says she is" and fed upon issues related to Warren's false claim to be Native American for employment purposes. Since then the Warren campaign and sympathetic media have moved aggressively to portray Warren's role as working to protect asbestos workers' settlements.  That the workers later were deprived of the settlement was portrayed as something unforeseeable, a "twist" with which Warren had no involvement. I have spent considerable time digging through case files and briefing as to Warren's representation of Travelers, and how it came to pass that Travelers ended up not having to pay the workers.  What emerges is a story very much at odds with the positive narrative presented by the Warren campaign and the media. I detail the story below, but here is the bottom line: Warren played a role at a critical time in what ended up as one of the great coups in legal history, the enforcement of settlement agreements by which Travelers promised a massive settlement fund for asbestos victims, but which Travelers didn't actually have to pay because a precondition to payment had not been met. The precondition was that other insurers give up their claims against Travelers, without receiving any payment from Travelers.  If the other insurers were not bound by the settlement, then Travelers did not have to pay the asbestos victims. Thus, the asbestos victim fund was held hostage to whether Travelers could strip other insurers of their claims.  By the time the case reached the Supreme Court the possibility, if not probabilty, that Travelers would not succeed in this inter-corporate fight -- and that it would not have to pay the asbestos victims -- was well known. Warren was not working to help asbestos victims, except ancillary to Travelers fight against other insurers.  Travelers ended up losing the fight with other insurers, which gave Travelers a contractual right not to make payment. This outcome, even if unintended, was foreseeable at the time of Warren's legal representation of Travelers.  Warren got paid, Travelers got to keep its settlement money, and the asbestos workers were left out in the cold.

George McGovern is dead.  The lede and two subsequent grafs from the New York Times report today give us an inkling of what we’ll be hearing and seeing a lot until he’s laid to rest. George McGovern, the United States senator who won the Democratic Party’s...

It's crunch time everywhere, but I want to call your attention again to the race in Rhode Island's 1st congressional district, my home district. While a couple of public polls showed incumbent Democrat David Cicilline up by low single digits, this race is much tighter. This is...

Micro housing.  It’s not just for the homeless anymore.  So says the New York Times. Most people see a parking space and promptly back up into it; Tim McCormick sees one and thinks, “I could live here.” Who would willingly choose to live in something with the...