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Analysis: The Goldberg Goldman Fallout and the Rocky Shoals of Race for Md. Democrats – Josh Kurtz

The Maryland State House in Annapolis. Photo by Danielle E. Gaines.

The leak of an email from a high-ranking state Democratic official and political donor led to her resignation Monday. It also spawned a deep and searing conversation about the Democratic Partys relationship with Black candidates and Black voters.

Barbara Goldberg Goldman, a vocal supporter of former U.S. Labor Secretary Tom Perez for governor, resigned Monday as deputy treasurer of the Maryland Democratic Party. In the leaked email, written in December, she expressed doubts that a Black Democrat could be elected governor, noting that three Black men had unsuccessfully run for governor and arguing that Maryland has increasingly become a purple state in gubernatorial elections.

In all probability, the email, which had been circulating in political and media circles for the past several days, was leaked to embarrass Perez and raise uncomfortable questions about whether his campaign was benefiting from the sentiment Goldberg Goldman expressed that a Black gubernatorial nominee could not win in November.

But then the email from Goldberg Goldman, who is well known to several hundred Democratic activists in Maryland at most, became the centerpiece of an article in Axios on Sunday evening about the fortunes of Black candidates across the country and whether they are getting adequate support from Democratic leaders.

The article sparked a social media firestorm among certain Maryland Democrats. Some posts predictably focused on Goldberg Goldmans language and the Perez campaigns possible culpability.

But the article, which featured remarks from the three Black Democratic candidates for governor, from the Perez campaign, and from other Black statewide candidates across the country, also sparked the beginnings of a necessary conversation in Maryland about Black candidates and their relationship with party leaders, at a time when Democrats are wholly dependent on Black voters for their electoral successes.

Because much of the conversation took place on social media initially, it wasnt very pretty, and it reinforced the notion that Democrats are happiest when they are attacking each other. But the discourse got deeper as the hours went by.

We do not condone or support the comments in her email. They do not represent the values of the Maryland Democratic Party, party Chair Yvette Lewis said in a statement immediately after Goldberg Goldman resigned as deputy treasurer. Maryland is the most diverse state on the east coast. I am excited that our Gubernatorial candidates reflect this diversity. I also know that whoever emerges as our nominee will be a superb candidate and an outstanding Governor.

The campaigns of the three Black candidates former Prince Georges County Executive Rushern L. Baker III, former U.S. Education Secretary John B. King Jr., and author and former nonprofit executive Wes Moore have all made thought-provoking observations in since the Axios article was published.

As someone whose family went from being enslaved in a cabin in Gaithersburg to serving in the cabinet of the first Black president in just three generations, my familys story is a testimony to the progress that Black Americans can achieve, said King, who called Goldberg Goldmans email backwards thinking.

Baker, making his second bid for governor, called the sentiments expressed in Goldberg Goldmans email a trope Ive heard expressed countless times in so-called polite conversation.

There is no justification for dismissing the electability of any Marylander, in 2022, solely on the basis of race or gender, he continued. Such comments merely serve to excuse and legitimize acts of institutional racism, whether at the voting booth, in our corridors of government or our institutions of business and civic life.

A Moore spokesperson told Maryland Matters that from the outset, the campaign has pushed back against the idea that there would be skepticism about a candidates electability because they are Black.

In a statement to multiple media outlets, Perezs campaign said, These hurtful and ill-conceived comments do not reflect the values of our campaign as evidenced by Toms entire career to advance civil rights and expand opportunity.

But Moores campaign sought to up the political pressure on Perez.

Barbara Goldberg Goldmans resignation was appropriate, but it should not be lost on anyone who benefitted from these unacceptable and racist statements, the Moore spokesperson said. She was urging people to join her in supporting her preferred candidate because she believed a Black candidate cannot win.

Moores campaign also urged Perez to return any contributions hes received from Goldberg Goldman and to cancel a fundraiser scheduled at her house next month.

Looking back on 2014 and 2018

Goldberg Goldman was right about one thing: The last two gubernatorial elections were disasters for Maryland Democrats. Whether party leaders and activists have adapted and responded to the factors that made Republican Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. a two-term governor is very much an open question. But whats undeniable is that Democrats have a pretty strong set of candidates seeking the gubernatorial nomination this year and half, including Perez, are candidates of color.

In the past two elections the Democratic nominees have been Black. But is that why they lost? Both were flawed candidates who had the misfortune to be running against Hogan, a politician with unparalleled political instincts.

In 2014, Anthony Brown lost in part because he took his foot off the pedal after winning the Democratic primary convincingly he openly said that the hard part was over. He didnt anticipate Hogans attacks on outgoing Gov. Martin J. OMalley (D), and didnt move to defend the administrations record, even though he had been OMalleys No. 2.

When it came time to punch back, Brown relied on cookie-cutter national Democratic talking points that had little resonance in Maryland. State Democrats are still suffering the consequences.

Four years later, former NAACP President Benjamin T. Jealous won an impressive victory in the Democratic primary considering he was a political unknown. But he emerged from the primary broke, and his general election campaign withered under a barrage of well-funded Republican attacks.

Probably any Democrat would have lost to Hogan in 2018, whose popularity remains stratospheric. But the Jealous campaign was plainly outgunned and overmatched.

Did some voters refuse to cast a ballot for Brown or Jealous because they are Black? Undoubtedly. But how many of those folks were going to vote for a Democrat anyway?

When Hogan talked about high taxes and runaway spending under OMalley, certain voters may have found a subliminal message, whether Hogan stoked it or not: Why are we spending valuable government resources on those people?

And in 2018, Hogan attacked Jealous as a man who wasnt from here, who didnt know Maryland, and whose socialist ideas didnt jibe with Maryland values.

Black Democratic candidates say they continue to encounter these attitudes on the campaign trail. Sometimes they may hear it from a fellow Democrat: Former Attorney General Douglas F. Gansler, a white candidate who is making a second bid for governor, regularly touts himself, without explanation, as the only Democrat who can win in November.

Kevin Harris, a former Jealous adviser and a strategist for Timothy L. Adams, Bowies Black mayor who is competing in the Democratic primary for state comptroller, said Goldberg Goldmans comments in the email sadly reflect the thinking and conversations of many within our party. It is inflammatory to suggest that an African American is unelectable while at the same time relying on that community to win elections.

Party leaders put their thumbs on the scale

Its not as if white Democratic leaders dont ever get behind Black candidates: In the 2014 gubernatorial election, Brown was the overwhelming choice of the Democratic establishment (Barbara Goldberg Goldman contributed $2,000 to his campaign). And in 2018, most party leaders got behind Baker.

In that Democratic primary, Jealous and Baker combined for 70% of the vote. But several big-time Democratic leaders indisputably sat on their hands after Jealous became their nominee. They kept their distance in part because they werent comfortable with his brand of progressive politics. And they didnt know him he wasnt part of the club. And some were quite comfortable with Hogan personally and ideologically.

Did race also play a factor?

So many of Marylands Democratic leaders are political centrists, and the state isnt as progressive as many people imagine. Jealous did not run a great general election campaign, but many party leaders did him a terrible disservice.

In that elections aftermath, there was some discussion within the Maryland Democratic Party about whether elected officials who had failed to endorse Jealous or had backed Hogan, including state Comptroller Peter V.R. Franchot, state Sens. Katherine A. Klausmeier and James N. Mathias Jr., and Salisbury Mayor Jacob R. Day, should face any consequences. The party never reached a consensus.

There are certainly examples of the party establishment clearly putting its collective thumbs on the scale for white candidates over Black opponents: In the 2006 U.S. Senate primary, most party leaders openly preferred Benjamin L. Cardin over Kweisi Mfume, and he won. Same in 2016, when Chris Van Hollen defeated Donna F. Edwards in the 2016 Senate primary.

There is zero doubt that in the comptroller primary, party leaders and other elected officials are overwhelmingly supporting Del. Brooke E. Lierman (D) over Adams. In the primary for attorney general, Brown seems to have an edge so far in establishment support over retired Judge Catherine Curran OMalley, though not by much.

The roster of top state Democratic leaders is slowly changing, generationally and ideologically. It now includes Black women, like Lewis, the party chair, House Speaker Adrienne A. Jones, and Prince Georges County Executive Angela D. Alsobrooks. It features younger Black men like Baltimore Mayor Brandon M. Scott and Howard County Executive Calvin Ball, as well as veteran Black politicos like Brown, now completing his service in Congress, and Mfume.

Yet its undeniable that many Black candidates face greater hurdles than their white counterparts just to attain a level of credibility. And its almost unimaginable that anyone would chalk up a white candidates defeat to the color of their skin.

Still, the presence of three strong Black candidates in the Democratic gubernatorial primary, and five candidates of color, may present a dilemma to some voters and to party leaders as well. Its why some strategists attached so much significance to Alsobrooks decision to endorse Moore in the primary, rather than Baker, her predecessor: It was seen in some quarters as an establishment effort to push the underfunded Baker out of the race, to thin the field of candidates of color and increase the possibility of a Moore victory.

But if anything, the Alsobrooks endorsement, which Baker criticized in unusually harsh and personal terms, has strengthened his resolve to stay in the race. Some party leaders quietly fear that the field of strong Black contenders increases the possibility of Franchot who many leading Democrats loathe winning the primary.

In a column last month for The AFRO in Baltimore, Marvin Randolph, a veteran Black political strategist, fretted that there may be too many candidates of color in the gubernatorial race for any of them to win.

2022 could be the year history is made, or not, he wrote.

Barbara Goldberg Goldmans comments shined a harsh light on a problem that has dogged Democratic leaders for years, in Maryland and across the country. The release of the email surely changes the Democratic primary dynamic but at this early stage, its hard to say how.

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Analysis: The Goldberg Goldman Fallout and the Rocky Shoals of Race for Md. Democrats - Josh Kurtz

Opinion | Just How Liberal Is California? The Answer Matters to Democrats Everywhere. – The New York Times

A contest emblematic of the California divide is unfolding in Los Angeles. From a crowded field of mayoral candidates, the two most likely to advance offer a stark contrast: Representative Karen Bass, a stalwart liberal embraced for both her politics and her background in community organizing, and the billionaire developer Rick Caruso, who has sounded the familiar refrain that its time for a businessman to clean up the failures of the political class. In a bow to the overwhelmingly Democratic electorate, Mr. Caruso, best known for his high-end shopping malls, recently changed his registration from no party preference to Democrat even though the race is nonpartisan. For her part, Ms. Bass has called for freeing up more police officers for patrol (and hiring replacements for administrative duties) and equivocated on abolishing cash bail, positions that alarmed some of her natural allies.

It is hard to know just how much the pandemic, on top of the Trump years, has scrambled the political calculus. We have traffic jams at the ports that rival those on the roads, restaurant tables where cars once parked, hotels that catered to tourists now sheltering the homeless. Anger over closed schools and mask mandates has triggered a record number of recalls (most notably the landslide that recalled three San Francisco school board members, on which progressives and moderates agreed). In the far northern county of Shasta, a group including members of a local militia won control of the board of supervisors by recalling a Republican ex-police chief who had not been sufficiently anti-mask or pro-gun. A prominent anti-Trump Republican consultant called the vote a canary in a coal mine for the direction of his state party.

If mask and vaccine mandates have become the litmus test for the far right, the left has chosen as its defining issue a far more complex but seemingly unattainable goal: single-payer health care. When a bill (with an estimated price of more than $300 billion a year) made it to the Assembly floor, progressives threatened to deny party support to any Democrat who voted no. Far short of the necessary yes votes, the sponsor, Ash Kalra of San Jose, a progressive Democrat, pulled the bill rather than force a vote that could be used against his colleagues. He was pilloried as a traitor by activists.

The Working Families Party, which has pushed for progressive priorities in the New York State Legislature, recently established a branch in California in hopes of having similar influence and endorsing and supporting progressive Democrats. The groups state director, Jane Kim, a former San Francisco supervisor who lost the 2018 mayoral race to the moderate London Breed and then helped Bernie Sanders win the California primary, argues that the states electorate is more liberal than its elected officials, who are beholden to the influence of large corporate donors. Still, in the 2020 general election with a record-setting turnout voters defeated almost all ballot initiatives that were priorities of the progressives, opting not to restore affirmative action, nor impose higher taxes on commercial and industrial properties, nor abolish cash bail, nor expand rent control.

In the arena of criminal justice, where voters and lawmakers have consistently made progressive changes in recent years, the growing concern about crime (some justified by data and some not) will soon test the commitment to move away from draconian sentences and mass incarceration. The conservative Sacramento district attorney, Anne Marie Schubert, is running for state attorney general on the slogan Stop the Chaos, tying her opponent, the incumbent Rob Bonta, to what she calls rogue prosecutors like the progressive district attorneys in Los Angeles and San Francisco, who are targets of recall campaigns.

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Opinion | Just How Liberal Is California? The Answer Matters to Democrats Everywhere. - The New York Times

Star Trek: Discovery Makes Democrat Stacey Abrams President Of United Earth As She Campaigns For Governor Of Georgia – Bounding Into Comics

Democrat and Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams made a special guest appearance in the season 4 finale of Star Trek: Discovery as the President of United Earth.

Source: Star Trek: Discovery

The Hollywood favorite, Abrams, announced her plans to run for governor of Georgia back in December writing on Twitter, Im running for Governor because opportunity in our state shouldnt be determined by zip code, background or access to power.

RELATED: Star Trek Fan Launches Petition To Have Alex Kurtzmans Star Trek Designated As Non-Canon

Despite the help of Hollywood heavyweight celebrities such as Oprah, Michael B. Jordan, Common, and Will Farrell, Abrams still lost the 2018 Georgia gubernatorial election by a 51-48 margin. Since the 2018 election, Abramss likability in the state has taken a hit.

Abrams has publicly refused to concede the fact that she lost the election accusing her opponents in the GOP of voter suppression and systematic racism for her defeat.

Former Minority Leader of the Georgia House of Representatives Stacey Abrams speaking with attendees at a conversation at the Mesa Arts Center in Mesa, Arizona. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

As noted above, in the series finale of Star Trek: Discovery (STD) entitled Coming Home, Abrams made a cameo as the President of United Earth.

The episode sees United Earth being evacuated as a Dark Matter Anomaly enters the Alpha Quadrant at the behest of the alien species known as the 10-C. The aliens were using the Dark Matter Anomaly to mine boronite in order to sustain a hyperfield that protected their species from danger.

After the STD crew saves the galaxy, Earth finally agrees to rejoin the Federation, with Abrams character being their representative.

The official description for the episode states, In the season four finale, the DMA approaches Earth and NiVar. With evacuations underway, Burnham and the team aboard theU.S.S. Discovery must find a way to communicate and connect with a species far different from their own before time runs out.

RELATED: Alex Kurtzman Says Hes Proud Of Having Been Able To Grow Star Trek Into Something It Had Never Been Before

Speaking to IndieWire, Star Trek: Discovery showrunner Michelle Paradise revealed that she can hardly believe that the show got Stacey Abrams to cameo.

Honestly, the number of times Ive seen the episode, every time I see her face, Im like, Wow, that really happened. Thats awesome. she stated.

Michelle Paradise speaking at the 2019 San Diego Comic Con International, for Star Trek: Discovery, at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Paradise would also detail how the cameo came about explaining, We knew, coming into season three, that bringing the Federation back together again would be a two season arc.

And in the third episode of Season 3, we go to Earth and we find out that Earth is no longer a member. So we were teeing up that Earth equals the Federation coming back together again. So we knew that, by the end of season four, we would need to focus on Earth, she detailed.

Source: Star Trek: Discovery

Paradise elaborated, And as we got into season four and got halfway through breaking it, we realized: We need a person to represent Earth. And then the question became: who should that person be?

I dont remember where the idea came from, honestly. But I texted Alex to say, What do you think of Stacey Abrams? Immediately, [he sent] exclamation points. And he said, Lets set up a meeting. Lets talk to her. Lets see. So we did, Paradise relayed.

And she was so kind. And we got on Zoom with her, and we pitched her where we were for the season and who this character was and what this character would represent. And asked if she would be a part of this with us. Honestly, I cant think of anyone better to represent the president of Earth in all of that, Paradise declared.

Source: Star Trek: Discovery

RELATED: Star Trek To Introduce Writer Magdalene Visaggio As Franchises First Canon Trans Woman Character

Paradise would also tell Deadline, We knew that she was a fan of the show and ofTrekin general, and for us, there was no one better to be that President.

Alex and I reached out to her, and she was kind enough to get on a Zoom with us, Paradise added. We pitched her the very basics of that part of the season just that Earth would rejoin (she didnt want spoilers, so we shared just enough to give her context) and then talked to her about who this character is and what she represents. We asked if shed be interested and she was kind enough to say yes.

It was just an amazing thing. She did such an incredible job, it was a privilege for all of us to get to work with her, and were so grateful she joined us for that, Paradise concluded.

Source: Star Trek: Discovery

The showrunner also detailed to IndieWire that it is possible Abrams could return in the future.

Oh my gosh, I would love that, she said. I mean, I have no idea. Shes certainly busy doing other things.

Source: Star Trek: Discovery

Paradise wasnt the only one to gush over Abrams. The shows lead actor Sonequa Martin-Green did so as well telling Deadline, Im still floored when I think about Stacey gracing us with her presence in our Season 4 finale.

Shes a legend in the making and a civil hero, and she was an absolute delight to work with, she continued. She wowed us with her charm, humility, and generosity, and she whipped out some acting chops too!

It was an honor for me as a Black woman to stand with her in the story. Its an experience Ill cherish for the rest of my life, she gushed.

Sonequa Martin-Green speaking at the 2019 San Diego Comic Con International, for Star Trek: Discovery, at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

RELATED: Deus Vult Creator Jon Del Arroz Claims Star Trek: Prodigy Is Pushing Transgender Propaganda On Children

While the love and admiration of Stacey Abrams is glowing from Hollywood, the same cant be said about the state of Georgia where Abrams is running Governor.

Last year, Abrams took heat in the state for working with Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred on the decision to move last years All-Star game out of the city of Atlanta to the Democrat city of Denver to protest the passing of Georgias Voter ID law that requires a state ID to vote in person and by mail.

The move to pull the All-Star game out of Atlanta cost local businesses and vendors upwards of $190 million of revenue that would have been spent during the festivities.

We are thrilled to have Stacey Abrams deliver the Democratic Response to the State of the Union. Her electrifying message reinvigorated our nation & continues to inspire millions in every part of the country Photo Credit: Office of U.S. House Speaker, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Abrams has since claimed she didnt support MLBs decision but Fox Business Networks Charles Gasparino reported that Manfred did speak with Abrams before he decided to move the game.

She also partnered with LeBron Jamess More Than A Vote organization who openly celebrated MLB moving the game out of the city.

The latest polls from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution show that Abrams trails Kemp by 7 points in a 2022 rematch.

Hollywood spent millions in the state of Georgia on Stacey Abrams failed election bid in 2018 and are likely to repeat their efforts in the coming months.

Former Minority Leader of the Georgia House of Representatives Stacey Abrams speaking with attendees at a conversation at the Mesa Arts Center in Mesa, Arizona. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

The latest episode of Star Trek Discovery is available on Paramount+ today.

What do you make of Abrams cameo on Star Trek: Discovery?

NEXT: Star Trek Actor George Takei Calls On Americans To Endure Higher Prices For Food And Gas If It Means Putting The Screws To Putin

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Star Trek: Discovery Makes Democrat Stacey Abrams President Of United Earth As She Campaigns For Governor Of Georgia - Bounding Into Comics

How Teaching Kids Chess Will Benefit the U.S. – National Review

So argues John Mac Ghlionn in todays Martin Center article.

In chess, he writes, Every action has a reaction. Decisions have consequences. The game of chess teaches people basic life skills, like the importance of patience, perspective, and proper planning. It is, in many ways, a highly effective, highly instructive educational tool. Right now, the US is very much lacking such tools.

Thats right. Playing chess builds, to use Hercule Poirots favorite phrase, the little gray cells.

Ghlionn explains that, Researchers have found that the schema used by chess players is eerily similartothe scientific method, with great emphasis placed on calculations and assessments. Other researchers havedocumented the ways in which chess improvesattention, memory, concentration, and reasoning among players.

If American schools (including colleges) would encourage chess, that would have great benefits for the individuals and, in the long-run, for the country.

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How Teaching Kids Chess Will Benefit the U.S. - National Review

Make Your Move, March 2022 – Tactics III and IV – uschess.org

Make Your Movechess tactics appear monthly inChess Lifemagazine, an exclusive US Chess member benefit. Not a member? Join today!

This month's 9 puzzles are all taken from the 2021 World Rapid and Blitz Championships in Warsaw, Poland. The puzzles start from easy (1) and gradually move toward being difficult (9). Please note that "easy" is a relative term. Newer players will find the "easy" puzzles to also be a challenge.

First, try to solve the puzzle without checking the hint. If you cannot, open the hint to get a clue. Try your best to solve the puzzle completely on your own before checking the solution.

If you were unsuccessful, return to the puzzle in a few weeks to see if you can solve it. That way, you gradually expand your tactical vision and you'll be more likely to spot tactics when they occur in your own games.

Whatever you do, do not use an engine to solve the puzzles. You will only be cheating yourself out of improving your game.

PIN!

[Event "World Rapid 2021"][Site "Warsaw POL"][Date "2021.12.28"][Round "11.80"][White "3.3 Aziz, Husain"][Black "Nasuta, G.."][Result "0-1"][ECO "C47"][WhiteElo "2357"][BlackElo "2521"][Annotator "FM Carsten Hansen"][SetUp "1"][FEN "r2qr1k1/p1p2ppp/2p2n2/3p4/1b2P1b1/2NB4/PPPB1PPP/R1Q1R1K1 b - - 0 11"][PlyCount "3"][EventDate "2021.12.26"][EventType "swiss (rapid)"][EventRounds "13"][EventCountry "POL"][SourceTitle "Chess Life March 2022"][SourceDate "2022.03.01"][SourceVersion "1"][SourceVersionDate "2022.03.01"][SourceQuality "1"]

{[#]} 11... dxe4 $1 12. Nxe4 $4 ({White responded a little too quickly andmisses Black's tactical point. If} 12. Bxe4 $4 {then} Bxc3 {removes thedefender and wins a piece. Therefore, White has to play}) (12. Bc4 {when} h6 {leaves Black with a solid pawn up and clearly better chances.}) 12... Rxe4 $1 ({White resigned on account of} 12... Rxe4 13. Rxe4 Bxd2 14. Qxd2 Nxe4 15. Qb4Nf6 {and Black would be a clear piece up.}) 0-1

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First step, then kick.

[Event "World Rapid Women 2021"][Site "Warsaw POL"][Date "2021.12.27"][Round "6.16"][White "3.4 Ovod, E.."][Black "Atalik, E.."][Result "0-1"][ECO "C55"][WhiteElo "2366"][BlackElo "2420"][Annotator "FM Carsten Hansen"][SetUp "1"][FEN "r1b2r1k/1pp3pp/p7/P2Pb3/2BBp2q/7P/1P3PP1/R2Q1RK1 b - - 0 19"][PlyCount "10"][EventDate "2021.12.26"][EventType "swiss (rapid)"][EventRounds "11"][EventCountry "POL"][SourceTitle "Chess Life March 2022"][SourceDate "2022.03.01"][SourceVersion "1"][SourceVersionDate "2022.03.01"][SourceQuality "1"]

{[#]} 19... Bd6 $1 {The bishop drops brack to avoid being exchanged andsimultaneously preventing White from playing Ra3 which would help defendWhite's king.} 20. Qb3 ({White tries to defend on h3. If White instead plays}20. Re1 {to give the king an escape square, then Black simply continues} Bxh3$1 21. Qd2 ({or} 21. Bxg7+ Kxg7 22. Qd4+ Rf6 23. gxh3 Qxh3 {and Black forcesmate}) 21... Bxg2 22. Kxg2 Rf4 23. Rg1 e3 24. Bxe3 Rxc4 25. Kf1 Qh3+ 26. Ke2Rf8 {with an ongoing, decisive attack.}) 20... Rf3 $1 {A beautifulinterference move.} 21. gxf3 ({Or} 21. Qc2 Bxh3 {and it is over for White.})21... Bxh3 ({This capture wins, but Black can force mate with} 21... Qf4 $1 22.Rfb1 Bxh3 $1 {and White's king is stuck in the trap and White can only delaymate by giving up her material, e.g.,} 23. Bxg7+ Kxg7 24. Qc3+ Kg6 {and it isover for White.}) 22. f4 Bxf4 23. Ra3 Bg2 ({Also} 23... e3 {wins.}) 24. Qg3 ({And White resigned at the same time as} 24. Qg3 Qh1# {would have ended thegame.}) 0-1

[/pgn]

Link:
Make Your Move, March 2022 - Tactics III and IV - uschess.org