The Morning Dispatch: It’s Joe Biden’s Race to Lose

Plus, President Trump’s coronavirus response.

Happy Friday! As we wrap up our second week of the Full Membership Experience™, we wanted to once again express our heartfelt gratitude to all of you for making us part of your morning routine. Every day, we’re delightfully surprised by wonderful community this newsletter is fostering: over email, in the comments, and on social media. (As always, if you would like to get the full version, please join us.) Have a great weekend, we’ll see you on Monday.

Biden’s Race to Lose

After what former DNC chairwoman Donna Brazile called the “most impressive 72 hours [she’s] ever seen in American politics,” the Democratic race is right back to where it was a year ago: Joe Biden as the best bet, with Bernie Sanders putting up a strong challenge.

Sure, there were some twists and turns along the way—Elizabeth Warren looked particularly formidable last fall, and Biden himself looked to be dead in the water as recently as the New Hampshire primary—but with Mike Bloomberg and Elizabeth Warren ending their candidacies, we’re down to the race that most pundits were predicting in March 2019 (plus Tulsi Gabbard, who remains in the race with just two delegates).

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The Parallel Tracks of Coronavirus Response

The federal government is still struggling to get a grasp on the ongoing coronavirus situation in the U.S. Earlier this week, the government announced two substantial changes to its coronavirus response policies: The FDA would permit private labs to create their own diagnostic tests for the disease, and the U.S. would open testing to anyone who wanted one, even if they were asymptomatic.

But Vice President Mike Pence, who is heading the White House’s coronavirus response, acknowledged Thursday that the government is not yet prepared to handle any spike in demand for test kits, as the virus continues to crop up in new locations.

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Worth Your Time

  • The exploding cost of going to college is understandably a hot-button topic this election year, as young people’s anger over the Faustian bargain of college debt helps to fuel Bernie Sanders’s outsider presidential run. But while the Sanders conversation has focused on whether the government should step in to help relieve that debt burden, there’s another question worth asking, too: Why should universities be charging as much as they are? That’s what makes this Atlantic profile of Purdue University president Mitch Daniels so interesting: the former Indiana governor has brought his famously parsimonious management style from the statehouse to his current role, and the result has been a blossoming college that hasn’t raised its tuition since 2013. As an added bonus, the piece is written by the ever-dependable Andy Ferguson. Read the whole thing here.
  • Today, alas, is another day double-dipping The Atlantic, because today The Atlantic is the outlet asking the real questions, to wit: Why are these people so freaking old?
  • A few weeks back, we clued you in on how the U.K. was making plans to allow Chinese telecom giant Huawei to help build their nation’s 5G networks, ignoring U.S. pleas that to do so presented an unacceptable security risk. The effects of that decision are already being felt, as America moves to determine whether and to what extent Huawei’s involvement will render the Brits an unreliable intelligence partner once that network is fully built. This Bloomberg piece from Eli Lake is a helpful explainer of what’s coming next, and what’s at stake.

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Toeing the Company Line

  • In David’s latest French Press (🔒), he expands upon Jonah’s recent argument that conservatism and Republicanism are not synonymous. “Right-wing populism looks a lot more like pro-life progressivism than it does anything recognizably conservative,” he writes.
  • Jonah had Stephanie Slade, managing editor of Reason magazine, on The Remnantyesterday to discuss nationalism and religion in public life. Check out their conversation.
  • Yesterday’s Advisory Opinionswas jam-packed: Super Tuesday, SCOTUS, FISA reform, qualified immunity, and arresting 6-year-olds. Sarah and David break it all down.
  • Today on the website, Jonah writes about how Sanders supporters have adopted Trumpian language to describe the Biden surge as a “coup” and the whole process as “rigged.”
  • Alec Dent makes his debut as fact checker, looking at activist Shaun King’s claim that MSNBC reported that the Democratic party was “interfering in the primaries” to stop Bernie Sanders.