The Morning Dispatch: The Coronavirus Is Not Politics as Usual

Plus, an update on the 2020 presidential race.

Happy Monday! With the switch to Daylight Saving Time, we had a one hour less on Sunday to work on this newsletter, so no fun header today, sorry. Let’s jump right in.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • After a little more than a year on the job, Mick Mulvaney is out as President Trump’s acting chief of staff. President Trump announced Friday that Mulvaney would be replaced by Rep. Mark Meadows, a retiring member of the House Freedom Caucus and staunch presidential ally, while Mulvaney will serve as special envoy to Northern Ireland.
  • Another batch of Democratic primaries will take place tomorrow in six states, in what has quickly become a two-man race between Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders. Each candidate notched notable endorsements over the weekend: Rev. Jesse Jackson for SandersSen. Kamala Harris for Biden. Still notably unaffiliated: Elizabeth Warren, who dropped out after Super Tuesday.
  • The U.S. economy added a robust 273,000 jobs in February, with the unemployment rate holding steady at a slim 3.5 percent.
  • North Korea fired a handful of unidentified projectiles into the Sea of Japan Sunday evening.
  • The number of COVID-19 cases in the United States has risen to at least 539, with 22 confirmed deaths, and the stock market is poised to plunge again today over coronavirus fears, with futures triggering circuit breakers meant to stop a market panic overnight.
  • Overseas, Italy is implementing heavy new travel limitations and quarantines in an effort to contain its rapidly worsening coronavirus situation, as the death count has risen to 366 in that country.

The Coronavirus Is Not Politics as Usual

On Thursday morning, President Trump tweeted that despite 100,000 coronavirus cases worldwide, “the United States, because of quick action on closing our borders, has, as of now, only 129 cases (40 Americans brought in) and 11 deaths. We are working very hard to keep these numbers as low as possible!”

Signing into law the $8.3 billion Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act the next day, he touted his decision to shut down international travel from China to combat COVID-19, saying, “I heard about it [the coronavirus] in China. It came out of China, and I heard about it. And made a good move: We closed it down; we stopped it.”

A 2020 Update

Is Bernie Sanders already in “last stand” territory? It almost feels silly to even ask: He was the front-runner until about five minutes ago, and is still only a handful of delegates behind Joe Biden. But now that the race has snapped into a virtual head-to-head between the two—setting aside Tulsi Gabbard’s ongoing quixotic effort—Sanders is staring down a tough reality check this week that may determine whether there’s any gas left in the tank.

The states that go to the polls tomorrow are Michigan, Idaho, Missouri, Washington, North Dakota, and Mississippi. Two, Missouri and Mississippi, are states Hillary Clinton carried in the 2016 primary; this time, Biden is likely to carry Missouri and all but guaranteed to take Mississippi by a sizable margin.

Worth Your Time

  • Here’s a story that reads like a particularly bizarre crossover from the Trumpworld Expanded Universe: Court documents show that Erik Prince—the Navy SEAL brother of Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos and founder of the private military company Blackwater—has recently been recruiting former U.S. and British spies to help right-wing activist James O’Keefe and his organization Project Veritas carry out undercover sting campaigns on Trump-hostile groups, from labor unions to Democratic congressional campaigns. The piece is written by New York Times reporters Mark Mazzetti and Adam Goldman, and you can read it here.
  • During President Trump’s impeachment hearings, America was very briefly introduced to a whole rotating cast of executive-branch characters who ordinarily work in relative obscurity: ambassadors, charges d’affaires, members of the president’s National Security Council. One of the most striking witnesses was Dr. Fiona Hill, the erstwhile top Russia expert in the federal government, who used her time to urge Congress to brace itself for Russia to interfere again in the 2020 election. On Sunday, CBS’s 60 Minutes aired a lengthy interview with Hill, which is full of interesting discussions on what separates today’s U.S.-Russia struggle from that of the Cold War and what motivates Russian president Vladimir Putin. You can watch the interview or read the transcript here.

Presented Without Comment

Something Fun

The coronavirus may be forcing schools in China to conduct class remotely, but some ingenious students found a workaround. From The London Review of Books:

Children were presumably glad to be off school—until, that is, an app called DingTalk was introduced. Students are meant to sign in and join their class for online lessons; teachers use the app to set homework. Somehow the little brats worked out that if enough users gave the app a one-star review it would get booted off the App Store. Tens of thousands of reviews flooded in, and DingTalk’s rating plummeted overnight from 4.9 to 1.4.

Toeing the Company Line

  • In his Friday G-File, Jonah ponders the need to defend against the ongoing diminishing and befuddlement of the English language, en route to a discussion about Joe Biden’s use of the word “literally,” Brian Williams’ math woes, and Elizabeth Warren’s exit from the race.
  • David has another great edition of the Sunday French Press for you to chew on, all about the temptation each one of us faces to see each outrageous thing that crosses our social media feeds—a cruel joke, a foolish take—as synecdoche for our ideological enemies, broadly considered: “the media,” “the left,” or what have you. “Our public discourse is trapped in an outrage cycle,” he writes. “We look for tweets and comments that appear to confirm our worst fears about our opponents, and when we find an outrageous comment, we retweet it, quote it, and repeat it as ‘proof’ that our fears were true… With each salvo in the endless war we retreat farther and farther from the perspective we truly need.”
  • Thomas Joscelyn continues his good coverage of the Afghanistan deal. Today on the website, he compares Mike Pompeo’s statements that al-Qaeda is a “shadow of its former self,” with the conclusions that came out of the State Department’s Counterterrorism Bureau’s conference last week, that the group was “resilient” and committed to continuing its operations.
  • Alec Dent has a new fact check up on the site about a deceptively truncated Joe Biden clip that pinged around Twitter over the weekend after the Trump campaign shared it, which you can read here.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).