Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday February 10, 2020.
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Feb 10, 2020
Good morning from Washington, where President Trump says health officials are closely tracking the China-based coronavirus outbreak, which has infected at least 12 persons in the U.S. and nearly 37,600 in 27 other countries.The administration is on the right track to protect Americans, Tom Spoehr writes. On the podcast, Florida’s former No. 2 official recalls how she has overcome barriers of race and politics. Plus: U.K. venues sink evangelist Franklin Graham’s tour, Turkey says it has Ukraine’s back, and a former transgender woman celebrates renewal. On this date in 1966, consumer activist Ralph Nader testifies before Congress for the first time about unsafe automobiles.
I was wrong. In hindsight, it was all part of a selfish quest to nourish my long-held sexual fantasy of being a woman—a mental disorder called autogynephilia.
It’s unsettlingly Orwellian to watch the United Kingdom muzzle ideas, traditional beliefs, and viewpoints in favor of a unified groupthink that promotes only progressive concepts.
On the whole, the Trump administration’s response to the coronavirus outbreak has been decisive and comprehensive, and—thus far, at least—seems to be quite effective.
“If men continue to be allowed in women’s sports, we might as well change all sports to ‘people’s tennis, people’s cross country’ … etc., and set the world back to 200 years ago when no women competed in any sport,” writes Joyce Matthews.
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THE EPOCH TIMES
Shen Yun Performing Arts is the world’s premier classical Chinese dance and music company. Get your tickets for the 2020 season today.
“In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart.”ANNE FRANK
Good morning,
The federal government’s proposed budget calls for significant reductions in spending.
According to a blueprint of the plan, federal spending would be reduced by $4.4 trillion over the next 10 years.
The changes include cuts to foreign assistance and the Environmental Protection Agency.
President Donald Trump’s fourth budget resolution, which will be released Feb. 10, calls for substantial reductions to both discretionary and mandatory spending. The proposal includes deep budget cuts in foreign aid and environmental programs. Read more
Facebook Inc. and the IRS will meet in U.S. Tax Court on Feb. 10, to do battle over $9 billion the tax agency claims the company owes despite moving its profits to a low-tax jurisdiction overseas. Read more
Americans’ levels of optimism about their current and future personal financial situation have reached or are near record highs, according to a recent Gallup poll. Read more
A New York Police Department officer was shot early on Feb. 9 in the 41st Precinct in the Bronx, just hours after another NYPD officer was shot in the face while sitting in his patrol vehicle in the same New York City borough. Read more
A senior official at a crematorium in the coronavirus epicenter of Wuhan, China, says their intake has skyrocketed in recent weeks, suggesting that more people are dying of the disease than officially reported. Read more
At a meeting of governors of U.S. states and territories, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo warned about China’s influence seeping into local politics. Read more
Shen Yun takes you on an extraordinary journey through China’s 5,000 years of divinely inspired civilization. Exquisite beauty from the heavens, profound wisdom from dynasties past, timeless legends and ethnic traditions all spring to life through classical Chinese dance, enchanting live orchestral music, authentic costumes, and patented interactive backdrops. It is an immersive experience that will uplift your spirit and transport you to a magical world. It’s 5,000 years of civilization reborn!
Making Prayer in Schools Great Again
By Jentezen FranklinAfter three years of unprecedented success—ranging from two Supreme Court Justices and nearly 200 federal judges confirmed, to the First Step and Right to Try Acts, historic tax cuts and historically low unemployment rates—it would be easy for a special Thursday in the January news cycle to come and go with business as usual. Read more
Is the Coronavirus a Bioweapon?
By Steven W. MosherNo less a figure than Dr. Francis Boyle, an expert on biowarfare, believes that “the coronavirus that we’re dealing with here is an offensive biological warfare weapon.” Speaking of Wuhan’s Institute of Virology, which is at the epicenter of the epidemic… Read more
Ruble Collapse Nears Escape Velocity
By Valentin Schmid
(November 12, 2014)Markets fighting central banks can be compared to a heavyweight boxer fighting a lightweight. The lightweight can place a few quick punches and wiggle around his slower opponent for a little while but will eventually get knocked out. Read more
First in Sunburn: State Sen. Jason Pizzo switches endorsement to Mike Bloomberg — After previously endorsing former Vice President Joe Biden, the Miami Democrat is now throwing his support to presidential candidate Bloomberg. Pizzo said he based his switch on the former New York Mayor’s investment to build a winning campaign in Florida. “I ran for office to curb gun violence, pass criminal justice reform, push for repairing infrastructure, and promote affordable housing, I’ve waited patiently to see that from Biden and others — Mike Bloomberg has a plan and a path to get there,” Pizzo said. “This election is more than just defeating Trump, it is the tipping point for issues which are critical to my family, my constituents and all Floridians. Mike has a plan that I am proud to get behind.”
___
A year ago, Florida Realtors commissioned a report on the economic impact of vacation rentals in the Sunshine State. Today, the University of Central Florida is releasing the results.
The top line shows the vacation rental industry provides 115,000 jobs and boosts the state economy by more than $27 billion — $16.6 billion in direct spending and $10.8 billion in indirect spending,
“Floridians have long-known that the state’s vacation home rental industry has a significant impact on our economy, but the numbers in this report are simply staggering,” said Florida Realtors President Barry Grooms, a Realtor and co-owner of Sarabay Suncoast Realty Inc. in Bradenton.
Florida Realtors President Barry Grooms says the economic impact of the state’s vacation home rental industry is ‘staggering.’
“More than $27 billion a year is a substantial contribution to our economy, and the 115,000 jobs it supports are critical to the well-being of many of our communities.”
To put those numbers in perspective, the industry generates 312 jobs statewide every day, 13 jobs every hour, and one job every 5 minutes. As far as direct spending, that’s nearly $46 million a day and approximately $1.9 million every hour reverberating through the state’s economy.
Grooms adds, “Given the vital importance of vacation home rentals to our economy, I truly hope policymakers and stakeholders consider this information as they deliberate on measures that could impact the industry.”
Today’s Sunrise
Wednesday marks the half-way point: Day 30 of the 60-day Session. It’s the moment when the political roller coaster kicks into high gear — and also the day of the annual Capitol Press Corps Skits.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— There’s been a newfound acceptance of drones in the state Legislature. At first, lawmakers had imposed limits on uncrewed aircraft over fears about surveillance from above by the police state. But now they’re considering exemptions for everything from law enforcement to python hunting.
— It’s budget time in The Capitol. The House and Senate will approve two different versions of the new spending plan, then spending the final month of Session playing a behind-the-scenes version of Let’s Make a Deal. Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried hopes she’s not traded away in the process.
— Police in Jacksonville arrested a man accused of running a van through a volunteer tent at a GOP voter registration event. Fortunately, no one was hurt.
— Fed up with standard cable news stations? There’s something new on the lineup. BNC — the Black News Channel — launches today from their studios in Tallahassee, covering community issues often ignored by the mainstream media.
— Republican political consultant Anthony Pedicini talks about life, the universe and Florida politics.
— The latest on Florida Men, featuring a voodoo death and first-grade meth.
—@RealDonaldTrump: Fake News @CNN & MSDNC keep talking about “Lt. Col.” [Alexander] Vindman as though I should think only how wonderful he was. Actually, I don’t know him, never spoke to him, or met him (I don’t believe!) but, he was very insubordinate, reported contents of my “perfect” calls incorrectly, & was given a horrendous report by his superior, the man he reported to, who publicly stated that Vindman had problems with judgement, adhering to the chain of command and leaking information. In other words, “OUT.”
—@MarcoRubio: Col. Vindman wasn’t “fired” he’s still an Army officer. He was assigned to NSC to serve the President who has a right to have people he trusts on his staff [Gordon] Sondland was a political appointee. No point in having a political appointee who no longer has the Presidents confidence
—@DonaldJTrumpJr: Allow me a moment to thank — and this may be a bit of a surprise — Adam Schiff. Were it not for his crack investigation skills, @realDonaldTrumpmight have had a tougher time unearthing who all needed to be fired. Thanks, Adam!
Tweet, tweet:
—@sahilkapur: UMass Lowell poll: 62% of New Hampshire Democrats would rather see a giant meteor strike the earth and extinguish all human life than see President Trump get reelected.
—@KevinCate: Watching some old @AndrewGillum footage & there is no question, he’s one of — if not the most — talented & inspiring political leaders in our country. He should be at the top of everyone’s Veep list.
—@GovRonDeSantis: The tax credit scholarship program provides educational opportunities to more than 100,000 low-income families in Florida. I support these families and am glad to see @FifthThirdcontinue to do so as well. Thanks for empowering parents and students!
—@SamanthaGross: There is a ton happening in Tallahassee, across Florida and beyond. Despite attending events statewide, it’s been about a month since the governor took questions from the press. @anaceballosspeaks for us all: [Ron] DeSantis has been sidestepping reporters, and we are taking notice.
—@TowsonFraser: Mandating Florida businesses use an error-ridden federal system was a bad idea then and still is.
—@Scott_Tobias: Netflix: Good morning. Here are 12 new shows. Disney Plus: Did you enjoy The Mandalorian? Hold onto that feeling for another nine months or so.
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
New Hampshire primaries — 1; Pitchers and catchers begin reporting for MLB Spring Training — 1; South Beach Wine and Food Festival — 9; Ninth Democratic presidential debate in Las Vegas — 9; Roger Stone’s sentencing — 10; Nevada caucuses — 12; “Better Call Saul” Season 5 premiers — 13; 10th Democratic presidential debate in Charleston — 15; South Carolina Primaries — 19; Super Tuesday — 22; Last day of 2020 Session (maybe) — 32; Florida’s presidential primary — 36; “No Time to Die” premiers — 56; Florida TaxWatch Spring Board Meeting begins — 65; TaxWatch Principal Leadership Awards — 66; Florida Chamber Summit on Prosperity and Economic Opportunity — 95; “Top Gun: Maverick” premiers — 137; Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee begins — 154; Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” premiers — 158; 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo start — 165; Florida primaries for 2020 state legislative/congressional races — 190; First Presidential Debate in Indiana — 232; Republican National Convention begins in Charlotte — 196; First Vice Presidential debate at the University of Utah — 240; Second Presidential Debate scheduled at the University of Michigan — 248; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 255; 2020 General Election — 267.
Top story
“Florida voted to give 1.4 million felons the right to vote. It hasn’t gone smoothly” via Arian Campo-Flores and Jon Kamp of The Wall Street Journal — “It is a confusing, Byzantine morass,” said Myrna Pérez, director of the Voting Rights and Elections Program at the Brennan Center for Justice, which sued the state. The 2018 amendment ended the state’s permanent disenfranchisement of felons. The measure restored voting rights to those who completed their prison terms as well as parole or probation, except people with murder or felony sexual-assault convictions. After it took effect, the Republican-led legislature last year passed a bill that supporters said was needed to clarify its language. Among the bill’s provisions was a requirement that felons pay any fees, fines or restitution they owe to fulfill all terms of their sentences. Opponents of the bill said the measure undercut the amendment.
Dateline: Tally
“’Without consequences’: Dozens of ethics cases are languishing on Gov. Ron DeSantis’ desk” via Jeff Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — A backlog of nearly 30 recommended orders from the state’s ethics board — imposing penalties on an array of public officials, several of which were high-profile cases — is languishing on the desk of DeSantis. All require final action from him, and all but seven of them arrived from the Florida Commission on Ethics since he took office. The Governor’s failure to act also means people who should have been removed from their positions are still in office, including a St. Cloud Community Redevelopment Agency board member whose term is up for renewal next week. Even a $5,000 fine against DeSantis’ Democratic rival for governor, former Tallahassee Mayor Gillum, has gone unaddressed.
Ron DeSantis has nearly 30 ethics orders on his desk, waiting for attention.
“Election year politics? GOP pushing pay raises for teachers and state workers” via John Kennedy of the GateHouse Capital Bureau — Democrats and union officials say the GOP’s motives may be to deflect campaign criticism this fall, or even sow dissent among labor groups jostling over the size of a rare pay hike. But many welcome being central to state budget talks as the Legislature nears its midpoint. It’s an unfamiliar place for both. “Republican leaders think this will take away a page from our playbook — that we can’t say they haven’t done enough for teachers or state workers,” said Rep. Evan Jenne. “But I’m happy they are finally seeing value in our hardworking public workers.” House budget chair Travis Cummings dismissed any political shadings to the pay raises.
“Why is Florida suddenly bullish on teacher pay? Big business is on board.” via Jeffrey Solochek and Emily Mahoney of the Tampa Bay Times — Teachers have been lobbying lawmakers for better pay — not bonuses — for years. Democrats have proposed boosting the minimum salary to $50,000 since 2015. Most often, their voices have stood alone. In 2020, though, some of the most powerful lobbying groups in the state are joining the chorus: those representing the business community. “If we want the best, most dedicated teachers for our children, we need to pay them enough to want to enter and stay in the classroom,” North Florida developer Chris Corr, also chairman of the Council of 100, wrote in a recent column that circulated across the state. That issue of talent is another key argument. And it’s not brand-new.
“Appeal court sustains House’s subpoena of visit Florida’s ‘Emeril’ contract” via Michael Moline Florida Phoenix — A state appellate court has handed a victory to the Florida House in a dispute over financial records kept by the company that produced the “Emeril’s Florida” cooking show under contract with VISIT FLORIDA, the state’s tourism promotion arm. The outcome could strengthen the House’s hand in the continuing drama over VISIT FLORIDA. That chamber keeps trying to kill the agency while DeSantis and the Senate see it as crucial to promoting Florida’s tourism industry. At the least, the ruling vindicates the Legislature’s broad authority to investigate suspected corruption, inefficiency, or waste.
One of Emeril Lagasse’s cooking shows is embroiled in the battle between the House and VISIT FLORIDA.
“Will APD changes happen this Session?” via Christine Sexton of the News Service of Florida — Despite both chambers identifying the Agency for Persons with Disabilities as a priority issue that needed to be addressed during Session, the House has been strangely quiet on how to improve the Medicaid waiver program for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, dubbed the “iBudget.” But the Agency for Persons with Disabilities has spent more money providing services to the 34,000 people in the iBudget program than what the state has agreed to spend, which has spurred lawmakers to take a closer look at how the program operates. The Senate has offered its proposal (SB 82), by Sen. Aaron Bean. The bill maintains the iBudget program but makes some changes to how it operates.
“Al Jacquet hard to find as state imposes fines” via Joel Englehardt of the Palm Beach Post — The state can’t always find him. They’re slapping fines on him and routinely seeking corrections in his campaign filings. One recent notice was returned unopened. A friend said Jacquet told him last year that he resorted to living in his car for a time while in Tallahassee for the 2019 session. For about six months, Jacquet had no district office. The Florida Elections Commission fined Jacquet $2,000 in September for waiting a year to correct other campaign finance violations. He still hasn’t paid the fine, which could lead to the state filing suit against him. A $50 fine went to a collection agency in December 2018 and state records indicate it remains unpaid.
Legislation
“Florida’s tourism industry is behind a bill to block local laws that could create more benefits for workers” via Chabeli Carrazana of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida’s top tourism and business interests are putting their combined political might behind a bill moving through the Legislature that would prevent cities and counties from forcing companies to provide their workers with better benefits or more predictable schedules. Proponents say the bill fosters a pro-business environment and will set a single standard across the state, rather than allow local governments to create a patchwork of different rules. Opponents worry the bill could cancel out local laws such as an Orange County ban on discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in the private sector or a wage recovery ordinance in Osceola County that helps workers when an employer doesn’t pay what the worker is due.
“Sponsors still hopeful puppy mill legislation passes” via Sarah Mueller of Florida Politics — Sen. Manny Diaz is still holding out hope his bill to regulate pet stores will pass this Session. However, the Hialeah Gardens Republican’s proposal (SB 1698) has not yet been heard by a committee. The legislation, along with the House companion bill (HB 1237), sponsored by Rep. Bryan Avila, aims to rid the state of so-called puppy mills. Both bills seek to set a uniform standard throughout the state, allowing stores that play by the rules to keep their doors open and freeing them of the stigma brought on by shady operations.
Manny Diaz hopes his puppy mill bill will make it through this Session.
Today in Capitol
The Senate Education Committee meets to consider a proposed constitutional amendment SJR 1216 from Sen. Joe Gruters, which seeks to set up eight-year term limits for school board members across the state, 1:30 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The Senate Governmental Oversight and Accountability Committee meets to consider several bills, including SB 966 from Sen. George Gainer, which seeks to create a public-records exemption for information submitted to government agencies for disaster-recovery housing assistance programs, 1:30 p.m., Room 301, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Innovation, Industry and Technology Committee meets to consider SB 1352 from Sen. Jeff Brandes, which seeks to permit vehicles in ride-sharing services such as Uber and Lyft to show digital advertising, 1:30 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The House PreK-12 Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider HB 737 from Rep. Kimberly Daniels, which seeks to require a moment of silence at public schools every day, 1:30 p.m., Reed Hall, House Office Building.
The House Transportation & Tourism Appropriations Subcommittee meets to consider HB 1371 from Reps. Randy Fine and Rep. Mike Caruso, which seeks to improve safety at pedestrian crosswalks, 1:30 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The House Select Committee on the Integrity of Research Institutions meets to hear a presentation on the “risk of foreign interference in research.” House Speaker José Oliva, called for the committee after the resignation of officials at Moffitt Cancer Center who had ties to China, 4 p.m., Room 404, House Office Building.
The Senate Community Affairs Committee meets to consider SB 1148 from Brandes, which seeks to set up regulations on electric bicycles, 4 p.m., Room 301, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Environment and Natural Resources Committee meets to consider SB 1706 from Chairman Bill Montford, which seeks to address pollution in distinct types of public and private water systems, 4 p.m., Room 37, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Ethics and Elections Committee meets to consider the confirmation of several appointees to state and local agencies and boards — such as the state university system’s Board of Governors, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and water management districts, 4 p.m., Room 412, Knott Building.
The Senate Infrastructure and Security Committee meets to consider SPB 7054, which seeks to make changes in several transportation laws, 4 p.m., Room 110, Senate Office Building.
The Senate Special Order Calendar Group will meet to finalize the special-order calendar, which lists bills that will move to the Senate floor, 15 minutes after committee hearings end.
Statewide
“Florida’s unpopular Common Core standards are ‘eradicated’” via The Associated Press — The state Department of Education in a statement said the controversial set of academic standards “has been officially eradicated from Florida classrooms.” Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran said he is recommending that the state Board of Education next week adapts Common Core’s successor, Benchmarks for Excellent Student Thinking, also known as BEST. The Common Core standards were first proposed a decade ago by associations of governors and state education chiefs, and they were embraced in Florida by former Gov. Jeb Bush. A broad coalition of conservatives, liberals, parents and teachers found fault with Common Core for different reasons.
Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran put the final nail in the Common Core coffin.
“Florida may start grading pre-K schools A through F. Here’s why some think that idea is wrong” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — State lawmakers this year have proposed a new system, one that has generated widespread support — in part because so many dislike the current one — but also has prompted criticism for suggesting pre-K programs be graded A-to-F. The pre-K program, dubbed VPK, served more than 174,000 students last year and cost more than $400 million. Many early-childhood and education advocates are in favor of the new assessments but don’t want an A-to-F grade given to pre-K programs. “The VPK accountability system is broken,” said David Daniel of the Florida Association for Child Care Management, which represents private child care centers. “It doesn’t serve private providers, it doesn’t serve the policymakers, and it doesn’t serve these families.”
“Moffitt returns $1 million to state. Money was linked to scientist with China ties.” via Justine Griffin of the Tampa Bay Times — The funds originally were used to provide a salary and staff for Howard McLeod, medical director of the DeBartolo Family Personalized Medicine Institute at Moffitt and a senior member in Moffitt’s department of cancer epidemiology. McLeod was forced to resign in December, along with former Moffitt CEO Alan List and four other scientists, after an internal investigation found they did not disclose ties to Chinese recruitment programs. “Out of an abundance of caution, Moffitt is refunding $1,093,890 that it could not confirm was spent as it should have been,” said Yvette Tremonti, Moffitt’s chief financial and administrative officer.
“From smaller asbestos payouts to limiting lawsuit damages: Florida high court’s conservative makeover raises stakes in Capitol tort reform battles” via Gray Rohrer of the Orlando Sentinel — Unlike tax cuts, regulation reductions and other business-friendly measures passed by the GOP-led Legislature, tort reform bills have often failed to get through amid massive opposition from another influential group — the trial attorney lobby. DeSantis’ conservative makeover of the Florida Supreme Court means new such laws are more likely to be upheld. Under the old liberal majority, the state’s high court knocked down or chipped away at laws capping fees in medical malpractice and workers’ compensation cases, upsetting insurers and large corporations. DeSantis has also taken an interest in the tort reform push.
“Ocala to host Ashley Moody at cybercrime workshop” via Carlos Medina of the Ocala StarBanner — The workshop will be presented Tuesday by Cyber Florida and the Marion County Clerk of Courts and Comptroller in the wake of several cybercrimes targeting government offices in Florida. A spear-phishing scam hit the city of Ocala in October to the tune of about $740,000. The episode demonstrated how governments could be vulnerable to such attacks. “These attacks on our cities are expensive and diverts the government’s focus away from serving its citizens. These workshops and training sessions will help local leaders across Florida implement procedures to prevent, respond to and recover from cyberattacks,” Moody said in a prepared statement. The workshop is scheduled for 11 a.m. at Southeastern Livestock Pavilion and Extension Auditorium.
AG Ashley Moody will be heading a cybercrime workshop in Ocala.
“Federal red tape hamstrings Florida’s commercial space growth” via Jacqueline Feldscher of POLITICO Florida — The arm of the Florida state government tasked with revitalizing its space economy is facing years of delays in acquiring excess federal land and facilities to attract new commercial customers, says Frank DiBello, CEO of Space Florida. Significant delays in Washington are slowing things down, asserts DiBello, who has led Space Florida since 2009 and previously managed the aerospace business at consulting firm KPMG. “Right now, when there is federal property that is excess or could be turned over to the state for purposes of meeting the market need, we have to go through a federal process that is long and cumbersome,” DiBello said. “I would love to see that streamlined. We’re pretty far down on the pecking order.”
“Free orange juice could make a comeback at Florida welcome centers” via the News Service of Florida — Helping the Department of Citrus bring back free orange juice could hinge on a more significant debate, as the operations of state welcome centers remain locked in a legislative battle about the fate of the tourism-marketing agency VISIT FLORIDA. The Department of Citrus last July eliminated free juice offerings at welcome centers along Interstate 10 west of Pensacola, Interstate 75 near Lake City, and Interstate 95 near Jacksonville, as a $4.1 million cut in state promotional funding went into effect. Shelley Rossetter, the department’s assistant director of global marketing, said that stopping the flow of free juice “was hard to let go of. The department and growers are very clear that our visitors miss their juice.”
Coronavirus
“Coronavirus has Florida couple quarantined on Diamond Princess cruise ship: ‘It’s a little bit prisonlike’” Naseem Miller of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida couple Philip and Gay Courter are trying to make the best of being quarantined on the Diamond Princess in Japan, where dozens of passengers, including 12 Americans, have been diagnosed with the coronavirus. “I’m out on the balcony looking at at least 16 ambulances lined up here on the pier, and they’ve got the quarantine tunnel set up at the door, so I’m sorry to say it looks like they’re going to be offloading more sick passengers today,” said Philip Courter, 77, in a phone call from the cruise ship docked at Yokohama, Japan. Meanwhile, the numbers of infections continue to rise, especially in China.
A Florida couple are under coronavirus quarantine on the Princess Diamond cruise ship.
“Rick Scott urges coronavirus transparency. Was he all that transparent on Zika?” via Anthony Man of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — This week, Scott depicted himself as a proponent of transparency. His office issued a news released headlined, “Scott Requests Transparency in Combating Coronavirus in United States.” While Gov., Scott’s administration was the subject of complaints at the time about a lack of transparency about Zika. “It’s rich in irony that Sen. Scott talks about transparency given his record of running from it. In 2016, he literally avoided coordination with Miami Beach Mayor Philip Levine and county Mayor [Carlos] Giménez around the Zika virus outbreak. He withheld information from local leaders and even his fellow Republican, Gimenez ripped him for his lack of transparency and withholding sensitive information,” Christian Ulvert, who was a political adviser to Levine, said.
Charlie Crist calls for transparency and action on coronavirus” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — In a letter to CDC Director Robert Redfield, Crist asked for transparency in the agencies planning as well as additional action on how individuals and families can take preventative action. Trump does not plan to request emergency funding to respond to the outbreak, which has left many lawmakers frustrated, according to The Hill. While only 12 cases have been reported in the U.S., officials are concerned action is needed to stave off a more widespread problem. Coronavirus first began in China at the end of 2019. So far more than 28,000 cases have been confirmed in Asia, Europe and North America, including in the U.S.
Happening today — Crist will tour a health clinic to highlight flu season and preparations for any possible coronavirus outbreak, 11 a.m., Community Health Center of Pinellas Lealman Clinic, 4950 34th St. North, St. Petersburg.
Mother Nature
“Florida should help remove shark fin soup from the world’s menu” via David Whitley of the Orlando Sentinel — The shark is yanked out of the ocean, its fins and tail are chopped off, then it’s tossed back into the water. Unable to move, the shark drowns or is eaten. Shark finning has been banned in the U.S. since 2000. Fins can still be imported from countries without bans, however. Florida’s become a major hub in this trade, so the legislature is considering bills that would prohibit the import, export and sale of shark fins. The issue is not as cut-and-dried as it seems. There’s fear such laws would make it harder to track and combat illegal trade, and they could punish responsible fisheries. But many scientists and shark lovers say there’s no time to waste.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confiscated nearly $1 million in shark fins at the Port of Miami.
“Sierra Club sues to block Pasco road project that cuts through nature preserve” via CT Bowen of the Tampa Bay Times — The suit was not unexpected. The environmental group had pledged a legal challenge to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers permit, and Pasco County already had retained outside legal counsel for the court fight. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Tampa, names U.S. Army Corps Commander Lt. Gen. Todd Semonite and Col. Andrew Kelly, of the Corps’ Jacksonville district as defendants. Dan Rametta of Land O’ Lakes, a longtime opponent of the road project, joined the Sierra Club as a plaintiff. The 59-page suit contends the corps issued the environmental permit Dec. 20 without requiring sufficient wildlife studies, a public hearing and inclusion of public comments before 2011.
“Indialantic motel finally falls to the wrecking ball, 2+ years after Hurricane Irma struck” via Rick Neale of FLORIDA TODAY — A pyramid-shaped heap of jagged rubble, discolored mattresses and dented water heaters are all that’s left of the three-story Beach House Motel that got its roof scalped by Hurricane Irma in September 2017. JCG Demolition & Construction of Melbourne used an excavator to finally raze the dilapidated, dangerous shuttered structure bordering popular James H. Nance Park. “It’s been an eyesore for (nearly) three years. I’m happy that it’s being resolved moving forward. And, hopefully, they keep the place safe and clear,” Indialantic Town Manager Michael Casey said. “There was broken glass and windows all over the place.”
FITN
“Democrats clash on electability and policy in blistering presidential debate” via Matt Viser, Michael Scherer, Chelsea Janes and Cleve Wootson of The Washington Post — With no clear front-runner and four days to go before the New Hampshire primary, seven of the party’s leading candidates abandoned the wonky policy contrasts and opaque tonal critiques that had filled the race before Iowa. The debate stage became a free-fire zone instead, the candidates seizing the moment to call each other out. In a sign of the reordering of the Democratic primary race, it was Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg who often took control of the stage, engaging in impassioned monologues — and seeing their records scrutinized — while rivals raised their hands in the hopes of being called on next. They harped on age and political records, flashed anger, indignation and warned their rivals’ policy prescriptions would fail.
The leading Democratic contenders are clashing over electability, policy in a ‘free-fire zone.’
“New Hampshire pollsters on high alert after Iowa flop” via Steven Shepard of POLITICO — The University of New Hampshire Survey Center assured CNN — which, along with WMUR-TV, sponsors its pre-primary polling — that everything would work as it should. Unlike the Des Moines Register/CNN/Mediacom poll, which is captained by Iowa pollster J. Ann Selzer and contracts with an outside call center to conduct interviews — UNH conducts its polling in-house and closely monitors its procedures. Between the crowded field of candidates, the compressed timeline after an ambiguous Iowa result and Granite Staters’ historical penchant for last-minute commitments, the performance of this year’s New Hampshire polls could exceed its notorious reputation for volatility. Even UNH pollster Andrew Smith said it’s “a fool’s errand” to try to nail the results with the final poll.
“NH officials on the primary: We got this” via Kevin Landrigan of the New Hampshire Union Leader — Gov. Chris Sununu, Secretary of State Bill Gardner and top state and federal prosecutors vow the first-in-the-nation primary will go off without a hitch, though they’re prepared for contingencies. During a nearly hourlong news conference, Sununu said the state’s “100-year tradition” of fair and transparent elections would continue, and the debacle with the count and reporting of results in Iowa will not happen here. “We have a great record of being right, reliable, and on time, and this time will be no different,” Sununu said.
2020
“Joe Biden is collapsing” via Walter Shapiro of The New Republic — In his first words of the debate — the moment when candidates are usually the most scripted — Biden confessed, “I took a hit in Iowa, and I’ll probably take a hit here.” If his comments were a brief misstep in an otherwise smooth debate, it would have been one thing. Biden adopted a combative tone that undercuts one of his most substantial assets as a candidate — his avuncular persona. Biden may merely have been frustrated; the 77-year-old can see himself losing New Hampshire to the dewy Buttigieg (who was born during Biden’s second term in the Senate) and to the perpetual left-wing Senate gadfly Bernie Sanders. But he ought to know better.
“Biden shakes up campaign leadership, elevating Anita Dunn” via Katie Glueck and Jonathan Martin of The New York Times — Biden is giving effective control of the campaign to Dunn, a veteran Democratic operative and top adviser to him. “She will be working closely with us on campaign strategy and overall coordination on budget and personnel as we build a bigger campaign for the next phase,” according to a campaign email obtained by The New York Times. But two senior Biden officials said Dunn is doing more than that — and that she will have final decision-making authority, a decision that came at the behest of the former vice president.
Joe Biden’s campaign makes a major shake-up, elevates Anita Dunn to the top adviser.
“Biden on Pete Buttigieg: ‘This guy’s not a Barack Obama’” via Sarah Mucha and Eric Bradner of CNN — Biden mocks Buttigieg’s experience as a small-city Mayor in a new digital ad the former vice president’s campaign is using on YouTube and Facebook in New Hampshire. The ad opened a bitter new chapter in the Democratic race, with Biden belittling Buttigieg on the campaign trail Saturday and the former Mayor’s supporters responding by calling Biden dismissive of those in small cities and towns. Biden, who is attempting to turn around his flagging campaign after a fourth-place finish in Iowa, dismissed comparisons between his attacks on Buttigieg and Hillary Clinton‘s criticism of then-Sen. Barack Obama‘s limited experience when the two were primary rivals in 2008. “Oh, come on, man,” Biden told reporters in Manchester. “This guy’s not a Barack Obama.”
“Buttigieg reluctantly embraces his barrier-breaking candidacy” via Ryan Lizza of POLITICO — For the most part, the historical impact of a gay man winning Iowa has been something that has been thrust upon Buttigieg — by the media, by proud gay activists — rather than something that he has boasted about. In recent years there have been vastly different approaches to identity politics in the Democratic Party. The pattern has been that the first to have a realistic shot at breaking a barrier is more circumspect. Buttigieg is in the complicated space of being a barrier breaker: He’s willing to celebrate and ruminate on the history when pressed, but being defined as a gay candidate is not part of his strategy to win.
“Iowa debacle could make Florida primary more important” via Zac Anderson of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Florida Democrats will see 16 names on their presidential primary ballot, including candidates who already have dropped out, such as Cory Booker and Julian Castro. More candidates likely will drop out before Florida’s March 17 primary date, but the ballot had to be finalized back in December to allow time for printing. If the race remains muddled deep into the primary calendar, Florida could play a key role in the nomination. That scenario looks more likely now, with Iowa’s vote-counting problems resulting in the state failing to give the type of big lift or devastating defeat that can help winnow the field.
Tweet, tweet:
“A Democratic race among mostly white men leaves many women, minorities feeling abandoned” via Dan Balz of The Washington Post — Despite having two women and an Asian American sharing the stage at the debate in New Hampshire, right now the Democratic race appears to be a contest among two white men in their late 70s, Sanders and former Vice President Biden, and another in his late 30s, Buttigieg. Another septuagenarian, former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg, is waiting to pounce, depending on the results of the first four primaries and caucuses. This represents an unexpected turn for a party whose success in the 2018 midterms depended heavily on an outpouring of support and activism by women and whose failure in 2016 was the result, in part at least, of a falloff in turnout among voters of color.
NH horse race
Tomorrow is the New Hampshire primaries, the first actual votes — notwithstanding the Iowa kerfuffle — cast in the 2020 primary season. Here’s a rundown of the latest polling leading into the primaries.
Buttigieg is moving slightly ahead of Sanders in New Hampshire, according to a new Boston Globe/WBZ-TV/Suffolk University poll. The former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor is leading the Vermont independent Sen. by one percentage point among likely Democratic presidential primary voters. Buttigieg, increased his support in New Hampshire to 25%, versus 24% for Sanders, in the Paul that has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points. Sen. Elizabeth Warren saw a small increase to 14% for third place, while former Vice President Biden held steady at 11%.
Polls are showing Pete Buttigieg and Bernie Sanders in a statistical tie in New Hampshire, within the margin of error.
In a February 8 poll from theSuffolk University Political Research Center, Sanders takes the lead with 24%, with Buttigieg second with 22%. Warren receives slightly more than 13%, for third place, with Biden at a little over 10%. All other candidates are in the single digits, with about 12% undecided. This poll also has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points.
Arecent NBC News/Marist poll taken four days before the primary finds Sanders with 25% of likely voters, while Buttigieg gets support from 21%. This puts the two leaders within the poll’s 4.7% margin of error. Warren receives 14% (slightly up from the 13% last month), and Biden is fourth with 13% (he had been at 15%).
CNN polling conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center gives Buttigieg a more significant boost in Sanders. However, the Vermont Senator still leads with 28% of likely Democratic primary voters, slightly more than the 25% backing him in mid-January. Buttigieg has risen six points to 21%, while Biden slides five points to 11% and Warren dips to single digits with 9%. Buttigieg’s gains come almost entirely at Biden’s expense, CNN notes.
The neuroscience of presidential preferences
During the 2016 presidential primaries, SPARK Neuro, a company examines brain waves and other physiological signals to understand the subliminal mind, decided to evaluate people’s reactions to the Democratic candidates.
Traditional political polls, a small section of the three-billion-dollar public-opinion-research industry, are often widely conflicting and somewhat unreliable. One reason for this, according to SPARK Neuro CEO Spencer Gerrol, is that people tend to say what they think others want to hear — referred to as a “social desirability bias, the innate desire to be liked”— are vulnerable to “groupthink,” or they say nothing because they don’t want to be judged.
“This is especially problematic in politics,” Gerrol told The New Yorker, “hence all the errors in polling and all of the mistakes in campaign decisions.”
Subconscious feelings are seen as more reliable, because they can’t be easily gamed or swayed by outside forces.
“We’re not really conscious of our emotions in real-time,” Gerrol said. “Our algorithm is not reading minds. It understands if you are paying more attention or less attention and if you have stronger or weaker emotions, and to some degree, what the nature of those emotions are.”
“The firm might take on issues, like gun control or climate change, to help advocates craft more effective advertisements, he told me, and has chosen not to take on tobacco companies as clients,” Halpern writes. “It is currently working with the Department of Defense to understand the specific appeal embedded in terrorists’ recruitment materials in order to make equally powerful counter-propaganda.”
D.C. matters
“Donald Trump’s post-virus, preelection boom” via Dion Rabouin of Axios — The Wuhan coronavirus outbreak is already scuttling supply chains and wreaking havoc on companies around the world that do business in China, but if analysts’ projections are correct, the rebound from the virus could help propel the U.S. economy to new heights right around the time of the 2020 presidential election. With Trump touting the stock market’s performance and job growth as critical accomplishments, that bounceback could play a major role in the election’s outcome. S&P Global expects the outbreak to “stabilize globally in April 2020, with virtually no new transmissions in May.
Donald Trump is enjoying a post-virus bump.
“Trump’s Mar-a-Lago: Strikes, tweets and major decisions are made, away from public scrutiny” via Christine Stapleton of the Palm Beach Post — Presidents dating back to the Founding Fathers have conducted White House business from afar while visiting their hometowns or foreign countries. But Trump has amped up that tradition, conducting domestic and foreign policy actions that have defined his presidency at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private residence and oceanfront club. Unlike other presidents on holiday from Washington, Trump makes himself accessible to those rich enough to pay his club’s $250,000 membership fee, donate large sums to his campaign, attend society fundraisers or stand for hours along a road in rain or heat, hoping to be among the few adoring fans occasionally invited back to Mar-a-Lago for snacks and photos with the president.
“Trump impeachment aides leave White House post-acquittal” via Alayna Treene of Axios — Trump’s impeachment gurus, Tony Sayegh and Pam Bondi are leaving the White House after his acquittal in the Senate. Sayegh and Bondi were hired to run an anti-impeachment war room amid the House impeachment investigation, but now that the president has been acquitted, the two plan to return to their former jobs. Bondi, the former two-term Florida AG, will continue at Ballard Partners, where she chairs the firm’s Corporate Regulatory Compliance Practice. Sayegh, who had served in a public affairs role for Trump’s Treasury Department and has a close relationship with Ivanka Trump, Jared Kushner and Donald Trump Jr., will return to Teneo as a managing director in New York City.
“Trump appoints admiral with Miami ties as recovery czar for Puerto Rico” via Jim Wyss of the Miami Herald — As Puerto Rico is struggling to recover from hurricanes and earthquakes, the White House confirmed that it’s appointing U.S. Coast Guard Rear Adm. Peter Brown as its liaison for the island. In a statement, the White House said Brown “will coordinate United States Government efforts to build the infrastructure and resiliency of Puerto Rico.” The U.S. territory of 3.2 million people has been hit by a series of natural and political disasters in recent years that are strangling its economy. To complicate matters, island authorities have only had access to a fraction of the $48.5 billion in recovery funds that Congress has approved since.
Happening today — Gillum will join representatives of civil-rights groups for a conference call to oppose Trump’s nomination of Alabama federal Judge Andrew Brasher to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, 11 a.m. Call-in number: 1-877-615-4339. Code: 8967765.
“Florida Bar passes on Miami-Dade Democratic Party complaint against Matt Gaetz, says separate inquiry already underway” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The Florida Bar has confirmed it has a file open regarding Gaetz‘s conduct during the House impeachment investigation into Trump. The news comes one day after the Miami-Dade Democratic Party announced they had filed a complaint of their own. The complaint alleged Gaetz violated Florida Bar rules by attempting to barge into closed hearings during the House investigation. A Florida Bar spokesperson said they had not yet received the complaint from the Miami-Dade Democrats. Party Chair Steve Simeonidis initiated that complaint. But because a separate file has already been opened, the spokesperson explained the body would not be acting on Simeonidis’ complaint either way.
“Val Demings blasts firing of Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman” via Antonio Fins of the Palm Beach Post — “The president might fire Lt. Colonel Vindman, but he cannot damage the power of truth,” Demings said in a statement. “He might smear the public servants who stood up to his corruption, but he cannot debase their honor. He might attack the families of those who oppose him, but he cannot weaken their bonds of love and loyalty. With every corrupt act, this president only accentuates the integrity of those who stand against him.” Vindman, a key witness in the impeachment inquiry last fall, served as an aide on the National Security Council. He was fired in apparent retaliation by the White House and administration for his closed-door and public testimony in the Ukraine hearings on Capitol Hill.
The trail
“There are 62,000 pending citizenship applications in Florida. Here’s what that means for 2020” via Lautaro Grinspan of the Miami Herald — In 2020, bureaucratic delays in processing naturalization applications and an enduring backlog of tens of thousands of pending cases at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) could keep scores of would-be Florida voters from the ballot box. For local advocates, that’s cause for alarm: “In Florida, we know that elections are won by razor-thin margins,” said Andrea Mercado, executive director of the New Florida Majority. “So, every vote matters, and every vote from a naturalized citizen matters.” As of last September, the national naturalization backlog stood at nearly 650,000 pending applications. In Florida, that number was 62,079 — a more than 75% increase compared to the number of backlogged cases in the state at the same time five years ago.
“Room for one more: Chelle DiAngelus seeks path in CD 7 Republican field” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The evolving field of Republicans seeking a shot at taking down Democratic Rep. Stephanie Murphy in Florida’s 7th Congressional District now includes DiAngelus who sees a path for someone with experience in the complexities of health care. The Longwood Republican became the seventh active candidate in the CD 7 field after she joined the race last month, a race from which three others already have dropped. She spent most of her professional career as an executive at Florida Hospital, now AdventHealth, including several years as vice president for strategic planning, navigating the hospital company’s numerous hospitals, stand-alone emergency rooms, affiliated medical practices, and health care providers through the complexities of the health care market.
Stephanie Murphy draws yet another challenger.
Personnel note: Trey Stapleton joins Amanda Makki’s congressional campaign — Stapleton has led statewide and national media efforts for political leaders and government administrations across the nation. In Florida, he helped secure victories for Scott’s 2010 gubernatorial campaign, Attorney General Bondi’s 2014 reelection campaign, and served as communications director for the Republican Party of Florida. “Amanda has made the American dream her reality, served our country after 9/11, and fought for others throughout her career,” Stapleton said. “Her passion to serve and ability to lead are what will make her a great representative for the people of CD 13, and I am honored to be a part of her team.” Makki praised Stapleton’s experience in GOP politics and his service in the United States Air Force.
“Daughter of football coach Bobby Bowden runs for State Attorney in Okaloosa” via Jim Little of the Tallahassee Democrat — Ginger Bowden Madden, a longtime prosecutor and daughter of famed football coach Bowden, has filed to run as State Attorney for the First Judicial Circuit. Madden is currently a prosecutor in Okaloosa County. Madden said: “Our police, sheriffs’ offices, and other first responders do a magnificent job as our first line of defense. It is the State Attorney’s responsibility to see that work through to its proper conclusion, to put dangerous criminals behind bars and keep our neighborhoods safe.” Madden will be running as a Republican against her current boss, Chief Assistant State Attorney Greg Marcille, for the top prosecutor job in Escambia, Santa Rosa, Okaloosa and Walton counties.
Local
“JSO: Van deliberately crashed into Republican registration tent” via Teresa Stepzinski of the Florida Times-Union — Jacksonville police say a driver intentionally crashed a van through a tent where Duval County GOP volunteers were registering voters Saturday afternoon. Nobody was injured in the incident at the Walmart Supercenter in the Sandalwood neighborhood, Lt. Larry Gayle of the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office told reporters. Several Duval County GOP volunteers were working at the registration tent when a white man in his early 20s driving an older brown van pulled up toward the tent. He then drove through the tent, endangering the lives of the workers and damaging the tent and tables, Gayle said. The driver then stopped, got out of the van, and took a video of the scene before he “flipped off” the victims and fled.
A Jacksonville man drove into a GOP voter registration booth.
“Brandon man arrested after threatening to assassinate Donald Trump” via News Channel 8 — The Metropolitan Police Department arrested 25-year-old Roger Hedgpeth outside the White House. Hedgpeth reportedly approached a U.S. Secret Service police officer on patrol and said, “I am here to assassinate President Donald Trump.” He then told the officer he planned to do it with a knife, which the Secret Service officer confiscated after a pat-down search. Hedgpeth was moved to a hospital for a mental health evaluation, where he will be held until further notice. He was arrested for threats to do bodily harm and the possession of a prohibited weapon.
“’Project Freebird’ used meetings at Orange Park resort to craft JEA sales process” via David Bauerlein of the Florida Times-Union — Newly released documents and interviews with key players in JEA’s attempt to potentially sell the utility show how utility executives worked with bankers and attorneys last summer to lay the groundwork for putting the utility up for sale. JEA executives met with outside attorneys and investment bankers who flew into town for three days of sessions last July at The Club Continental, a resort hotel in Orange Park. They even had a code name for the privatization process — Project Freebird — and a timeline that anticipated a referendum in August 2020 for voters to decide if they approved a sale of JEA. All that activity unfolded while the JEA board was saying nothing in public about the possibility of selling JEA.
“Regrets? On eve of JEA investigation, Council President has a few” via Mark Woods of the Florida Times-Union — Scott Wilson stood on the steps of City Hall and pledged to get to the bottom of all things JEA. Then, even before the committee started meeting, another rock was turned over, a Fan Cam photo unearthed — with the image of Wilson sitting between Mayor Lenny Curry and then-JEA CEO Aaron Zahn, beverage in hand, at a baseball playoff game in Atlanta. Wilson didn’t realize what he was getting into when the Mayor invited him. When he showed up at the airport, he didn’t know who else was going — and that once he found out, he should’ve decided not to go. Yet he still got on the plane. “It was a dumb decision,” he said.
“Another city hit by ransomware attack. This time the police department is the target” via C. Isaiah Smalls of the Miami Herald — The North Miami Beach Police Department is the latest agency to suffer a cyberattack. City officials confirmed the breach, saying they discovered the ransomware. The affected computer systems were immediately shut down, but public safety services haven’t been interrupted, the city said. “Our Police Department continues to conduct all operations to keep our residents and streets safe,” a statement from the city says, “and citizen calls for assistance will continue to be responded to promptly.” An ongoing investigation has yet to conclude whether other departments or services were hacked.
“Pulse survivor research could offer first-ever look at how victims and families move on after tragedy” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — The Orlando United Assistance Center, established in the aftermath of the Pulse tragedy, is hoping to reach out to those who survived, immediate family members of those who were slain, and the first responders who were there the morning of June 12, 2016. The results could not only help evolve services but could provide first-ever research on how such populations get on years after tragedy strikes. The center has been the focal point of social and psychological services offered to those three groups. The study, which will include a survey and focus groups, is expected to expand research and responses beyond what has been studied in communities devastated by mass shootings in cities like Aurora, Colorado, and Connecticut.
“’Pro-life sanctuary’ bill blocked from Santa Rosa Commission agenda. Here’s why” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — Santa Rosa County Commissioner Board Chairman Don Salter is refusing to put a resolution on the meeting agenda that would declare Santa Rosa County a “pro-life sanctuary,” saying the item is too controversial and is above the county’s purview. The resolution, which is only symbolic and would proclaim the county as being officially anti-abortion, was proposed by District 2 Commissioner Bob Cole. “I think it’s too controversial,” said Salter, who describes himself as a pro-life Republican. “I think it’s above the Board of County Commissioners’ purview. Talking with our legal counsel, I think we all feel the same way. We’d be happy to take it up at public forum.”
“Greyhound racing at Sanford Orlando Kennel Club nears end of an era” via Tobie Nell Perkins of the Orlando Sentinel — The greyhounds still sprint around the track twice as fast as Usain Bolt. They make money for owners, gamblers and track employees for whom dog racing is a way of life. But decades after Earhart and Elvis came and watched, the sport is fading. The death knell came in November 2018, when Floridians overwhelmingly voted to end greyhound racing. Amendment 13 not only banned the sport but made it constitutionally illegal. That meant all 11 of the Sunshine State’s greyhound tracks would have to close their doors by the end of this year. Both racing fanatics and animal welfare activists say the greyhounds will find safe homes. Adoption groups say the waiting lists for dogs are long.
Top Opinion
“Less taxes, less government and more freedom? Not by passing E-Verify mandate.” via Al Cardenas for the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The mantra of the Republican Party, led by icons like U.S. Sen. Connie Mack and Gov. Jeb Bush, used to be “less taxes, less government and more personal freedom.” The effort to mandate that Florida employers use the federal E-Verify employment eligibility verification system fails in all three of those goals. The E-Verify mandate does not lower the tax burden on Floridians. In fact, while it may not technically be a “tax,” it will increase the cost of doing business in Florida and, ultimately, the cost of almost everything we buy. It is a stealth tax for which Florida businesses and consumers will be forced to pay.
Opinions
“We can’t afford a voting rights foe on the 11th circuit” via Andrew Gillum for the Tampa Bay Times — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell moved immediately to resume processing federal judicial nominations. One of those is Andrew Brasher for the 11th Circuit, which includes Florida, Alabama and Georgia. Brasher has devoted himself to opposing voting rights. And that makes him an especially bad fit for a circuit in which those rights are under serious attack. For Republicans determined to snuff out voting rights, Brasher is an ace in the hole: As Deputy Alabama Solicitor General, Brasher filed an amicus brief in the Shelby County case in favor of gutting the VRA. As reported by the Alliance for Justice, “Brasher also defended the state’s felon anti-voter law that disenfranchised over 286,000 Alabamians, more than half of whom were black.”
“Keep higher-Ed president searches open” via the South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — The Florida Legislature wants to throw a blanket of secrecy over the searches for the presidents of all 12 state universities and 28 state colleges. The proposal has been around for years, but it’s gaining steam this Session and that’s not a good sign. The bill is based on a flawed assumption. As Speaker Oliva said secrecy is necessary because “we don’t get the best pool of candidates” to run our universities. It is poor public policy to hide the names of people who seek to lead our public universities, control their multibillion-dollar budgets and make decisions that affect the lives of people and communities. As taxpayers, we deserve to know.
“How tuition vouchers for poor kids became a middle-class entitlement” via Mac Stipanovich for the Tampa Bay Times — You would expect the Family Empowerment Scholarship Program created last year by the Legislature would have three threshold requirements: the voucher applicant attends a failing public school; the voucher applicant moves to a better private school; and while the families of the voucher applicant need not be as poor as church mice, they at least are not middle class. And you would be wrong. Not one of these things is a requirement for receiving a private school voucher. The many defects in the private school voucher program are vexing from a public policy perspective, but none more so than the purposeful lack of transparency and accountability.
“Manny Diaz, Jason Fischer: vacation rentals need predictability, uniformity” via Florida Politics — Vacation rental owners and tourists have been in a state of flux due to rules and regulations that differ from one city or county to the other. That is why we have filed Senate Bill 1128 and House Bill 1011 to create predictable and uniform regulations related to vacation rentals in Florida. The bills will protect homeowners and consumers by clarifying the rules for everyone with a single, statewide system handling vacation rental licensing, inspections and the verification of state tax registrations. This legislation would help all jurisdictions — even those that currently do not have ordinances regulating vacation rentals. The proper place for the regulation of vacation rentals is the DBPR — just like the rest of the hospitality industry.
“Your independent access to important information threatened by bill in Florida Senate, House” via Don Coble of Calais Today Online — If Sen. Gruters has his way, you will lose independent access to legal notices. Senate Bill 1340 will be heard at the Judiciary Committee’s meeting. Meanwhile, the House’s companion bill, HB 7, already has passed through committees and will be heard on the House floor. State law requires each county to post its legal notices with a local publication with paid subscriptions. If SB 1340 and HB 7 are passed, counties no longer would be required to post legal notices, or they could hide them on their own website. That means no oversight to the issues that affect all of us.
Movements
“If lawmakers-turned-lobbyists break rules, Legislature should punish” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Frank Artiles’ career as a member of the Legislature ended very quickly. Still, he dusted himself off and soon returned the way many ex-lawmakers do. He became a lobbyist. But now there are new questions about whether Artiles has run afoul of a rule the House adopted shortly before he left town. Artiles is registered to represent five clients, including Freytech, a Miami company that wants $8 million in the next state budget to remove toxic blue-green algae from Florida waters. The House project request, which directs state money to a specific vendor, lists Artiles as its only lobbyist. If a six-year ban on lobbying by former legislators rings a bell, it should. You probably voted for it.
Frank Artiles is already lobbying the Legislature. Should he be punished?
Personnel note: Foley & Lardner adds on Katie Kelly — Kelly has joined Foley & Lardner’s State and Local Government Solutions Practice as a public affairs adviser; she will be based in the firm’s Tallahassee office. Most recently, Kelly served as Legislative and Governmental Affairs Chief for the Suwannee River Water Management District, where she was responsible for directing the Office of Legislative and Governmental Affairs. In this capacity, Katie served as the liaison to federal and state officials, community leaders to advocate the District’s legislative priorities effectively and efficiently. “We welcome Katie Kelly. She will strengthen our ability to serve clients in the Capitol and across Florida,” said Jim McKee, managing partner of Foley’s Tallahassee office.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Joshua Aubuchon, Holland & Knight: Dave & Buster’s
Albert Balido, Anfield Consulting: Florida Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Taylor Biehl, Capitol Alliance Group: Fraternal & Charitables United
Ronald Brise, Gunster Yoakley & Stewart: Frontier Communications Corporation
Matt Bryan, David Daniel, Thomas Griffin, Jeff Hartley, Lisa Hurley, Jim Naff, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: Florida Urban Medical and Educational Services, Millennia Management Group
Robert Burleson, Ballard Partners: Continental Heavy Civil Corp
Brecht Heuchan, The Labrador Company: Florida Academy of Anesthesiologist Assistants
James McFaddin, The Southern Group: Non-Secure Programs
David Ramba, Ramba Consulting Group: Kendall Investors 172
Daniel Sibol: PACE Center for Girls
Matthew Ubben, Confianza Consulting: 3MB Construction
Aloe
“Florida rolling out red carpet for Indies” via Kristin Fiore of the Villages Daily Sun — In a movie industry dictated by sequels and remakes, independent films are filling a gap that just keeps getting wider. “Audiences are demonstrating that they will support a well-crafted, character-driven independent film, voting with their ticket purchases at the box office,” said Margo Lange, CEO of ArtAffects Entertainment, a motion picture distribution company. Audiences in The Villages are no exception. More than 50% of the movies shown at Rialto Theatre, Old Mill Playhouse and Barnstorm Theater are indie movies, according to Deborah Mills, operations director at The Villages Movie Theaters. “Most independent films that open here end up being No. 1 in the country,” added Craig Wolf, manager at Rialto Theatre. “We’ve gained a reputation. They call us up.”
“PETA claims victory after SeaWorld says no to trainers riding atop dolphins” via Lori Weisberg of the Los Angeles Times — The decision to move away from such showy theatrics in the dolphin shows was disclosed in a letter sent by a SeaWorld attorney to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The letter was addressing a shareholder proposal made last December by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which asked that SeaWorld prohibit trainers from riding on dolphins’ backs and standing on their faces. As of last December, PETA held 163 shares of SeaWorld stock and has owned at least $2,000 worth of common stock for some time.
There will be no more trainers riding dolphins in SeaWorld.
“Spring training: Time for pitchers, catchers and cheaters” via Ronald Blum of The Associated Press — This year the players bring along dark clouds of scandal — the 2017 World Series champion Houston Astros have been tainted by their sign-stealing scam and the 2018 champion Boston Red Sox have been accused of similar subversion. Teams hope once workouts start, the stain will fade. “I think those stories lines will weave in and out, but that spring training is that juncture for individual fan bases to be optimistic about what the season ahead holds and it shifts back to that,” Toronto Blue Jays President Mark Shapiro said. “There’s a natural kind of rhythm to spring training that diverts to the positive stories.”
Happy birthday
Best wishes to our good friend, Franco Ripple, communications director in Fried’s office. Also celebrating today are Carrie Henriquez, Celeste Lewis-Hemanes, and Jamie Wilson. Belated wishes to Pinellas GOP Chairman Todd Jennings and Brian Swensen.
According to the state Democratic Party, Buttigieg gets 14 delegates while Sanders gets 12, even though Sanders had considerably more voters (Politico). From Hugh Hewitt: So @PeteButtigieg won Iowa. Those are the rules, like the electoral college. Candidates are looking for delegates. The mayor got 14, @BernieSanders 12. Like total yards v score in football game, the stats don’t count. Winner does. It’s Pete B for the win (Twitter). From Byron York: Talk about phony precision. Iowa Democratic Party calculates SDEs to one-thousandth, but won’t correct caucus officials’ errors. So Buttigieg wins 564.302 SDEs to Sanders’ 561.528. Meanwhile, party makes popular vote hard to find. Hint: Bernie won (Twitter). From Nina Turner, national co-chairwoman for Sanders’ campaign: “I feel bad for the people of Iowa who take great pride in the caucus process. They were robbed. Our campaign, and all the thousands of volunteers that combed that entire state on behalf of this campaign, it was really wrong” (Washington Examiner).
2.
At Debate, Biden, Buttigieg and Sanders Say They Would Let Soleimani Live
All say they would not have taken out the terrorist (WSJ). More on the debate (Fox News). Klobuchar went after Buttigieg (National Review). From John Fund: Trump Derangement Syndrome may be so deeply imbedded in the Democratic Party that it can’t be successfully treated. But the first step would be for Democrats to take Trump at his word. He is not evil — he is more of “a total act” who tramples social norms and sacred cows with equal abandon. Opposing him is fine, but acting as if he’s a dictator tilts the rhetorical playing field toward him (National Review).
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3.
Biden Calls Woman “Lying Dogface Pony Soldier”
The young, polite woman simply said she had been to a caucus before (Twitter). Biden could finish fourth or lower in each of the first two states (RCP). Meanwhile, Buttigieg called for legalizing drugs in a conversation with Chris Wallace over the weekend (Twitter). He and Sanders are targeting each other now (NY Post). People are starting to realize Pete Buttigieg is far, far left (Washington Times). Biden is looking to save the world by eliminating plastic straws (Twitter). He also argued that an AK-47 won’t help you fight the government, so you also shouldn’t have “a magazine that has more than 10 rounds in it.” He also said “Those who say ‘the tree of liberty is watered with the blood of patriots’ — a great line, well, guess what: The fact is, if you’re going to take on the government you need an F-15 with Hellfire Missiles. There is no way an AK-47 is going to take care of you” (Twitter). From Mark Hemingway: Yes, we should expect the American military to fire missiles on its fellow citizens. Great point, Joe! (Twitter). Elizabeth Warren argued gun control is “a public health issue” (Townhall). Byron York finds New Hampshire voters who are seeking someone more moderate appear to be turning away from Biden (Washington Examiner). Hillary is flirting with the idea of being someone’s VP (Washington Examiner).
4.
Oscar Winner Uses Line from Communist Manifesto
Documentary filmmaker Julia Reichert said “Our film is from Ohio and China, but it really could be from anywhere that people put on a uniform, punch a clock, trying to make a better life. We believe things will get better when workers of the world unite” (Daily Caller). Joaquin Phoenix gave an absolutely bizarre and self-righteous acceptance speech that had nothing to do with acting and included an anti-milk statement (Twitter). Brat Pitt, in his Best Supporting Actor acceptance speech, said “They told me I only have 45 seconds up here—which is 45 seconds more than the Senate gave John Bolton this week” (Fox News). From Larry Elder: Brad Pitt, winner of Best Supporting Actor, and made a crack about John Bolton not testifying before the Senate during the Trump impeachment trial. Apparently, Pitt is unaware that Bolton has REFUSED to testify without a subpoena (Twitter).
5.
Man Drives Into Tent Registering Trump Voters
Apparently in an attempt to kill Trump supporters.
Gunman Attempts to Assassinate New York City Policemen
He was caught the second time, when he walked right into a precinct and began firing (NY Post). From the NYC Scanner tweet: The gunman walked up to the marked NYPD van, asked for directions, then opened fire. The officer in the drivers seat was shot in the chin but is expected to survive (Twitter).
7.
First American Dies from Coronavirus
At over 900, death toll is now well beyond SARS (Hot Air). Over 40,000 infections in China alone (NY Times). From another story: Health officials are under pressure to release details of the movements of a British coronavirus “super spreader” – amid fears the virus is far more contagious than was thought (Telegraph).
8.
PETA Goes ANTIFA at Auto Show
According to reporter Andy Ngo, smashing up a car while dressed as animals.
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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray and Carrie Dann
FIRST READ: Pay close attention to New Hampshire’s independent voters
MANCHESTER, N.H. – Arguably the most important group to watch in Tuesday night’s Democratic primary here are the state’s undeclared — or independent — voters, who make up a larger share of New Hampshire’s electorate (42 percent) than any other voting bloc.
Photo by JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP via Getty Images
In 2016, Bernie Sanders won a whopping 73 percent of these independent voters. But in our NBC News/Marist poll we released on Friday, Sanders was getting just 22 percent of them — compared with Buttigieg at 25 percent and Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren at 10 percent apiece.
What’s going on here? Well, because there isn’t a competitive GOP primary this year, you not only have pro-Bernie indies, you also have the GOP-leaning independents who backed John Kasich and Jeb Bush in 2016.
And Buttigieg has been trying to win over those independents while campaigning here in New Hampshire.
“I have a vision for this country that is about moving us forward. It’s about ensuring that we draw together the energies of Democrats and independents, and even some Republicans who want to cross over,” he said on “Meet the Press” yesterday.
If Buttigieg is going to pull off the upset on Tuesday against Sanders — or at least make it close — it will be due to those independents.
Ditto if Amy Klobuchar continues her momentum, especially after Friday night’s debate.
The moderates’ standoff in New Hampshire
But it’s also very possible that the independent-moderate vote needed to beat Sanders in New Hampshire gets split up three ways, giving Sanders an easy win in the Granite State.
Indeed, the action over the last 72 hours here has resembled moderates acting like the characters at the end of Quentin Tarantino’s “Reservoir Dogs.”
On Friday, Klobuchar knocked Buttigieg at the debate. “It is easy to go after Washington, because that’s a popular thing to do… [it] makes you look like a cool newcomer, I just — I don’t think that’s what people want right now. We have a newcomer in the White House, and look where it got us. I think having some experience is a good thing.”
The next day, Joe Biden’s campaign went after Pete Buttigieg with this digital ad.
And guess what: The latest Boston Globe/WBZ/Suffolk poll has Sanders at 27 percent, Buttigieg at 19 percent, Klobuchar at 14 percent and Biden and Warren at 12 percent each.
But before the debate, the tracking poll had it Buttigieg 25 percent, Sanders 24 percent, Warren 14 percent, Biden 11 percent and Klobuchar 6 percent.
TWEET OF THE DAY: Did Amy Klobuchar pull a Chris Christie in New Hampshire?
Trump strikes back
Meanwhile, back in Washington, we saw President Trump retaliate after being acquitted in his impeachment trial.
On Friday, he fired Gordon Sondland as EU ambassador and removed Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman from his White House post – both men testified under oath in the Democrats’ impeachment inquiry.
He attacked Democrats who voted to convict Trump in the impeachment trial, like Joe Manchin and Doug Jones.
All over a matter where the president of the United States pretty clearly asked another country to investigate a political rival; where the Trump administration held up that country’s security aid; and where the White House said it wouldn’t cooperate with the House of Representatives’ investigation into it all.
2020 VISION: Buttigieg nets the most delegates out of Iowa
Nearly a week later, the Iowa Democratic Party finally released the delegate totals from the Iowa caucuses.
Here’s the split of the 41 delegates that Iowa will be sending to the Democratic convention in Milwaukee:
Buttigieg 14
Sanders 12
Warren 8
Biden 6
Klobuchar 1
On the campaign trail today: It’s one day before the New Hampshire primary: President Trump holds a rally in Manchester at 7:00 pm ET… Bernie Sanders stumps in Manchester, Rindge, Hudson and Durham, where he holds his rally with The Strokes… Pete Buttigieg makes stops in Plymouth, Milford and Exeter… Joe Biden visits Gilford and Manchester… Elizabeth Warren campaigns in Rochester and Portsmouth… Amy Klobuchar hits Keene, Nashua, Exeter and Rochester… Andrew Yang is in Rochester, Concord, Portsmouth, Manchester, Derry and Keene…And Michael Bennet, Deval Patrick and Tulsi Gabbard also campaign in the Granite State… Outside of New Hampshire, Tom Steyer is in South Carolina.
Dispatches from NBC’s campaign embeds: While crowd size isn’t a scientific indicator of support at the polls, Amy Klobuchar is hoping it is, since she just beat her own crowd size record in the Granite State, per NBC’s Amanda Golden. “Klobuchar drew over 1,100 people at a get-out-the-vote rally on Sunday. During the rally, she explained why her childhood experiences with her father’s addiction would make her a good president. ‘I learned what it was like not to have a perfect life, what it was like not to have your dad there on Christmas morning, and I think what I’ve learned from that is one, resilience, that no matter what happens to you, you gotta pick yourself up,’ she said of her father’s addiction and its impact on her life. ‘Good quality in a president.'”
And Pete Buttigieg is escalating his battle with Bernie Sanders, NBC’s Priscilla Thompson reports. “He first hit the senator from neighboring Vermont for his ‘you’re either for revolution or you got to be for the status quo’ language. Buttigieg said, ‘that’s a vision of the country that doesn’t have room for most of us.’ Then during the Q&A, Buttigieg continued to work in his knocks on Sanders, highlighting differences between the two. ‘Some of my competition says you don’t deserve an explanation on how much things are going to cost and how to add it up,’ he said. ‘I think you do.'”
DATA DOWNLOAD: And the number of the day is… five.
Five.
That’s the number of pages of medical records that Elizabeth Warren released in December, which included results of blood work and routine lab tests.
And yesterday, Sanders said he would not be making any more health records public.
“I mean, you can start releasing medical records and it never ends,” he said.
THE LID: The Vermin Supreme Experience
Don’t miss a special edition of the pod from Saturday, when guest star Alex Seitz-Wald gave a glimpse at the, er, unconventional candidates also running for president here in New Hampshire.
SHAMELESS PLUG: New Toddcast!
Check out Chuck’s latest podcast from Manchester, when he previewed the Granite State primary night with the state’s foremost experts.
‘Why are we still here?’ That’s the question Rob O’Neill, the former Navy SEAL who killed Osama bin Laden, asked after the news this weekend that there were multiple casualties during a U.S. military mission in Afghanistan. From Fox News:
“There were multiple American casualties after U.S. and Afghan troops were fired on during a mission in Afghanistan‘s eastern Nangarhar province on Saturday, two U.S. officials confirmed to Fox News.Military personnel were fired upon while carrying out the operation, but the number of deaths and the severity of any injuries have yet to be confirmed, according to The Associated Press.
Military spokesman Col. Sonny Leggett issued in a statement, saying those involved in the attack were ‘engaged by direct firing.'”
The AP reported that two soldiers were killed in action and six were wounded in an “inside attack” by an Afghan man in a Afghani military uniform. More from the AP:
“The U.S. Department of Defense released later in the day the names of the dead American soldiers. They are Sgt. Javier Jaguar Gutierrez, 28; and Sgt. Antonio Rey Rodriguez, 28.
There have been numerous attacks by Afghan national army soldiers on their allied partners during 18 years of America’s protracted war in Afghanistan.
Six U.S. service members have been killed in Afghanistan since the start of 2020, including Saturday’s casualties. Last year, 22 U.S. service personnel died in combat there.”
Man Arrested After Trying to Run Over Trump Supporters
On Sunday, a man drove a van into a group of six Trump supporters at their voter registration booth in Jacksonville, FL. Thankfully, no one was injured. According to the Daily Mail, the 27 year-old man was “charged with two counts of aggravated assault, one of criminal mischief and driving while driver’s license suspended.” Read more on reactions and how it unfolded on The Federalist.
Everything Oscars
The Oscars was host-less, but comedian and actor Ricky Gervais told a fan who asked what his opening joke would be if he were hosting. He tweeted that it would be, “I can’t wait to hear all your inspirational speeches about equality, and it’s great that the 3 hours you’re here tonight is the only time your badly paid migrant house staff will get some time off to sleep this week.”
What I Read… And You Should, Too I usually feature a book I’m going to read. Instead, I want to go back to two weeks ago to a book I wrote about starting. Now that I’ve read On Second Thoughtby Kristan Higgins, I can enthusiastically recommend it now. There’s just something about the relationship between sisters that always makes for a good story. From the description:
“Ainsley O’Leary is so ready to get married – she’s even found the engagement ring her boyfriend has stashed away. What she doesn’t anticipate is for Eric to blindside her with a tactless breakup he chronicles in a blog – which (of course) goes viral. Devastated and humiliated, Ainsley turns to her half sister, Kate, who’s already struggling after the sudden loss of her new husband. Kate has always been so poised, so self-assured, but Nathan’s death shatters everything she thought she knew – including her husband – and sometimes the people who step up aren’t the ones you expect. With seven years and a murky blended family dynamic between them, Ainsley and Kate have never been overly close, but their shared sorrow dovetails their faltering worlds into one. Despite the lifetime of history between them, the sisters must learn to put their differences aside and open their hearts to the inevitable imperfection of family – and the possibility of one day finding love again.”
A Case of the Mondays The luckiest Oscar winner (Twitter)
A doll’s journey makes a little girl’s day (Delta via Twitter)
LMPD officer saves dogs from kill shelters, gives them a ‘chance for a better life’ (WHAS11 ABC)
Dog breaks Guinness World Record for amount of tennis balls in mouth at once (New York Post)
The First Lady sported a patriotic look during the Super Bowl part at Mar-A-Lago last weekend and the intrepid John Binder at Fashion Notes has all the details:
“Melania Trump wore an exclusive knitted stretch-jersey dress by Atelier Caito for Herve Pierre from their upcoming Pre-Fall 2020 collection. Loyal Fashion Notes readers will know that Pierre is Mrs. Trump’s personal couturier and style adviser.Mrs. Trump paired the dress with Christian Louboutin stilettos and, later, a navy Christian Dior coat to return to the White House. Pierre shared a sketch of the dress to his Instagram page and thanked Mrs. Trump for wearing the frock.
“We were so happy,” Pierre wrote alongside a photo of Mrs. Trump. “I guess her smile says it all!!! It the best accessory!!”
If you’re in the DC area, don’t miss the chance to attend the annual Easter Egg Roll. It’s scheduled for April 13 and the lottery for the free tickets opens on February 18 at 10 a.m. EST. and closes on February 24 at 10 a.m. Visit WhiteHouse.gov for more information on the lottery and volunteer opportunities.
Mondays with Melania is a weekly feature that highlights what the First Lady is doing and wearing.
Note: By using some of the links above, Bright may be compensated through the Amazon Affiliate program and Magic Links. However, none of this content is sponsored and all opinions are our own.
President Donald Trump’s $4.8 trillion election year budget seeks to balance painful reductions in domestic and foreign aid programs that are certain to draw scorn from lawmakers, with openings for bipartisan deals on prescription drug pricing and infrastructure. Read More…
While the “Medicare for All” debate over whether to shift the nation toward government-run health care has been the mainstay of the presidential debate so far, other issues, especially drug prices, are also dominant themes on the campaign trail this year. Read More…
Congress enters the debate over how to shore up a highway trust fund headed for insolvency with a conundrum: The GOP is reluctant to raise the federal fuel tax, the tax isn’t a long-term solution anyway, and the most popular alternative to the gas tax isn’t ready for prime time. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developments in finance and financial technology.
The legal bills keep coming for Rep. Tony Cárdenas. The California Democrat has spent $220,547 on a lawsuit that alleged he sexually assaulted a minor, according to a legal expense filing received by the Legislative Resource Center on Jan. 30. Read More…
Former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg may have squeaked out a narrow win in the Iowa caucus over Vermont independent Sen. Bernie Sanders. But on Capitol Hill, former Vice President Joe Biden is still the candidate to beat. Read More…
Speaker Nancy Pelosi started a paper-tearing trend after she ripped a copy of the president’s State of the Union address on live TV. But papers weren’t the only things getting ripped to shreds last week. Read More…
Lawmakers won’t get to insert special projects for their districts into spending bills this year after all, following weeks of internal discussions and some momentum among House Democrats. Read More…
The Government Publishing Office is hard at work ahead of the public release of President Donald Trump’s budget, printing and binding the document for distribution. Every year since 1921, thousands of copies of the president’s budget are printed and bound at the GPO. Read More…
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REALCLEARPOLITICS
02/10/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Presented by Partnership for America’s Health Care Future: Illiterate & Obtuse; N.H. Previews; Garry vs. Blue
Good morning. It’s Monday, Feb. 10, 2020. That certainly was a newsworthy eight-day stretch, wasn’t it?
Sunday, Feb. 2 — Super Bowl LIV. Great game.
Monday — Iowa caucuses, with uncertainty going in.
Monday night — Uncertainty going out, too, as Democrats inexplicably can’t count the votes in the Hawkeye State.
Tuesday — State of the Union address, which ends with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi theatrically tearing up the text of President Trump’s speech.
Wednesday — President acquitted in Senate impeachment vote.
Thursday – — National Prayer Breakfast, where President Trump rips Democrats because (a) they impeached him in the first place; (2) they managed to get one GOP vote for conviction; (3) Pelosi prays for the president. His performance was a combination of Ricky Bobby in “Talladega Nights” and Michael Corleone in “Godfather II.”
Friday morning — Boffo economic numbers for umpteenth month in a row.
Friday night — Democrats’ hold presidential debate in New Hampshire, where none of the seven candidates on stage has a single good thing to say about the U.S. economy.
Saturday — With three days before voting in New Hampshire, the Democrats start attacking one another.
Saturday night — “SNL” spoofs the debates. A mock ad by Mike Bloomberg floats a fanciful campaign slogan for the former New York City mayor: “He’s not as short as Trump is fat.” The Pete Buttigieg character, asked by a moderator who won Iowa, answers simply, “Trump.”
Sunday — Hollywood hosts the Academy Awards ceremony. Apparently trying to pick up where Iowa Democrats left off, the hosts and award winners take thinly veiled shots at conservatives over climate change and impeachment, tout single-payer health care, use the words “vaginas” and “queer,” and admiringly invoke a line from “The Communist Manifesto.” But at least Brad Pitt got an Oscar for his performance in “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood.” It was about time — and well-deserved.
And on this date 24 years ago, in the cradle of liberty, man faced off against machine. The machine was built by IBM. The man was reigning world chess champion — and future democracy activist — Garry Kasparov. We’ll revisit the results of the competition in a moment. First, I’d point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Our Biblically Illiterate, Historically Obtuse President. In a column, I explain why Donald Trump’s “victory lap” speeches were, to put it mildly, lacking.
New Hampshire Debate: Dems and the “S” Word. Phil Wegmann writes that socialism was not a shunned concept during Friday’s showdown at Saint Anselm College.
Pete Is a Serious Young Man. Howard Fineman writes that Granite Staters are warming to Pete Buttigieg, though Bernie Sanders still leads in the polls.
Bloomberg Isn’t on Ballot, But Is on the Minds of N.H. Voters. Howard also has this report on the eve of the primary.
The Cabinet Secretary and the Reporter: A Parable: After Mike Pompeo’s verbal smackdown with an NPR reporter recently, William A. Pierce revisits “off the record.”
Golden State’s Clean Green Hypocrisy. Peggy Grande assails the legislature’s moratorium on oil production as both bad economics and bad environmental policy.
Presidents Day Celebrates Our Singular Heritage. Wendell Willkie II and Russell Muirhead identify the glue that binds us: an appreciation of America’s founding ideals.
With Huawei, Just What Are Conservatives So Afraid Of? RealClearMarkets editor John Tamny sees hypocrisy in the hand-wringing over the Chinese-government-supported tech company’s push to develop 5G.
The Lake People’s Story. The world has seen climate change before, which Michael Curley spotlights in RealClearEnergy.
* * *
The disruptive possibilities of artificial intelligence have been explored since the advent of science fiction, but for many people it migrated from the world of fantasy to reality on Feb. 10, 1996, inside Philadelphia’s Pennsylvania Convention Center.
There, an IBM computer named “Deep Blue” was pitted against the greatest chess player in the world. Deep Blue came out of Carnegie Mellon University’s computer science labs, the brainchild of a doctoral student named Feng-hsiung Hsu. This pet project was named “Deep Thought,” after a computer in the 1979 paperback novel “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.”
Hsu and two colleagues were hired by IBM, continued to work on their computer and, by 1989, felt confident enough to challenge world chess champ Garry Kasparov to a two-game match. The machine was no contest for the man, not then anyway. So the IBM boys went back to the lab.
Kasparov had burst onto the world chess scene in the mid-1980s in a series of historic matches against Anatoly Karpov. As the Cold War lurched to an end, their storied struggles served as a proxy between East and West. Karpov was the ideal Soviet man: methodical, ruthless, efficient, and unflappable – “icy” in Kasparov’s description. His younger opponent — Jewish on his father’s side, Armenian on his mother’s, and hailing from one of the Soviet Union’s far-flung provinces — played a bold and daring game.
He reminded some observers of Bobby Fischer, which was only superficially true in terms of their chess style. But the point was that Kasparov played chess unpredictably and fearlessly, and American chess fans loved him.
He finally dispatched Karpov, displeasing Soviet authorities, and he smoked the IBM computer in their six-game match in Philadelphia. A year later, the computer would prove stronger, but among humans Kasparov had no peer.
Although he still plays sometimes, Kasparov retired from competitive chess 15 years ago to pursue a challenge even more elusive: bringing democracy to Russia. This has put him in direct conflict with Vladimir Putin, a foe as cunning and merciless as Skynet. I discussed Putin with the old chess master in an interview more than four years ago and wrote about it.
The Putin-Kasparov battle of wills has always seemed to be a mismatch, and sometimes I fear for my acquaintance. But as the world learned many years ago, it can be a mistake to underestimate the great Garry Kasparov.
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When President Obama supported the “gig economy” during his time in office, he did so with the very capitalist understanding that people who were empowered to take advantage of income flexibility in an increasingly technological society would be the driving force to prosperity. It was one of the few acknowledgements he made through his administration that conservatives and liberty-minded folks could agree with wholeheartedly.
The only loser in the gig economy is the antiquated Big Labor movement, the labor unions who once protected workers from exploitation but that now participate in exploitation for the benefit of the collective instead of the individuals. Workers rarely need collective-bargaining power that comes at the high cost of participating in a union which is why Big Labor has sought legislative solutions to their dwindling usefulness. Their saviors: Democrats.
Specifically, Big Labor turned to California and its radical progressive lawmakers to enact AB5, a bill they hope will blaze a trail for other blue states for years to come. As JD said, it’s an anti-American law. It’s also an economy killer brought about by “progressives” who are fighting against real progress in the economy and the technological world.
But even the age-old profession of journalism is being affected. In fact, it’s arguably the worst hit as freelance journalists across the state are being shunned by their former employers. Why? Because the law limits freelancers to 35 content submissions per year per publication. Considering many write multiple articles per week, the Draconian restriction is a job-killer.
“As a freelancer I have the flexibility to do work while I’m at school or do work late at night or not work that week because I’m busy,” said graduate student and founder of Lone ConservativeKassy Dillon. Freelancing allowed her to pay her way through graduate school. Now, she may have to take out student loans to make up the difference.
This video by ReasonTV highlights some of the challenges being faced by freelance writers in California who are being harmed by AB5. For a law that’s supposed to empower people, it’s doing a great job at subverting their needs all for Big Labor’s benefit.
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
There was a time when I liked Bill Kristol. He was an ideological moderate and a neoconservative, but he seemed to be principled. Now that his entire existence has shifted to proving he was right in 2016 when he denounced candidate-Trump and sought a viable alternative, it’s difficult to look at his antics with anything other than remorse for someone who is so lost.
His latest machination is a clever one. His team is calling and texting Independents in New Hampshire and telling them to vote in the Democratic primary on Tuesday. While he’s not endorsing any of the candidates, he’s attacking one in particular: Senator Bernie Sanders. While not mentioning him by name, the implication of the call is clear. They want Independents, who can vote in either the Republican or Democratic primary, to vote for someone “responsible and electable.”
Is this really about saving the country from President Trump? Kristol has been framing his “resistance” stance in such terms since before the 2016 election. But the fact that he’s pushing an anyone-but-Bernie stance tells us something extremely important. This isn’t about finding someone who can beat President Trump. It’s about putting someone in he and his NeverTrump buddies can support without having to embrace full-blown socialism as their new ideological tenet.
It’s all about saving face, what little he and his pals at The Bulwark have left. They will never back President Trump. That’s the blood oath they took when he was elected, a blood oath that cost them The Weekly Standard. With all the credibility and political capital they’ve lost, they don’t want to have to get behind a communist.
But they will if necessary.
This plan for New Hampshire has about as much of a chance of working as their attempt to beat Trump with Evan McMullin in 2016. But as our EIC noted, conservatives should want to see Bernie Sanders as the nominee. It’ll make for the best general election.
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Does former Vice President Joe Biden want to be the Democratic nominee for president? No. If he did, he wouldn’t say the thing he says or do the things he does. Conspiracy theories have been popping up for months that the only reason he ran for president was to shield himself and his son from scrutiny from President Trump. I never believed those theories, but after hearing how he treated a woman at a campaign event in Hamptom, New Hampshire, I’m not so sure.
“Madison,” an economics student at Mercer University, started by noting that Biden had the biggest advantage going into the race. He was Vice President and while the impeachment trial was happening in the Senate, three of his adversaries were tied up in DC, leaving him with only South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg to contend against in the weeks before the Iowa caucus. Yet, he finished an abysmal fourth. She wanted to know why voters should believe he could win a national election.
It was a fair question, and Biden seemed unfazed by it at first.
But it devolved in an instant when he asked her if she’d ever been to caucus before. She claimed she had. That’s when Biden went into a strange place in his mind to pull out one of the oddest insults ever uttered by a major presidential candidate.
“No you haven’t,” he shot back. “You’re a lying dog-faced pony soldier.”
The writing’s on the wall. Joe Biden will not be the Democratic nominee for president. The way he’s been acting throughout his “campaign,” one can make a valid argument that he never wanted the nomination. Well, he’ll get his wish before the end of this month.
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
A man drove his van into a tent where six people were registering people to vote. There were no injuries, but six of the volunteers were nearly hit, including one woman who said he missed her by six inches.
Gregory William Loel Timm, 27, was arrested by law enforcement with the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office and charged with two counts of aggravated assault on a person 65 years of age or older, one count of criminal mischief and driving with a suspended license.
#JSO has arrested the suspect who drove through the voter registration tent in the area of 11900 Atlantic Boulevard.
Gregory Timm has been charged with Aggravated Assault, Criminal Mischief, and Driving While Driver’s License Suspended. pic.twitter.com/zGKbR2VTg0
The tent, set up by the Jacksonville Republican Party, had “Trump 2020” signs on it as well as the table that Timm reportedly ran over. Witnesses say he drove by, then turned around and started driving slowly towards the tent before “gunning it” directly at them. After narrowly missing the people there, he stopped his van, got out, filmed them with his cell phone, and made obscene gestures towards them before driving off.
Thankful everyone is safe after today’s horrible attack on volunteers for the @DuvalGOP. Violence of any kind, particularly violence that targets those exercising their 1st Amendment rights, has no place in our nation. https://t.co/xaKhD6AcJO
Mainstream media has been effectively silent about the incident with NY Times and Washington Post running wire stories about it. If the situation was reversed and a Democrat-operated voter registration table was run over by a Trump supporter, there would be mass hysteria in newsrooms across the nation. Journalists and commentators would be rushing to condemn the attacks. Experts would be taking turns on CNN and MSNBC claiming the attack was a direct result of the President’s violent, racist, misogynistic, anti-Semitic, ageist, right-wing bigotry. It would be pandemonium.
Instead, it was Republican volunteers who were nearly victims in an attempted mass murder, so mainstream media is shrugging it off.
Getting the hashtag #TrumpSupportersAttacked to trend may be the only way to force mainstream media to even report this violent incident at all. An unhinged anti-Trump activist attempted to kill people. This needs America’s attention.
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
Joe Biden’s campaign is latching New Hampshire polls that have him in third or fourth place after an Emerson College poll has him all the way down to fifth. It’s a sad state of affairs for the former Vice President when his best hope is to finish in the three, a feat he couldn’t accomplish during the Iowa caucus.
What makes it worse for Biden is knowing his main nemesis in the moderate lane is far ahead of him. South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg finished in a virtual tie with Senator Bernie Sanders in Iowa and seems to be the only one who has a chance of catching Sanders in New Hampshire. He’ll need a strong showing on Tuesday if he has a chance of competing in the next two contests—Nevada and South Carolina—where he’ll finally have to face a large minority Democratic voter base.
Should Biden finish third or fourth, he’ll be limping but he won’t necessarily be done. He still has a big lead in South Carolina and a slight lead in Nevada, though there is no recent data in the latter. A fifth place finish in New Hampshire could be enough to send him into a death spiral as Nevada supporters may choose not to show up for him to caucus. If he loses badly in Nevada, a big win in South Carolina won’t be enough to resuscitate his floundering campaign.
Another interesting finding from the poll is that Senator Amy Klobuchar leapfrogged not only Biden, but also Senator Elizabeth Warren. This follows another strong debate performance in which she scored some points against every major candidate while getting very little flack.
Biden’s collapse is reminiscent of Jeb Bush’s fall from grace in 2016. Both had heavy party establishment support. Both had name recognition. Both scored well with minorities. Both make gaffes. Neither will ever be President of the United States.
American Conservative Movement
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. We have two priorities until election day: Stopping Democrats and supporting strong conservative candidates. We currently have 7500+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
👋 San Francisco readers: I hope you’ll join me Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. in South of Market for conversations about affordable housing in the Bay Area. RSVP here.
🌏 Situational awareness: Partly because of a “nightmare” for tech manufacturing, the coronavirus outbreak will cost the global economy more than $280 billion in Q1, ending a 43-quarter global growth streak. (Bloomberg)
1 big thing: Letter from Planet Bloomberg
Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios
Mike Bloomberg’s campaign feels corporate. It’s calm, orderly and punctual. His audiences clap politely, and you can’t walk two steps without running into a paid staffer with talking points. Nobody whoops or yells. Nothing is left to chance. No expense is spared. The candidate is self-consciously low-key.
Why it matters: The scale of Bloomberg’s staff buildup and national advertising spending is unprecedented in modern American politics. His operation is coming to resemble his own personal political party.
After being immersed in Donald Trump’s freewheeling White House and campaign for more than four years, Axios’ Jonathan Swan found a day he spent flying around California with Bloomberg last week to be a foreign experience.
Supporters didn’t profess their love for Bloomberg like fans at Trump rallies, who come across as football fans cheering for their quarterback. Some at Bloomberg’s rallies wore printed T-shirts saying: “I Like Mike.”
Bloomberg promises to govern quietly. “What about no tweeting from the Oval Office ever again?” he said to applause in Fresno.
Even the protesters are well-behaved. During Bloomberg’s speech in Compton on Monday, a young man, standing in silence, held up a sign saying: “Billionaires should not buy elections.” At a Trump rally, the president would have told security: “Get him the hell out!” At the Bloomberg event, a staffer politely asked him to move to the back.
Between the lines: Part of the quietness can’t be helped. Bloomberg’s unlimited money cannot draft — at least not yet — tens of thousands of fired-up men and women in campaign hats to arenas all around the country.
But Bloomberg supporters said they admired his wealth and accomplishments.
They expressed anxiety about the state of the Democratic field, and were looking for a safe bet to beat Trump. One supporter said that you need a very rich man to beat Trump.
Bloomberg is being taken seriously by the national media and the president of the United States, although he doesn’t track the typical path of a would-be nominee. And rivals are cranking up their anti-billionaire messages.
On the day of the Iowa caucuses, Bloomberg’s press plane was packed with national media — The New York Times, The New Yorker, CBS, NBC, CNN, Fox, AP, Reuters and Axios.
Bloomberg wore a navy suit and tie and mulberry sweater as he jetted around delegate-rich California. On the stump, he called himself the “un-Trump.”
His curtain-raisers introduced him with words like “pragmatic” and “practical.” His stump speeches were laced with words like “decency” and “sanity,” and phrases like “commonsense plans that are workable.”
Bloomberg is self-deprecating. He makes fun of his spelling and his age.
He doesn’t give nicknames to his Democratic opponents. He won’t even criticize them unless prompted.
Donald Trump’s campaign call for all Muslims to be barred from entering the United States has morphed over the past three years into a complex web of travel and immigration restrictions placed, to varying degrees, on 7% of the world’s population, Axios’ Stef Kight writes.
The big picture: While most eyes were on impeachment and Iowa, President Trump recently extended restrictions to six additional countries — widening the ban and ignoring the massive outcry it has created.
The Trump administration recently announced restrictions on permanent immigration for people from Kyrgyzstan, Myanmar, Eritrea, Nigeria, Sudan and Tanzania.
While Myanmar has a relatively small Muslim population (4%), the Muslim populations of the other five are between 30% (Tanzania) and 86% (Kyrgyzstan), according to Pew Research Center.
Unlike previous iterations of Trump’s travel ban, the new policy will still allow all short-term travel to the U.S.
Flashback: Trump first announced a travel ban — labeled by many a “Muslim ban” — in his first week in office.
It’s had a dramatic impact. Between 2017 and 2018, the number of permanent visas given every month to nationals of Iran, Libya, Somalia, Syria, and Yemen fell by 72%, according to Migration Policy Institute.
Collectively, those countries are more than 92% Muslim.
Bernie Sanders’ campaign will ask for a “partial recanvass” of caucus results after updated Iowa Democratic Party results (with 100% of precincts) showed Pete Buttigieg ahead by two state delegate equivalents out of 2,152 counted.
That’s a margin of 0.09%. Both Buttigieg and Sanders have claimed victory.
AP saidit remains unable to declare a winner because it believes the results may not be fully accurate and are still subject to potential revision.
🤯 A N.Y. Times post-mortemon the Iowa fiasco found it wasn’t just the app, but “cascading failures going back months … a total system breakdown that casts doubt on how a critical contest … has been managed for years.”
“An analysis by The New York Times revealed inconsistencies in the reported data for at least one in six of the state’s precincts.”
“[A]t least 10 percent of precincts appeared to have improperly allocated their delegates.”
“[R]esults collected by phone operators were riddled with errors.”
4. Pic du jour: Flags meant to go up in flames
Photo: Ebrahim Noroozi/AP
Workers at this small Iranian factory diligently add all 50 stars and 13 bars to American flags, and carefully imprint the Star of David on the flag of Israel. They known their work is destined to go up in flames, AP reports from Khomein, Iran.
This factory serves as a major producer for the American and Israeli flags constantly burned at pro-government rallies in the Islamic Republic.
5. Budget day: Trump wants foreign-aid cuts
In his Fiscal Year 2021 budget out today, President Trump will propose a 21% cut in U.S. foreign aid, “while seeking an increase in funds to counter developing economic threats from China and Russia,” per Reuters.
Trump will seek $44.1 billion for foreign aid, compared with $55.7 billion enacted in FY 2020, an administration official said.
Reality check: The plan has cuts to food stamps, farm subsidies, Medicaid and student loans that couldn’t pass when Republicans controlled Congress, much less now with Speaker Pelosi setting the agenda. (AP)
6. Graphic du jour: GOP embraces Putin
“Republicans and Republican-leaning independents are now 21 points more likely than Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents to express confidence in [Russian President Vladimir] Putin (31% vs. 10%).” (Pew Research Center)
7. Stock hell for oil and gas
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
Oil and natural-gas stocks are in the toilet, and climate change is fast becoming a mainstream investor worry, Axios’ Amy Harder writes in her “Harder Line” column.
Why it matters: Oil and gas companies have become victims of their own success by producing more fuel than the world is demanding.
Layer on top of that the prospect that the world drastically reduces use of these products to address climate change, and the industry has a deeply uncertain outlook over the coming decades.
8. Tesla short-sellers lose $2.4 billion in one week
Tesla CEO Elon Musk. Photo: Tobias Schwarz/AFP via Getty Images
“Tesla’s rocketing stock has meant an astonishing dive” — $8.4 billion since January — “for investors who have staked their money on the proposition that Tesla shares were drastically overvalued and bound to fall,” the Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
Why it matters: “These investors have been mostly losing the battle for years … Their pain has suddenly gone from chronic to acute.”
9. Obama-backed doc wins Oscar
The Oscar for best feature-length documentary went to “American Factory,” the first documentary released by Barack and Michelle Obama’s production company, Higher Ground.
The Netflix film is about an Ohio auto glass factory that is run by a Chinese investor. It explores many issues, including the rights of workers, globalization and automation. (AP)
🐦 In a congratulatory tweet, President Obama called it “a complex, moving story about the very human consequences of wrenching economic change.”
10. 🎬 1 film thing: Oscars make history
Director Bong Joon-Ho eyes the awards won by “Parasite” at the Oscars Governors Ball. Photo: Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images
South Korean thriller “Parasite” became the first foreign-language film to win the Oscars’ top prize in the awards’ 92-year history, “an astounding achievement for a $11 million Korean-language theatrical effort that grew through word-of-mouth,” per The Hollywood Reporter.
“I think naturally there will come a day when a foreign-language film or not, it won’t really matter,” said director Bong Joon-Ho, who also nabbed the prizes for best director, best original screenplay and best international film.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. Happy Monday! Our newsletter gets you up to speed on the most important developments in politics and policy, plus trends to watch. Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver are the daily co-creators, so find us @asimendinger and @alweaver22 on Twitter and recommend the Morning Report to your friends. CLICK HERE to subscribe!
The Democratic field is in a race to the finish ahead of Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary as the candidates look to put the disaster in Iowa behind them and try to separate themselves from their 2020 rivals in the coming days and weeks.
With about 24 hours until the polls open, it’s a two-man sprint for supremacy in the Granite State, as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg are once again expected to finish one-two in Tuesday’s primary. In a series of polls taken since last week’s Iowa caucuses, Sanders and Buttigieg are far and away the top two contenders to win the first-in-the-nation primary, taking at least 20 percent in each poll and keeping themselves clear of the field.
While trying to keep the focus on his closing message to New Hampshirites, Sanders has come under increasing fire for his far-left stances, with his interview Sunday serving as a microcosm of what he is facing from his Democratic opponents. Appearing on “Fox News Sunday,” Sanders defended his policies and proposals, saying that the president is full of it when he says the Vermont Independent is a “communist.”
“Obviously I am not a communist,” Sanders told host Chris Wallace in response to a clip of Trump using the term in a recent interview, adding that Trump “maybe doesn’t know the difference” (The Hill).
The prospect of Sanders serving as the Democratic standard-bearer, though, has caused agita for some in the party who worry that a Trump versus Sanders match-up could result in the kind of drubbing Jeremy Corbyn and the Labour Party in the United Kingdom experienced in December.
The Hill: Former Vice President Joe Biden says Sanders nomination would create “uphill climb” for other Democrats on the ballot.
FiveThirtyEight: Election update: The polling picture in New Hampshire is actually pretty clear.
The Hill: In New Hampshire, high anxiety about beating Trump.
The Daily Beast: Sanders backtracks on promise to release medical records: “I’m in good health.”
For Buttigieg, he is trying to rip away the centrist mantle from Biden and stake his claim in the race as the person to beat as the moderate lane continues to crowd (The Hill). Buttigieg continued to attract attention on Sunday though, as a crowd of 1,800 came out to see him in Nashua, N.H., one of his biggest of the campaign.
While he’s not expected to challenge the top two, Biden remains the focus of intense scrutiny as he continues to push ahead in the wake of his underwhelming performance in Iowa. The former VP maintains that he will make his mark in the campaign in the next two contests — Nevada and South Carolina — which he indicated more clearly than ever during Friday’s debate.
Over the weekend, the Biden campaign continued to level attacks against Buttigieg for his lack of experience and what it considers inconsequential work in the Indiana college town.
“We’re electing a president. What you’ve done matters,”the ad says near the end.
Buttigieg took umbrage with the contents of the ad and has leaned into his mayoral tenure, as Jonathan Easley reports on the ground in New Hampshire.
“Mayors have to get things done,” Buttigieg said in Nashua on Sunday. “That problem-solving instinct that mayors have is just one reason why we have to start getting Washington to look like our best-run cities and towns instead of the other way around.”
The Hill: Buttigieg: Biden is right that I’m no Barack Obama, but “neither is he.”
The Washington Post: Sanders and Buttigieg aren’t competing for the same voters Tuesday. But they are competing, and fiercely.
Elsewhere, having slipped in polls in New Hampshire, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is maintaining that the state is not a must-win for her and that she expects a “long campaign” moving forward.
“Look, the way I see this is it’s going to be a long campaign … We’ve built a campaign to go the distance,” she told host ABC News host George Stephanopoulos after he noted that no Democrat has won the nomination after finishing outside the top-two in Iowa or New Hampshire (The Hill).
Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) is also looking to capitalize off a strong showing in Iowa. According to multiple polls taken in recent days, the Minnesota Democrat has eclipsed both Warren and Biden — a result that would be a major boon to her campaign (The Washington Post).
The Hill: Buttigieg takes delegate lead in Iowa after updated results released. MORE: Sanders campaign to request partial Iowa recanvass.
The New York Times: Trump’s campaign team aims to win back suburban voters.
The Sunday Shows: 2020 Democrats make closing arguments in New Hampshire.
The Hill: Democrats see chances rising for brokered convention.
WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: Cut Medicare and Medicaid, but support health care for people in rural America? During any presidential election year, the incumbent president’s budget submission to Congress is a study in contrasts. It’s almost always doomed as a viable legislative vehicle while being gratefully seized as an election flotation device by the president’s own party.
Later today, when Trump sends lawmakers his fiscal 2021 budget documents, Republicans will hail his ideas as their campaign agenda while House Democrats promise to block many of Trump’s priorities.
The Hill: The administration will seek a 6 percent cut in non-defense spending, breaking from a bipartisan spending agreement inked in August. Democratic lawmakers are already howling. The Trump budget includes $740.5 billion in proposed defense spending, but just $590 billion for domestic spending, which includes everything from health and education to transportation and foreign policy.
Will Trump unveil clues about a second wave of GOP tax cuts (described by the White House as stimulus destined to land in some voters’ wallets later this year)?
The Wall Street Journal: Trump wants to curb Medicare and Medicaid spending as well as foreign assistance in his proposed $4.8 trillion budget beginning in October, and he wants to hike funding for the military and veterans. The president will seek to eliminate up to $4.6 trillion in red ink forecast over a decade, but will not propose to balance the budget, believing that deficits on his watch are “manageable,” especially with the current low interest rates.
Axios: Trump will ask Congress for $28.9 billion for the Pentagon to modernize nuclear delivery systems and $19.8 billion for the National Nuclear Security Administration — a nearly 20 percent increase over his previous budget request to “modernize” the country’s nuclear weapons arsenal.
Forbes and The Daily Caller: The president’s fiscal road map will include a chapter calling for an end to wasteful federal spending, corruption, fraud and taxpayer abuse.
USA Today: Trump is eyeing the states he’ll need to capture to win a second term. He’d like to spend billions of dollars on health care, business loans and infrastructure specifically targeted to rural America.
The Miami Herald: For Florida, a must-win state for the president and in a region close to his Mar-a-Lago property, Trump wants increased spending for the environmentally sensitive Everglades.
The Economist: A look at what Trump has done with the Health and Human Services (HHS) budget provides a look at his thinking about health care.
The Wall Street Journal: Trump will propose a 12 percent boost in spending for NASA, where he’s created a Space Force and wants to see the United States compete militarily with China and Russia in space.
The administration’s budget will be released at noon, and the House and Senate Budget committees will dissect the fine print during separate hearings this week.
CONGRESS: Impeachment might be over, but the investigations into the president will not stop, as House Democrats intend to continue to probe his administration.
According to The Hill’s Olivia Beavers, House Democrats say that they have no intention to ease off their investigations and are weighing whether to pursue new leads of possible wrongdoing or press forward with probes that were already underway when the impeachment took off in earnest in September.
No matter which route Democrats take, they insist there is more wrongdoing to be uncovered and that it’s a matter of when they find it, not if, and how grave it is.
“Donald Trump, I still believe, is a one-man crime wave, and we can’t let him get away with all of his other offenses against the Constitution and the people,” said Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.), a member of the House Judiciary Committee.
Democrats have expressed concern that Trump will feel emboldened by his acquittal and even more untouchable in the coming months. But it won’t slow the work by Democrats, who are awaiting the outcome of several lawsuits, including those targeting Trump’s financial records at Deutsche Bank and former White House counsel Don McGahn.
Across the Capitol, senators are scouring for bipartisan bills and are hopeful to push some through the upper chamber as they try to put the divisive impeachment fight behind them.
As Jordain Carney writes, the push for new, bipartisan legislation comes as the trial strained across-the-aisle friendships and poured gasoline on partisan tensions in a chamber that has become increasingly majoritarian in recent years.The looming general election could threaten to inflame the sides once again, though some top lawmakers are urging members to put down their swords for the time being.
“Hopefully the better angels of people will begin to emerge, and we’ll see a willingness to focus on a common agenda,” said Sen. John Thune (S.D.), the No. 2- ranked Senate Republican. “I think both sides have things they need to get done.”
However, it is unknown what the Senate could move forward on legislatively. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) has already teed up a number of judicial nominees that the chamber will consider this week.
Also making matters difficult is the president, who said on Friday that “there’s a lot of evil” on the Democratic side, indicating that moving ahead on bipartisan issues is not possible.
“They’re not constructive people,” he said of Democratic lawmakers. Trump also took aim at multiple senators in tweets over the weekend, including Sens. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) and Mitt Romney (R-Utah).
The New York Times: Mitt Romney Is a “Judas” to many Republicans. But not in Utah.
Gerald F. Seib: A bitter impeachment ends; its divisions may live on.
The New York Times: How McConnell came to be seen inside the Republican Party as a “fighter.”
>Investigations: House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said on Sunday that his panel will investigate the Bidens, Burisma and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act process and that he wants to know the ID of the whistleblower who kicked off the House impeachment effort in September.
Graham also told “Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan that he wants to ask Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman if he “leaked” information from inside the National Security Council to the whistleblower. The South Carolina Republican defended Trump’s decision to reassign Vindman and fire GordonSondland, the former U.S. ambassador to the European Union (CBS News).
Graham also said he spoke with Attorney General William Barr over the weekend and is publicly conveying to Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani and others that if they have any information from Ukraine, it should be sent to the Senate Intelligence Committee, to the Justice Department or to U.S. intelligence agencies, not to the Senate Judiciary Committee as Giuliani has tried to do already.
“I’m not going to be played,” Graham said, arguing that the information they claim to have is likely coming from Russia.
The New York Times: The Justice Department is reviewing information from Giuliani on the Bidens, Graham says.
Enough about Bloomberg’s sushi: Why did New Yorkers elect him three times? By Joe Ferullo, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3bz3ELo
Is dumping Donald Trump for Democrats worth a recession? By Kristin Tate, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/2SggCGl
WHERE AND WHEN
📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features Alex Lawson, executive director with Social Security Works, to discuss Biden’s record when it comes to the nation’s most popular federal program; Jennifer Holdsworth, a surrogate for the Buttigieg campaign, who outlines the former mayor’s strategy in New Hampshire; and Daniel Nichanian, editor and fellow with The Justice Collaborative, who discusses voter issues tied to the New Hampshire primary and last week’s Iowa caucuses. Catch all the news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.
The House meets at noon.
The Senate will convene at 3 p.m. to consider the nomination of Andrew Brasher, 38, to be a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit.
The president will speak about business to the nation’s governors gathered at the White House. Trump will have lunch with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. The president will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Oval Office with parents whose children were killed or wounded in a mass shooting in 2018 at Parkland High School in Florida. Trump will hold a reelection rally in Manchester, N.H., at 7 p.m.
The Office of Management and Budget will transmit Trump’s proposed fiscal 2021 budget to Congress at 12:30 p.m. The Budget will be available in print, and digitally on www.govinfo.gov and www.omb.gov/budget.
Vice President Pence speaks this morning to the nation’s governors at the White House along with the president. Pence at noon will travel to New Hampshire to participate in a bus tour that begins with a law enforcement campaign event in Portsmouth and ends in Manchester at a Trump-Pence reelection rally. The vice president returns to Washington tonight.
This week, free tickets are available for the National Archives’s screening and panel discussion on Wednesday for “Race for the White House,” a documentary series produced by CNN that begins with “Obama v. McCain.” A moderated discussion about the 2008 race as well as current political news will include David Axelrod, an adviser to former President Obama, and Charlie Black, a political strategist for the late Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). Information for the 7 p.m. event on Wednesday in Washington is HERE.
➔ Coronavirus: The death toll from the new virus has exceeded the 774 people who died from the SARS outbreak in 2003, which also began in China. The number of people killed by the coronavirus as of today is 910, with at least 40,573 infected, according to the latest data. Experts had hoped the number of new cases of the coronavirus had eased somewhat because of quarantines put in place in China and elsewhere since last month, but today the spread of the respiratory disease appears to be back on the rise (The Associated Press). Officials with the World Health Organization cautioned that the city of Wuhan and Hubei province remain in the midst of a “very intense outbreak” (The New York Times).
There have been a dozen confirmed cases of infection in the United States, and one U.S. citizen living in Wuhan died there on Saturday. According to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing, the person was 60 years old and died at Jinyintan Hospital in Wuhan. Two people familiar with the matter said the patient was a woman and had underlying health conditions (The New York Times).
Lawmakers and medical experts believe it is important for the United States to have resources on hand for any domestic coronavirus emergency and HHS notified Congress on Sunday that the administration will spend up to $66 million in its initial response (The Hill). In the United States, medical specialists believe the risks to the general population of contracting the new coronavirus are low (The New York Times).
Trump praised President Xi Jinping of China on Friday for his handling of the epidemic and said the U.S. government is working with China. However, U.S. officials have said Beijing has been slow to act on offers of help from the World Health Organization and U.S. virologists and epidemiologists who have been waiting for the go-ahead to fly into China.
Scientists, writing in two detailed papers, disclosed what’s known to date about the transmission and lethality of the coronavirus in China (The New York Times).
Two cruise lines temporarily decided not to accept passengers who are passport holders from China (Miami Herald).
➔ Afghanistan: An attacker wearing an Afghan army uniform opened fire over the weekend and killed two U.S. soldiers and wounded six in eastern Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province. The shooter was killed. In 2019 in Afghanistan, two Americans died and three were wounded in separate “insider attacks” on U.S. forces (The Associated Press).
➔ Political disinformation: The Atlantic offers a roundup of “censorship through noise,” the weaponization of information, and forensics behind assaults on truth, trust and democracy, by McKay Coppins. … Ideas spread by QAnon, a “community” for conspiracy theorists and the gullible on the internet, are being pushed by people in power into the mainstream political arena (The Associated Press and The New York Times). … Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) clashed with Facebook and Twitter over a selectively edited and she said misleading video posted by Trump. Both companies refused to take the video off their platforms (The New York Times).
➔ State watch: Virginia’s General Assembly is poised to aid undocumented immigrants with driver’s licenses, a policy opposed by Republicans in Washington. Proposals to allow undocumented immigrant students to pay cheaper in-state college tuition, bar local police across the state from asking crime victims about immigration status and create a new office for immigrant services have also sailed toward approval under the Democratic majority in Richmond (The Washington Post).
➔ If only Brexit had moved this fast: A British Airways 747 flight set a new transatlantic record from New York to London over the weekend in less than five hours (1 hour and 38 minutes ahead of schedule) because of weather (“bomb cyclone” winds) that produced some amazing acceleration along the way. A Virgin Atlantic flight wasn’t far behind. The planes reached maximum speeds of more than 830 mph (One Mile at a Time).
THE CLOSER
And finally … 🎞 The Oscars on Sunday night went to … Bong Joon-ho, whose film “Parasite,” captured golden statuettes for best picture, best director, best original screenplay and best international film feature. The South Korean writer-producer-director tied Walt Disney for the most Oscars amassed in one night, and his social thriller became the first foreign-language film to capture the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences award for best picture (NBC News).
“I’m going to drink until next morning,” he said in English several times as he walked onstage to thank his American admirers.
The host-free 92nd annual Oscars show included some brief political commentary from Brad Pitt, winner in the supporting actor category for “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood,” and a quirky speech about lending “voice to the voiceless” from Joaquin Phoenix, who in 2008 retired from acting only to return to capture this year’s award for best actor for his performance in “Joker.”
Renée Zellweger won as best actress for her portrayal of Judy Garland in “Judy,” and Laura Dern walked away with the statuette for best supporting actress in “Marriage Story.”
The evening’s presentations were peppered with digs about whether the Academy is offering sufficient accolades to female directors and filmmakers. Icelandic composer Hildur Guðnadóttir became the first woman to win an Academy Award for best original score in two decades. Thanking the Academy for its tribute to her work in “Joker,” she added, “To the girls, to the women, to the mothers, to the daughters who hear the music bubbling within — please speak up. We need to hear your voices.”
To no one’s surprise “Toy Story 4” won in the animated feature film category, and sentimental favorite Elton John (for music) with longtime songwriter Bernie Taupin (for lyrics) won the Oscar for best original song for “(I’m Gonna) Love Me Again” from “Rocketman,” a musical romp through the pop star’s life and career.
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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“Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that you, O Lord, are God, and that you have turned their hearts back,” (1 Kings 18:37, ESV).
By Shane Vander Hart on Feb 09, 2020 03:31 pm
Former Vice President Joe Biden called a young woman during a town hall in Hampton, NH, a ‘lying, dog-faced pony soldier.’ Read in browser »
Launched in 2006, Caffeinated Thoughts reports news and shares commentary about culture, current events, faith and state and national politics from a Christian and conservative point of view.
President Donald Trump will speak at a business session with the nation’s governors, have lunch with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and host a Keep America Great Rally in New Hampshire just one day before the primary to be held there. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. …
After a gunman on Sunday attacked a New York Police Department station house, an NYPD union is blaming violence against law enforcement on Mayor Bill de Blasio. A gunman walked into an NYPD station house in The Bronx early Sunday and immediately began firing at officers, injuring a lieutenant inside. …
The Iowa Democratic Party projected Sunday that Pete Buttigieg will win the state’s caucuses, though several news organizations are declining to declare a winner because of a series of technical glitches and tabulation errors that have marred the results. The party said in a statement that Buttigieg, the former mayor …
Facebook and Twitter are refusing to bow to requests from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to nix an edited video of the California Democrat tearing up President Donald Trump’s State of the Union speech. The edited video was posted on both social media platforms after the Tuesday night SOTU in which …
Deaths from coronavirus in China hit 811 by Sunday, surpassing the number of patients who died from SARS, according to the Chinese National Health Commission. Confirmed infections reached about 37,200 as governments worldwide are trying to stop further advancement of the outbreak. SARS, a similar contagious respiratory illness, killed 774 …
I always find it eyebrow-raising (if not comical) how Progressives arrive late to the party and then try to dictate how the party should be run. The most recent example of this particular brand of self-important narcissism comes in Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and her cuckold, metrosexual boy-toy, Riley Roberts, attempting to …
A few months ago, while fighting President Trump and insisting that our nation have open borders, resulting in a massive influx of illegals invading our nation and killing other illegal aliens as well as American citizens, House leader and Democrat, Nancy Pelosi, the leading Democrat in the nation, defended the …
With the exception of a very few, Republicans, conservatives, and all those on the Right side of the aisle have all but shunned US Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT), for his vote to impeach the President on the charge of Abuse of Power. In the politically charged atmosphere of the beltway, …
Two Vindmans and a Sondland Fired! Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman, who testified against President Trump during the House Impeachment hearings, was fired. Naturally, the anti-Trump mass media was outraged, but that was to be expected. They’re perma-outraged by Trump no matter what he does or doesn’t do. What Vindman did …
Nearly a week after the Iowa caucuses, the state’s Democratic Party announced that Pete Buttigieg won the most delegates in the first nominating contest, finishing narrowly ahead of Bernie Sanders.
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham said the Justice Department has “created a process” to review Ukraine-related information collected by President Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani.
An American filmmaker echoed a rallying cry from The Communist Manifesto during the 2020 Academy Awards, calling for the “workers of the world” to “unite.”
Sen. Bernie Sanders’s 2020 presidential campaign plans to file a request to recanvass some Iowa precincts following a debacle last week that resulted in delayed results from the first-in-the-nation caucuses.
Brad Pitt used his acceptance speech at the Oscars to jab the Senate for voting against hearing witness testimony in President Trump’s impeachment trial.
Thousands of energized supporters of candidates in the 2020 Democratic presidential field transformed Southern New Hampshire University arena into a pressure cooker of swirling campaign anxiety three days before the Feb. 11 New Hampshire primary.
The president of CBS News condemned threats faced by Gayle King after she brought up a 2003 rape allegation against NBA legend Kobe Bryant in an interview.
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Academy Awards history was made in 2020, with the first time a foreign-language film won the Oscar for Best Picture: ‘Parasite’ capped off a surprise sweep, winning four out of six nominations. Full article
By Mark Hemingway
Instead of self-examination and taking stock of their copious failures, many in the media have chosen to blame Trump and suggest his supporters are victims of ‘disinformation’ instead of winning back readers’ trust. Full article
By Margot Cleveland
‘[C]ertain sections of the public version of the report are misleading because they are contradicted by relevant and probative classified information redacted in four footnotes.’ Full article
By Paulina Enck
While it is admittedly entertaining to watch a Democratic presidential candidate waste hundreds of millions of his own money with nothing to show for it, I prefer the version with John Candy and Richard Pryor. Full article
By Emily Jashinsky
Seventeen years after “Lose Yourself” won Best Original Song, Eminem showed up at the 2020 Oscars for a very random but very entertaining performance of the iconic “8 Mile” song. Full article
By Emily Jashinsky
Chris Rock and Steve Martin snuck in a joke that functioned as something of an indictment of the Academy’s treatment of Kevin Hart. Full article
By Tristan Justice
According to the Republican Party of Duval County, no one was injured as volunteers ‘narrowly avoided’ the assault. Full article
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An armed man was fatally shot by a Chicago police officer responding to a call of a disturbance outside the bar Tai’s til 4 in the Lakeview neighborhood Sunday morning, police said. Before police arrived, the suspect shot another man in the neck and cheek outside the bar, then fled on foot. Officers quickly found him and an “armed confrontation” with police followed, they said.
U.S. Reps. Danny Davis and Bobby Rush, two titans of Chicago’s Democratic political scene who have outlasted presidents, mayors and aldermen. But their much younger opponents in next month’s Illinois primary say they are out of touch and not visible in their districts after decades in Congress.
In the 1st District, Rush, 73, is facing three challengers, including Ameena Matthews, an anti-violence activist who got national attention when her journey was spotlighted in a documentary, “The Interrupters.” In the 7th District, Davis, 78, is also facing three challengers, including Anthony Cox, a teacher and Air Force veteran who ran for the same office two years ago.
For nearly three decades, Arnulfo Tovar, 72, saved enough money selling corn on the streets of Pilsen each summer to pay his rent during the winter months. This year it was not enough. He was forced out of his longtime apartment and now pays nearly double the rent in his new one, forcing him to continue selling outside in the cold.
Chicago’s third observatory is coming into view as the owner of the Aon Center prepares to start building the long-discussed $185 million addition. Construction on the yet-to-be-named observation deck will begin later this year and open to tourists in the spring of 2022, a year and a half later than originally planned.
The two-level space will include a restaurant, bar, event space and virtual reality experiences. The main attraction will be a thrill ride called the Sky Summit, which will lift enclosed cabs filled with visitors over the building’s edge for 30 to 40 seconds.
Sunday night, “Parasite” became the first non-English language film to win best picture in the 92-year history of the Academy Awards. Bong Joon Ho’s masterfully devious class satire took Hollywood’s top prize at the Oscars, along with awards for best director, best international film and best screenplay. Not only did the film make history, it struck a blow for Oscar quality, writes Tribune film critic Michael Phillips.
Feb 10, 2020 01:00 am
Santa was late coming down the White House chimney, but this week a sack of reelection Christmas presents belatedly arrived under the Trump Christmas tree. Read More…
Feb 10, 2020 01:00 am
We are faced with an incredible disunity, so intense that no appearance of unity in the form of decorum can cover it up. Read More…
Feb 10, 2020 01:00 am
We would do well not to underestimate her ruthlessness, for she couples it with a rare quality that magnifies her potency exponentially: patience. We turn our back to her at our peril. Read More…
Feb 10, 2020 01:00 am
We are not blindly following a manifesto that Trump drafted in the bowels of his basement. Our “Kool-Aid” is patriotism. Read More…
G’MORNING from Manchester — ugh, fine, actually Hooksett — where a delayed flight got us in around 2 a.m. last night.
COULD THERE BE A MORE DEFINING two days in this presidential primary season than today and tomorrow?
SETTING THE STAGE: THE BOSTON GLOBE/WBZ/SUFFOLK poll shows BERNIE SANDERS ahead with 26% of the vote. PETE BUTTIGIEG has 19%,AMY KLOBUCHAR has around 13%, and ELIZABETH WARREN and JOE BIDEN are tied with around 11% each. The full poll results … POLITICO’S RECAP of all the action in New Hampshire on Sunday.
HERE ARE THE STAKES: BIDEN — who has billed himself as the prohibitive front-runner in this race — is now on the ropes. Another fourth-place finish is likely to freeze up money, and would cement his standing toward the middle or bottom of this field. This comes as the AP reports on other candidates trying to eat away at Biden’s South Carolina firewall. If your central argument is your “electability,” whatever that means, you need to actually win some elections.
IF WARREN comes in third here, that would be two third-place finishes in a row.
— “Biden, Warren battle for third place in New Hampshire,” by WaPo’s Cleve Wootson Jr. and Matt Viser in Hampton, N.H., and Felicia Sonmez: “Two days before voters head to the polls, Biden advisers were already eager to move on, hoping the former vice president would do better with Nevada and South Carolina’s more diverse electorate. But there are growing concerns, even inside his campaign, that financial resources are being strained ahead of an upcoming stretch that will only get more expensive as the race shifts into a national campaign.
“Biden in recent days has retooled his stump speech, focusing on the stories of those he has met on the trail, and growing emotional as he speaks about the 2015 death of his oldest son, Beau.”
MEANWHILE, BERNIE IS JUST COASTING — “Sanders glides toward primary day as moderates brawl,” by Holly Otterbein and Stephanie Murray in Plymouth, N.H.: “Bernie Sanders was battered in Iowa with more than $800,000 in TV attack ads that labeled him a socialist and argued he couldn’t beat President Trump. Here in New Hampshire, the opposite has happened: The airwaves are free of anti-Sanders spots in the days before the first-in-the-nation-primary, and he’s watching the moderates shank each other.
“Tom Steyer is largely training his advertising firepower onto Pete Buttigieg and Joe Biden. The former vice president is mocking Buttigieg’s experience and targeting him in a digital spot. Fighting back against Biden, the ex-mayor says he’s tired of being a punchline. The strength of the Vermont senator — who is polling first in the state with Buttigieg closely behind him — and the sudden lack of resistance to him on the airwaves is sparking anxiety among some moderate Democratic leaders.” POLITICO
GABBY ORR: “Trump’s ‘dream scenario’ unfolds: Dem disarray ahead of 2020”: “Inside Donald Trump’s reelection campaign, Joe Biden is a shadow of the past. Once his chief rival in the 2020 Democratic presidential field, and the cause of so much presidential angst that Trump mounted a pressure campaign against Ukraine to damage him, the former vice president’s name is now hardly mentioned in conversations with the president’s aides — that is, unless they’re mocking him.
“‘Lately, he looks like he’s competing against himself,’ a top Trump aide said late last week as delayed data from the Iowa caucuses appeared to confirm Biden’s dismal fourth-place finish.
“With Biden increasingly struggling … the Trump campaign is now salivating at the thought of what could unfold next.” POLITICO
HAPPENING TODAY … BUDGET TIME — “Trump to Propose $4.8 Trillion Budget With Big Safety-Net Cuts,”by WSJ’s Kate Davidson and Andrew Restuccia: “President Trump is expected to release a $4.8 trillion budget Monday that charts a path for a potential second term, proposing steep reductions in social-safety-net programs and foreign aid and higher outlays for defense and veterans.
“The plan would increase military spending 0.3%, to $740.5 billion for fiscal year 2021, which begins Oct. 1, according to a senior administration official. The proposal would lower nondefense spending by 5%, to $590 billion, below the level Congress and the president agreed to in a two-year budget deal last summer.”
BACK TO REALITY … CAITLIN EMMA and JENNIFER SCHOLTES: “As with his previous budget proposals, Trump is once again seeking deep and unrealistic cuts to most federal agency budgets, according to the budget summary tables. The cuts are unlikely to be embraced by Congress.
“For example, the administration is seeking an 8 percent cut to USDA’s budget over current funding levels. Trump’s plan would cut the Commerce Department by 37 percent, the Education Department by 8 percent, the Energy Department by 8 percent, the Department of Housing and Urban Development by 15 percent, and the Department of Health and Human Services by 9 percent.
“The administration is also seeking a 13 percent cut to the Interior Department, a 2 percent cut to the Justice Department, an 11 percent cut to the Labor Department, a nearly 21 percent cut to the State Department and a 13 percent cut to the Department of Transportation. The EPA’s budget would see a nearly 27 percent chop, the Army Corps of Engineers would see a 22 percent reduction and the Small Business Administration would see an 11 percent decrease.” POLITICO
TRUMP’S MONDAY — The president will deliver remarks to governors at the White House at 11 a.m. He will have lunch with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at 12:30 p.m. in the private dining room. Trump will greet the Parkland families in the Oval Office at 3:30 p.m. The president will leave the White House at 4:20 p.m. en route to Manchester, N.H. He will deliver a political speech at 7 p.m. at the SNHU Arena. Afterward, he will return to Washington.
PLAYBOOK READS
MICHAEL KRUSE: “Is It Bernie’s Party Now?”: “Nearly half a century has passed since Sanders started running for office, bumming money from friends to put gas in his beat-up blue VW bug, and now here he is, the often dour, oddly charismatic, undeniably indefatigable, 79-in-September Vermont senator and self-described democratic socialist—heading into Tuesday’s first-in-the-nation primary in New Hampshire as at least the co-favorite to win. He won the most votes in Iowa a week ago, a result that seems clear in spite of the botched and still unresolved caucuses.
“He’s leading in more and more polls, at times trailing only Joe Biden, whose campaign seems to be wheezing. And he has become nothing short of a grassroots fundraising colossus, the possessor of a reservoir of resources that could let him run forever. In this panicky, high-stakes race to take on an emboldened Donald Trump in November, Sanders is positioned as well as, if not better than, any of his many competitors to be the Democratic nominee.” POLITICO Magazine
POLITICAL MELTDOWN IN GERMANY … JUDITH MISCHKE in Berlin: “Merkel heir Kramp-Karrenbauer to step down as CDU leader”: “Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer plans to step down as leader of Germany’s governing Christian Democrats and will not be the party’s candidate to succeed Angela Merkel as chancellor, German media reported Monday.
“Kramp-Karrenbauer, who was widely seen as Merkel’s preferred successor as chancellor, informed the party of her decision at a CDU executive committee meeting on Monday morning.
“The announcement came after an outcry over a controversial vote in the eastern German state of Thuringia last week. The regional CDU branch had acted against Kramp-Karrenbauer’s wishes and voted with the Alternative for Germany (AfD) to install a liberal as state premier, the first time in Germany’s postwar history that a state premier was elected with the help of the far right.” POLITICO Europe
CORONAVIRUS MILESTONE: “The death toll of the coronavirus officially surpassed that of SARS, after China’s health authorities reported a further 97 deaths over the course of Sunday, the deadliest day so far.
“The latest daily increase took the total number of confirmed deaths … to 910. All but two of those had occurred in mainland China. The commission on Monday morning reported 3,062 new cases of infectionas of Sunday at midnight, taking the total to date to 40,171. Of those in hospital, almost 6,500 are severe cases, according to the data.” SCMP … Happening today: WHO experts visit China, via NYT
DATA DU JOUR … WSJ: “Growth in global trade sank to a meager 1% last year, down from 4% in 2018 and 6% in 2017. It was the fourth worst showing in 40 years, and the worst ever outside a period of recession, according to International Monetary Fund data. Several factors contributed to the slowdown, but analysts say the U.S.-China trade war was the single-biggest cause.”
— “Parasite Won So Much More Than the Best Picture Oscar,”by The Atlantic’s Hannah Giorgis: “Bong Joon-ho’s drama became the first South Korean film to nab the top prize. But its success as a global phenomenon was cemented long before last night.”
MEDIAWATCH — Jenna Gibson will be managing editorial producer for CBS News. She previously was a senior editorial producer overseeing bookings for several shows.
SPOTTED: Speaker Nancy Pelosi at Peacock Cafe Sunday. … Education Secretary Betsy DeVos at Fiola Mare for brunch Sunday. Pic
TRANSITIONS — Jonathan Blanks will be contributing editor of Clause 40 Foundation, a new 501(c)(3) sister organization of the Due Process Institute. He previously was a longtime writer and researcher at the Cato Institute. … Joe Lustig will be a manager of federal advocacy for Ascension Health. He previously was a senior policy adviser for Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.).
WEEKEND WEDDINGS — Ashley Bender, an associate at Arnold & Porter, and Daniel Spirn, senior regulatory counsel for the American Academy of Neurology, got married Saturday at the Four Seasons Resort Rancho Encantado in Santa Fe, N.M. Pic
— Vanessa VandeHey, executive assistant to the secretary of the Senate, and Nicholas Mastronardi, a Capitol Police officer, got married Saturday in Green Bay, Wis. They met working together for former Speaker Paul Ryan. Pic… Another pic… SPOTTED: Casey Higgins, Juston Johnson, Jessica Cameron, Alison Peterson, Julia Doyle, Jamie Gillespie, Paige Waltz, Jordan Dunn and half of USCP’s DPD.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Izzy Klein, co-founder and principal at Klein/Johnson Group. A trend that he thinks doesn’t get enough attention: “The disconnect between government representatives and their constituents is troubling. We’ve had an artificial limit on the number of House members elected that was set 100 years ago. Every 10 years, we have a census that tells us how many people are living in our country and we move the deck chairs around where states that aren’t growing as fast as other states are losing representation. We need to increase the number of seats in the House to account for the population increases and shifts that have occurred over the last century.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: George Stephanopoulos is 59 … Disney CEO Bob Iger is 69 … Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.) is 58 … Rep. Dan Meuser (R-Pa.) is 56 … Liz Hill of the Education Department … Glenn Beck is 56 … CNBC’s Jim Cramer is 65 … POLITICO’s Margy Slattery, Kaitlyn Tibbetts and Rodrigo Zuleta … Reuters’ Aram Roston … Mindy Finn, co-founder/executive director of Stand Up Republic … Susan Crabtree, RealClearPolitics WH/national political correspondent … the “PBS Newshour’s” John Yang is 62 … Reuters’ Aram Roston … Scott Sendek, VP of strategy and business development at Cross Screen Media (h/ts Tim Burger) … Cathy Gillespie … John Sturm is 73 … Michael Levoff … CNN’s Mallory Thompson … Stacy Kerans, senior comms director at the American Wind Energy Association (h/t Jon Haber) … Natalie Knight …
… Emilie Stanton, director of global public affairs at Blackstone (h/t David Vitek) … Jo-Marie St. Martin … Michael Gordon,WSJ national security correspondent, is 69 … Michelle Levi Noe … Barbee Ponder … Joanna Belanger … Connecticut state Rep. Caroline Simmons … Bruce Gates of Three Oaks Strategies … Eric Roper … Vince Zito, VP of corporate communications at Truist, is 31 … Maryland state Del. Anne Kaiser … Jessica Meyers … Merck’s John Cummins … Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby is 61 … Steve Beynon, veterans reporter at Stars and Stripes … Tanya Somanader, chief content officer of Crooked Media … Eric Storey … Tim Graham … Marisa Kashino, senior editor at Washingtonian … Jim Pfaff is 55 … Hector Irastorza is 62 … Clayton Keir is 35 … Mimi Sheraton is 94 … BBC’s Philip Hampsheir … Howie Beigelman is 46
The grim question facing the two candidates is not whether they can win the state’s primary, strategists say, but how low they will finish — and what that would mean for their candidacies.
By Cleve Wootson, Matt Viser and Felicia Sonmez ● Read more »
National and Iowa party leaders sparred over who is to blame for the caucus meltdown, while supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders accused the Democratic National Committee of being unfair to their movement.
By Michael Scherer and Sean Sullivan ● Read more »
The techniques and tropes director Bong Joon-ho repurposed so adroitly in “Parasite” made the film feel both original and oddly familiar, the product of the male gaze that still holds sway in Hollywood.
Once again, the Oscars have a diversity problem among its nominees. But on the red carpet, where individuals alone have the power to define themselves as glittering stars, rarefied gazelles, eccentric raconteurs or rumply intellectuals, it was possible to get at least a peek at the breadth of creativity in the La-La-Land.
Although Wuhan and Hubei province remain ravaged by the disease, officials say the number of new cases outside Hubei is declining, in a reflection of strict quarantine measures taking effect nationwide.
By Gerry Shih, Alex Horton and Marisa Iati ● Read more »
Irresponsible pesticide use worldwide poisons millions of people, kills hundreds of thousands and damages soil, water and ecosystems. The illegal, unregulated trade, estimated at $2 billion in Brazil, makes everything worse.
Arizona’s Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument includes about 330,000 acres of designated wilderness and is home to ancestral grounds of the Tohono O’odham Nation.
Video: Joe Biden calls a young woman voter a ‘lying dog-faced pony soldier’ in New Hampshire
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One last thing …
MSNBC pundit reveals the exact reason why Democratic pandering won’t win the black vote in 2020
MSNBC anchor Joshua Johnson made it clear Sunday that pandering from Democratic presidential candidates will not win them votes from the black community.Appearing on NBC’s “Meet the Press,”Johnson said that Democrats are more talk than walk, highlighting the fact that all remaining viable Democratic candidates are white.Johnson’s point? Democrats c … Read more
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Monday, February 10, 2020
Democratic Debate
Last Friday, the Democratic candidates debated in New Hampshire. Time
From the Left
The left is critical of Buttigieg and Biden and praises Klobuchar and Sanders.
“At some point soon, establishment Democrats will have to face the reality that Biden, for all his personal virtues, probably doesn’t have what it takes to win the nomination in 2020. Sure, this dire verdict may be premature. For the moment, Biden is holding onto his African American support in the February 29 South Carolina primary and leading in most national polls. But those numbers may look different next week if Biden limps home in fourth or even fifth in New Hampshire. In politics, universally known and liked former vice presidents don’t win by losing badly in both Iowa and New Hampshire.”
Walter Shapiro, New Republic
“While Buttigieg, Bernie Sanders, Joe Biden and Elizabeth Warren all had good moments, this debate belonged to Klobuchar. For once, she hit all her marks, whether attacking one of the others, joking with Bernie Sanders about a bill they had co-sponsored, or — again and again — turning each answer into an attack on Trump… Will it matter? Unlikely.”
Jonathan Bernstein, Bloomberg
“Despite questions about socialism and the viability of Medicare for All, Sanders was steady and commanding. While candidates talked about uniting the party, no other frontrunner can claim to have the economic, ethnic and ideological diversity [of] Sanders, who has the most people of color and lowest [median neighborhood income] in his donor base and success attracting independents…
“Contrasting Buttigieg, who seems to believe billionaires are mere constituents and not a part of a power structure that siphons wealth from everyday Americans, Sanders staked his allegiance assertively with the working class. He warned that none of the progressive policies being promoted can pass if corporate and billionaire donors have undue influence on candidates, and he is the only candidate who doesn’t have billionaire financing in his campaign coffers. Talk is cheap, and few but Sanders seem like they will prioritize people over billionaire patrons when it’s time to deliver.”
Malaika Jabali, The Guardian
“Buttigieg dodged questions on his healthcare plan and he dodged a question on a troubling history of police racism during his tenure as the Mayor of South Bend. He was heavy on niceties, light on specifics. He made lots of calls for unity, specifically in his attacks on the Senators to his left, but he did not have much to say about what Americans should unify around, or how to persuade them [to] do so. His answers sounded more like marketing copy for a nefarious tech start up than like statements of political principle. He looked, more than anything, like a man who has not relaxed since he was a child.”
Moira Donegan, The Guardian
Regarding the healthcare debate, “It’s not just that the Canadian and British governments finance health care that’s free at point of service for all citizens, they do it while spending less than our government does even if you completely ignore America’s enormous private sector health spending…
“Warren, who had a brand as the woman with a thousand plans, was expected to draw up a specific plan to make her health care vision work… Sanders is free of a wonk reputation or a need to worry about his left flank, so he doesn’t try to offer a specific health care financing vision — which, if he did it, would inevitably end up featuring some unpleasant tradeoffs. Instead, he just makes the basic compelling point… [that] America’s health care system is bizarrely terrible, providing less coverage at greater cost than what we see in comparable countries. This is not an adequate basis for actually enacting Medicare-for-all, but it’s a good political answer that explains his big picture view of health care without falling into nasty political traps.”
Matthew Yglesias, Vox
From the Right
The right thinks Klobuchar had a successful debate and criticizes the candidates’ positions on the issues.
“The New Hampshire contest was Klobuchar’s best debate overall. She was poised and collected, and it was smart from her perspective to hit Buttigieg, whose supporters overlap the most with hers. Her attacks on Buttigieg certainly didn’t seem to be powerful enough to send Buttigieg tumbling downward the way Chris Christie’s attack on Marco Rubio did at the 2016 GOP debate. But was it a strong-enough debate performance for Klobuchar to leapfrog Buttigieg in New Hampshire and become a real contender for the nomination? We’ll know soon enough.”
John McCormack, National Review
But “Klobuchar is Jon Huntsman circa 2012. She’s the candidate who naturally appeals in demeanor and policy (by being slightly less objectionable) to the other side. The problem for Klobuchar is that the other side is irrelevant. She finished 5th in Iowa and is currently polling around 5% in New Hampshire… Klobuchar seemed the most well spoken last night. Jeb Bush was also a lot more well spoken than Donald Trump in 2016. It doesn’t matter. What matters is who actually aligns with the voting base of their party. Klobuchar simply doesn’t do that in comparison to the field.”
Bonchie, RedState
“One by one, the candidates echoed the message that ‘systemic racism’ characterizes America… It’s one thing to trash Trump, which they did as they always do. It’s one thing to blame him for all kinds of stuff. It’s another to spend an evening trashing the United States of America as a systematically unjust and even evil place whose rot reaches its very foundations. You don’t win the presidency by telling a majority of voters — some of whom are the very voters you need to flip to win — that the system is unfairly rigged in their favor.”
John Podhoretz, New York Post
“Does the public still make at least some assumptions based on race? Of course. Some of those assumptions are far less malignant than others, and they aren’t merely the province of whites against blacks. Does some of the public discriminate based on racial prejudice? Yes. Should such attitudes be anathema? Absolutely. But the public is sick and tired of being hectored, of being told they are racist and evil without any acknowledgment of how far this nation has come in combating racism, both public and private… the more Democrats go down this path for the sake of primary votes, the more they will hurt themselves for the fall general election.”
Quin Hillyer, Washington Examiner
Furthermore, “not one of [the candidates] would have made the call to help Soleimani shuffle off this mortal coil. Mayor Pete at least went so far as to say that Soleimani was ‘a bad guy.’ But he then claimed that ‘taking out a bad guy is a bad idea if you do not know what you’re doing.’ Oh, really? Seems to me that our military knew precisely what they were doing. They knew where Soleimani was, where he was heading and took him out with a single drone shot. And the collateral damage was minimal…
“You’ll also recall that Joe Biden disagreed with Barack Obama about the raid to take out Osama bin Laden. Sounds like bad guys around the world should sleep well at night if Joe Biden is elected.”
Jazz Shaw, Hot Air
“Effective counterterrorism and the broader stability of international order do not rest on the back of nice rules and polite discussions at the United Nations. They rest on the balancing beam of deterrence and destruction — on nations knowing that they will be held to account for what they do to America, our allies, or to innocent peoples. Absent our ability to position a credible threat at the heart of their calculation, our enemies will try to get away with as much mayhem as possible.”
Tom Rogan, Washington Examiner
On the bright side…
New York City’s largest sewage plant announces Valentine’s Day tours – and sells out in less than 20 minutes.
CBS News
The Flip Side team spends hours each night scanning the news, fact-checking, and debating one another, so your 5 minutes each morning can be well spent. If you’ve found value in our work, we welcome you to help sustain our efforts and expand our reach. Any support you can provide is greatly appreciated!
The Morning Dispatch: Mayor Pete as Frontrunner
Plus, Trump purges impeachment witnesses Vindman and Sondman.
The Dispatch Staff 8 min
Happy Monday! Good morning from New Hampshire, where the forces of primary-week supply and demand have led to Declan staying in a hotel where everything is sticky or smells like cigarettes, but, at least for now, The Morning Dispatch remains bedbug-free.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The U.S. economy added a stronger-than-expected 225,000 jobs in January, with the unemployment rate inching up to 3.6 percent from last month’s 50-year low of 3.5 percent.
The Iowa Democratic Party has belatedly declared Pete Buttigieg the winner of last week’s caucuses, winning 14 total delegates to Bernie Sanders’ 12 and Elizabeth Warren’s 8—though a remaining pile of reporting irregularities have led many media organizations to declare the race still too close to call. Both the national Democratic party and the Sanders campaign have called for a recanvass in which authorities would double-check caucus counts to ensure they were tabulated correctly.
Two American soldiers were killed and six wounded in Afghanistan on Saturday in an apparent “green-on-blue” attack: the attacker was someone wearing an Afghan military uniform.
A Jacksonville man has been arrested on charges of aggravated assault after crashing his car through a parking-lot tent of Trump supporters registering voters Saturday.
President Trump’s former Navy Secretary Richard Spencer, who was fired last year after butting heads with Trump over Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher, has endorsed former New York City mayor Mike Bloomberg for president.
Axios’ Jonathan Swan reports that the Trump administration’s budget will include a major increase in funding for the nation’s nuclear weapons arsenal. The story expands on reporting first in The Dispatch last month on the fight to increase funding for nuclear modernization and here in TMD on Trump’s intervention to settle it.
Mayor Pete Gets the Frontrunner Treatment (For Now)
The 7.86 million people who tuned into the eighth Democratic presidential debate of the cycle on Friday saw a field of candidates at each others’ throats. With New Hampshire voters set to cast their ballots on Tuesday, the debate represented the last, best chance for the presidential aspirants to make their case, trash their opponents, and prolong their own candidacies. One former South Bend mayor in particular seemed to field the most incoming attacks.
Joe Biden was the first to strike. “He’s a mayor of a small city, who has done some good things,” he patronizingly described Pete Buttigieg. “But [he] has not demonstrated he has the ability to … get a broad scope of support across the spectrum, including African Americans and Latinos.” The former vice president launched a digital ad on Saturday taking aim at the “smallness” of Mayor Pete’s accomplishments in South Bend.
“We have a newcomer in the White House, and look where it got us,” Sen. Amy Klobuchar added, attempting to poke a hole in Buttigieg’s outsider message. “I think having some experience is a good thing.”
“Unlike some of the folks up here,” Sen. Bernie Sanders chided, “I don’t have 40 billionaires, Pete, contributing to my campaign, coming from the pharmaceutical industry, coming from Wall Street, and all the big money interests.”
Since squeaking out a surprise victory over Sanders in Iowa, Buttigieg has found himself in a position few would have predicted just a year ago: Ascendant, and squarely in the crosshairs of his Democratic rivals.
But the attacks might not be enough to slow Pete’s roll, and they could even work to elevate his profile. Buttigieg has gained nearly eight points in the RealClearPolitics New Hampshire polling average since Iowa voted last week, rocketing past Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren on his way toward Sanders, whom he called out by name at a rally on Sunday night.
“I respect Senator Sanders and I think a lot of the ideas that he is calling for tie to values that we all share,” Buttigieg explained to a Londonderry-record crowd of 914 packed into a middle school cafeteria. “But at a moment like this, telling Americans that you’ve either got to be for a revolution or you’ve got to be for the status quo is telling most of us we don’t belong. And we need a political movement where everybody can find a home.”
The Dispatch spoke to one voter at the event on the fence between Bernie and Pete, but most were staunchly behind the latter.
“I wouldn’t want Bernie,” Anne Fenn, a New Hampshire voter, told The Dispatch when asked if there were any candidates she didn’t want to see win the nomination. “I really wouldn’t. Sorry. I mean, he’s too argumentative, and he didn’t, from my point of view, didn’t really accomplish a whole lot in his 30 years in both the House and the Senate.”
When told other candidates, including Joe Biden, had been criticizing Pete for his lack of accomplishments, Fenn remained steadfast in her support for the South Bend mayor. “I don’t think that actually resonates very well for Joe,” she said. “Because that’s not who he is and that’s not his personality. I think it really doesn’t help him to do that, to tell you the truth.”
“Most people love Joe. Who doesn’t love Joe? Uncle Joe!” she added. “But to go on the attack, it really does not represent Joe Biden.”
“I’m also very anti-Bernie,” Fenn’s friend Neila Brownstein told The Dispatch. Brownstein is supporting Klobuchar, but she admitted it was “kind of hard sitting here tonight, listening to Pete, and realizing, ‘yeah, this is an amazing candidate as well.’”
“It’s not that we don’t have these aspirational goals,” she added in a nod to some of the field’s loftier policy ambitions. But “this Bernie and Elizabeth approach of day one, boom, it’s there—it’s not going to fly. It’s not going to get through Congress.”
“For 99 percent of us, defeating Trump is first and foremost,” Brownstein said. “If he is in office, all of these wonderful, passionate dreams will never get accomplished. So you have to get in the office before you can get the job done.”
Even some of Bernie’s former supporters have forsaken him. Asked her top priority in choosing a candidate, Liz Richter answered immediately: “Electability, for heaven’s sakes!”
“In 2016 I was all for Bernie, and still think the world of him,” she said. “But I don’t think somebody as progressive as Bernie or Elizabeth will appeal to enough percentage of the country.”
Buttigieg is still plenty progressive on a whole host of issues: abortion, guns, and climate change to name just a few. But in a world where Democratic primary voters’ most important candidate quality is his or her ability to send Donald Trump packing, attacks on Buttigieg from the left—from the Sanders camp on Pete’s call for deficit reduction, for example—may not carry the same weight they otherwise would.
Join now
Trump’s Impeachment Retribution
On Friday, Lt. Col. Alex Vindman and his twin brother were both removed from their posts at the White House at the direction of the President. Gordon Sondland was also recalled from his post as ambassador to the European Union.
Back in October, both Vindman and Sondland—and plenty of others like Secretaries Rick Perry and Mark Esper and Vice President Mike Pence—received subpoenas from the House of Representatives to testify or produce documents about the President’s actions surrounding the delayed military funding to Ukraine and the pressure on the Ukrainian government to investigate the Bidens.
The White House directed executive branch employees not to comply. Some—like Vindman and Sondland—chose to testify anyway, while others—like Charles Kupperman—chose to ask the courts to decide. Some, like Vice President Pence, simply ignored Congress.
Vindman and Sondland’s testimonies revealed new and damaging details about the president’s involvement in the Ukraine saga.
Sondland, who had donated $1 million to Trump’s inaugural committee, confirmed that there was a quid pro quo, saying, “I know that members of this committee frequently frame these complicated issues in the form of a simple question: Was there a quid pro quo? As I testified previously, with regard to the requested White House call and the White House meeting, the answer is yes.” He also confirmed that many senior administration officials were in the loop, including Vice President Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and acting White House chief of staff Mick Mulvaney.
Vindman, who had won a purple heart for his service in Iraq and joined the National Security Council in 2018, offered that he believed it was “improper for the president of the United States to demand a foreign government investigate a U.S. citizen and political opponent,” and that no other national security officials supported withholding the military assistance.
Others who testified in the impeachment inquiry—such as Jennifer Williams, Marie Yovanovitch, and Bill Taylor Jr.—have already left their positions.
As the New York Times reported over the weekend, some Republican senators who had voted to acquit the president—including Sens. McSally, Tillis, Johnson, and Collins—tried to stop Trump from firing Sondland, without effect.
Some publicly defended Trump’s actions.
Marco Rubio
@marcorubio
Col. Vindman wasn’t “fired” he’s still an Army officer. He was assigned to NSC to serve the President who has a right to have people he trusts on his staff
Sondland was a politically appointee. No point in having a political appointee who no longer has the Presidents confidence
February 8th 2020
10,830 Retweets40,462 Likes
But it’s clear Trump himself viewed his actions vis-a-vis Vindman as a retributive firing: He was escorted out of the White House, his twin brother was removed as well, and Trump retweeted a congressman using the word “fire” to describe what happened.
And Donald Trump Jr. tweeted sarcastic thanks to Adam Schiff for identifying those who needed to be punished.
Donald Trump Jr.
@DonaldJTrumpJr
Allow me a moment to thank—and this may be a bit of a surprise—Adam Schiff. Were it not for his crack investigation skills, @realDonaldTrump might have had a tougher time unearthing who all needed to be fired. Thanks, Adam! 🤣 #FullOfSchiff
February 8th 2020
23,063 Retweets92,205 Likes
The president defended his decision on Twitter, calling Vindman “very insubordinate”:
Donald J. Trump
@realDonaldTrump
Fake News @CNN & MSDNC keep talking about “Lt. Col.” Vindman as though I should think only how wonderful he was. Actually, I don’t know him, never spoke to him, or met him (I don’t believe!) but, he was very insubordinate, reported contents of my “perfect” calls incorrectly, &…
February 8th 2020
27,139 Retweets114,253 Likes
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, however, called it “as clear a case of retribution as I’ve seen during my 27 years in the Senate.”
Vindman’s attorney also released a pointed statement:
“He did what any member of our military is charged with doing every day: he followed orders, he obeyed his oath, and he served his country, even when doing so was fraught with danger and personal peril. And for that, the most powerful man in the world—buoyed by the silent, the pliable, and the complicit—has decided to exact revenge… If we allow truthful voices to be silenced, if we ignore their warnings, eventually there will be no one left to warn us.”
Worth Your Time
In recent weeks, we’ve mentioned a number of alarming reports in this space about the growing power of the private surveillance state and the growing willingness of law enforcement to partner with it. Now, a new Wall Street Journal report has brought to light one of the largest instances of such cooperation yet. For the last three years, the Department of Homeland Security has been using cell location data pulled from ordinary apps to track and arrest illegal immigrants and other people in the U.S. unlawfully. The move is apparently perfectly legal—by purchasing the data from private marketing companies rather than seeking it directly from cell companies, the government avoids triggering a 2018 Supreme Court ruling that established cell location data as a protected class of information. But it further underscores how pervasive these public-private surveillance partnerships are becoming, and how underdeveloped laws shoring up civil liberties against such all-encompassing surveillance still are. Read the whole thing here.
One of the odder phenomena of the Trump era has been the emergence of QAnon—an online conspiracy community of Trump supporters who believe, among other things, that the president was elected to unearth and root out a global ring of pedophiles and that the Mueller investigation was secretly created to implicate prominent Democrats in the scheme and ship them off to Guantanamo Bay. This unsettling New York Times piece by Mike McIntire and Kevin Roose catalogs how, in recent months, the conspiracy has begun to make the jump from cyberspace to the real world: QAnon devotees now show up regularly at Trump rallies, a number of congressional candidates have endorsed the theory, and QAnon personalities have been invited to the White House’s social media summit.
Although Donald Trump’s hotel companies have insisted for years that they charge the government at cost when the president and his retinue stay at Trump properties, a Washington Post review of Secret Service records has found that they have charged rates of up to $650 a night for Secret Service rooms, with total taxpayer payments to Trump properties so far exceeding $471,000.
Presented Without Comment
Steve Guest
@SteveGuest
Joe Biden to New Hampshire voter asking about why he lost in Iowa “you’re a lying dog-faced pony solider”
February 9th 2020
2,428 Retweets4,307 Likes
Something Fun
Experts agree: Never let a little thing like an awards show, or your role in an awards show, ruin the rhythm of getting your sandwich on.
bunklore
@bunklore
The guy delivering statues at the Independent Spirit Awards didn’t bother to put down his sandwich before coming onstage.
February 8th 2020
16,108 Retweets129,097 Likes
Toeing the Company Line
Over the weekend, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez earned some right-wing mockery when she referred in an Instagram video to “Milton Keynes”—mixing up the names of free-market darling Milton Friedman and progressive econ godfather John Maynard Keynes. But as James Pethokoukis points out in a great new piece on the site, isn’t “Milton Keynes” a pretty good shorthand for the economic policy the modern GOP actually pursues: Free-market platitudes on the donor circuit, stimulus and central planning once in office?
Thomas Joscelyn wrote about Qasim al-Raymi last week in his newsletter, highlighting the danger al-Qaeda still presents. One day later, the Trump administration announced it had killed Raymi, the head of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Joscelyn revisits Raymi in a new piece, arguing that his death actually highlights how little the U.S. government shares publicly about the terrorist organization.
Be sure to check out David’s Sunday French Press, in which he unpacks President Trump’s performance at last week’s National Prayer Breakfast and digs into an uncomfortable question: What does it look like if American evangelicals still obey Jesus’s command not to hate their enemies, but have agreed to delegate that task to someone else? If you missed it yesterday, it’s well worth your time.
Head still reeling from Iowa, and all that went wrong? Declan put together a Dispatch Fact Check looking at the various conspiracy theories that sprung up in the wake of the caucuses. Give it a read here.
Let Us Know
The 92nd Academy Awards were held last night, and Parasite, the South Korean thriller, was the big winner. (Not to brag, but back on October 21 we wrote: “Parasite, the latest film from South Korean director Bong Joon-ho, might just be the movie of the year.”)
Our question to you: Did the Academy voters make the right choice?
Our second question to you: Do you care about the Oscars?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
Photograph of Pete Buttigieg by Win McNamee/Getty Images. Photograph of Lt. Col. Vindman by Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images.
“[Moving] the payment to the landlord’s side doesn’t eliminate the cost of finding, matching, showing units, and vetting tenants—the cost will still be paid, and you will still meet the occasional ‘sketchy’ broker.”
By Alex Armlovich Economics21
February 6, 2020
“Spending has skyrocketed across the board since de Blasio took over City Hall, but no government expenditures have soared as fast as homeless services, which more than doubled since 2014, from $1 billion to $2.1 billion.”
By Seth Barron New York Post
February 8, 2020
“In what he calls a ‘bold agenda’ for New York’s future, Gov. Andrew Cuomo has dusted off one of Albany’s creakiest bipartisan infrastructure fantasies: high-speed passenger rail service. … Any seriously honest study will reveal that to be a misplaced priority.”
By E.J. McMahon New York Post
February 10, 2020
“The latest projections from the CBO predict the budget deficit will surge toward $2 trillion by the end of the decade if current policies continue.”
By Brian Riedl Economics21
February 7, 2020
“Job growth this month surpassed expectations and allows the Trump administration to continue to boast about the strong economy.”
By Beth Akers Manhattan Institute
February 7, 2020
“Yet, as I discovered in my visit to this region as a new presidential election approaches, Pennsylvania is, as ever, a battleground state: The attitudes here remain contested, about Trump and even about King Coal.”
By Paul Starobin The Philadelphia Inquirer
February 9, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
Increased numbers of cops on the streets helped stem rising crime, but now that progress could be reversed as police departments face hiring shortages.
By Charles Fain Lehman New York Post
February 7, 2020
Adapted from City Journal
Rafael A. Mangual joins John Stossel to discuss how overcriminalization—specifically, the expansion of state and federal criminal laws—puts well-meaning citizens at risk of serious prosecution. Mangual warns, “People commit crimes all the time without knowing it. It’s impossible to know what sort of behavior is criminal.”
Mark Mills joins Brian Anderson to discuss the enormous energy demands of the world’s modern information infrastructure—or “the Cloud”—the subject of his new book, Digital Cathedrals.
In Digital Cathedrals,Mark Mills explores the new digital infrastructure through the lens of energy demand, and the implications for policymakers and regulators, who will be increasingly tempted—or enjoined—to engage issues of competition, fairness, and even social disruptions, along with the challenges of abuse of market power, both valid and trumped up.
Nominations are open for the Manhattan Institute’s 2020 Civil Society Awards. This fall, four winners will each receive a $25,000 award for their efforts to keep our social fabric from fraying, assist those who need it most, and help people change the course of their lives. Nominate an outstanding nonprofit by March 20, 2020. Learn more at civilsocietyawards.com.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
52 Vanderbilt Ave. New York, NY 10017
(212) 599-7000
There was a time when many on the Right and the Left found Joe Biden’s antics charming and amusing. He would do something disturbingly weird like grope a biker chick and everyone would just gloss over the fact that he was one heartbeat away from the presidency and just say, “Well, that’s just Joe.”
I was never one of those people. I’ve always thought that his odd behavior was disturbing, not charming. He’s a skeevy creep who shouldn’t be left alone in charge of a goldfish, let alone the most powerful nation on Earth.
During this presidential campaign he has gotten progressively (pun intended) more bizarre. At his best, Biden hemorrhages odd syntax, nonsequiturs, and virtually nothing that indicates he made it past the third grade. On Sunday, Crazy Joe the Wonder Veep had perhaps his weirdest word-barf yet, calling a woman at a campaign event a “lying, dog-faced pony soldier.”
This guy doesn’t need any more public campaign events, he needs a sedative and a full-time nurse.
Remember, Biden was supposed to be the safe, sane option for the Democrats in this election.
Many have expressed concern that perhaps Biden is slipping into age-related dementia. He’s always been like this, however. He’s the guy who dropped an f-bomb on a hot mic while standing next to the president. He has the impulse-control of an ADHD-riddled 14-year-old boy.
Every off-script moment of Biden’s now is a loud cry for help. Put the man out of our collective misery and run him out of this primary race ahead of schedule.
At this point, serious questions have to be asked about his loved ones. Are they not embarrassed and concerned enough to talk him into leaving the race? Who lets someone they care about continually make a fool of himself in front of the entire country? Is his wife so power-hungry that she’s willing to let her husband be a punchline just so she can order some White House china?
Here is the “dog-faced pony soldier” video:
Tom Elliott@tomselliott
After a New Hampshire voter asks @JoeBiden why they should trust he can turn his campaign around, he asks if she’s ever been to a caucus before; when she says yes, Biden snaps: “No you haven’t. You’re a lying dog-faced pony soldier.”
Meanwhile, in the “How’s That Working Out, Democrats?” Dept.
The New York Times
✔@nytimes
Voters in the populous, heavily Republican suburbs west of Milwaukee did not entirely embrace Donald Trump in 2016. But in Waukesha County, Wisconsin, after the impeachment trial, Republicans are rallying around the president. https://nyti.ms/375MlOl
Post Impeachment, a Key Republican Suburban Area Rallies Around Trump
Voters in the populous, heavily Republican suburbs west of Milwaukee did not entirely embrace Donald Trump in 2016. They do now.
On Saturday I wrote about the passing of comedy legend Orson Bean (who was also the late Andrew Breitbart’s father-in-law). Here’s an interview from the old PJTV days that our friend and former colleague did with Bean. Hat tip to Managing Editor Paula Bolyard for finding this.
This feels like a good week to lower expectations.
“Parasite” won the Oscar for Best Picture, the first time a foreign language film has won the award. Also, more people have now died from the coronavirus than the SARS epidemic. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
“Parasite” makes history at the Academy Awards
Watch Video +
Biden defends poor finish in Iowa: “We’re just getting going”
Read Story +
Cell phone of missing Idaho teen found with mother
Read Story +
Video appears to show jail staff ignoring pleas from dying inmate
Read Story +
Why fashion influencer Camila Coelho hid her epilepsy
The Bridge Initiative, a project of the Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for Muslim Christian Understanding, continues to embarrass its host, Georgetown University, this time by publishing a “factsheet” in defense of the convicted Hamas fundraising organization known as the Holy Land Foundation.
The sheet is short on facts, and long on emotional appeal. It distorts basic facts about the Holy Land Foundation case, in which the nation’s largest Islamic charity and five of its employees were convicted on 104 felony counts, including providing material support for the terrorist organization Hamas.
On Saturday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo issued a blunt warning to the nation’s governors: Beware Chinese influence operations. As he put it, “…Competition with China is not just a federal issue….It’s happening in your states with consequences for our foreign policy, for the citizens that reside in your states, and indeed, for each of you.”
Mr. Pompeo speculated that many in his audience had probably already been targeted by the Chinese Communist Party. Their respective state’s universities, companies, business development efforts and public employee pension funds have likely been penetrated, and even suborned.
For example, the Committee on the Present Danger: China has recently established that the public employees’ retirement plans of Iowa and New Hampshire hold in portfolio stocks of malevolent Chinese companies. And such companies don’t disclose material risk as American counterparts must. That perilous double-standard must end.
This is Frank Gaffney.
The Trump administration is sending a clear message to the Palestinian leadership with the peace plan, says Douglas Feith, Senior Fellow and Director of the Center for National Security Strategies at the Hudson Institute.
Douglas Feith addresses the largely misunderstood purpose of the administration in putting the peace plan forward on Secure Freedom Radio.
On the menu today: Forget about the documentarian who said “workers of the world unite” during the Oscars ceremony. Heck, even forget about the New Hampshire primary for a moment — there will be plenty of that in the Corner — and let’s start off the week with three huge news stories that are just under the radar with huge ramifications: the impact of the coronavirus, the accelerating bonanza in the U.S. energy industries and the one glaring exception, and the potential dangers of private location data tracking. Trust me, this will be one of those newsletters you end up forwarding to people with “Did you see this?”
Are You Dependent upon China for Your Prescription Drugs or Your Doctor’s Equipment?
“Makes an original and compelling case for nationalism . . . A fascinating, erudite—and much-needed—defense of a hallowed idea unfairly under current attack.” — Victor Davis Hanson
Below is a sneak peek of this content! With impeachment fading fast in the rear view mirror, the question before us now is whether progressive Democrats (also known as the Resistance) will continue to smear the president with their new favorite dopey epithet … or whether they’re ready to grow… CONTINUE Read More »
Bernard Goldberg, the television news reporter and author of Bias, a New York Times number one bestseller about how the media distort the news, is widely seen as one of the most original writers and thinkers in broadcast journalism. He has covered stories all over the world for CBS News and has won 13 Emmy awards for excellence in journalism. He won six Emmys at CBS, and seven at HBO, where he now reports for the widely acclaimed broadcast Real Sports. [Read More…]
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NATIONAL JOURNAL
What’s News
IA CAUCUSES: Former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg (D) “widened his lead in the Iowa caucuses Sunday when the Iowa Democratic Party updated results for 55 of 1,765 precincts. In new projections, Buttigieg would be awarded 14 national delegates,” and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) “would be awarded 12 national delegates. But it’s not over yet. Sanders’ campaign plans to ask state party officials for a ‘partial recanvass’ of results, a Sanders aide confirmed Sunday night ahead of Monday’s deadline for such requests.” (Des Moines Register)
ENDORSEMENTS: The Michigan Democratic Party Black Caucus endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden. The caucus had previously supported Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA). (release)
ME SEN: Sen. Susan Collins (R) said Friday “she can’t say yet whether she will vote for” Trump in November. Collins has said she wrote in then-Speaker Paul Ryan in 2016. Collins: “I haven’t even given thought to presidential politics.” (Lewiston Sun Journal)
TX SEN: The Dallas Morning News editorial board endorsed state Sen. Royce West (D) and former Houston City Councilwoman Amanda Edwards (D) on Sunday for the primary runoff. The op-ed said both Edwards and West have demonstrated “strong governing ability,” and that their “practical” approach to politics is needed to take on Sen. John Cornyn (R). (Dallas Morning News)
KS SEN: Venture capitalist Peter Thiel “was the primary contributor to” the Free Forever PAC “that conducted a poll showing” 2018 gubernatorial nominee Kris Kobach (R) leading the GOP field for the state’s open seat. End-of-year FEC reports show Thiel “contributed $100,000” to the PAC on Dec. 31. “Thiel’s contribution makes up more than 95% of the PAC’s total fundraising for 2019.” (Kansas City Star)
UT GOV: Former Gov. Jon Huntsman (R) announced Friday that he chose Provo Mayor Michelle Kaufusi (R) as his running mate. Kaufusi was first elected mayor in 2017, becoming the first woman elected to that position. The Huntsman campaign also released a video announcement. (release)
KANSAS: “Democrats are making a push to flip the [open] seat of” state Senate President Susan Wagle (R), who is running for Senate, “in the November general election. Former Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston (D) has announced that she’s running … for the seat.” Gov. Laura Kelly (D) “was present for Foulston’s kickoff last week. … Wagle has endorsed” state Rep. Renee Erickson (R) “as her replacement. Erickson so far is the only GOP candidate to file.” (AP)
BATTLE FOR THE SENATE: “A handful of Republican senators tried to stop Trump from firing” Ambassador to the EU Gordon Sondland, “but the president relieved the diplomat of his post anyway. … Among the Republicans who warned the White House” were Sens. Thom Tillis (R-NC), Martha McSally (R-AZ), Ron Johnson (R-WI), and Collins. “The senators did not express the same concern about” Col. Alexander Vindman, “who is viewed less sympathetically by the president’s allies.” (New York Times)
IL-03: Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot (D) endorsed 2018 challenger Marie Newman (D) over Rep. Dan Lipinski (D), “giving Newman’s campaign a key progressive boost ahead of the Chicago area’s biggest Democratic primary contest next month.” Lightfoot had previously said it was Lipinski’s “time to leave” after he “co-signed a legal brief asking the U.S. Supreme Court to revisit the Roe V. Wade decision.” (Chicago Sun-Times)
The Democrats’ situation in PA-01 got more muddled over the weekend, as the Bucks County Democratic Committee voted to endorse Ivyland Councilwoman Christina Finello over Pennsbury School Board director Debbie Wachspress. While the race is already uphill for them (Cook Political Report moved it from Tossup to Lean Republican last week), they haven’t made their task easier: Wachspress has $355,000 on hand, a respectable amount for a challenger nine months out from the election, and Finello has $11,000 (having spent nearly 90% of what she’s raised). If Finello wins the primary despite her meager haul, national Democrats may fully give up on beating Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick and refocus their attention in the Philadelphia media market to New Jersey, where they’re already working to defeat Jeff Van Drew and defend Andy Kim. — Alex Clearfield
Fresh Brewed Buzz
Former Vice President Joe Biden is “giving effective control of the campaign to Anita Dunn, a veteran Democratic operative and top adviser to him.” According to a campaign email, Dunn “will be working closely with us on campaign strategy and overall coordination on budget and personnel.” (New York Times)
Sen. Joe Manchin (D-WV) “defended his vote to convict” Trump “after the president attacked him on social media as ‘weak’ and ‘pathetic’ … Manchin tweeted that the people of West Virginia ‘know exactly who has worked day & night for the last 5 years to secure their healthcare & pensions & it wasn’t you.’” (USA Today)
“Kentucky Lt. Gov. Jacqueline Coleman (D) welcomed a new member to her family Saturday when she gave birth to a baby girl. Coleman is the first lieutenant governor in Kentucky history to give birth to a child while in office.“ (WDRB)
AL SEN candidate Roy Moore (R) “says that he plans to bring back the very same monument” of the Ten Commandments “that got him removed as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court in 2003,” placing it “on the first floor of the Foundation for Moral Law, which is run by Moore and his wife, and is located just streets away from where it was first displayed.” (WHNT)
“All of” Sen. Elizabeth Warren‘s (D-MA) “big-name political surrogates are hitting the trail in New Hampshire this weekend as she tries to stage a comeback from her disappointing third-place finish in Iowa. All, that is, except for one:” Rep. Joe Kennedy III (D-MA 04). Kennedy “has made only two campaign appearances for Warren since then. Kennedy popped over twice to New Hampshire; he did not set foot in Iowa ahead of its caucuses.” (Politico)
2016 Libertarian Party nominee Gary Johnson (L) endorsed his running mate, former Gov. Bill Weld (R) in the Republican primary and Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) in the Democratic primary. (Twitter/Business Insider)
“Hours after a van plowed through a Republican Party tent where volunteers were registering voters” on Saturday, “Jacksonville police arrested a 27-year-old man on two counts of aggravated assault on a person over 65 years old, criminal mischief and driving without a license. … No injuries were reported.” (WJXT)
Author Jodi Picoult endorsed Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA). (release)
Sanders “took issue on Sunday with CNN anchor Jake Tapper bringing up comments he made over 45 years ago, sarcastically asking if Tapper had also dug up his ‘third-grade essay’ as well. … Tapper brought up the complaints from moderate Democrats that Sanders’ message is not a winning one, prompting the progressive lawmaker to insist that his ‘agenda is precisely the agenda that the overwhelming number of people want.’” (Daily Beast)
Rooster’s Crow
The House is in at noon. The Senate is in at 3 p.m.
Trump meets with governors at 11 a.m. and with Parkland families at 3:30 p.m. Trump delivers remarks at a rally at SNHU Arena in Manchester, NH at 7 p.m.
Swizzle Challenge
Secretary of War William W. Belknap was impeached in 1876.
Bill Pascoe won Friday’s challenge. Here’s his challenge: At the beginning of the Senate impeachment trial of Bill Clinton, all the senators signed a book affirming the oaths they had taken for the trial. The pen used had an unfortunate typo in the inscription; what did it read?
By Wayne Allyn Root I’ve tried in my career as a conservative commentator to rarely use the word “evil.” Disagreeing over policies and a political… Read more…
According to former US Attorney Joe diGenova, the White House has identified the “anonymous” author who penned the anti-Trump NY Times ‘resistance hit piece and… Read more…
Climate alarmist Greta Thunberg has been cruising around the world complaining about global warming. Now, she’s gonna’ make bank. “BBC Studios is making a TV… Read more…
Another Hollywood award show, another all-time low. “The three-hour-plus broadcast averaged about 23.6 million viewers and a 5.3 rating among adults 18-49, well below the… Read more…
Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) chairman Matt Schlapp said that he would “actually be afraid” for Mitt Romney’s “physical safety” if he attended the conference… Read more…
Attorney General Bill Barr on Monday confirmed that the Justice Department is currently assessing information about Ukraine provided by President Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani,… Read more…
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