Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Monday June 22, 2020.
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Jun 22, 2020
Good morning from Washington, where we’ve asked some influential African Americans to tell why they call themselves conservatives. We hope their answers will open some eyes. YouTube cites “hate speech” as an excuse to censor a Heritage Foundation video on the transgender debate, Rob Bluey writes. On the podcast, two friends share their story of racial healing. Plus: the truth about a Roman Catholic saint smeared by the left; the overseas group behind the attack on an online conservative magazine; and what cultural revolution sows. Seventy-five years ago today, the U.S. 10th Army overcomes the last Japanese resistance on the Pacific island of Okinawa, ending one of World War II’s bloodiest battles.
“I am a conservative because I have tasted and spit out the depressing, self-defeating ideologies and fruits of progressive liberalism,” writes Carol M. Swain, host of the “Be the People” podcast and radio show.
YouTube said the words of Walt Heyer, a former transgender person, at a panel about children and gender identity issues violated its “hate speech” policy and would not be permitted.
“We didn’t have a choice, the way God interwove our lives together, and we just could not not see the handiwork of God in the whole thing,” says Will Ford, co-author of “The Dream King: How the Dream of Martin Luther King, Jr. Is Being Fulfilled to Heal Racism in America.”
The current Black Lives Matter revolution has “canceled” certain movies, television shows, and cartoons, toppled statues, tried to create new autonomous urban zones, and renamed streets and plazas.
NBC News cited Stop Funding Fake News, a project of the Center for Countering Digital Hate, in pushing Google to demonetize The Federalist, a mainstream conservative news and opinion site.
A small group of rogue criminals should not be allowed to dictate the fate of statues in America’s parks and cities. And contra his critics, Serra advocated on behalf of native Californians.
Statues Come Tumbling Down as Cancel Culture Generates Momentum
In San Francisco, protestors tore down a statue of Ulysses S. Grant, our famed general (and later president) who helped defeat the confederacy, (Newsweek). After Grant’s death, Fredrick Douglas said, “To him, more than to any other man, the Negro owes his enfranchisement” (RedState). Rich Lowry: “What idiots. I guess they’re going to come for Sherman next” (Twitter). Junipero Serra is down as well (Twitter). In New York, the Teddy Roosevelt statue in front of the Museum of Natural History is being removed (NYPost) In Minneapolis: Both Harper Lee books and Mark Twain books are banned from Minneapolis public schools—and no, the teachers were not consulted in the decision (Telegraph). Monmouth University is renaming Woodrow Wilson building (NYTimes). Washington Post has their eye on the Redskins (WPost) Noah Rothman: Conservatives saw all this coming, and they were relentlessly mocked for it. But they were right, and their foresight was based on the fullest understanding of the arguments that America’s historical revisionists tacitly endorsed but never scrutinized…. When Donald Trump wondered whether it would be “George Washington next week” and “Thomas Jefferson the week after,” he was treated to haughty and dismissive dispatches in the mainstream press explaining why these Founders were more than just their proximity to slavery (Commentary).
2.
A.G. Barr Removes Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman; No “Standoff”
Berman was disinclined to resign and was subsequently fired. Wall Street Journal: People close to Mr. Barr said he had been growing unhappy with Mr. Berman for months and had been searching for a successor (WSJ). There is no standoff. AG Barr fired Berman yesterday after giving him the chance to resign, but Berman declined to do so. Shipwreckedcrew: There are rumors—unconfirmed so far as I can tell—that AG Barr offered Berman the job of Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division in Washington, but Berman declined that as well (RedState). The long of it, from Andrew McCarthy: Let’s take a deep breath. Congress is already demanding answers to the questions raised by Geoff Berman’s removal as U.S. Attorney for the SDNY. None of the people involved in this escapade is a shrinking violet. Soon enough, we’ll know why this happened (NationalReview).
Advertisement
3.
Tulsa Rally Numbers Disappoint; Was It TikTok? Concern over Cornonavirus?
A look at the event in Tulsa: President Trump’s campaign planned for a raucous show of force at a rally in Oklahoma but has found itself in a back-and-forth with critics over crowd size Sunday, as the campaign looked ahead to an event in Arizona on Tuesday. Trump aides blamed the news media for the smaller-than-expected crowd because of coverage of protests and coronavirus infections leading up to Saturday’s rally in Tulsa, Okla. (WSJ). Did a prank play a role?: TikTok users and fans of Korean pop music groups claimed to have registered potentially hundreds of thousands of tickets for Mr. Trump’s campaign rally as a prank (NYT). Was it concern over coronavirus (NYT). From Burgess Owens: Tulsa is the right place, and the day after Juneteenth is the right time, for this rally. It’s a celebration of the tenacity, work ethic, faith and entrepreneurial grit of an African-American community that has overcome both white racism and liberal paternalism to achieve economic independence. Let the rally begin (WSJ). Jerry Bowyer: “…an opportunity to shift the conversation towards the heroic successes of black people” (TownhallReview). Trump campaign continues to push for inroads in the Black vote (WashEx).
4.
Larry Elder, Candace Owens Among Courageous Black Conservatives Telling Their Story in New Documentary “Uncle Tom”
Kevin McCullough: The film does an excellent job of piecing together what happened when the welfare state and the “war on poverty” expanded. It broke up the nuclear family, it undermined the values and faith that family had believed, and it created an angry and controllable class of voters that race pimps have gotten wealthy by controlling for the bidding of the American political left (Townhall). Larry Elder serves as executive producer (UncleTom).
5.
Sen. Tim Scott Expounds on Sen. Durbin’s “Token” Black Comment: Elites Get Away With It
To the Wall Street Journal: “I’m just really ticked off about how casual and cavalier he gets to be, as a Democrat leader, to race-bait in an intentional, and unnecessary, and unfortunate way.” He doesn’t think that Mr. Durbin is “a racist,” he stresses, but says he’s “adopted a rhythm and a cadence that is consistent with what sometimes the elite liberals can get away with because they’re supposedly woke. And that’s a problem, because it just denigrates everybody who’s not in their way of thinking about the world” (WSJ).
Advertisement
6.
70 Shot in Chicago This Weekend; 11 Killed
… and little news coverage. Among the killed: a 13-year-old girl (ChicagoSunTimes). Chicago crime just doesn’t fit the prevailing narrative.
7.
Murder in Seattle’s CHOP Zone
From the Police blotter: Officers attempted to locate a shooting victim but were met by a violent crowd that prevented officers safe access to the victims. Officers were later informed that the victims, both males, had been transported to Harborview Medical Center by CHOP medics (Seattle). Hugh Hewitt: This account of events in Seattle makes clear that @GovInsleeis abandoning citizens who are owed the rule of law. The trajectory is towards even greater tragedy and it’s on the governor as that is where the police power resides when city forfeits it (Twitter) (SeattlePI).
8.
CHOP Sets Up Blacks-Only Zone
Weren’t we all on the same page that racially segregated areas was a bad idea?
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It is only sent to people who signed up from one of the Salem Media Group network of websites OR a friend might have forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy.
—@Parscale: Radical protesters, fueled by a week of apocalyptic media coverage, interfered with @realDonaldTrump supporters at the rally. They even blocked access to the metal detectors, preventing people from entering. Thanks to the 1,000s who made it anyway!
—@StormyDaniels: Told ya’ll he exaggerates about the size of things.
—@JaredEMoskowitz: Wear a MASK! Protect your family and mine. #PeopleoverPolitics.
—@FrankLuntz: 80% of American voters have a favorable view of wearing 😷 masks, including: • 89% of Democrats • 68% of Republicans • 61% of people who strongly approve of President Trump’s job performance
—@KeithOlbermann: This is simple. We cannot restart sports now. I would be grateful to be mistaken. I’m not.
—@MattGaetz: A very special Happy Fathers Day to all the stepparents out there. So many of you have reached out to me over the last few days. Thank you. #ModernFamilies
Tweet, tweet:
Days until
NBA training camp — 8; “The Outpost” with Orlando Bloom and Scott Eastwood premieres — 11; NBA teams travel to Orlando — 15; Major League Soccer will return to action — 16; Disney World Magic Kingdom & Animal Kingdom to reopen — 19; Disney World Epcot and Hollywood Studios to reopen — 23; Federal taxes due — 23; “Mulan” premieres — 32; TED conference rescheduled — 33; Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” premieres — 39; NBA season restart in Orlando — 39; Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee begins — 56; Florida primaries for 2020 state legislative/congressional races — 57; NBA draft lottery — 62; Indy 500 rescheduled — 62; Republican National Convention begins in Charlotte — 64; Rev. Al Sharpton’s D.C. March — 67; U.S. Open begins — 70; “A Quiet Place Part II” premieres — 74; Rescheduled running of the Kentucky Derby — 75; Rescheduled date for French Open — 97; First presidential debate in Indiana — 102; “Wonder Woman” premieres — 102; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 103; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 110; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 112; Second presidential debate scheduled at the University of Michigan — 115; NBA draft — 115; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 116; NBA free agency — 118; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 124; 2020 General Election — 134; “Black Widow” premieres — 138; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 141; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 148; “No Time to Die” premieres — 155; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 162; “Top Gun: Maverick” premieres — 204; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 230; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 396; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 405; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 501; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 599; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 641; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 683; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 837.
Corona Florida
The numbers — Nearly 100,000 people have tested positive for COVID-19 in Florida after state health officials reported 11,365 cases the last three days, including a record 4,049 Saturday. In total, 97,291 people have tested positive, 13,227 have been hospitalized and 3,254 have died. That includes 288 hospitalized and 93 dead non-Floridians. With rising positivity rates topping 10% in recent days, Gov. Ron DeSantis began addressing the growth of new cases Friday, calling it a cause for concern. But he says the new cases are largely among young populations, who are least likely to develop severe symptoms, making lockdowns unnecessary. “It just wouldn’t be appropriate to take some of those actions given that we have a hospital system in good shape,” he said.
Tweet, tweet:
“Ron DeSantis pivots on COVID-19 surge, says testing doesn’t account for spike” via Arek Sarkissian of POLITICO — DeSantis acknowledged on Saturday that the rising number of new COVID-19 cases in Florida cannot be explained away by an increase in testing, and announced plans to step up enforcement of social distancing practices in bars and nightclubs. Just earlier this week, when the state logged nearly 2,800 COVID-19 cases, DeSantis attributed the spike to increased testing among migrant farmworkers and in low-income communities. Even with more evidence of community spread, DeSantis refrained from requiring that people to wear masks in public. The state has endorsed the mask-use guidelines set by the CDC in May but DeSantis argues a broad mandate would be impossible to enforce.
“Chamber poll finds Florida approves of DeSantis coronavirus response; mixed on effectiveness” via James Call of the Tallahassee Democrat — Floridians overwhelmingly approve of DeSantis’ response to the coronavirus pandemic, according to a survey this month by the Florida Chamber of Commerce. That same poll indicates a majority of respondents believe the state’s economy will improve over the next six months. When asked whether they approved or disapproved of DeSantis’ handling of COVID-19, 57% of respondents approved but they split over whether the restrictions put in place during the health emergency were “just about right” (46%) or not “not restrictive enough” (44%).
Most Floridians approve of Ron DeSantis’ handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Image via AP.
Assignment editors — Florida Democrats and Hispanic leaders, including Rep. Javier Fernández, Natascha Otero-Santiago of the Democratic Hispanic Caucus of Florida, former DHCF President Claudia Mendoza, LULAC Political Director Cramer Verde and HD 118 candidate Ricky Junquera, will hold a joint news call demanding Gov. DeSantis apologize to the Hispanic community for his latest comments blaming them for the increase in coronavirus in Florida, 1 p.m. Media can RSVP here.
“First Florida teen dies from coronavirus, state health department says” via Paola Pérez of the Orlando Sentinel — A 17-year-old boy from Pasco County was the first reported fatality of a minor from coronavirus in the state of Florida, according to the state health department. The teenager’s death was among 40 new deaths confirmed Saturday. His case was counted by the state on April 18. As of June 21, nearly 6,000 Florida kids under the age of 18 have been infected with COVID-19 since March 1. About half of them are in the 12-18 age group.
“‘All individuals should wear masks,’ Florida Department of Health issues recommendation” via CBS Miami — The Florida Department of Health issued a Public Health Advisory on Saturday in response to increased COVID-19 cases in the state. The advisory provides several recommendations including that individuals in Florida should wear masks in any setting where social distancing is not possible. All individuals over the age of 65 and all individuals of any age with high-risk health conditions should limit personal interactions outside of the home and take all measures to limit the risk of exposure to COVID-19, according to the advisory. All individuals should refrain from participation in social or recreational gatherings of more than 50 people.
“Florida changes ICU reporting” via Christine Sexton of the News Service of Florida — Amid a surge in Florida coronavirus cases, DeSantis’ administration is changing the guidelines for hospitals’ reporting of intensive-care beds in the state Emergency Status System, or ESS. In a phone call with hospital providers, Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees said he no longer wants hospitals to report to the state the number of patients in intensive-care unit beds. Instead, Rivkees said he only wants hospitals to report the number of patients in those beds who require what he described as an “intensive level of care.” The change could reduce the numbers of occupied ICU beds reported to the state.
“From coronavirus to hurricanes, 2020 is forcing Broward County’s Jared Moskowitz to become the ‘master of disaster’” via Skyler Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Moskowitz, the 39-year-old state emergency management director and Broward County native is quick with a joke, but he knows his job is deadly serious. A native of Coral Springs and a graduate of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Moskowitz was first elected to the Florida House in 2012. He’s now the guy in Tallahassee responsible for ensuring that masks get to front-line health care workers. His agency has doled out millions of dollars in emergency contracts to stockpile supplies for the coronavirus pandemic. Moskowitz is preparing for the peak of the hurricane season. Projections indicate this year’s season could be severe, and COVID-19 complicates everything.
Jared Moskowitz is becoming the Master of Disaster.
“Many complaints but little enforcement for businesses violating coronavirus orders” via Scott Travis and Rebecca Schneid of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Complaints come daily about South Florida businesses flouting laws designed to help protect the public from the coronavirus, but consequences have been rare. Only a few citations have been given out to South Florida businesses that have violated county orders related to social distancing, face coverings or other restrictions enacted due to the coronavirus pandemic. Now two counties, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade, are reconsidering that approach as new COVID-19 cases rise and the number of available hospital beds shrinks.
Corona local
“Jacksonville plans more test sites as positive test rates jump” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Two months after Jacksonville City Council approved $35 million to open test sites in “every corner” of Duval County, city officials are still working on plans to open those sites as residents wait in long lines to find out if they are among the recent jump in COVID-19 cases. Duval County’s positive test rate for the virus is sharply on the upswing, driven partly by younger adults seeking testing and learning they caught the virus, even when they only have mild symptoms or don’t notice any changes at all. DeSantis and Mayor Lenny Curry say hospitals are not seeing spikes in patients suffering from the virus.
“After warning of new COVID cases, Miami Mayor ate at busy restaurant that defied rules” via Devoun Cetoute and Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Miami Mayor Francis Suárez held a news conference Monday to “sound to alarms” and “reiterate” the importance of social distancing and wearing facial coverings. Three days later, Suarez, who tested positive for COVID-19 in March, was seen at a crowded restaurant where guests appear to have violated a host of coronavirus rules as they dined at packed tables, sat too close to other parties and danced without masks. Suarez’s office confirmed the Mayor went to Swan for dinner, but said he was not part of any large gathering.
Miami Mayor Francis Suárez was seen attending events at a Miami club that does not meet social distancing standards. Image via Univision.
“Strip clubs, movie theaters start opening in Miami-Dade despite coronavirus trends” via Aaron Leibowitz and Ana Claudia Chacin of the Miami Herald — As Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Giménez and other local officials acknowledge that the novel coronavirus in South Florida may be trending in the wrong direction, the county continues to allow a wide range of businesses to reopen that have been closed since March. That includes strip clubs, at least five of which got county approval to reopen last week after submitting safety plans. Some of their new safety measures include installing hand-sanitizing stations next to their ATMs and requiring all employees to wear masks. At some strip clubs, masks as well as gloves will be required for any performances closer than six feet. Indoor movie theaters are starting to reopen, too.
“‘Grim Reaper’ visits Trump National Doral to warn of continuing COVID-19 risks” via Al Diaz of the Miami Herald — Florida Lawyer Daniel Uhlfelder, continued his “Grim Reaper Beach Tour’ in Miami on Saturday, June 20, visiting the Trump National Doral to raise awareness of skyrocketing news cases of COVID in Florida. Uhlfelder says he has been working for the past several months to get leaders and people, in general, to take COVID-19 seriously because he believes the leaders have ignored the call. Uhlfelder is also angered by the failure to help unemployed workers and small businesses.
Daniel Uhlfelder takes his ‘Grim Reaper Tour’ to Trump Doral. Image via Twitter.
“As outbreak hits Brandon nursing home, Congress investigates owner” via Rose Wong of the Tampa Bay Times — One of the nursing home operators being investigated by Congress for its handling of the coronavirus is experiencing major outbreaks at its Florida nursing homes and a deadly outbreak in the Tampa Bay area. Consulate Health Care is one of the five companies that received a letter from House Majority Whip James Clyburn, demanding records about how prepared it was for COVID-19 and how it is caring for infected residents. One of the worst outbreaks was at Consulate Health Care of Brandon, where at least nine residents have died. No less than 36 seniors and 18 employees contracted the disease at the facility.
House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn wants answers from a Brandon ALF about COVID-19 infections.
“Immokalee outbreaks raise Collier Co. cases above 3,000” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — An outbreak of COVID-19 cases in Immokalee skyrocketed Collier County past 3,000. After 105 new cases were reported in the county overnight, the total number of cases sits at 3,097 as of Saturday at 10 a.m. The Immokalee ZIP code, 34142, which lies mostly in Collier County, has a reported 1,245 residents who have tested positive. The data includes every case dating back to the first known coronavirus infection in Florida reported on March 1. Local officials stressed the majority of those are patients who have recovered from the virus. There are plenty of signs the growth has occurred primarily within the migrant farmer community. The median age of those infected has dropped from 43 on June 11 to 35 now.
“What coronavirus? Beaches packed as pent-up vacation demand blossoms” via Jim Thompson of the NWF Daily News — Despite the ongoing threat from COVID-19, it’s back to vacation business as usual, or nearly so, along area beaches, even as the number of COVID-19 cases is rising both locally and across the state. And while local health department officials are urging the use of face masks and social distancing to help slow the spread of COVID-19, local elected officials are taking a wait-and-see approach to deal with any potential local COVID-19-related fallout from the returning vacation crowds. In Walton County, according to County Commission Chairman Bill Chapman, officials “will continue to monitor the COVID-19 pandemic closely and will continue to focus on the health and safety of our residents, businesses and visitors.”
Corona nation
“White House adviser says Donald Trump’s call for less coronavirus testing was ‘tongue in cheek’” via Jeanine Santucci of the USA Today — Trump drew widespread criticism when he said at his first rally since the start of coronavirus lockdowns that he wanted testing for the virus to be slowed down, but White House trade adviser Peter Navarro said Sunday that was “tongue in cheek.” Trump reiterated his argument at his Tulsa, Oklahoma rally on Saturday night that increased coronavirus testing leads to a higher number of cases identified in the United States, calling testing a “double-edged sword.” Acting Department of Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf said that Trump’s call to slow down testing was in “frustration” over media coverage he said focuses on increased cases rather than the advanced testing.
Donald Trump’s people say his comments that ‘testing is overrated’ were tongue-in-cheek.
“CDC coronavirus test kits were likely contaminated, federal review confirms” via David Willman of The Washington Post — The test kits for detecting the nation’s earliest cases of the novel coronavirus failed because of “likely” contamination at the CDC, whose scientists did not thoroughly check the kits despite “anomalies” during manufacturing. The review also said there was “time pressure’’ at the CDC to launch testing, and “lab practices that may have been insufficient to prevent the risk of contamination.’’ The three-page review also acknowledged that, after weeks of delay, the likely contamination ultimately prompted the CDC to jettison a problematic component of the test kit.
“‘They just dumped him like trash:’ Nursing homes evict vulnerable residents” via Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Amy Julia Harris of The New York Times — Nursing homes are kicking out old and disabled residents, among the people most susceptible to the coronavirus, and shunting them into homeless shelters, rundown motels and other unsafe facilities. Many of the evictions, known as involuntary discharges, appear to violate federal rules that require nursing homes to place residents in safe locations and to provide them with at least 30 days’ notice before forcing them to leave. Nursing homes have long had a financial incentive to evict Medicaid patients in favor of those who pay through private insurance or Medicare.
“Despite pandemic, White House will still host Fourth of July event this year” via Kyley Schultz of Tampa Bay 10 — Fourth of July festivities will still take place this year says the White House, despite pushback about health concerns amid the pandemic. The White House announced the “Salute to America” planned celebration will still take place on the South Lawn and the Ellipse on July 4. Beyond music and remarks from the president, the event is also set to have a military flyover and “spectacular fireworks” to go off over the National Mall, similar to 2019’s event. This year, several members of Congress, including Virginia Rep. Don Beyer, wrote a letter expressing concerns that this year’s event would become a health hazard during the pandemic.
Donald Trump is moving ahead with a lower-key “Salute to America” celebration this year on July Fourth. Image via AP.
“Using hand sanitizer during COVID-19 pandemic? FDA warns these 9 might be toxic” via David J. Neal of the Miami Herald — Though hand sanitizer remains a high demand product in the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the FDA issued a warning against nine hand sanitizers as possibly being toxic. All nine, made in Mexico by Eskbiochem SA de CV, might contain methanol also known as wood alcohol. “Methanol is not an acceptable ingredient for hand sanitizers and should not be used due to its toxic effects,” the FDA warning says. “Consumers who have been exposed to hand sanitizer containing methanol should seek immediate treatment, which is critical for [a] potential reversal of toxic effects of methanol poisoning.”
Corona economics
Happening today — Leon County Circuit Judge John Cooper holds a virtual hearing on a possible class-action lawsuit filed against the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity and Deloitte Consulting on behalf of people having trouble receiving unemployment benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic, 1:30 p.m. The Florida Channel will also livestream the hearing. Call-in number: 1-786-635-1003. Access code: 400408. Meeting ID: 97348883423.
More corona
“WHO warns of ‘dangerous phase’ of pandemic as outbreaks widen” via Julie Bosman of The New York Times — Coronavirus cases spiked sharply across the American South and West, particularly in states that loosened restrictions on businesses several weeks ago. Around the country, there were indications that major companies and sports teams were changing their own plans as the new surges emerged. More widespread testing is no doubt playing some role in the increase in the number of known cases. A sobering lesson in the virus’s tenacity came in China, where officials had recently proclaimed that they had vanquished the virus, only to see it surge back in Beijing, the capital. That metropolis, of 21 million people, is facing new restrictions on travel and renewed school closures.
The WHO is warning that the COVID-19 pandemic is reaching a dangerous new phase.
“The whole world is watching America’s failure” via Paul Waldman of The Washington Post — People in other countries are simply gobsmacked at what a terrible job the United States is doing in controlling the novel coronavirus pandemic. Trump likes to say that after he was elected, respect for the United States was restored, but the truth is precisely the opposite. Even before the pandemic, Trump couldn’t have done more to degrade America’s standing than if that was his explicit goal. Just the fact that the United States would elect such a vulgar, ignorant, corrupt buffoon was bad enough. But now our government’s incompetence is helping cause the bodies to pile up and, it would be reasonable for other countries to worry, potentially affecting their own efforts to contain the virus.
“UK to cut 2-meter social distance rule, says health secretary” via James Randerson of POLITICO — The U.K. government will reduce its 2-meter social distancing rule this week, the Health Secretary Matt Hancock confirmed, following intense pressure from the hospitality industry that it makes profitable operations impossible. There have been rumors for weeks that the government would ditch the rule in favor of a shorter distance as is the case in several European countries. Pubs and restaurants are due to reopen on July 4, but the industry has warned that keeping customers 2 meters apart to reduce the spread of coronavirus is impossible for many establishments. Peter Piot, the head of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the rule created a “false sense of security.” “I’m pretty relaxed as long as it is associated with mandatory wearing of face masks,” he said.
“Concern throughout NBA grows as coronavirus cases spike in Florida” via Baxter Holmes and Zach Lowe of ESPN — The surging number of coronavirus cases in Florida, which posted a record high Saturday for the third consecutive day, has raised concerns in many corners of the NBA, from players to team executives to the league office itself, as it prepares to resume play in Orlando next month. In at least one recent call with high-level team executives, NBA commissioner Adam Silver has acknowledged the spiking numbers in Florida. Team sources described the general tone of that call, including the questions asked of Silver on it, as tense. Most teams aren’t slated to arrive in Orlando until July 7, 8 or 9.
Smoldering
“Florida sees rise in background checks for gun purchases” via The Associated Press — More Floridians are considering buying guns, according to state records that show a dramatic rise in the number of background checks its processed since the death of George Floyd in Minnesota. Florida has processed 30,657 background checks in the week after Floyd’s May 25 death, after a police officer pressed his knee against the black man’s neck. The number of background checks was twice the number for the same period last year. To purchase a gun in Florida, buyers must usually undergo a background check. A week after Floyd’s death, June 1, the state processed 8,597 background checks that day, more than four times higher than the first Monday in June last year.
“Chief judge says he relied on Pinellas sheriff’s word to keep protesters in jail” via Kathryn Varn of the Tampa Bay Times — During the first week of protests against racism and police brutality, the Pinellas County sheriff and the circuit’s top judge came to an agreement that allowed demonstrators to be held in jail overnight without bail. After news about the unusual arrangement broke and blew up on social media Pinellas-Pasco Chief Judge Anthony Rondolino this week issued a response. What Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri told the chief judge the protesters were doing didn’t match the allegations against them. Rondolino more clearly defined the process for bail deviation requests going forward.
Judge Anthony Rondolino said he trusted Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri on holding protesters without bail. He won’t be doing that again.
“Duval decries hanging mannequin in police uniform” via The Associated Press — Motorists saw a startling scene Saturday morning as they drove along a Florida interstate: a mannequin dressed in a police uniform dangling from a rope at an overpass. Emergency crews in Jacksonville, Florida, were dispatched shortly after 6:20 a.m. to investigate a possible suicide. But when they got there, they discovered a mannequin hanging from an Interstate 95 overpass wearing a pig mask and dressed in what appeared to be a New York City police uniform. The mannequin was removed and authorities launched an investigation. In a statement on Twitter, Jacksonville Sheriff Mike Williams called the incident “extremely disturbing.” He called it an attempt to stoke “anti-police sentiment and drive a divide in our community.”
“Federal lawsuit calls Jacksonville protesters’ arrests illegal and violent” via Andrew Pantazi of The Florida Times-Union — The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office’s arrests on May 31, the first Sunday of protests, were illegal, violent and unconstitutional, a new federal lawsuit argues. The lawsuit points to a mountain of video evidence to say officers indiscriminately arrested people for unlawful assembly or resisting without violence without any evidence that the protesters were actually breaking the law. Jacksonville Sheriff Mike Williams has defended his office’s tactics, telling News4Jax that they were “necessary steps to keep the city safe.”
“Jacksonville-based Florida Blue joins ‘historical fight’ to end racial injustice” via Beth Cravey of The Florida Times-Union — Florida Blue, the state’s largest insurer, has launched a $25 million initiative to address racial injustice by investing in organizations focused on diversity, inclusion and health care equity. The company, along with corporate parent GuideWell and philanthropic arm the Florida Blue Foundation, also formed task force-led Equity Alliance to tackle health care disparities in the Black community. The new initiatives follow the $1.2 million in grants Florida Blue and Guidewell awarded in 2019 to about 80 Black and community development organizations. The $25 million in investments will be made over five years.
“Miami’s Black officers conflicted by protests. They’ve fought racism themselves” via Charles Rabin and David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — During the first demonstrations in downtown Miami against police brutality toward Blacks, hundreds of protesters marched through the streets as squads of officers ringed police headquarters to protect the building. Some marchers threw bottles and rocks. Others hurled curses, some directed specifically at Black faces in the ranks. They were called traitors to their own race. “It’s like an oxymoron. To me, yes, Derek Chauvin, he’s a scumbag. But is there a need for this to be adversarial?” said one veteran officer. Policing while Black always poses its own challenges but more than a half-dozen officers in several Miami-Dade agencies say it’s never been more difficult.
“Emadi Okwuosa is the 22-year-old protester who embodies the resilience of Tampa’s new BLM movement” via Ray Roa of Creative Loafing — Okwuosa, a 22-year-old USF student, joined his local protest to call for serious police reform and an end to the racial violence that’s been a stain on American history since slaves were brought to these shores centuries ago. Then on June 4, he was arrested after Tampa police deployed pepper spray following what officers describe as an incident where a 17-year-old protester slashed an umbrella at a cop. Okwuosa disagrees with the police’s version of the incident. He says a bike officer started the scuffle by trying to grab the umbrella.
“Ben Crump has become the go-to attorney for racial justice: ‘I feel like I’m running out of time’” via Karen Heller of The Washington Post — Each case Crump takes remains singular, with its own set of horrendous circumstances. Yet a shared mission runs through all of them. Crump turns down a dozen requests for every case he takes, selecting ones that will “shock the conscience” of the American people. In a nation lousy with lawyers, he has become the go-to advocate for families who have lost relatives to police brutality, as if he is the only name on the list. He accomplished this by being fluent in the language of the church, tort law, racial inequality, and what he deems “the mediasphere,” paired with an indefatigable drive to be everywhere.
Ben Crump is the go-to attorney for social justice. Image via AP.
Sports reax
“NCAA bans championships in states where Confederate flag has a ‘prominent presence’” via Li Cohen of CBS News — The National Collegiate Athletic Association announced that NCAA championship events will not be held in states where the Confederate flag has a “prominent presence.” The statement targeted Mississippi, writing that it’s “the only state currently affected by the Association’s policy.” Mississippi has the only state flag that currently includes the Confederate battle emblem. The flag has come under increased scrutiny recently, due to its ties to slavery. The association’s policy previously barred championship events from being awarded in advance to states that prominently displayed the confederate flag. But the policy now covers “nonpredetermined” championship events, where a team earned the right to host a game based on their tournament seeding or ranking, too.
“Former Florida State football player creates petition to rename Doak Campbell Stadium” via Wayne McGhee III of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State’s football stadium has sported the same name for 70 years. But that name is now being called into question. Doak S. Campbell Stadium was named after FSU’s first president in 1950. Campbell oversaw the transition FSU made from the Florida State College for Women in 1947, in addition to the building of the stadium. Former FSU linebacker Kendrick Scott has created a petition to remove Campbell’s name from the stadium due to Campbell’s pro-segregation stance while he was president at FSU. The stadium is not the first FSU building to come under fire due to this issue.
D.C. matters
Happening today — Rep. Ted Deutch joins other members of the House Democratic Caucus Task Force on Aging and Families for an online roundtable discussion about the impact of COVID-19 on nursing homes, noon,facebook.com/AgingandFamiliesTaskForce.
“Matt Gaetz describes himself as ‘single stepparent’ to Nestor Galban” via Paul V. Fontelo of Roll Call — Hours after making a surprise announcement on his personal Twitter account that he had a son, Gaetz continued to tout his family in the press and on his own podcast. Gaetz repeatedly referred to 19-year-old Galban as his son but stops short of saying he had formally adopted him. “Our relationship as a family is defined by our love for each other, not by any paperwork,” he said. He would later elaborate on that in his podcast. In the podcast, Gaetz said Galban spends time with his sister, Gaetz’s family and with Gaetz. He refers to questions about why he does not have adoption paperwork and says: “He’s 19 years old now. Our family was never defined by paperwork or blood. It was truly defined by the love we have for each other.”
Matt Gaetz calls himself a ‘single stepparent’ to Nestor Galban, who he revealed after a heated argument on the floor of Congress.
Statewide
“Video shows police escorting Nikki Fried’s fiance from resort” via David Smiley and Samantha Gross of the Miami Herald — Police were called just before 1 a.m. to the Westin Fort Lauderdale Beach Resort about a “trespassing/disturbance” involving Nikki Fried and Robert “Jake” Bergmann, according to a June 13 Fort Lauderdale Police report. Police body camera footage shows that when police arrived, a security guard standing outside a Mexican restaurant located on the resort grounds told them a man staying at the hotel had thrown a trash can at a female companion during an argument. The two then got into a car and drove off, running over a curb and getting a flat tire, he said. The security guard, Robert Kane, wasn’t sure who was driving. But he told police he knew that Fried is “the freaking agriculture commissioner.”
“Governor approves e-bike bill” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Floridians will soon be able to ride e-bikes on roads, sidewalks and paths, anywhere regular bikes are allowed. Ron DeSantis signed legislation defining electric bikes and protecting home rule for communities that wish to regulate them. The bill establishes three tiers of electric bicycles based on what speed the motor cuts out and whether a rider must actively pedal for the motor to issue power. Under existing law, electric bikes are limited to 15 mph. Existing law also blocks anyone under the age of 16 from operating an electric bike, a restriction eliminated in the legislation. The bill would also create a statewide framework for e-bikes that would make it easier for bike share or rental companies to do business in Florida.
“DeSantis signs bill on school bus safety” via Jim Saunders of Florida Politics — Continuing to gradually finish the work of this year’s legislative session, DeSantis on Saturday signed 21 bills, including measures aimed at improving school-bus safety and preventing bear poaching. The school-bus safety bill will increase penalties for motorists who drive improperly when buses are stopped to load and unload children. In part, it would increase from $100 to $200 the minimum penalty for motorists who fail to stop for school buses and would double from $200 to $400 the minimum penalty for motorists who pass stopped school buses on the side where children enter and exit, according to a House staff analysis.
“New Florida law will ban pelvic exams without consent” via Brendan Farrington of The Associated Press — Doctors and medical students won’t be able to perform pelvic exams on unconscious patients without their informed consent under a bill signed by DeSantis. The new law that goes into effect July 1 also bans doctors and health care practitioners from inseminating a woman or implanting an embryo using their own reproductive material. The bill was a priority for Democratic Sen. Lauren Book, who has spent her adult life trying to protect people from sexual abuse. Book said she was horrified to learn the exams are performed on women under anesthesia as a teaching tool for medical students, unbeknown to patients. She said no woman should have her vagina examined without her consent, regardless of the intent.
“DeSantis signs bill to tighten penalties against bear poaching” via The Associated Press — Black bears, once a threatened species in Florida, will get stiffened protections against poachers, some of whom see the animals resurgence as a growing nuisance. DeSantis agreed to increase the penalties against illegal bear hunting to further deter hunters from killing the once-imperiled creatures. The bill was among a slate of 21 pieces of legislation the governor signed Saturday. Under the new rules, which go into effect July 1, the minimum fine for bear poaching would rise to $750 from $500. Hunting licenses could also be suspended for three years, instead of the current yearlong maximum.
Ron DeSantis signed several bills this weekend.
“DeSantis signs bill protecting split land inheritances” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DeSantis has signed legislation intended to keep long-held property within a deceased owner’s family even if they lacked a proper will. Current Florida law allows for any heirs in cases without a clear will to request the property be partitioned and force a sale. Real estate speculators use this loophole by targeting an unwitting heir, often a low-income individual, to property kept within a family for decades or centuries, ultimately purchasing the property below market value, says Sen. Randolph Bracy, the bill’s sponsor. The bill would give notice to other heirs when one wants to split or sell the land and have an independent body appraise the land value.
“Behavioral health advocates hope to outlast budget slashes” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Behavioral health advocates fear budget cuts from the COVID-19 pandemic could reverse progress revitalizing the state’s mental health programs following the 2008 recession. The Florida Behavioral Health Association (FBHA), led by President and CEO Melanie Brown-Woofter, is tracking funding integral to its partners’ services and fears they could get the ax. But behavioral health providers have had an ally in the Governor’s Office in First Lady Casey DeSantis, an ardent supporter who has already pioneered mental health initiatives in the Sunshine State during her husband’s year and a half in office. Some of those efforts have addressed the mental health of first responders, highlighted during the pandemic.
Lobby regs
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Albert Balido, Anfield Consulting: Estate of Hilda Medrano
Matt Bryan, Thomas Griffin, Teye Reeves, Smith Bryan & Myers: The Krome Groves Land Trust
Shawn Foster, Sunrise Consulting Group: Florida Academy of Pain Medicine
Matthew Martello, Dan Polesovsky: Indivior
Steven Marin, Marin and Sons: Inter Miami CF
Cissy Proctor, LSN Partners: AgustaWestland Philadelphia Corporation
Fred Karlinsky, Greenberg Traurig: WePayMore Funding
Sheela VanHoose, The Southern Group: Florida Scholastic Esports League
2020
“Donald Trump rally fizzles as attendance falls short of campaign’s expectations” via Michael D. Shear, Maggie Haberman and Astead W. Herndon of The New York Times — Trump’s attempt to revive his reelection campaign sputtered badly on Saturday night as he traveled to Tulsa for his first mass rally in months and found a far smaller crowd than his aides had promised him, then delivered a disjointed speech that did not address the multiple crises facing the nation or scandals battering him in Washington. Trump was furious about the unused outdoor stage and the comparatively thin crowd in the stadium. The Drudge Report, a reliably conservative website, carried an all-caps headline that said “MAGA LESS MEGA” with a picture of rows and rows of empty blue seats.
“TikTok Teens and K-pop fans say they sank Trump rally” via Taylor Lorenz, Kellen Browning and Sheera Frenkel of The New York Times — Trump’s campaign promised huge crowds at his rally in Tulsa, Okla., on Saturday, but it failed to deliver. Hundreds of teenage TikTok users and K-pop fans say they’re at least partially responsible. Brad Parscale, the chairman of Trump’s reelection campaign, posted on Twitter that the campaign had fielded more than a million ticket requests, but reporters at the event noted the attendance was lower than expected. The campaign also canceled planned events outside the rally for an anticipated overflow crowd that did not materialize. TikTok users and fans of Korean pop music groups claimed to have registered potentially hundreds of thousands of tickets for Trump’s campaign rally as a prank.
“Joe Biden outraises Trump with $80.8 million in May” via Elena Schneider and Zach Montellaro — Biden raised more money than Trump last month, setting a record high one-month total, raking in $80.8 million. But the presumptive Democratic nominee still has a long way to go in catching up to Trump’s war chest. At the end of April, Democrats had approximately $100 million in cash reserves. Neither Trump nor Biden have yet submitted fundraising filings covering the month of May to the nation’s chief campaign finance watchdog; those are due by midnight Saturday. May was the first full month Biden, who clinched the Democratic nomination in early June, raised money in tandem with the DNC, a joint fundraising agreement that allowed individual donors to give more than $620,000. Trump has had a joint fundraising effort with the RNC for months.
“Trump allies see a mounting threat: Biden’s rising evangelical support” via Gabby Orr of POLITICO — Allies of Trump worry his 2020 opponent, Biden, can do the same as Barack Obama did in his 2008 campaign, snatching a slice of a critical voting bloc from Trump when he can least afford departures from his base. Biden, a lifelong Catholic, has performed better in recent polling among white evangelicals, and other religious groups, than Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton did in 2016, and is widely perceived as more religious than the current White House occupant. This polling result is happening even though many conservative evangelical leaders have argued that Biden’s positions on cultural issues — like abortion, judges and religious freedom — are disqualifying.
“Tom Petty estate issues cease and desist over Trump’s use of song” via Laura Snapes of The Guardian — The family of Petty has issued a formal cease and desist letter to the Trump campaign over its use of his song I Won’t Back Down at a rally in Tulsa on 20 June. In a statement posted on Twitter, family members said the US president was “in no way authorized to use this song to further a campaign that leaves too many Americans and common sense left behind.” They said the late musician and his family “firmly stand against racism and discrimination of any kind. Tom Petty would not want a song of his used for a campaign of hate. He liked to bring people together.”
What Mike Haridopolos is reading — “Trump Space Coast boat parade draws enormous fleet of watercraft to Intracoastal Waterway” via Rick Neale of Florida Today — Seen from Cocoa Village, the approaching Trump boat parade looked like a countless mass of vessels and white water across the Indian River, stretching from one end of the distant Beachline Expressway bridge to the other. Socks and perhaps 200 spectators watched the massive Trump boat parade pass from the Lee Wenner Park shoreline. Starting at 11 a.m. from the power lines north of State Road 528, the colorful Trump flotilla motored southward down the Indian River to Dragon Point. That’s where most boaters planned to turn around the southernmost tip of Merritt Island and head back north up the Banana River to the Barge Canal.
Convention countdown
“Trump’s GOP convention in Jacksonville carries big risks amid coronavirus and protests” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — The announcement that the Republican National Convention was coming to Florida in August was supposed to be a slam dunk win for DeSantis and the state GOP. But it came just as Florida began seeing a stretch of record single-day numbers of new coronavirus cases — and Jacksonville, the site of the convention, was the scene of some of the most troubling examples of the virus hitting restaurants and bars. The party’s decision to move most of the RNC from Charlotte with less than three months to go was already a risky gambit. But could holding such a massive event backfire in the middle of the pandemic and with nationwide demonstrations against police brutality?
Donald Trump arrives at a campaign event in Jacksonville. Trump will deliver his Aug. 27 Republican convention speech in Jacksonville. Image via The New York Times.
“Potter’s House founder Vaughn McLaughlin ‘shocked’ to see his name on GOP convention host committee” via David Bauerlein of First Coast News — A day after the Jacksonville host committee for the Republican National Convention announced 32 members, McLaughlin of Potter’s House said he was shocked to find out he was on the list and said he never agreed to be on the committee. After McLaughlin delivered his comments in a Facebook post, the host committee said McLaughlin had committed to be on the committee but would remove him from the list if he is not interested in continuing in that role. “Everybody who knows me knew that I said I would not be on that committee,” McLaughlin said in a video message posted to Facebook. “I did not consent to be on that welcoming committee.” McLaughlin said he is not a supporter of Trump or the Republican convention.
More from the trail
Florida Democrats hit voter outreach milestone — The Florida Democratic Party’s organizing team of volunteers contacted 1 million voters last week by phone and text, which averages 142,857 voters each day. According to an email from FDP Executive Director Juan Peñalosa, since “the narrowest of margins” decides Florida, this voter outreach is critical to a Joe Biden victory in November. “Earlier this year we surpassed the milestone of 5 million registered Democrats in Florida, increasing the margin of Democratic registered voters over 2018,” Peñalosa wrote.
Judson Sapp takes the ‘Gator Bait’ — The University of Florida won’t endorse the ‘Gator Bait’ cheer anymore, but a Republican candidate for Congress has no problem with the stadium taunt. Sapp, running in Florida’s 3rd Congressional District, distributed orange-and-blue yard signs and went too far as to record a robocall with the words “Gator Bait” featured prominently. University of Florida President Kent Fuchs made headlines for banning the phrase at games because of historic racist undertones, leading many to learn how minority children had once been used as literal bait. But Sapp postures the censorship as political correctness. Sharing a social media meme with the Petty lyric “I won’t back down,” Sapp promises he “won’t back down to liberals in Florida or in Washington.”
Judson Sapp believes the ‘Gator Bite’ controversy is going too far.
“Well, this poll shows Heather Fitzenhagen with a double-digit lead on Ray Rodrigues” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Fort Myers Republican Fitzenhagen may start a Senate race in a better position than conventional wisdom may suggest. A Remington Research Group poll shows Fitzenhagen with a 10% lead over primary opponent Rodrigues. The survey, conducted on June 18 and 19 among likely Republican primary voters, found 34% of primary voters would vote for Fitzenhagen if the election were held today, while 24% would back Rodrigues. About 42% remain undecided. That puts Fitzenhagen’s lead outside the poll’s 4.5% margin of error. “These numbers are why incoming Senate President Wilton Simpson and the political establishment are scared,” a polling memo reads. “Not only do their endorsements mean nothing in this race, their hand-anointed candidate, Ray Rodrigues, is embarrassingly behind.”
Christian Ulvert joins Javier Fernandez’s Senate campaign — Veteran communications consulting and Democratic operative Ulvert is now political and communications adviser to Rep. Fernandez in his bid for SD 39. “I’m excited to join Rep. Fernandez’s battle-tested campaign team as we work to elect a strong Democrat and proven leader to the state Senate. This is a crucial cycle for our party and with Rep. Fernandez’s record of fighting for Floridians, we can flip this key seat in November,” said Ulvert, who has worked with clients such as Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber, former Mayor Philip Levine and later Andrew Gillum in his bid for Governor. Also, Ron Bilbao is serving as campaign manager and Dan Newman is the general consultant.
“Broadway producer Tom Kirdahy casts star lineup for Margaret Good event” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — With an event themed around LGBTQ rights, Kirdahy will bring together a lineup of stars of stage and activism. The marquis talent includes Sarah Silverman, Tony Goldwyn, Dan Bucatinsky, Matthew Lopez and Anthony Chatmon II, who will provide a “musical moment” at the event. Chatmon starred in a Kirdahy-produced Broadway production of Hadestown. Major players in the fight for equality will also hold featured roles at the event. Roberta Kaplan, who represented plaintiff Edie Windsor in a landmark Supreme Court case that overturned the Defense of Marriage Act, will be among spotlighted guests. So will Equality Florida Executive Director Nadine Smith. The event will be June 30 and held over Zoom.
Margaret Good and Tom Kirdahy will be holding a star-studded fundraiser for her congressional bid.
Epilogue — “Mark Foley to close congressional campaign account, donate money to charity” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — The news was first flagged by Noah Pransky of NBC LX. Foley told Pransky the remaining money will go toward local charities. Foley had faced questions in recent years about the funds still remaining in that account, “Friends of Mark Foley for Congress.” In 2018, the FEC pledged to conduct additional reviews of so-called “zombie” campaign accounts. Last year, Foley was also one of 50 campaigns to receive an FEC letter asking whether those accounts were truly “winding down.” Foley previously said he was keeping that account open for a potential congressional run once reapportionment occurs following the 2020 Census.
Top opinion
“Trump’s rally looked like his vision of America. Limited and pitiless.” via Robin Givhan of The Washington Post — When he emerged into the light, Trump walked into the cheering embrace of a mostly unmasked crowd bedecked in red Trump hats and MAGA T-shirts, along with the occasional QAnon tank top and “Don’t Tread on Me” pullover. It’s tempting to say it was a crowd that didn’t look anything like America because it appeared to be so lacking in diversity — so overwhelmingly white. But, in fact, the crowd looked precisely like America does in more than a few suburbs, counties and hollers. Such a homogenous throng might be jarring to some. For others, it’s completely normal and right. For the President, it was like coming home.
Opinions
“Florida shrugs off COVID threat to us oldsters” via Fred Grimm of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis and the governors of 20 other states where COVID-19 infections have been increasing over the last few weeks are not about to admit they reopened their respective economies before the pandemic was under control. Last month, in an argument about how Florida’s death rates are skewed by an overabundance of retirees, DeSantis dredged up the old joke characterizing Florida as “God’s waiting room.” Apparently, DeSantis wouldn’t mind shortening the wait. The demographic most threatened by coronavirus is not only expendable but a costly drag on the economy.
“Florida’s unemployment rate is wrong. Here’s why” via the Tampa Bay Times editorial board — The latest state jobs numbers are misleading in some cases and flat-out wrong in others. More people were employed in May, but a higher percentage of returning workers were still looking for work, which caused the unemployment rate to rise. In some ways that’s not so bad. An expanding labor force signals that people feel confident they can find work. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics conceded that in recent months it misclassified people as “employed, but absent from work,” instead of “unemployed, on temporary furlough,” a hiccup that stems from how the crisis quickly altered the job status of millions of workers nationwide. Plus, about 800,000 people in Florida are still missing from the workforce compared to February because they aren’t looking for a job.
Today’s Sunrise
Gov. DeSantis is asking the media — and the public — to stop focusing all its attention on the huge spike in COVID-19 cases over the past week.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— What it actually means: We’ve now had so many new cases that even DeSantis admits we have community spread of coronavirus. However, he says it’s not that bad, because most of the new victims are young adults, who are far less likely to die than seniors.
— Despite the surge of cases, The Governor is refusing to impose any sort of statewide mandate for the use of protective masks in public. Nevertheless, he says local officials are free to do so. And they are.
— Also, DeSantis believes the state will get serious about cracking down on those bars and restaurants that pack people, refusing to honor capacity limits intended to ensure social distancing.
— Florida’s jobless rate in May hit 14.5% — the highest on record. There are now 1.4 million Floridians on the official unemployment list. On the plus side, the state added more than 180,000 jobs in May. Although, more accurately, the state recovered those jobs. They are not “new.”
— A check-in with Florida Man, who decided to show off his assault rifle to a friend without checking the chamber first. “What, are you going to shoot me?” the friend asked. You can guess the rest.
“In the fight for equality, the NBA can be a symbol and an inspiration — not a distraction” via Jerry Brewer of The Washington Post — It is a wonderful and unselfish sentiment that some NBA players, with so much money at stake, are worried their return to action will be a distraction. It is also a rather facile concern, a frustratingly binary way to think. The notion of the NBA’s return being a momentum-killing distraction creates an assumption that the nation will be in the same place in six weeks as it is now, with daily protests, consistent dialogue and unrelenting pressure to tear down every tangible sign of racism that supporters of this budding movement can see. But a mass audience, no matter how determined, has seldom displayed such endurance.
“What to expect from Apple’s online-only WWDC 2020” via Chris Velazco of Engadget — Apple’s once-massive conference has gone online-only this year, beginning with a livestreamed keynote. It appears that Apple is getting ready to change some of the most basic facets of the iOS experience. Apple may be working on a “mention” system for iMessage so you can nudge specific people in your group chat, as well as the ability to retract your messages after you’ve sent them. If there’s one bit of news to keep your eyes peeled for at WWDC, though, it’s Apple’s rumored switch to ARM-based processors. Apple may also announce a cheaper version of its HomePod speaker.
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks at the Capital Factory in Austin, on an app development partnership with Austin Community College. Apple’s once-massive conference has gone online-only this year. image via Austin Community College.
“Disney Plus no longer offers free trial accounts, ahead of ‘Hamilton’ premiere” via Todd Spangler of Variety — Disney has ended the free seven-day promotional trial for Disney Plus, with the company saying it doesn’t need to dangle freebies to lure new customers to the streaming service. As of early May, Disney Plus had signed up 54.5 million subscribers worldwide just six months after its launch. The move by Disney Plus to stop giving away trial accounts comes ahead of the July 3 premiere of “Hamilton,” the movie based on Lin-Manuel Miranda’s hit musical, about a year before it was originally scheduled to play in theaters. Meanwhile, on a stand-alone basis, Hulu, which is controlled by Disney, still offers free trials of varying lengths.
“COVID-19 quarantine fun: homebound because of pandemic, family dressed up for 60 days in costume” via Jennifer Sangalang of Florida Today — It was mid-April, a month into the coronavirus pandemic, when 39-year-old Heather Zipser, a mom from Indian Harbour Beach, coaxed her husband, Jeff, 40, and their twin 9-year-old boys Samy and Toby to “do something fun for quarantine.” “We’re a big Halloween family. That’s the biggest holiday in our house,” Zipser said. So, for 60 days, every day was Halloween for the Zipsers, complete with DIY costumes and photos posted on social media. They called it “quarantheme dinners.” The costumes ranged from the “Wizard of Oz” to the weather. Some were naturally easy (the family wasn’t shy about reusing costumes from years past), while others took some creativity.
Happy birthday
Happy belated birthday to Michele Cavallo of Duke Energy, Gia Porras-Ferrulo, Matt Harringer, Anthony Katchuk, Todd Josko of Ballard Partners, Shannon Love, Ed Miyagishima, congressional candidate Leo Valentin, Courtney Bense Weatherford, and Bill Young. Celebrating today are Speaker-to-be Danny Perez and Drew Weatherford.
Both sides agree that Juneteenth should be a federal holiday:
“The ending of slavery was a defining moment in the moral and civic development of our nation. Freedom, justice, and equality, essential aspects of the Founding, finally began to be legally extended to all Americans. In this way, Juneteenth is another celebration of independence. What’s more, recognition of Juneteenth is just one of many essential steps towards healing the divides in this country. If I’ve taken anything away from the protests and unrest of the past few weeks, it’s that many Americans do not feel heard or seen. We should welcome the bipartisan effort to make Juneteenth a federal holiday.” Carine Hajjar, National Review
“Newly freed black people celebrated the first Juneteenth in 1866 to commemorate liberation — with food, singing, and the reading of spirituals — and take pride in their progress. But a century and a half later, Juneteenth is still not taught in most schools, nor is the event a federal holiday despite decades of pushing from activists…
“In ‘Teaching the Significance of Juneteenth,’ Shennette Garrett-Scott and others wrote, ‘It is sometimes hard to teach small but pivotal moments in American history. Survey classes mostly allow for covering the biggest events and the most well known people.’ But to help students understand major moments like the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, it is important to teach the smaller historical milestones. To Garrett-Scott, teaching Juneteenth gives students a fuller picture of the long, enduring fight for freedom.” Fabiola Cineas, Vox
“Enacting a Juneteenth federal holiday over the next fortnight would be a significant act of national unity at a time when the United States is being torn to pieces amid claims that America is systemically racist, institutionally bigoted, and that ‘Nothing has changed!’ since the days of Jim Crow, as one street protester recently screamed. A Juneteenth holiday would focus on both sides of this American reality: the sin of slavery, which cursed this country and tortured blacks until 1865 and the freedom that they gained under the Emancipation Proclamation and the Union Army’s defeat of the Confederacy. — That was the beginning of liberty that blacks began to enjoy across America, and with which they contributed mightily to this nation.” Deroy Murdock, Fox News
Juneteenth “is a celebration of emancipation but also a ‘celebration of the commitment’ to “liberty and equality.’ This idea—that the day’s significance lies in our stated ‘commitment,’ not necessarily our accomplishments—should be key to our celebration… The concept of Juneteenth resonates in part because the day fell in 1865, two-and-a-half years after the date of the Emancipation Proclamation, showing how gradual and patchwork enslaved people’s wartime achievement of freedom was. Emancipation, Juneteenth tells us, was a process.” Rebecca Onion, Slate
Other opinions below.
From the Left
“The fact that Juneteenth is primarily celebrated by black Americans, and largely ignored by the rest of the country, is part of a larger problem. America has never truly reckoned with the horrors of slavery. Many would still prefer to just not think about it, or to picture it in benign terms, whitewashed of its true brutality. Making Juneteenth a federal holiday would be far more than a symbolic gesture. It would provide space for growth as a nation…
“Many American students graduate high school without ever learning the true horrors of American chattel slavery: the fact that slaves were viciously beaten and often lynched if they ever tried to escape; that parents, children, and partners could be separated and never seen again; that slaves weren’t allowed to read and write; and the unique horrors that black women endured, including medical experimentation and rape… Only by acknowledging its ugly past can a nation begin to heal itself.” Jamaal Bowman, The Nation
“The ugly story didn’t end with the abolition of slavery… In 1921 the Oklahoma city [of Tulsa] was the center of an oil boom, a place to which people in search of opportunity migrated. It boasted a sizable black middle class, centered on the Greenwood neighborhood, which was widely described as the ‘black Wall Street.’ And that was the neighborhood destroyed by white mobs, who looted black businesses and homes, killing probably hundreds. (We don’t know how many because the massacre was never properly investigated.)…
“Even in Northern cities, blacks were often denied opportunities for upward mobility. For example, in 1944 white transit workers in Philadelphia went on strike — disrupting war production — to protest the promotion of a handful of black workers.” Paul Krugman, New York Times
“It is useful to look at the end of slavery as ‘a near-century-long process’ rather than ‘the work of a moment, even if that moment was a great civil war’… After the Civil War, black Americans — free and freed — would work to realize the promise of emancipation, and to make the South a true democracy. They abolished property qualifications for voting and officeholding, instituted universal manhood suffrage, opened the region’s first public schools and made them available to all children…
“The holiday gives us an occasion to reflect on the profound contributions of enslaved black Americans to the cause of human freedom… And it gives us an opportunity to remember that American democracy has more authors than the shrewd lawyers and erudite farmer-philosophers of the Revolution, that our experiment in liberty owes as much to the men and women who toiled in bondage as it does to anyone else in this nation’s history.” Jamelle Bouie, New York Times
“There is no one-way arc of history bending toward justice and enlightenment. Often in the course of human history, things get worse. It was probably worse to be a black man in America in 1915 than it had been 40 years earlier. The Ku Klux Klan had arisen. Jim Crow had spread. Governments stripped previously recognized rights from black people. This wasn’t just worse for blacks, of course, it was morally worse for the white power structure led by Woodrow Wilson, who re-segregated the civil service…
“‘Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction,’ Ronald Reagan said in his 1964 speech, ‘A Time for Choosing.’ ‘We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.’… We ought to use our holidays as an injection of vigilance and a reminder that none of our gains are permanent.” Timothy P. Carney, Washington Examiner
“Arguments that the accomplishments celebrated on Juneteenth represent a rejection of America’s irredeemably racist founding are becoming increasingly pronounced…
“However, Juneteenth is not a deviation from, but the fruition of America’s organic law. The seeds of Juneteenth were sowed on July 4 in the Founding Fathers’ pronouncement that ‘all men [meaning all human beings] are created equal and are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights among which are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.’…
“Today, as the country is wracked by division and strife, we would do well to remember that though slavery and racial discrimination are rightfully recognized as a tragic stain on our country’s past, we can still find reason to esteem and identify with America and its promise of liberty and justice for all.” Christina Villegas, Washington Examiner
“The first Juneteenth, of 1865, marked the date on which Union forces finally had sufficient control over the last Confederate strongholds to enforce a law that had been passed by the United States government years previously, and to liberate in practice people who had been legally free for over two years. In other words, the Juneteenth story demonstrates, probably better than any other, the indispensable necessity of good and trustworthy law enforcement…
“Each of the major advances for African Americans living in the United States since the Civil War have been manifest in hard-won legislative victories for which many martyrs of the Civil Rights Movement suffered and died. Without government-backed agencies wielding the monopoly on violence in their jurisdiction, this legislation is nothing more than ink on a page. The men and women in uniform are the ones who give legislation teeth and enforce its enactment on the ground…
“The real problem for African Americans in this country is the gap that exists between laws and their enforcement.” Cameron Hilditch, National Review
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!
You have <<RH_TOTREF>> referrals.
Your bear mug is at 25 referrals!
Share The Flip Side just a few more times, and we’ll mail our favorite mug in the world your way.
🎧 The first episode of our new podcast, “Axios Today,” hosted by Niala Boodhoo, is here! Listen.
🎬 Tonight, on “Axios on HBO,” at 11 p.m. ET/PT … Stacey Abrams tells Axios’ Alexi McCammond that President Trump’s executive order on police reform is the “least he could do.” See a clip.
And Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian tells Axios CEO Jim VandeHei that the airline won’t forcibly remove someone from a plane if they take their mask off. See a clip.
🗽 Situational awareness: New York City today begins Phase 2 of reopening, with outdoor dining, shopping, playground, haircuts and a few offices.
1 big thing: How rookie investors are beating pros
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
Call it the Robinhood effect. In a tectonic shift that shows how the coronavirus pandemic has upended seemingly every part of our reality, millennials and Gen Zers have started to abandon video games and sports betting in favor of a new craze: the stock market, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
Why it matters: While many have wagged their fingers at what they see as overconfident and underprepared youngsters day trading on their smartphones, the stock market’s new school — a collection of sports bettors, the newly unemployed, Reddit aficionados and eager young investors — is growing into a force on Wall Street.
In fact, many of them are beating professional money managers so far this year. By a sizable margin.
What we’re hearing: A top strategist at a major Wall Street investment bank tells Axios that it closely tracks a basket of securities most commonly traded by hedge funds, a basket for institutional asset managers, and one for retail day traders — and is seeing clear outperformance from retail.
“I’m just looking at the scoreboard on the year,” he says. “And the work-from-home trader has been a pretty good performer.”
Between the lines: Those who follow the markets say stock trading’s booming popularity makes perfect sense given the actions of the Federal Reserve.
The new Robinhood cohort is simply following the advice of sophisticated investors over the past decade: “Don’t fight the Fed” and always #BTFD — “Buy the f—ing dip,” meaning buy stocks whenever prices fall.
The backstory: When the S&P 500 fell by 34% in March, traditional money managers pulled funds out of stocks and even safe-haven U.S. government debt and went into money market funds, or savings accounts.
The new crop of retail investors saw opportunity and signed up in record numbers to buy stocks.
The bottom line: The Robinhood cohort is winning right now, not by ignoring the lessons of the past but by embracing them.
Some swing voters in Erie, Pa., who are gravitating to Joe Biden say they see him less as a change agent than as a path back to stability, Axios’ Alexi McCammond writes.
Most who were for Biden said they haven’t heard much from him — and couldn’t think of anything specific that he’s said or done lately.
So they see the election as a referendum on President Trump.
Participants in the Engagious/Schlesinger focus group described feeling “annoyed,” “irritated,” and “frustrated” to see the president out and about without a mask.
By contrast, participants described Biden as a “role model” for wearing a mask, calling him “informed,” “educated,” and “responsible.”
Several said Biden would bring “respect” back to the presidency and the country.
The big picture: An Axios/SurveyMonkey poll last week found that nine in 10 Trump 2016 voters plan to stick with him.
3. Exclusive: Sarah Sanders says John Bolton was “drunk on power”
So just what did fellow West Wing aides think of national security adviser John Bolton in real time?
One former top official tells me that Bolton was unpopular even before the leaks from his tell-all, “The Room Where It Happened,” which is out tomorrow.
Axios AM has a first look for you at a fiery passage from a book that’s coming this fall from former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, “Speaking for Myself.”
Here’s Sanders’ description of President Trump’s state visit to London last year:
“Bolton apparently felt too important to travel with the rest of us,” Sanders writes. “As we were ready to depart for the Winfield House,” the U.S. ambassador’s residence in London, “we loaded onto a small black bus.”
“We waited and watched as Bolton sped by and left us in the dust. The discussion on the bus quickly moved … to how arrogant and selfish Bolton could be, not just in this moment but on a regular basis.”
“If anyone on the team should have merited a motorcade it was [Treasury Secretary] Mnuchin, but he was a team player and didn’t seem to mind traveling with the rest of us.”
“Bolton was a classic case of a senior White House official drunk on power, who had forgotten that nobody elected him to anything,” Sanders continues.
“Often Bolton acted like he was the president, pushing an agenda contrary to President Trump’s.”
“When we finally arrived at the Winfield House, [chief of staff] Mick Mulvaney, typically laid-back and not one to get caught up in titles or seniority, confronted Bolton and unleashed a full Irish explosion on him.”
“Let’s face it, John,” Mulvaney said, according to Sanders. “You’re a f—— self-righteous, self-centered son of a b——!'”
“That epithet … was the culmination of months of Bolton thinking he was more important and could play by a different set of rules than the rest of the team. … Bolton backed down and stormed off.”
The response … Sarah Tinsley, longtime senior adviser to Bolton, told me:
All logistical arrangements for travel of this sort were handled by the Secret Service, without any input from Ambassador Bolton. It is impossible to believe that his assigned Secret Service agents acted other than in a completely professional manner, fully coordinated with the Secret Service details assigned to Messrs. Mnuchin and Mulvaney.
In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced that the American Museum of Natural History will remove a prominent statue of Theodore Roosevelt from its entrance after years of objections that it symbolizes colonial expansion and racial discrimination, AP reports.
The bronze statue has stood at the museum’s Central Park West entrance since 1940. It depicts Roosevelt on horseback with a Native American man and an African man standing next to the horse.
5. Coronavirus cases are up but deaths are down
The number of coronavirus cases in the U.S. is rising again, but the number of daily deaths is still dropping from the mid-April peak, Axios’ Caitlin Owens reports.
Why it matters: Younger people, for now, are accounting for a larger share of new infections.
The catch: Young people don’t exist in social silos; they visit older family members and interact with older or sicker coworkers. That means that as these more vulnerable groups get the virus, the death rate may shoot back up.
“The death rate always lags several weeks behind the infection rate,” Dr. Anthony Fauci told Axios.
The high number of cases in young people is “not surprising,” Fauci added, as younger people are more likely to engage in riskier behavior: “They get infected first, then they come home, and then they infect the older people. The older people get the complications, and then they go to the hospitals.”
A decade of battles against pipelines proposed to crisscross the country is arriving at the Supreme Court, Axios’ Amy Harder writes in her “Harder Line” column.
The big picture: These court battles represent the culmination of fights over fossil-fuel infrastructure of all kinds — beginning with the Keystone XL pipeline — as a proxy for a larger debate about climate change and energy.
The bottom line: If President Trump loses re-election, expect Joe Biden to be increasingly hostile to fossil-fuel projects. But ultimately, it’s still a fight that’ll play out in the courts.
Wallace tweeteda statement in response to the event:
“This will not break me, I will not give in nor will I back down. I will continue to proudly stand for what I believe in.”
8. June’s emotional rollercoaster
Negative emotions in the U.S. surged during the first week of June, as millions protested racial injustice after the May 25 killing of George Floyd, Gallup reports.
The surge-and-decline pattern was seen across all parties, ages, races and education subgroups.
9. Scoop: Hassett to leave White House this summer
Kevin Hassett speaks to reporters at the White House last year. Photo: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters
White House adviser Kevin Hassett will leave the administration this summer, after returning in March to help the president respond to the economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic, Axios’ Hans Nichols reports.
Why it matters: Hassett has shown an ability to translate economic numbers into tangible terms for the president, steering President Trump to support more stimulus and relief. His departure could cede power to administration officials who oppose a $2 trillion stimulus package and worry about the deficit.
What’s next: Hassett will return to his posts as a distinguished visiting fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, and vice president and managing director of The Lindsey Group.
The strategy energized his base and helped him win the White House in 2016 but is out of step with public opinion, which has rallied around the movement for racial justice.
The notion that young activists are the main reason the event was poorly attended has drawn its fair share of skeptics, who point out that the reality is likely to be much more complex.
The children and grandchildren of immigrants have joined the Black Lives Matter movement, but they often have to explain to their parents why change is necessary.
The president and administration officials have consistently labeled antifa as perpetrators of violence at the protests since George Floyd’s killing, but little evidence supports this claim.
Fact Checker | Analysis ● By Meg Kelly and Elyse Samuels ● Read more »
Sheila Buck, an art instructor, intended to show support for Black Lives Matter but was arrested at the request of the Trump campaign after she refused to leave the event.
Many populous states are seeing a sharp climb in new cases, but there is little sign that they are reconsidering politically popular decisions to reopen their economies.
When Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar dropped out of contention to be Joe Biden’s running mate, it removed the last relative centrist from the pool of likely choices.
A senior adviser for Joe Biden’s campaign pointed to federal coronavirus guidelines as a main reason the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee has not held a press conference in nearly three months.
John Bolton defended his decision not to testify before Congress in the impeachment proceedings against President Trump, blaming the Democrats for conducting a flawed House investigation.
President Trump said his niece signed a “very powerful” nondisclosure agreement that would legally block her from publishing a tell-all family memoir set to go on sale later this month.
One of the former Minneapolis police officers involved in the arrest that led to the death of George Floyd was confronted by a fellow shopper in a Plymouth, Minnesota, supermarket over the weekend.
A spokeswoman for George Soros said people claiming the billionaire liberal donor has funded recent protests throughout the United States are trying to distract from the real issues that inspired the demonstrations.
Fox News Sunday anchor Chris Wallace and Trump reelection campaign adviser Mercedes Schlapp butt heads over the size of the crowd that attended President Trump’s rally in Tulsa on Saturday.
The hashtag “CancelYale” began trending on Saturday following tweets calling on the Ivy League university to change its name due to its connection to slavery.
You received this email because you are subscribed to Examiner Today from The Washington Examiner. Update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive.We respect your right to privacy – View our Policy Unsubscribe
When she was running for mayor, Lori Lightfoot left no doubt what she thought of Chicago police using chokeholds on suspects, saying they should be prohibited from use. But nearly a year into her term, the Chicago Police Department toughened restrictions on the use of potentially lethal neck holds but did not completely ban them, with a February directive regarding them as deadly force to be used as a last resort, as chokeholds have been for years.
Lightfoot told the Tribune she still wants chokeholds banned “in their entirety” but did not say when that would be. She has directed a task force to review the department’s use of force following the death of George Floyd, who died after a Minneapolis police officer placed a knee on his neck for about eight minutes. In the meantime, new Chicago police Superintendent David Brown said he wanted officers to undergo “mandatory training on positional asphyxiation,” which raised the question of just what the current training regimen is and what it should be.
A new phase of campaigning is emerging in critical 2020 swing states. As Trump and Republicans have fully embraced a return to in-person, grassroots organizing while the presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden and his campaign have not, citing health risks to campaign staffers, volunteers and voters.
Downtown Chicago’s economy is unlikely to roar back from the coronavirus pandemic without the accompanying rumble of elevated trains and other public transit packed with office workers. As the city restarts its economic engine in and around the Loop, city leaders, employers and business groups face the challenge of restoring confidence in the area’s public transportation network.
In 1973, Howard Bolling secured a $55,000 loan and took a big chance. The young pharmacist had worked at Walgreens for years but was ready to go out on his own. Friends told him he was crazy for wanting to open a Black-owned business in the then majority-white neighborhood of Roseland. He became a mainstay for the next 47 years.
But his store was broken into on May 31 as looting followed peaceful protests that day over the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Most of his medications were wiped out, along with much of his other inventory. He’s working to rebuild, bolstered by donations from the community.
The towering earthen mound oddly soars amid the flat-as-a-pancake river bottoms that surround it. From the mound’s summit, reached by a pulse-raising climb, downtown St. Louis — with its iconic arch along the Mighty Mississippi — is easily spotted. But roughly 700 years before the current metropolis was first settled, the earthen rise was at the heart of one of the greatest cities of its time in all of the Americas. It was called Cahokia.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Monday. We get 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!
Total U.S. coronavirus deaths reported each morning this week: Monday, 119,977.
More people are dying in the United States from COVID-19 every week than died during terror attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.
President Trump is itching to rebound his political fortunes after a week that got progressively worse, headlined by a scathing tell-all book by one of his former top advisers and an underwhelming political rally on Saturday that attracted a fraction of the expected turnout and landed with a thud.
On Sunday, the president’s reelection team was in scramble mode as it tried to spin Saturday’s rally in Tulsa, Okla., which was attended by roughly 6,200 supporters after the campaign gleefully declared that more than 1 million people had requested tickets for it. Campaign manager Brad Parscale floated the possibility of blocking reporters from attending future rallies over their coverage of the light attendance, while the campaign declared hours after Saturday’s rally that more than 4 million unique viewers had tuned in, revising the number upward in a move reminiscent of the White House on the day after Trump’s inauguration in 2017.
The reaction from Trump World came as it deals with a stark political reality: That the president’s chances to secure a second term are in peril more than four months before Election Day, with polls showing an uphill battle against former Vice President Joe Biden.
ABC News: Former national security adviser John Bolton, during an interview about his just-released book, “The Room Where it Happened,” said Trump should not be president. “I don’t think he’s a conservative Republican. I’m not going to vote for him in November — certainly not going to vote for Joe Biden either. I’m going to figure out a conservative Republican to vote in,” he told Martha Raddatz.
“There really isn’t any guiding principle that I was able to discern other than what’s good for Donald Trump’s reelection,” Bolton told ABC. “There’s no coherent basis, no strategy, no philosophy, and decisions are made in a very scatter-shot fashion, especially in the potentially mortal field of national security policy. This is a danger for the republic.”
During an interview with NPR’s Steve Inskeep released this morning, Bolton explained, “I wrote this book as a matter of philosophy and belief in the importance of putting the facts about the Trump administration before the American public for them to make up their mind. I felt I had an obligation to do it. … I knew there would be trials and tribulations when you displeased Donald Trump.”
The Hill: Bolton denies saying he will back Biden over Trump in November.
As The Hill’s Niall Stanage writes in his latest memo, Trump supporters continue to cite 2016 when the president outperformed some polls and defeated Hillary Clinton. However, it does not mean Trump is above the laws of political gravity, with the 2018 midterms serving as a prime example. His approval numbers have fallen in recent weeks as the coronavirus and the protests across the country have taken their toll.
According to a pair of national polls released late last week, Trump trails Biden by 12 and 8 points. He also trails in five key swing states (Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and Arizona), according to the latest RealClearPolitics average.
In a bid to turn things around, the president is turning to the issue that put him on the map with many conservatives: Immigration. On Tuesday, Trump will travel to Yuma, Ariz., to commemorate the building of the 200th mile of new border wall. He also told Fox News in an interview on Saturday that he will announce new visa restrictions in the coming days, adding that there will be exclusions.
The New York Times: The president’s shock at the rows of empty seats in Tulsa.
The Associated Press: Trump rally highlights vulnerabilities heading into election.
The Hill: Sunday shows: Bolton’s bombshell book reverberates.
According to The Hill’s Jordain Carney, some of the president’s allies in the Senate are betting that an improved economy could be the ticket for the party to succeed in November. Lawmakers are hoping that a potential surge in economic growth following the coronavirus-induced recession will be politically beneficial.
“As long as it’s moving in the right direction and people have some hope — obviously we’ve been through a tough time, but I think if we see a V-shaped recovery, which I think most people are predicting now, then I think that will be a good issue to run on,” said Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who is up for reelection in the fall.
The Washington Post: For Biden and Democrats, confidence comes with a chaser: Fear.
NBC News: Biden builds out his presidential transition operation.
While Democrats remain confident in the vice president’s chances, they are looking for all on the left to pull their weight to ensure he denies Trump a second term. According to the latest reporting from Jonathan Easley and Amie Parnes, some within the party believe Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) needs to do more to make sure progressives fall in line in November.
While they concede Sanders has done more than he did four years ago to help Clinton, they still say the senator needs to use his influence with his supporters to ensure they turn out and chip in to Biden’s campaign with donations. The races in New York and Kentucky — where progressive candidates are taking on establishment candidates, as The Hill’s Max Greenwood previews — have only added to the unease felt by some Democrats.
The Hill: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) builds political army, and a fundraising machine to match.
The Hill: Sen. Kamala Harris’s (D-Calif.) path on police reform littered with land mines.
Facebook is building the largest voter information effort in US history, starting with the new Voting Information Center, where you can find the latest resources about voting in the 2020 election.
CORONAVIRUS: Forget about COVID-19 waves; America is still dog paddling through the severe turbulence of the original crisis. What’s changed are public impatience and complacency, not the coronavirus.
“These case counts are going to build,” Scott Gottlieb, a physician and former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, said Sunday on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” referring to states, including Texas, Florida and Arizona, where coronavirus positivity rates are rising, indicating community spread and not just broader testing. Gottlieb advocates for mandatory mask requirements nationwide. “This is an epidemic that’s expanding in these states,” he said.
Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday, “I think right now, I don’t see this slowing down through the summer or into the fall.”
As the week begins, questions swirl about Trump’s comment Saturday that he asked federal officials to “slow the testing down” because more COVID-19 tests nationally reveal higher numbers of infections, which the president called a “double-edged sword” as he focuses on economic revival. White House officials said Trump was joking during his Tulsa rally.
Sensing, as Biden did, that Trump committed an unforced political error among concerned voters worried about the contagion across party lines, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said the House will seek answers from the White House coronavirus task force members who are expected to testify on Tuesday to the House Energy and Commerce Committee. “The American people are owed answers about why President Trump wants less testing when experts say much more is needed,” the Speaker said in a statement (The Hill).
New York: Today begins phase two of Gotham’s reopening. Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) announced the change on Saturday for New York City and said the mid-Hudson region remains on track to enter its third phase of loosening restrictions on Tuesday. Outdoor dining will be permitted during the second phase in NYC today. Playgrounds will reopen today in New York City, although team sports will not be permitted in parks for the time being (ABC7NY). … Cuomo was featured on ”CBS Sunday Morning,” which pointed out the governor’s popularity soared to 80 percent during the pandemic. “In my state, I owned the situation, for better or worse,” he said in an interview. The state reported the lowest COVID-19 infection rate in the nation in June. … A range of New Yorkers, never shy about expressing their views, talked with The Associated Press about today’s reopening. “We talk about being physically distant, which is important, but being socially active is important, as well,” said Melba Wilson, president of the NYC Hospitality Alliance, an industry group.
New Jersey: This week, visitors are allowed inside nursing homes, assisted living facilities, dementia care homes and pediatric transitional care homes in the Garden State. Personal care businesses reopen today, including beauty salons and barber shops, along with nail salons, massage parlors and tattoo shops.
Washington, D.C.: Today, the nation’s capital moves into phase two of eased coronavirus restrictions, based on improved numbers of infections and hospitalizations. That means the entire D.C. metro region has progressed into a second phase, which for Washington means a return to indoor dining and the reopening of stores, camps, swimming pools, worship services without singing and gatherings of up to 50 people.
Restaurants and stores will be able to operate at 50 percent capacity. Gyms, tanning salons and tattoo parlors can reopen as long as they maintain distance between their patrons, said Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) (The Washington Post).
Deadly numbers in the South: Alabama and many states in the Deep South are seeing spikes in coronavirus cases, alarming public health officials and people who have lost loved ones because of COVID-19. Over the past two weeks, Alabama had the second highest number of new cases per capita in the nation. South Carolina was fourth. Louisiana and Mississippi were also in the top 10 (The Associated Press).
Florida: Three restaurants were closed in Miami-Dade over the weekend because of patrons’ coronavirus violations. Miami Mayor Francis Suarez (R) was one such violator, with photos to prove it (Miami Herald). The Sunshine State logged another record day of more than 4,000 coronavirus cases on Saturday, approaching 94,000 COVID-19 infections in the state (Tampa Bay Times).
Air travel precautions: The airline industry is asking government officials to establish national guidelines for air travel in the COVID-19 era. Airline passengers are encountering a patchwork of rules for masks on planes and in airports, creating confusion and frustration among customers and companies. Airlines are creating their own policies, and airports are free to set their own standards for facial coverings (The Hill). … “Absolutely, it’s safe to fly,” Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf told CBS’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday in response to a question about a whistleblower complaint that Transportation Security Administration employees are poorly prepared and protected to deal with COVID-19 as passenger air travel resumes.
WHITE HOUSE & ADMINISTRATION: Trump’s decision to fire U.S. Attorney Geoffrey Berman in New York, with help from Attorney General William Barr, sparked a weekend of controversy over the president’s sudden move to purge a prosecutor in charge of high-profile cases, including an investigation of former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s personal attorney.
In a messy 24-hour drama inside the administration, Berman refused to resign and objected to Barr’s first choice to replace him, Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Jay Clayton. Barr swiftly switched gears to advise Berman that Trump had fired him but told him he would be temporarily replaced by Berman’s own chief deputy, Audrey Strauss (The New York Times).
House Democrats — some of whom recall former President George W. Bush’s sudden firing of nine U.S. attorneys years ago as well as Trump’s recent decisions to replace other prosecutors — plan to hold investigative hearings, said House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) (The Hill).
Flashback: 14 years ago, Bush became bogged down for months in damaging congressional and inspector general investigations examining his 2006 purge of nine U.S. attorneys, the circumstances of which contributed to the resignation of then-Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, a Bush loyalist, who was accused of lying to Congress and politicizing the Justice Department. “The U.S. attorneys serve at the pleasure of the United States President. I named them to 4-year terms; they served their 4-year terms,” Bush said during a press conference in 2007. “And I appreciate their service. I’m sorry that this — these hearings and all this stuff have besmirched their reputation.”
Trump’s constant churn through personnel, defense of allies who have been investigated, tried and sent to prison from New York, and resistance to being investigated from inside the executive branch are not going away before the November elections. The president and Barr have been criticized for eroding public trust in the independence of the Justice Department, and a chorus of criticisms from Bolton and former military advisers that Trump is unfit for reelection are growing louder during the 2020 campaign.
CBS DFW:Joseph Brown, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Texas, abruptly resigned in May.
ProPublica: A group of federal prosecutors and agents from Texas led by Brown investigated the opioid dispensing practices of Walmart, the largest company in the world, for two years. They had amassed what they viewed as highly damning evidence only to face a major obstacle: top Trump appointees at the Department of Justice. (In 2020, nearly 51 percent of Walmart’s total political contributions have gone to Republicans, according to OpenSecrets.org.)
The Hill: Barr said Sunday that “developments” in U.S. Attorney John Durham’s investigation into the origins of the government’s Russia probe during the Obama administration are expected this summer. Barr told Fox News’s “Sunday Morning Futures” that Durham is “pressing ahead as hard as he can.”
Immigration: The president said he is planning to impose new restrictions on H-1B, L-1 and other temporary, employment-based immigration visas as the U.S. continues to grapple with the coronavirus pandemic. Trump told Fox News during an interview on Saturday that he will make an announcement in the coming days, noting that it was “‘going to make a lot of people very happy” (The Hill).
Trump is expected to sign an order that suspends certain guest worker visas for the rest of 2020, NPR first reported on Saturday, citing multiple sources familiar with the plan.
Pentagon: The U.S. military is grappling with race and equality in the wake of nationwide protests. Trump has shut down a plan to strip Confederate names from 10 Army bases even as Congress gets involved. This week, Defense Secretary Mark Esper announced an internal review aimed at finding ways to “ensure equal opportunity across all ranks.” The military services are examining racial disparities in their justice systems, removing Confederate symbols and listening to the views of African American service members (The Hill).
More from the administration: Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has faced a turbulent past two months amid allegations of improper use of agency employees and claims he is critical of Trump behind his back, but he has been a presidential favorite and appears to be weathering the storms (The Hill). …Trump’s assertion that he is open to a complete “decoupling” from China is yet another sign of increasing tensions at a time when the president has made China-bashing a theme of his bid for a second term. Some observers worry that Trump’s efforts to appear tough on China could spark a serious crisis (The Hill). … Trump’s choice of Michael Pack, a conservative filmmaker, to lead the U.S. Agency for Global Media has attracted harsh headlines following a rash of firings of Voice of America (VOA) senior editors 10 days after he started the job (The Hill). VOA is congressionally funded.
OPINION
When to wear a mask and when you can skip it, by Faye Flam, columnist, Bloomberg Opinion. https://bloom.bg/37SP1RI
The pandemic has reshaped American fatherhood. Can it last? By Martin Gelin, opinion contributor, The New York Times. https://nyti.ms/3encKLX
SPONSORED CONTENT — FACEBOOK
How Facebook is preparing for the US 2020 election
— Tripled safety and security teams to 35,000 people
— Implemented 5-step political ad verification
— Providing greater political ad transparency
— Launching new Voting Information Center
The House meets at 11 a.m. for a pro forma session.
The Senate will reconvene at 3 p.m. and resume consideration of the nomination of Cory Wilson to serve as a judge with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit.
The president will have lunch with Vice President Pence.
The vice president will lead a video conference with governors on the coronavirus response and recovery.
The Asian and Pacific Islander American Vote, a nonpartisan voter mobilization organization representing the fastest-growing racial or ethnic population in the United States, hosts its annual leadership summit as a virtual event beginning today through July 2. On Saturday, representatives of the Trump and Biden campaigns will participate in a town hall forum sponsored by the organization. Find information about events and speakers HERE.
The Hill’s Coronavirus Report has updates and exclusive video interviews with policymakers emailed each day. Sign up HERE!
➔ International: An American lawyer is among the victims of a knifing rampage in a Reading, England, park on Saturday that has been labeled a terrorist attack. The Philadelphia Inquirer said Joe Ritchie-Bennett, 39, who lived and worked in Britain for 15 years, was among three victims stabbed to death. Arrested by police: 25-year-old Libyan Khairi Saadallah (Reuters). … Spain ended its national state of emergency on Sunday as it reopened its borders to allow European tourists back into the country for the first time since the COVID-19 outbreak. Spanish citizens are now able to move freely throughout the country, with the government dropping its 14-day quarantine for visitors from the United Kingdom and countries in Europe’s visa-free Schengen travel zone (The Associated Press). … The United Kingdom will roll out a plan this week to wind down the coronavirus-induced lockdown and potentially the six-feet social distance rule, allowing businesses to reopen in early July (Reuters). … China is moving toward enacting a security law on Hong Kong by the end of the month after the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress announced a three-day session in Beijing (The Associated Press).
➔ Reproductive rights: Chief Justice John Roberts is under a microscope as the Supreme Court prepares to issue its first major decision on abortion rights in the Trump era, which will give the clearest indication yet of the conservative court’s willingness to revisit abortion protections under Roe v. Wade. It’s a high-stakes test of Roberts’s role as the court’s new ideological center (The Hill).
➔ Recession’s impacts: The recession spurred by the coronavirus could have a more significant effect on air emissions than did stay-at-home orders, experts say. Emissions dropped by as much as 17 percent at the beginning of the pandemic (The Hill). … Early economic data suggests the recovery from the coronavirus-fueled recession will be slow and uneven. Unprecedented federal spending and lending helped large companies, but many smaller firms and the low-wage workers who depend on them have fallen through the cracks, prompting concerns from economists and the oversight commission charged with monitoring federal rescue efforts (The Hill).
➔ Intense weather: Verkhoyansk, a Russian town located within the Arctic Circle, reached 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius) on Sunday, marking its hottest temperature on record. The Siberian town, which experiences a wide range of temperatures, has also recorded temperatures of negative-90 degrees Fahrenheit (The Hill).
THE CLOSER
And finally … ⚾ Baseball news keeps getting worse. … Every team in Major League Baseball will temporarily shut its spring training camp over concerns about the coronavirus pandemic, a move that came after the Philadelphia Phillies announced on Friday that five players had tested positive for COVID-19. The closures come while MLB owners and players try to negotiate a deal to begin the season and raise the possibility the virus outbreak could scuttle all attempts at starting up this year. A person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press the spring complexes in Florida and Arizona (states with rising COVID-19 cases) will temporarily close because of recent events. The facilities will undergo a deep cleaning and disinfecting. No one will be permitted back inside without a negative test for the virus.
Cuomo said on Saturday that the New YorkYankees and New York Mets would move their spring training camps for the upcoming season from Florida to New York. As of this morning, the Major League Baseball Players Association (MLBPA) has not voted on a 60-game proposal after the owners made minor alterations to the offer over the weekend.
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!
To view past editions of The Hill’s Morning Report CLICK HERE
To receive The Hill’s Morning Report in your inbox SIGN UP HERE
The successor to prison-bound former Rep. Chris Collins and the challenger to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will be decided Tuesday along with nominees for dozens of House seats as six states hold elections. Read More…
After his surprise announcement Thursday that he had a son named Nestor Galban, Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz continued to tout his family in the press and on his own podcast. However, there is still a lack of clarity about his relationship to the person he has described as his son. Read More…
President Donald Trump has indicated he will try again to end the Obama-era program protecting undocumented immigrants who came to the country as children, after the Supreme Court ruled that his administration erred in how it carried out the first attempt. Read More…
Click here to subscribe to Fintech Beat for the latest market and regulatory developmentsin finance and financial technology.
Since April 29, the number of coronavirus cases among construction workers assigned to the Cannon House Office Building renovation project on Capitol Hill has climbed from 17 to 28, while cases among the Capitol Police rose from 12 to 18. Read More…
Georgia Democrat Sanford D. Bishop Jr.’s campaign has paid law firm Perkins Coie $78,000 for “legal expenses” since the Office of Congressional Ethics sent its completed report, which examined whether he improperly spent campaign cash, to the House Ethics Committee in February. Read More…
CQ Roll Call is a part of FiscalNote, the leading technology innovator at the intersection of global business and government. Copyright 2020 CQ Roll Call. All rights reserved Privacy | Safely unsubscribe now.
1201 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 600
Washington, DC 20004
POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: Trump’s carousel of self-destruction
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
LIKE ANY POLITICAL ENTERPRISE, the WHITE HOUSE is always keen to figure out what news will drive the week — what line of questioning will dominate the chatter in Washington, on Capitol Hill and on cable news broadcasts.
IT’S SAFE TO SAY that much of the discussion will center around President DONALD TRUMP and his team’s most recent go-around on the self-destruction carousel.
IN THE LAST FEW DAYS, the president has ensured that members of his party will be forced to answer the following questions:
— ARE YOU COMFORTABLE with the president’s abrupt decision to fire the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, a man TRUMP appointed?
— DO YOU AGREE WITH THE PRESIDENT’S decision to tell his advisers to slow down the nationwide testing regime to avoid more positive results?
— WHAT DO YOU MAKE of any one of JOHN BOLTON’S allegations about decision-making in the White House?
— DO YOU BELIEVE the president’s campaign team is up to the task of winning the election if they so badly misjudged the crowd that was going to show up in Tulsa, and furthermore, if they didn’t change the locale if they knew it was going to fall short of expectations?
MUCH OF THIS, of course, is avoidable. And if you ask White House aides why the president decided to do something like fire the U.S. attorney, or meander into saying that he asked officials to slow testing for a deadly virus, you won’t get a satisfactory explanation, because this kind of behavior and decision-making is questionable at best, and self-immolation at worst. But, with fewer than five months until Election Day, this is how the president is deciding to behave, and he will force his whole party to answer for him.
ALSO DRIVING THE NEWS THIS WEEK: the police overhaul bill. Senate Republicans need cooperation from Senate Minority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER and Democrats to debate the legislation. Democrats don’t much like the bill, authored by Sen. TIM SCOTT (R-S.C.), and they have two basic choices: debate it and try to amend it, or block it.
— MOVEMENT ON POLICE … SEN. DOUG JONES (D-Ala.) says on MSNBC’s “Kasie DC” that he’d vote to proceed: “I’m not really that crazy about Sen. Scott’s bill. I don’t think it does what Sen. [Kamala] Harris and [Cory] Booker’s bill does, particularly with regard to banning chokeholds like our bill does. You know, banning no-knock warrants, creating a new system of standard on 242, the criminal prosecution. All of that I think is much stronger than Sen. Scott’s bill, but I also think there needs to be an open discussion about this. So, I’m inclined to vote to proceed with debate on the bill. That doesn’t mean I’ll necessarily vote for the final passage on that bill.”
JOIN US! As part of our “Inside the Recovery” virtual briefing series, we are going to talk this morning at 9 a.m. with two of the best Capitol Hill reporters in the business — HEATHER CAYGLE and BURGESS EVERETT — about what it’s like to cover Capitol Hill during a pandemic, the status of police reform in the Senate and the next steps on a coronavirus relief package. Tune in
NEW … ANITA KUMAR: “Trump expected to extend limits on foreign workers”: “President Donald Trump is expected to extend through the end of the year foreign-worker restrictions that were initially enacted in April because of the coronavirus pandemic, according to two people familiar with the discussions.
“Trump will expand on the executive order blocking most people from receiving a permanent residency visa, or green card, by including most guest workers who come to the United States for temporary or seasonal work. That will encompass skilled workers in specialty occupations, executives, and seasonal workers who work in industries such as landscaping, housekeeping and construction, according to the two people, as well as a Department of Homeland Security official. Agricultural workers and students will not be included.
“The new order is expected to continue to have broad exemptions, including for health care professionals and those entering for law enforcement or national security reasons, which will be expanded to include those with economic interests. New exemptions will probably include au pairs.” POLITICO
OKLAHOMA, BEHIND THE SCENES …
— ALEX ISENSTADT: “Inside Trump’s Oklahoma debacle”: “Donald Trump’s campaign advisers had it all mapped out: A blowout rally in Oklahoma — coupled with a withering ad launched days earlier questioning Joe Biden’s mental acuity — would finally shift the focus to the elusive Democrat amid the worst stretch of Trump’s presidency.
“The ad tested well, and Trump attacked Biden extensively during the Saturday night event, saying the former vice president has ‘surrendered to his party and to the left-wing mob.’ But his remarks were lost in a meandering and grievance-filled two-hour speech, which included a lengthy rendition of him drinking water during his West Point commencement speech a week earlier. …
“The partly-empty arena was the biggest embarrassment and has received the lion’s share of media attention. But the issues surrounding the rally — an event that his advisers unanimously saw as a turning point for Trump — extended beyond crowd size and raised questions about the strength of his campaign less than five months until the election.” POLITICO
— NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN and ANNIE KARNI on A18: “The President’s Shock at the Rows of Empty Seats in Tulsa”: “The president, who had been warned aboard Air Force One that the crowds at the arena were smaller than expected, was stunned, and he yelled at aides backstage while looking at the endless rows of empty blue seats in the upper bowl of the stadium, according to four people familiar with what took place. Brad Parscale, the campaign manager who had put the event together, was not present. …
“By the end of the rally, Mr. Trump’s mood had improved, advisers said. But after he left the stage, the fight seemed to have left him, at least temporarily. Leaving the arena, he wasn’t yelling. Instead, he was mostly muted. …
“Exactly what went wrong was still being dissected on Sunday. But a broad group of advisers and associates acknowledged to one another that Mr. Trump had not been able to will public opinion away from fears about the spread of the coronavirus in an indoor space. And they conceded that myriad polls showing Mr. Trump’s eroded standing were not fake, and that he might be on course to lose to former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr, the presumptive Democratic nominee, in November.”
CORONAVIRUS RAGES ON — “Virus cases surge in U.S., India, but slow in China, Korea,” by AP’s Emily Schmall and Elaine Kurtenbach in New Delhi: “The world saw the largest daily increases yet in coronavirus cases, with infections soaring in India’s rural villages after migrant workers fled major cities. India’s coronavirus caseload climbed by nearly 15,000 as of Monday to 425,282, with more than 13,000 deaths, the health ministry reported.
“After easing the nationwide lockdown, the Indian government has run special trains to return thousands of migrant workers to their natal villages in recent weeks. Nearly 90% of India’s poorest districts have cases, though the outbreak remains centered in Delhi, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu states, which are home to major cities.
“Infections slowed in China and South Korea, suggesting some progress in stemming their newest outbreaks. But despite clear headway in containing the virus in regions that suffered early outbreaks, globally the number of new virus cases has soared in recent days. In Brazil, Iraq, India and the United States, hospitals are scrambling to cope.” AP … Dan Diamond on how the U.S. and Italy have traded places on coronavirus
— TOTAL CASES IN U.S.: 2.24 million; DEATH TOLL: 119,615.
DEMS NERVOUS ABOUT 2020 — “Despite dreamy polls, Dems can’t shake their 2016 nightmare,” by Burgess Everett and Marianne LeVine: “Everything seems to be going Democrats’ way. But many in the party just can’t get 2016 off their minds. President Donald Trump is down or within striking distance in nearly every battleground state, his approval ratings are stubbornly low and he’s threatening to bring down the GOP Senate majority with him while helping to douse Republican chances of House takeover. Some Democrats are even beginning to feel confident about their prospects this fall.
“Yet many can’t let themselves enjoy it. ‘I’m not confident at all. I think the easiest way to ensure Trump’s reelection is to be overconfident. Too many Democrats are looking at national polls and finding them encouraging,’ said Sen. Chris Coons, (D-Del.), a close ally of Joe Biden. ‘Too many Democrats assumed that Hillary Clinton was a shoo-in and didn’t vote or didn’t work.’
“Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.), who calls herself ‘Debbie Downer’ for repeatedly raising the alarm in Democratic circles, said she heard directly from people in her district that they plan to vote for Trump in 2020. ‘Everyone will roll their eyes and say, “that’s Debbie.” But I was right in 2016,’ Dingell said in an interview. She was among the few Democrats to warn that Hillary Clinton was on track to lose Michigan: ‘Anybody who believes the polls right now is overconfident.’” POLITICO
— WAPO’S MATT VISER: “For Biden and Democrats, confidence comes with a chaser: Fear”: “[F]or Democrats, the very idea that they are doing well provokes an underlying skittishness. They worry about voting during the coronavirus crisis, amid restrictions that could make it harder to cast ballots. Some fear a coming misinformation campaign and say the party risks underestimating Trump’s ability to turn the country against their nominee.
“They also worry their party still does not fully understand what led voters to Trump in the first place, and they are terrified that overconfidence, like some of them enjoyed four years ago, will lead to complacency.”
DOWN BALLOT — “Black candidates tap protest energy to challenge Democrats,” by AP’s Steve Peoples in New York and Alan Fram in D.C.: “Amy McGrath and Eliot Engel live hundreds of miles apart in states with dramatically different politics. Yet they are both the preferred candidates of the Democratic Party’s Washington establishment as voters in Kentucky and New York decide their congressional primary elections on Tuesday. And both may be in trouble.
“On the eve of their elections, Engel, a 16-term House incumbent who represents parts of the Bronx and New York City’s wealthy suburbs, and McGrath, a former military officer and fundraising juggernaut running in her first Kentucky Senate campaign, are facing strong challenges from lower-profile Black candidates. The challengers have tapped into the wounded progressive movement’s desire for transformational change suddenly animated by sweeping civil rights protests across America.” AP
OF NOTE: KATHRYN MURDOCH, the wife of James Murdoch, gave $1 million to Senate Majority PAC, the Senate Dem super PAC.
TRUMP’S MONDAY — The president will have lunch with VP Mike Pence at 1 p.m. in the private dining room.
MAIN JUSTICE READING — “For Barr, Standoff With Prosecutor Adds to String of Miscues,” by NYT’s Katie Benner and Sharon LaFraniere: “From the onset of his tenure, William P. Barr has been billed as the attorney general that President Trump was looking for. And Mr. Barr has taken some pride in this role, telling Fox News this past weekend that he speaks with the president ‘very regularly.’
“But for a man who projects unswerving confidence in his political and legal skills, his efforts this month to play presidential intimate have backfired, embarrassing both him and his boss.
“The month has brought a string of unusually high-profile miscues for the attorney general. He has been at odds with the White House at critical moments, showing how even top administration officials known for their loyalty can fall out of sync with a president laser-focused on his own political popularity.” NYT
— WSJ, via Rebecca Davis O’Brien and Sadie Gurman: “People close to Mr. Barr said he had been growing unhappy with Mr. Berman for months and had been searching for a successor. He had considered removing Mr. Berman at least once last year but put the plan on hold around the time Mr. Giuliani’s associates, Lev Parnas and Igor Fruman, were indicted, people familiar with the matter said, on criminal charges stemming from their alleged efforts to funnel foreign money into U.S. elections and influence U.S. politics on behalf of at least one unnamed Ukrainian politician.”
HOW WILL THIS ONE PLAY IN MIAMI? … AXIOS’ JONATHAN SWAN:“Trump cold on Guaidó, would consider meeting Maduro”: “In an Oval Office interview with Axios on Friday, President Trump suggested he’s had second thoughts about his decision to recognize Juan Guaidó as the legitimate leader of Venezuela and said he is open to meeting with dictator Nicolás Maduro. Asked whether he would meet with Maduro, Trump said, ‘I would maybe think about that. … Maduro would like to meet. And I’m never opposed to meetings — you know, rarely opposed to meetings. I always say, you lose very little with meetings. But at this moment, I’ve turned them down.’” Axios
NEW … LESLIE KIERNAN and ROBERT RIZZI have a new podcast — “Transition Lab” — about vetting. The podcast
TRANSITION — John Chapuis is now policy adviser to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on tax, trade, banking and economic policy issues. He most recently was a senior adviser to Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas).
WEEKEND WEDDING — Zac Petkanas, a Democratic strategist and president of Petkanas Strategies, and Levi Bohanan, apolicy analyst at the Next100 and Obama Education Department alum, got married Saturday. They’ll be holding virtual celebrations with family and friends, and hope for an in-person party when safe. They met on a blind date set up by Kiki McLean, which lasted seven hours.Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — James Wegmann, comms director for Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.), and Hannah Wegmann, a professor at the University of Maryland, welcomed Maddie Wegmann on Thursday. She joins big siblings Hank and Etta. Twitter pic
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Lauren Weiner, director of strategic comms at the ACLU. How she thinks the Trump presidency is going: “I work for an organization that has sued this president nearly 200 times. In our 100-year history, we’ve sued every president, but this caseload certainly tops any previous administration, especially in just one term.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is 71 … Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) is 87 … Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) is 6-0 … Jill Colvin, White House reporter for the AP … Apple News’ Michael Falcone … Erin Brockovich is 6-0 … Andrew Malcolm … Derek Hunter … Bryan Jung … Brian Rell … Joni Smith, head of the Scottish government’s D.C. office … Robert Sinners … Pia Carusone … Pat Griffin … Jesse Chase-Lubitz … ICANN’s Carlos Reyes … Nate Sizemore, comms director for Rep. Tom Reed (R-N.Y.) … Alisha Sud, associate at Albright Stonebridge Group, is 27 (h/t Nihal Krishan) …
… Brit Hume is 77 …Steven Smith of the House GOP Conference … Katie Byerly … Google’s Megan Chan … Carson Daly … GOP fundraiser Dana Harris … Alisa Robbins Doctoroff is 62 … Patrick F. Kennedy is 71 … Kaitlyn Burton, comms director for Rep. Rick Larsen’s (D-Wash.) reelect … Jackie Adams … Luke Bassett of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee … CRC Advisors’ Brian Doherty … Lori Kelley … Kyle Taylor is 39 … Mike Moodian … Mike Carter-Conneen … Dustin Olson … Zach Stewart (h/t Teresa Vilmain) … Bonny-Kate Ralston … Grayson Miller … Kristie Robinson
“Whoever has my commandments and keeps them, he it is who loves me. And he who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him and manifest myself to him,” (John 14:21, ESV).
By Shane Vander Hart on Jun 22, 2020 02:01 am
Shane Vander Hart: Colossians 1 reveals who Jesus Christ is, what He has done for his church, and who we are in Christ. How can we not proclaim him? 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 have lunch with Vice President Mike Pence. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 6/22/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. All Times EDT …
CNN accused President Donald Trump of exploiting innocent children Thursday night after he retweeted a manipulated video of a mock report with the news outlet’s logo. The video depicts a phony CNN headline that reads, “TERRIFIED TODDLER RUNS FROM RACIST BABY,” as a white toddler is seen chasing after a …
The pampered mobs who have taken over Seattle and portions of other liberal dumpster fire cities have been flailing about for a leader who they can crown as King of the #Resistance. The Idiot Dictator in charge of the National Football League and his suddenly woke players seem to want that figurehead to be one of its more spectacular failures, former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick.
Kaepernick hasn’t been in the league for a few years now but the woke mob keeps him in the national conversation. Nike made Kaepernick a constant presence via finger-wagging advertising that transformed him from failed quarterback to martyr, which is probably the job he really wants.
There is a lot of speculation that Kaepernick really doesn’t want to be back in the NFL, he just wants to be the guy who gets to whine about being kept out of the NFL.
The conversation focusing on Kaepernick long ago stopped being about his football skills. The prevailing politically correct narrative is that he was drummed out of the NFL because he was kneeling in protest during the National Anthem before each game. Anyone who suggests otherwise is immediately branded a racist.
On Sunday, three-time NFL Most Valuable Player Brett Favre took the Kaepernick love-fest to a new and ridiculous place:
Pat Tillman left the NFL in the prime of his career to fight for his country. He gave up riches and fame to defend liberty. He was killed in a friendly fire incident.
Colin Kaepernick threw a temper tantrum.
So maybe shut it, Brett.
I take umbrage with the Kaepernick brouhaha not from a political standpoint, but from that of a true football fan, The simple reality is this: Colin Kaepernick is no longer in the NFL because his football skills diminished. Greatly.
Yes, his rise was rather impressive when he first got to the NFL. He was drafted in 2011, took over the starting QB job a little more than half way through the 2012 season and then took the 49ers to the Super Bowl, where they lost a tight, very good game to the Baltimore Ravens.
He was OK for a couple of seasons after that but then quickly reached a point of diminishing returns in his last two seasons in the NFL. Here are some raw numbers regarding Kaepernick’s final full season in the NFL:
In the 2016-17 NFL season, Colin Kaepernick was in the bottom half of production for quarterbacks. His 2,241 yards passing ranked 29th in the league. His quarterback rating was also near the bottom of the league. He ranked 23rd in the NFL with a 49.2 QBR.
His QB rating the previous season was even worse, placing him in the bottom third of all NFL quarterbacks.
No one knows for sure if Kaepernick began his protests to deflect from his awful on-field performances. The timing was certainly suspicious and he has seen more intent on keeping his face in front of a camera as a protest leader than he has on getting back on the field. Face it, he’s less likely to get a concussion during a press conference.
To sum things up, I will quote my favorite Twitter blowhard, me:
It really is that simple. He’s a good running quarterback, but not a great passer. He’s out of the NFL because he sucked at it. That’s what people need to bring up every time this “Hero of the People” nonsense narrative starts up.
Colin Kaepernick is no hero. He’s just a guy who played football well for a couple of years.
Happy Monday! And welcome to all our new Dad readers. Your children have excellent taste in Father’s Day gifts.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
As of Sunday night, 2,279,875 cases of COVID-19 have been reported in the United States (an increase of 25,213 from yesterday) and 119,969 deaths have been attributed to the virus (an increase of 250 from yesterday), according to the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, leading to a mortality rate among confirmed cases of 5.3 percent (the true mortality rate is likely much lower, between 0.4 percent and 1.4 percent, but it’s impossible to determine precisely due to incomplete testing regimens). Of 27,084,900 coronavirus tests conducted in the United States (518,347 conducted since yesterday), 8.4 percent have come back positive.
Geoffrey Berman, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, agreed to step down from his post on Saturday. Attorney General William Barr had announced Berman’s resignation on Friday night, but Berman put out his own statement denying he had resigned and implying that Barr lacked the authority to fire him.
U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth rejected the Trump administration’s last-ditch attempt to block the release of John Bolton’s new book, The Room Where it Happened, but concluded that Trump’s former national security adviser “gambled with the national security of the United States.” “While Bolton’s unilateral conduct raises grave national security concerns, the government has not established that an injunction is an appropriate remedy,” Lamberth wrote. The book is set for national release on Tuesday.
President Trump is expected to sign an executive order that will suspend—with some exceptions—H-1B, L-1, and other temporary work authorization visas through the end of the year, NPR reports.
The RNC and the Trump campaign brought in $74 million last month, lagging behind Biden and the DNC’s $80.8 million May haul. The Biden-aligned Priorities USA super PAC raised $7.5 million over the same time period, compared with $2.4 million for the Trump-aligned America First Action super PAC. The Trump campaign still leads the Biden team in the all-important cash on hand metric, however, $265 million to $122.2 million.
A Botched Friday Night Massacre
Late Friday night, Attorney General Bill Barr issued a press release announcing Geoffrey Berman’s resignation from his post as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York (SDNY). But just hours later, Berman issued a statement of his own, saying he “learned in a press release from the Attorney General tonight” that he was “stepping down,” but adding that he had no intention of resigning. “I will step down when a presidentially appointed nominee is confirmed by the Senate,” Berman said. “Until then, our investigations will move forward without delay or interruption.”
Barr responded to Berman’s statement in a letter the following morning. “I was surprised and quite disappointed by the press statement you released last night,” Barr wrote. “As we discussed, I wanted the opportunity to choose a distinguished New York lawyer, Jay Clayton, to nominate as United States Attorney and was hoping for your cooperation to facilitate a smooth transition. … Unfortunately, with your statement of last night, you have chosen public spectacle over public service. Because you have declared that you have no intention of resigning, I have asked the President to remove you as of today, and he has done so.”
Trump, however, did not play along, placing the decision to fire Berman squarely at Barr’s feet. “Well, that’s all up to the Attorney General. Attorney General Barr is working on that. That’s his department, not my department,” the president told reporters on Saturday. “I’m not involved.”
Berman eventually relented Saturday evening once it became clear his acting replacement would be his chief deputy Audrey Strauss—not U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey Craig Carpenito, an ally of Barr. “It has been the honor of a lifetime to serve as this District’s U.S. Attorney,” Berman said, “but I could leave the District in no better hands than Audrey’s.” Strauss played a key role in the investigation and prosecution of Trump’s former personal attorney Michael D. Cohen.
Strauss’ promotion comes with an “acting” label, but comments from Sen. Lindsey Graham over the weekend indicate she could be in the top SDNY job for a while. “It has always been the policy of the Judiciary Committee to receive blue slips from the home state senators before proceeding to the nomination,” Graham said in a statement, making clear he was not told of the decision to fire Berman. “As chairman, I have honored that policy and will continue to do so.”
The “blue-slip” policy dictates that U.S. attorney nominees must be approved by both senators from the district in question’s home state. But there’s very little chance Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand will greenlight Barr’s preferred choice, Jay Clayton, the current chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission who has never been a prosecutor.
Democrats viewed Berman’s abrupt firing with suspicion. Rep. Jerry Nadler issued an “open invitation” for the former SDNY prosecutor to testify before the House Judiciary Committee, which Nadler chairs. Speaker Nancy Pelosi condemned the firing in the statement. “Again and again, the President and his cronies have chosen to protect Trump’s personal and political interests over those of the American people by interfering in numerous criminal investigations involving the President and his associates,” she said. “The firing of U.S. Attorney Berman cannot be explained by cause and instead suggests base and improper motives.”
Neither the White House nor Attorney General Barr have explained the motivation for Berman’s firing, but the incident is another in recent string of episodes in which White House officials and the attorney general have offered contradictory public spin.
Back on the Campaign Trail in Tulsa
President Trump held his first campaign rally since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, delivering a characteristically freewheeling one-hour and 43-minute address on Saturday to a crowd of about 6,200 attendees in Tulsa, Oklahoma
The president’s speech—which fluctuated between being on- and off-script—ranged in subject matter from denunciations of the media and Democratic politicians to touting the administration’s record on the economy, border security, and the COVID-19 outbreak. Trump devoted more than 14 minutes to a discussion of his walking down a ramp and drinking a glass of water at the West Point graduation ceremony last week, and White House aides had to clean up a claim he made about telling “his people” to “slow the [coronavirus] testing down” because increased testing was revealing a higher number of cases. White House officials later insisted the president was joking.
The race and police issues that have consumed the country in recent weeks received brief mentions, with both the president and the vice president—who served as the opening act for the event—making rhetorical nods to the injustice of George Floyd’s death while also reaffirming their support for law enforcement.
“Republicans are the party of liberty, justice and equality for all,” Trump later said. “We are the party of Abraham Lincoln, and we are the party of law and order.”
At the same time, hundreds of protesters gathered outside of the rally to demonstrate, holding signs reading “Black Lives Matter” and “Defund the Police” while blocking traffic. The rally had originally been scheduled for Friday, but had been moved due to controversy surrounding the date’s coinciding with Juneteenth, a holiday marking the end of slavery in the U.S.
Much of the media coverage surrounding the rally focused on the relatively small crowd size, in part because Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale had boasted earlier in the week of more than one million ticket requests for the event. The BOK Center seats 19,000 but its upper deck was relatively empty, and the president was originally slated to speak to an overflow crowd outside after the event, but canceled due to the unexpectedly low attendance. A Trump campaign spokesman blamed “radical protesters, coupled with a relentless onslaught from the media” for “attempt[ing] to frighten off the president’s supporters.”
A Troop Drawdown in Germany
President Trump is not backing down on plans to withdraw approximately 9,500 American troops stationed in Germany, making good on his long-standing threat to reduce America’s military presence in the area if the German government did not do more to financially support the NATO military alliance.
“Germany’s delinquent, they’ve been delinquent for years,” Trump said at a White House press conference soon after announcing the withdrawal. “They owe NATO billions of dollars and they have to pay it.”
The details of the drawdown are still murky, and Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. ambassador to NATO, cautioned that “nothing firm has been set” in regards to how exactly the move will play out. But the decision—which was initially reported by the Wall Street Journal on June 5 and confirmed by the administration last week—drew sharp bipartisan criticism.
Top Democrats in both the House and the Senate quickly moved to block the plan, with Sen. Bob Menendez (D-New Jersey) and Rep. Eliot Engel (D-New York) introducing a bill that would attempt to bar funding for the withdrawal until the president formally justified his decision to Congress. In a statement, Menendez said: “The administration has made no effort to explain how our country is stronger because of this drawdown decision. Because we’re not. This drawdown weakens America and Europe. And Vladimir Putin understands and appreciates that better than anyone.”
Many Republicans also expressed opposition to the withdrawal, with 22 Republican members of the House Armed Services Committee signing a letter urging the president to reverse course. Penned by Rep. Mac Thornberry—ranking member on the Armed Services Committee—the letter acknowledged that Germany “should do more to contribute to our joint defense efforts,” but stipulated that the troop drawdown “would significantly damage U.S. national security as well as strengthen the position of Russia to our detriment.”
The Heritage Foundation released a report expressing a similar criticism of the president’s decision. “The commonly held belief that the U.S. forces in Europe are there to protect European allies from a threat that no longer exists is wrong. U.S. troops are in Europe first and foremost for American national security interests,” it argues. “The U.S. should maintain, or even increase, the number of forces it has in Europe. Additionally, Congress should endeavor to block any attempt to remove forces from Europe.”
According to the latest Pentagon workforce report, 34,674 American military personnel were stationed in Germany as of March 31, 2020. Trump’s decision to reduce that number to roughly 25,000 comes at a time when “the U.S.-German relationship is pretty poisonous,” Hal Brands—a resident scholar of defense strategy at the American Enterprise Institute—told The Dispatch.
“It’s unfortunate because the U.S.-German relationship is the real ‘special relationship’ in Europe,” Brands says. “It’s what makes NATO go. So what’s worrying is not so much the 9,500 troops. It’s what it says about what has happened to this most important relationship.”
Trump’s defenders have emphasized the president’s criticism of Germany and its inadequate contributions to NATO. “It’s fair to point out that the Germans probably have not done as well on burden sharing issues as they might have,” says Brands. “I think the Germans have taken too lackadaisical an approach to developing a serious military capability of their own, particularly when you look at contingencies in the Baltic region, for instance.”
But bipartisan critics of the withdrawal have argued that the administration’s seemingly impulsive decisions to remove American troops from their deployment on the world stage is a counterproductive approach to dealing with these issues. In the context of the drawdown in Germany, Brands says, the move is tantamount to “cutting off your nose to spite your face.” The Stuttgart base, located in the German state of Baden-Württemburg, acts as a significant center for both logistics and training for America’s operations in Africa, Afghanistan and Iraq, and plays a key role in the Pentagon’s strategic relationship with other NATO member countries. Many worry that the reduction in personnel will also aid Russia’s regional ambitions to the east, which have long been hindered by America’s military presence on the European continent.
In characteristically haphazard form, the president also failed to alert many of the relevant authorities before announcing the move: The NATO Secretary-General, among others, confirmed that Trump did not notify the alliance before announcing the withdrawal.
“The problem with the Trump administration is that it has a tendency to pursue reasonable policy objectives in the most self-defeating manner possible,” says Brands. “If you were serious about strengthening NATO, what you would try to do is strengthen the voices of those political leaders in Germany and other European countries who favor an enhanced defense spending and a strengthened German role in the alliance.”
Worth Your Time
The New York Times’ Astead Herndon went to Tulsa last week with an eye more toward the city’s Juneteenth celebration than President Trump’s campaign rally. “In a city that has become known as a landmark to black pain, Friday was a day for black joy,” he writes. City residents celebrated emancipation while also reflecting on the 1921 pogrom that killed an estimated 300 black Tulsans. “We’re celebrating the emancipation of slaves, but we’re really celebrating the idea of being black,’ said Jacquelyn Simmons, who has lived in Tulsa for 45 years. ‘We love it and we love us.’”
With the film industry continuing to struggle in the coronavirus era, drive-in theaters—long thought to be relics of a previous age—are reemerging. William Sertl has a fun piece in the Wall Street Journal detailing this trend. “This quintessentially American invention—a hybrid of Hollywood, Detroit and Nathan’s Famous … [is] back to reclaim [its] glory, if not [its] maximum capacity.”
Has last week’s Supreme Court decision Bostock v. Clayton County doomed religious liberty once and for all? In Sunday’s French Press, David argues that many religious liberty activists are exaggerating the extent to which their First Amendment freedoms are under threat. He outlines the vast statutory and jurisprudential protections for religious liberty and explains why these freedoms are likely to be extended in the coming weeks. “The question for America’s religious community, then, is not whether we have liberty—or will have liberty for the foreseeable future—but rather what we do with that liberty,” he concludes.
Check out Friday’s extra long G-File, in which Jonah dissects the backlash against John Bolton’s book and debunks myths surrounding the origins of policing. Be sure to listen to his weekly Ruminant podcast expanding upon these themes as well.
Former CIA analyst Martin Gurri joined Sarah and Steve on Friday’s Dispatch Podcast to discuss society’s waning trust in authority figures, the role of tech platforms like Facebook and Twitter in the dissemination of information, and how to improve your media diet.
“President Trump tweeted a video on Thursday night bearing the CNN logo purporting to show CNN’s misleading coverage of a viral video of two toddlers of different races happily playing together,” Alec Dent wrote in his latest Dispatch Fact Check. It turns out the video itself was manipulated.
Nate Hochman dove into the academic theories behind the “defund the police” movement and discussed the divide between those who want to reform the police and those who really want to abolish police forces.
Let Us Know
We’re obviously biased, but the latest Dispatch Podcast with Martin Gurri about information and the media is really great, and it made us think a lot about our news gathering habits—both in our personal and professional capacities.
Our question to you: In addition to The Dispatch, what else is in your media diet? How do you filter through the nonstop bombardment on all sides to determine the truth?
Vijeta Uniyal: “China is setting up a new security apparatus in Hong Kong to crush the pro-democracy movement, Chinese state media on Saturday revealed. The Beijing-controlled agency will enforce the controversial “National Security Law” passed last month by China’s National People’s Congress, country’s Communist Party-controlled legislative body.”
Legal Insurrection Foundation is a Rhode Island tax-exempt corporation established exclusively for charitable purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code to educate and inform the public on legal, historical, economic, academic, and cultural issues related to the Constitution, liberty, and world events.
For more information about the Foundation, CLICK HERE.
Subscribing to Erick’s daily email not only supports his efforts, but provides you exclusive access to additional content, interviews, and discounts for the Resurgent Gathering, which will return in 2021.
It does not matter that allegedly a million tickets to the Trump rally in Tulsa were taken by progressives. It does not matter for one big reason — there was no cap. So if a million progressives bought up tickets, there were still an infinite number of tickets available for others.
But there is one element of this that matters greatly.
The President’s campaign team has been bragging about their data collection and data analytics. If a million progressives took all those tickets, the Trump campaign should have known if their data collection efforts were at the level they claim. That they did not know is a sign something is fundamentally wrong within the campaign.
The fact that the Trump campaign bragged about the number and it not only did not materialize, but the President was left embarrassed, speaks to incompetence at the Trump campaign. Just play out the scenarios.
SCENARIO 1: People didn’t come because they heard about the crowd size.
Well, they heard about the crowd size because of the President’s team bragging about the crowd size. This is the campaign team that should have been able to extrapolate what was happening from their data.
SCENARIO 2: People didn’t come because of reasonable concerns about the virus.
Again, the President’s team was bragging about the crowd size. If people were not coming out because of the virus, the President’s team on the ground should have realized it and downplayed expectations.
SCENARIO 3: Progressives really did register for 1 million tickets.
As I noted, it does not matter because there was no cap. With an infinite number of tickets, anyone could get one. The tickets were about data collection, not capacity. But the Trump team claims to be masters of data analytics. Consequently, they should have easily been able to tell that the people getting the tickets online were progressives. It is really easy to analyze that online and even I, a non-expert, know how to do that.
SCENARIO 4: The Trump team knew it wasn’t going to have a huge crowd.
This is the most troubling one and the most likely one. But they lied to the President and the press and that all generated enormously negative headlines for the President. The team failed the boss.
In fact, every scenario comes back to that — the President’s own campaign team insisted on bragging about the projected crowd size and they ultimately attracted less than 6,200 attendees into an area that holds three times as many.
Brad Parscale, who has gotten very wealthy off the President’s campaign, went onto social media on Saturday evening to do some damage control. He claimed protestors were blocking entrances and making it difficult for people to get in the arena. This reads like Potemkin creating the facade of a village to fool people.
Yes, there were protestors, but they were not enough to obstruct people getting into the facility and they were not enough to prevent the projected spillover crowds that never materialized.
The Tulsa rally was supposed to be a reboot for the President’s campaign. The campaign relentlessly hyped the projected crowd size, which did not materialize and it leaves the President embarrassed by news media headlines laughing about his failure to attract the crowd.
Or it could just be that not that many people wanted to go see him, which raises all sorts of other questions. Regardless, however, there’s a level of incompetence at the campaign level to build up the anticipation of a huge crowd and have it not show up. Someone or some group within the campaign should be fired.
Don’t get upset when the press uses the metric you gave them and then shows you didn’t live up to that metric. This is what happened and it was an amateur mistake.
Like receiving news in your inbox? Sign up for another free Deseret News newsletter.
Want to see your company or product advertised in our newsletters? Click here.
Join Us On Zoom Tonight!
To celebrate four years of BRIGHT, we’re inviting our readers to a BRIGHT Zoom Meet-Uptonight, June 22 at 8 p.m. EST with current and former BRIGHT editors. We’ll be talking about our favorite stories, summer plans, quarantine must-haves, and taking your questions.
Monday, June 22, 2020
The Summer of America’s Discontent
Another weekend without law and order in too many American cities is taking its toll. In New York City, Fox News reported at least 17 people were injured in 13 unrelated shootings in multiple boroughs. In Seattle’s “Capitol Hill Occupied Protest” (now CHOP, previously known as CHAZ), there was a fatal shooting. Officers attempted to find the victim and the shooter but were met with a crowd shouting profanities. Fox News reported the police said into a bullhorn, “Please move out of the way so we can get to the victim! All we want to do is get to the victim and provide them aid!” Since the area wasn’t secured, medics could not get in and a 19 year-old man died and another was left with life-threatening injuries. Despite these serious events, the Left is still focused on taking down statues, as the New York Times reported President Teddy Roosevelt would be removed from the Museum of Natural History. Will Night at the Museum be the next movie banned?Over at American Greatness, former Congressman Thaddeus McCotter writes in the article, “Now Is the Summer of America’s Discontent,” that “the three-and-a-half-year tantrum of lawlessness, deceit, and hypocrisy of Democrats and their media comrades is building to a crescendo that will peak just prior to the 2020 election.” After recapping the year of Russiagate duds, unmasking Americans, and the COVID-19 pandemic, he writes:“In this summer of America’s discontent, the three-and-a-half-year tantrum of lawlessness, deceit, and hypocrisy of Democrats and their media comrades is building to a crescendo that will peak just prior to the 2020 election. Deeming themselves above the law, by hook and crook, these American malcontents will continue to cause chaos and sow discontent, dissention, and division amongst the citizenry. Unable to offer better solutions to America’s problems than more half-baked socialism, they will continue to slander their opponents as racists and/or fascists; and project their sins upon Republicans. For this, they expect to be rewarded with an electoral victory in the fall.The only remaining question is: Are you going to let them have their way?”If you’re feeling overwhelmed by the current state of affairs in the news, this Twitter thread is worth reading. I certainly needed to read it and it does put things into perspective.#CancelYale
In response to protestors and activists on the Left “canceling” historic figures like military installations named after Confederate generals, Founding Fathers, Christopher Columbus, Ulysses S. Grant (huh?), and Teddy Roosevelt, last week’s column from Ann Coulter started the trending hashtag #CancelYale. From Coulter’s column on June 17:“How about a bill withholding all federal funds from Yale University until it changes its name? The school’s namesake, Elihu Yale, was not only a slave owner, but a slave trader.Quite a dilemma for the little snots who attend and teach there! It will be tremendously damaging to their brand. After all, true sublimity for a Social Justice Warrior is virtue signaling and advertising their high SAT scores at the same time.If you refuse to fight, Republicans, don’t you at least want to have some fun?”If these are now the rules, shouldn’t they apply to every institution not just the ones decided by the mob? I’d at least settle for what Australia is doing — raising costs for humanities degrees in favor of “job-relevant” degrees. What I’m Reading This Week Audible is having a great 2 for 1 credit sale right now. This week I’m starting Followers by Megan Angelo. From the description:
“Orla Cadden is a budding novelist stuck in a dead-end job, writing clickbait about movie-star hookups and influencer yoga moves. Then Orla meets Floss—a striving, wannabe A-lister—who comes up with a plan for launching them both into the high-profile lives they dream about. So what if Orla and Floss’s methods are a little shady—and sometimes people get hurt? Their legions of followers can’t be wrong.
Thirty-five years later, in a closed California village where government-appointed celebrities live every moment of the day on camera, a woman named Marlow discovers a shattering secret about her past. Despite her massive popularity—twelve million loyal followers—Marlow dreams of fleeing the corporate sponsors who would do anything to keep her on-screen. When she learns that her whole family history is based on a lie, Marlow finally summons the courage to run in search of the truth, no matter the risks.
Followers traces the paths of Orla, Floss and Marlow as they wind through time toward each other, and toward a cataclysmic event that sends America into lasting upheaval. At turns wry and tender, bleak and hopeful, this darkly funny story reminds us that even if we obsess over famous people we’ll never meet, what we really crave is genuine human connection.”
Since it’s a 2 for 1 sale, I also snapped up the infamous Helter Skelter, written by the prosecuting attorney in the Manson family murders. If you enjoyed Once Upon a Time in Hollywood or true crime podcasts you’ll definitely want to grab this one during the sale.
A Case of the Mondays A man recreates the infamous Dirty Dancing final dance in quarantine… alone… and it is hilarious (YouTube)
Sheriff’s deputy shares note left by black women after random act of kindness (New York Post)
On Saturday, the First Lady announced an art exhibit to celebrate the 19th Amendment. She tweeted, “Calling all our Nation’s young artists! The @FLOTUS 19th Amendment Project: ‘Building the Movement: America’s Youth Celebrate 100 Years of Women’s Suffrage’ is a great opportunity to show your art skills & learn about this important time in women’s history!” More info on how to submit artwork for the exhibit here.
Last week, I mentioned the new book about the First Lady, The Art of Her Deal, and the comments by her spokesperson Stephanie Grisham, who said “This book belongs in the fiction genre.” However, Stephanie Green writes on The Federalist that it’s surprisingly flattering:
“There are no major bombshells in Mary Jordan’s new biography of Melania Trump, “The Art of Her Deal.” Jordan merely reaffirms what we’ve always known about the First Lady—she’s a cool head in an unsteady world, and the ultimate poster girl for soft power.The worst thing one of Jordan’s 100 sources had to say about Trump is that she’s “stubborn.” No arguments there. Like an alabaster Greek statue, Melania stays strong and unflappably elegant as her remarkably improbable life unfolds.
Jordan is a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter with The Washington Post who has told interviewers that Melania is the most enigmatic personality she’s ever tried to crack. Since the book’s release on Monday, the media has been gunning for a portrait of a marriage in turmoil, but Jordan admits that “there’s a real connection there. When Trump finishes a rally or major event, his first call is to Melania.”
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.
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
Americans need to realize that they have been deliberate targets of ideological subversion… as descibred by a former KGB spy and state media propagandist who defected. And the founder of BLM boasted in 2015 of her Marxist “ideological training.” Read More…
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
I’m going to go out on a limb and say that the people protesting his death don’t care about George Floyd. They have never met him, and don’t really know anything about him. Read More…
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
What is to be done about police brutality? Maybe writing off as systemic racism and looking at the real issues could provide some answers. Read More…
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
The history of France will not be rewritten and the destruction or elimination of statues and memorials will not be permitted. Read More…
Recent Blog Posts
So much for Seattle’s ‘summer of love’
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
The place has descended into a hellhole with armed warlords loaded for bear and deaths piling up. Naturally, the cops are being blamed. Read more…
Petraeus pathetically panders
Jun 22, 2020 01:00 am
Generals who find their integrity in retirement are like hookers who find God after the bloom is off the rose. Read more…
Early Saturday morning, two men were shot in Seattle’s Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone, one later died from his gunshot injuries. One of the prominent leaders of the CHAZ is enraged that Seattle EMT’s refused to enter the autonomous zone, but emergency … Read more
There’s a narrative in mainstream media right now that the coronavirus is having a resurgence. They’re noting that several states are seeing spikes in the number of “cases” of coronavirus and therefore it’s time to reinstate some of the draconian lockdown procedures we just abandoned a month ago or more, depending on your state. But they’re definitely not reporting the actual important number as it pertains to the coronavirus. In fact, they won’t mention at all that Sunday’s reported coronavirus death total of 267 was the lowest it has been since March 23.
We have seen the worst of the coronavirus, at least for this year. The left, especially Democrats and their proxies in mainstream media, must perpetuate coronavirus fear as long as possible to prevent the economic rebound we’re already starting to see. It behooves them to keep people suffering and the economy stagnant all the way through election day, which is why this narrative is so prevalent. But behind the number of cases rising is a logical and clear-cut explanation. As the President noted on Twitter, the number of reported cases is going up because the number of people being tested is going up dramatically.
Our Coronavirus testing is so much greater (25 million tests) and so much more advanced, that it makes us look like we have more cases, especially proportionally, than other countries. My message on that is very clear!
Does the number of cases rising necessarily mean the number of infections is going up? Not at all. Does the number of cases going up mean more people will die? No. As we learned based on studies done at multiple universities in April and May, the actual number of people infected by the coronavirus is much higher than the reported cases. Excepting for those who are vulnerable such as the elderly and those with preexisting conditions, the coronavirus has not been much of a killer. And as death numbers go down, the false narrative surrounding cases will go up. This is why you don’t hear them talking about the number of people killed supposedly by the coronavirus anymore.
The real news about the coronavirus is unambiguously good. Mainstream media’s propaganda would never include the truth that we’re on a sharp decline in actual infections or that cases are spiking because testing is increasing. Focus on facts, folks.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The so-called “2nd-wave” narrative is upon us. Every day, mainstream media and the Democratic puppetmasters are echoing reports of “spikes” in the number of coronavirus cases. It’s important to understand the difference between reported cases and the actual infectious rate of this disease. More importantly, it’s imperative that Republican lawmakers focus on the most important number of them all: Deaths.
Cases are spiking for a very important and logical reason, as the President noted yesterday on Twitter:
Our Coronavirus testing is so much greater (25 million tests) and so much more advanced, that it makes us look like we have more cases, especially proportionally, than other countries. My message on that is very clear!
That’s not just spin. It’s the truth. The reason the number of cases is going up is because more people are being tested. But if we look at the all-important number, deaths, we’ll see that it has been steadily declining week-over-week since early May.
The truthful narrative here is apparent to anyone who will look closely. Deaths going down, even after the supposed “grandma killing” Memorial Day weekend or the “selfish” opening up of many cities and states, means we’re heading for a good summer. Will there be a real 2nd-wave? Probably, but it won’t come until next winter. But that won’t stop mainstream media and Democrats from pushing the false narrative of an omnipresent 2nd-wave. Why? Because they don’t want the economy to open up before the election.
It’s so important for Republican lawmakers to understand the real numbers and spread the truth. Death rates are going down. Cases are going up because of more testing. These are facts. They need to act accordingly, as I detailed in the latest episode of the Conservative Playbook.
Stick to your guns, folks. Don’t slow the economy any further. Ramp it up. Open the country. Relieve restrictions. Follow the REAL science that death rates are dropping. Ignore the false narrative about cases. It’s a smokescreen.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
The Capitol Hill Occupied Protest (CHOP) had a second shooting incident in 48 hours as a Twitch livestream caught the audio. But it was what happened afterwards that should have citizens concerned as the Twitch user’s phone was taken from him. The livestream continued to broadcast as at least two members of CHOP “security” attempted to prevent the footage from getting out.
Twitter user @ShawnGui_, Shawn Whiting, was livestreaming on Twitch for just under four hours. Near the end, gunshots can be heard. At the time, it was unclear if the noise was actual gunshots or fireworks, but his phone continued to livestream after it was taken by a member of CHOP “security.” The man who carried the phone away confirmed at least one person had been shot.
I have no details on what happened besides what appears in the video. Afterwards no one laid hands on me but they did take my phone. They then gave it back. ↓
Reports came in shortly after the livestream started going viral on social media that someone was in serious condition after being shot at the CHOP.
BREAKING: A shooting — the second in 48 hours — was reported Sunday night in the area known as the CHOP, or Capitol Hill Occupied Protest. One person with a gunshot wound was in serious condition at Harborview Medical Center. https://t.co/r55VKl9UVQ
In the Twitch video at the 3:44:20 mark, gunshots can be heard. Then, at the 3:50:51 point, Whiting’s phone was grabbed from him. The person who stole the phone went to ask “James Madison,” who Whiting identified as the “lead security guy,” if he was really with The CHOP. Throughout, the livestream continued. At one point, he said to someone on his phone, “Another ****** just got shot. Ya, this is a war zone.”
When the person who grabbed the phone found “James Madison,” they examined it and realized it was still filming. By that time, both had put their faces clearly on camera, seen above. Twitch user Whiting made clear in the video and in subsequent Tweets that he was not a “plant,” as CHOP security seemed to believe. He appears to be generally supportive of the plight of those in the occupied area of Seattle and was merely documenting what was happening.
Social media reactions have been limited as the shooting happened overnight, but those talking about it have been vocal about the shooting and apparent attempted cover-up of the circumstances.
.@ShawnGui_ was recording a livestream during the CHAZ shooting tonight. Afterward, a man interrogated him and stole his phone, demanding the footage be deleted. He didn’t know the camera was still recording. This is what was captured: https://t.co/pAWm0CyxFBpic.twitter.com/yLhUKRdjyo
Violent and deadly crime seems to be rampant at The CHOP, though it’s clear from this video that concerted efforts are being put into preventing any of it from getting reported. It seem optics are more important than safety in Seattle.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
President Trump has called out radical progressive Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez many times since she took office less than two years ago. The leader of “The Squad” in Congress and de facto poster child for the Justice Democrats has rankled many conservatives during her short time in office after a meteoric rise from bartender to main advocate in the House for the Green New Deal. But the President offered her encouragement Sunday night as rumors started spreading that she might challenge Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer for his seat in 2022.
The President’s feud with Schumer predates AOC’s ascension in the ranks in Congress. Once friendly, the two have butted heads nearly as much as the President and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi. But prospects of the freshman Congresswoman taking on the most powerful Democrat in the Senate seemed to be a welcomed development to President Trump.
Ocasio-Cortez rose to prominence after defeating longtime Congressman Joe Crowley in New York’s 14th District Democratic primary in 2018. She went on to win the seat easily in the heavily blue district and has been a thorn in the side of Republicans as well as fellow Democrats ever since. She is the embodiment of what the Justice Democrats hope to create, a young and charismatic candidate with multiple intersectionality boxes checked to go with a radical leftist ideology.
But she faces multiple competitors in the upcoming New York primary for her seat, and while she is expected to win easily, it won’t be without a fight. She has had to spend some money in her massive war chest to assure she gets to continue being the prime social justice warrior in Congress, a sign that some have already tired of her brand of extremism. As the Washington Times noted, she has had to put out expensive television ads to make sure she doesn’t suffer the same fate she once dealt to Crowley.
Before anything happens, Ms. Ocasio-Cortez must defend her seat Tuesday against three challengers, including Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, a former business journalist and CNBC host.
In her closing campaign ad, Ms. Ocascio-Cortez is telling voters that the fallout from COVID-19, mass unemployment and racism in law enforcement have exposed a broken system of governance.
“What if these broken systems weren’t built to last in the first place? What if a better world is possible?” she says in a campaign ad. “People are coming together in an unprecedented movement to build this better future and a better world.
“It is time to bring the movement to the voting booth,” she says.
Could AOC defeat Schumer? Those prospects are low at this stage, but if she wins reelection she’ll have two more years to build her brand and make her point before having to run for Senate. We’ll see what happens between now and then.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
It’s clear to anyone paying attention that the major challenges we’re facing as a nation in 2020 are completely different from anything we’ve faced in decades, perhaps ever. And unlike past challenges with riots and lockdowns, these are not being driven by legitimate grievances. It seems that a small group of vocal “activists” have been able to cause so much turmoil, nearly every American has been affected in some way. The nation seems, for lack of a better term, broken.
There are accusations being thrown around by patriotic conservatives and lucid moderates about the root cause. Many are claiming this all falls on the shoulders of the elected Democrats across the nation, but that’s not the case. They’re not in control. They’re pawns being pulled along by the ideological horses to which they latched their wagons years ago. The party that once focused on workers and Big Labor detached their wagons from those horses around the time Barack Obama became president, opting instead to latch onto identity politics to pull them forward. This served them well for years, but now that identity politics has been taken over by Black Lives Matter and Antifa, among others, Democrats like Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer are no longer in control. It’s the radicals like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar who are the party’s new ideological leaders, but even they are simply higher-ranking pawns.
Some say it’s mainstream media, and more specifically big media companies like Disney, Google, and Facebook who are not only driving the narrative but also driving the agenda. This is also untrue. If Democratic Party leadership are pawns, then big media companies are the pawns of the pawns.
We can look to academia to get closer to the root cause. They don’t have the clout to make this all happen, but it’s conspicuous that the radical progressives in academia are seeing their visions manifesting in American society. Someone else is delivering the clout to them, but it’s their ideas that are coming forward. From here, I won’t even speculate about the origins of the clout behind the Cultural Marxism developed by the Frankfort School. Determining whether it’s George Soros, Bill Gates, Justice Democrats, China, the New World Order, a combination, or someone else entirely is above my pay grade, but the extremist ideas in American academia are clearly at play today.
In this episode of the NOQ Report Podcast, I exposed critical theory and its manifestation in modern America society as the true root cause of what’s happening today. I also discussed the goals at each level, from the anarcho-communism craved by many of the foot soldiers in the movement to the true anarchy that will follow if they’re not stopped. I discussed how this leads to forced authoritarianism that the Cultural Marxists hope to precede the emergence of radical leaders who will drive us towards actual communism, or worse, an uglier variation of it.
The plans of the Cultural Marxists at the top come down to three big lies. First, they have the lie of authority in which they turn people against the leaders. They say all police and the justice system in general is corrupt. They say President Trump and the GOP are the problem despite unprecedented prosperity across the board in America. They need to lie to get their foot soldiers fired up.
The second lie is the lie of action. They tell their group that to achieve their goals, they need to riot, loot, tear down monuments, form autonomous zones, and act out in ways that lead towards governments at every level promoting further authoritarianism. They don’t tell their foot soldiers that they’re supposed to be quashed in the middle stages of the plan, but that’s exactly what’s happening.
The last lie is the lie of results. The people in their movement are told this is all going to lead to revolution. They’re not told that they’re going to get put down by authoritarian measures, and that these measures are the true goal of the Cultural Marxists who need that precedent in order to allow for the real end goal of authoritarian communism, which is very different from the anarcho-communism the foot soldiers believe they’re producing.
All of this should sound familiar as it’s the same gameplan used long before Karl Marx was even born. It’s a gameplan that has always used deception as a means to achieve very nefarious goals. To see where this originated, we simply need to read the third chapter of the Book of Genesis to see the first use of the lie of authority, the lie of action, and the lie of results:
And he said unto the woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?
2 And the woman said unto the serpent, We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden:
3 But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die.
4 And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die:
5 For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.
6 And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat, and gave also unto her husband with her; and he did eat.
The Cultural Marxists driving this anarchy have plans that go much further than riots and taking down monuments. They have a vision of America that essentially doesn’t include America itself. This is my most important podcast to date.
Join fellow patriots as we form a grassroots movement to advance the cause of conservatism. The coronavirus crisis has prompted many, even some conservatives, to promote authoritarianism. It’s understandable to some extent now, but it must not be allowed to embed itself in American life. We currently have 8000+ patriots with us in a very short time. If you are interested, please join us to receive updates.
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the RedState.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Or Send postal mail to:
RedState Unsubscribe
1735 N. Lynn St – Suite 510, Arlington, VA 22209
* Copyright RedState and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
AMERICAN SPECTATOR
NBC
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Ben Kamisar and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Tuesday’s primaries give progressives opportunities to make inroads
After the first three presidential nominating contests, Joe Biden and the pragmatic wing of the Democratic Party easily beat Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and the progressives pushing for big, structural change.
But this Tuesday, progressives have the opportunity to strike back with some wins of their own.
That’s when progressive candidates — from New York to Kentucky — have chances to score victories over establishment / moderate / pragmatic Democrats, including the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
In Kentucky, progressive African-American state Rep. Charles Booker – who supports Medicare for All, the Green New Deal and Universal Basic Income – appears to have the momentumover well-funded Amy McGrath in the Dem Senate primary for the right to take on Mitch McConnell in the fall.
The big question, however, is whether enough Kentucky Democrats already submitted their mail-in ballots before Booker’s campaign started to take off, especially after the shooting death of Breonna Taylor in Louisville.
Pat McDonogh/Louisville Courier-Journal via AP
In NY-16, progressive challenger Jamaal Bowman, a middle school principal, is trying to defeat longtime incumbent Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
In NY-17, former Obama DOJ official Mondaire Jones – who backs Medicare for All – is running in a crowded primary to fill the congressional seat being vacated by retiring Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y. Also running for the seat is former Obama Defense official Evelyn Farkas, as well as state Sen. David Carlucci.
And in NY-9, longtime Rep. Yvette Clarke, D-N.Y., is facing a handful of challengers, including progressive Adem Bunkeddeko, who narrowly lost to Clarke in 2018.
What we’ll be watching for on Tuesday night is whether the party that’s about to nominate Joe Biden as its presidential candidate to face President Trump in November has more hunger for progressive politics after the coronavirus and after the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Rayshard Brooks.
It also shouldn’t be lost here that Booker, Bowman, Jones and Bunkeddeko are all progressives of color, and a question going forward is whether they might fare better than white progressives in Democratic primaries.
But also don’t forget that NONE of these races will be competitive in November. No matter who wins between Booker and McGrath in Kentucky, McConnell will be the big favorite in this presidential year.
And in New York, all of the primary races we’re watching on Tuesday are in safe Democratic seats.
Was the Tulsa rally really worth it?
Tulsa’s health director urged President Trump not to come.
So now that the rally has come and gone, who is better off for it? We’d be hard-pressed to say anyone except the Democrats, who got a whole lot of new ad material.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers that you need to know today
22 percent: The share of ICU beds available in Washington D.C. hospitals as of Saturday, as the city is slated to move to Phase Two of reopening on Monday (76 beds of 345 total).
101 minutes: The length of President Trump’s Saturday night remarks in Tulsa.
14 minutes: How long the president spoke on Saturday about his frustration with the coverage of his use of a ramp and how he drank water at a recent West Point address.
With the June 30 primary around the corner, a new outside group is coming to the former governor’s aid: Let’s Turn Colorado Blue.
The group, which formed last week, is already running an ad hitting Hickenlooper’s primary opponent, Andrew Romanoff.
And with almost $800,000 booked between now and the primary, it’s part of the big outside push coming in for Hickenlooper down the stretch — the Senate Majority PAC, which has backed Hickenlooper, has about $1.4 million in TV and radio time booked through June 30.
Plus, thanks to the group’s convenient decision to wait until so late to open its doors, it won’t have to disclose its donors until after the primary.
THE LID: Narrowing it down
Don’t miss the pod from Friday, when we made the case how Joe Biden’s VP pick could now be down to a two-woman race.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Coronavirus-related stimulus and economic aid has curbed the increase in poverty in America, with one study finding the poverty rate dropping in April and May.
President Trump told Axios his trade negotiations with China have prompted him to pump the breaks on sanctions against the country in retribution for the detention of Uighurs and others.
White House officials are pushing back against John Bolton, who said he hopes President Trump won’t be re-elected in November. Also, Democrats are demanding probes into the firing of a federal prosecutor investigating people close to the president. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
Bolton says Trump should be a one-term president
Watch Video +
Top Trump fundraiser sought to cash in on valuable 3M masks
We need more of our commentators—and more of our citizens in general—to get hands-on experience with politics and government.
By Andy Smarick The Bulwark
June 22, 2020
The Covid-19 pandemic presents immense challenges for schools in both the public and private sector. Join the Manhattan Institute this Wednesday for a conversation with experts in education on the measures policymakers should take to ensure that both public and private schools emerge strong following the pandemic.
Some of the Tocqueville Project’s past Civil Society Award winners have made a substantial impact through work in and with America’s black communities. It’s important to recognize the inspiring and successful efforts of local leaders who bring people together in their communities to close the racial achievement gap, improve educational outcomes, reduce crime, and provide a support system to the most vulnerable members of our society.
By Annie Dwyer, Alexandra Cohill Manhattan Institute
June 19, 2020
Amid the pandemic, Beijing offers a disturbing contrast to America, where mutual aid is enjoying a revival.
By Howard Husock City Journal Online
June 19, 2020
“Black Lives Matter and other activists are calling on cities across the nation to #DefundthePolice. … [But] it’s because of chronic policy failure in areas such as mental health that the police and other public-safety agencies so often find themselves dealing with problems that shouldn’t be their responsibility.”
By Stephen Eide New York Post
June 22, 2020
“As we look to revitalize our cities in the wake of the pandemic, a new application of an old tool, the transferable development right (TDR), can play an important role in fostering an abundance of urban opportunities for all residents.”
By John Ketcham Economics21
June 19, 2020
Environmentalism offers emotional relief and spiritual satisfaction, giving its adherents a sense of purpose and transcendence.
By John Tierney The Wall Street Journal
June 22, 2020
NEW YORK CITY & STATE
Photo: New York in 1855, with Battery Park and Castle Clinton in the center (HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES)
Mayor Bill de Blasio’s plan to expand the island borough is part of a long history of land reclamation that has continually reshaped Gotham.
By Seth Barron City Journal Spring 2020 Issue
The role of fathers has changed, and little in the lives of men prepares them to meet the new expectations.
By Jonathan Clarke City Journal Online
June 19, 2020
Even as protests over the death of George Floyd devolved into riots reminiscent of 1960s-era unrest, activists have made “defund the police” a rallying cry. The turmoil has reignited important debates about race, policing, and the future of urban life. On June 18, Coleman Hughes, Rafael Mangual, and JamilJivani held an important discussion on these issues, moderated by JasonRiley.
Christopher Rufo joins Brian Anderson to discuss Seattle’s activist-controlled “autonomous zone” in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of the city, established after police evacuated the local precinct building.
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
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on the Townhall.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Or Send postal mail to:
Townhall Daily Unsubscribe
P.O. Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219
* Copyright Townhall and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
REALCLEARPOLITICS #1
06/22/2020
Share:
Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Basic Income Q&A; Big Brother; Daddy Dearest
By Carl M. Cannon on Jun 22, 2020 09:28 am
Good morning, it’s Monday, June 22, 2020. I hope you had a good Father’s Day weekend. If you’re unfamiliar with the origins of the observance, you might suspect it’s an idea that was hatched in Kansas City by the folks at Hallmark to sell more greeting cards. Here at RealClearPolitics, we know our U.S. history, however, which means that we know Hallmark had nothing to do with it. We honor the loving daughter who actually came up with the idea, as well as her father, a Civil War veteran who made it to the 20th century and has been interred for the last 100 years in a quiet cemetery in Spokane, Wash.
I’ll have some thoughts on William Jackson Smart and his daughter Sonora in a moment. First, I’d direct 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 and contributors, including the following:
* * *
Making the Case for Universal Basic Income: An Author Q&A. Steven Shafarman and I discuss his new book, “Our Future: The Basic Income Plan for Peace, Justice, Liberty, Democracy, and Personal Dignity.”
Big Brother, Google and the “Enemies of Freedom.” Frank Miele examines the latest examples of the Internet platform censoring conservative voices.
Big Tech Monopolies Are a Threat to the First Amendment. K.S. Bruce offers a prescription to govern our modern-day public square.
The ACLU’s “Death Star” Client in Its Title IX Lawsuit. KC Johnson and Stuart Taylor Jr. spotlight Know Your IX, one of the groups challenging new Education Department rules ensuring due-process rights to students accused of sexual assault.
America’s Real Divide. Derek Monson and the Rev. Marian Edmonds-Allen see a different dichotomy from the usual left-right model.
The Danger of Designating Antifa a Terrorist Organization. In RealClearPolicy, Heather Williams asserts that doing so could undermine the legal framework for counterterrorism investigations.
COVID Coverage Displaces Floyd/Racism; Trump’s Star Dims Too. Kalev Leetaru has this analysis of the latest numbers.
Media Begging for a “Second Wave.” Physicians Thomas Price and C.L. Gray assail news outlets for cherry-picking statistics and failing to put them in context.
Republicans — Unite Behind Trump or Face Radicalized Future. Former Rep. Dave Brat argues the president is all that stands between the protection of individual liberties and a leftward lurch toward greater government control of all aspects of American life.
If You Like Some Limits on Abortion, You Don’t Like Roe. Kristan Hawkins argues a majority of Americans would oppose the law if they understood it fully.
The FARA Pretext for Russian Collusion Probe. In RealClearInvestigations, Paul Sperry spotlights documents showing the FBI used a statutory relic — the Foreign Agents Registration Act — as the legal rationale for surveilling Trump campaign aides.
A World Without the Fed Would Be the Same as the World With It. John Tamny explains in RealClearMarkets.
* * *
Mother’s Day, as I’ve discussed before in this space, not only has its antecedents in the 19th century, but in the Civil War itself, thanks to a Virginian named Ann Jarvis. When the government in Richmond seceded from the United States, Jarvis found herself living in a new state, West Virginia, and in a community with divided loyalties. Her instincts were toward nurturing not combat. Before the war, she’d organized “Mothers’ Day Work Clubs” to address local health needs; when the carnage began, she urged the clubs to stay neutral to the point of providing medical care and solace to mothers on each side.
Ann Jarvis certainly knew the pain of losing a child. Eight of her 12 children never reached adulthood. Lee’s surrender at Appomattox brought an end to the bloodshed, but not the grief. In the summer of 1865, she organized a “Mothers’ Friendship Day” on the grounds of the Taylor County courthouse where families from both sides gathered, many to mourn lost sons.
When she died in 1905, her daughter Anna, living in Philadelphia, vowed to keep the tradition alive. She made it a national cause, and by 1914 President Woodrow Wilson had signed a joint resolution of Congress designating the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day.
Among those who took note was Sonora Smart Dodd, although the parent she believed was deserving of recognition was her dear old dad, William Jackson Smart, a widower who had answered the call of fatherhood with the same sense of duty he had as a soldier. Actually, even more, as you’ll see in a moment.
Sonora was 16 when her mother, Ellen, died in childbirth in 1898, leaving Sonora and her five brothers in the care of a single dad. He never wavered. “He was both father and mother to me and my brothers and sisters,” Sonora recalled. She used the plural “sisters” because Ellen Smart was a widow who had three children of her own before marrying a second time. William Smart took care of them, too. Oh, and William Smart had five grown children from his first marriage, to a woman who also died young. By all accounts he was a loving father to that brood as well.
So you might imagine how Sonora Smart Dodd (by then married herself) felt as she sat (with her father) in a Methodist church pew in 1909 at an early Mother’s Day service. She resolved to do something about the disparity, and she succeeded, too. The following year, Spokane held its first Father’s Day commemoration. Sonora chose June, instead of May, because her father’s birthday was that month. Today, it is a matter of Father’s Day lore that it took far longer — 62 years, to be exact — for Sonora Dodd to achieve what Anna Jarvis did in a short period of time. But that’s hardly the full story.
Yes, it wasn’t until 1972 that President Richard Nixon made the third Sunday in June an official part of the national calendar, but Lyndon Johnson had signed a similar proclamation in 1966; Sen. Margaret Chase Smith had introduced such legislation in 1957 (while delivering a spirited speech on behalf of fatherhood); and Calvin Coolidge signed a presidential edict in 1924 urging the states to recognize fathers. “The widespread observance of this occasion is calculated,” Coolidge wrote with his typically taciturn Yankee reserve, “to establish more intimate relations between fathers and their children and to impress upon fathers the full measure of their obligations.”
Even Woodrow Wilson sanctioned the idea of Father’s Day, first in 1913 and then in 1916 in an election year trip to Spokane. So this was never a competition between Mother’s Day and Father’s Day. One begat the other, if you’ll forgive the pun.
Likewise, the life story of the father who inspired Father’s Day is a testament to national unity. If you clicked on my first link above to William Jackson Smart you’ll notice that his 1919 obituary in the local newspaper notes that he was born in Arkansas, while celebrating his service in “the Grand Army of the Republic.” This was “Mr. Lincoln’s Army,” of course, so how did an Arkansan born in 1842 come to serve in it?
There’s a story there, too. The short version is that William Smart was first pressed into service in the Confederate Army. He was captured early in the war by Union troops, who detected a lack of passion for the “Lost Cause” and gave him a choice: spend the rest of the war in a stockade or joint the U.S. Army. He made the right call, and because he did so, every year at this time millions of American fathers get neckties they won’t want and affectionate hugs and cards they do want. What they also get — and what they cherish most — is hearing the magic words “I love you, Dad.”
America’s most cherished freedom, the freedom of consciousness -to believe and speak freely, is increasingly under-siege. From Social Media platforms to college campuses to the workplace, the social, political, and even legal costs to exercising free speech are rising.
What is perhaps most striking about this most recent campaign against America’s 1st amendment is how it echoes -and was clearly shaped by- long running struggles over speech surrounding discussion of Islam and the jihadist threat. As the Center for Security Policy has long documented, international institutions, foreign governments, and Islamist pressure groups conducted a length campaign to pressure, vilify and even jail those who opposed them.
On September 27, 2012, Nakoula Basseley Nakoula was arrested for making a movie which supposedly offended Muslims. That was not, naturally, the official charge. On paper, Nakoula was arrested for the parole violation of having used a computer and alias. Which he did, while making the video in question.
Yet no less esteemed a personage than Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made it perfectly clear that the real reason why Nakoula was dragged out of his home one night by sheriff deputies was that he had made a movie.
Over the weekend, the Chinese Communist Party confirmed that it will be, as President Trump put it last month, “absolutely smothering” the liberties of the people of Hong Kong that it promised to respect for another nearly three decades.
Beijing announced Saturday that it will be institutionalizing its repression of what the CCP calls “troublemakers” in the former British colony. A new investigative unit will create the pretexts for arresting them and the hated Chinese puppet, Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam, will use new judges to legitimate such apprehensions.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo says such changes will reduce Hong Kong to the sorry status of any other city in totalitarian China. That will mean an end to its favored trade treatment by the United States and the rule of law that long made its securities exchanges attractive to foreign investors.
This is Frank Gaffney.
TEVI TROY, Author of Fight House: Rivalries in the White House, from Truman to Trump, Best-selling presidential historian, and a former senior government official, Former Deputy Secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services:
Why do White House administrations often turn into “fight houses?”
Patterns of rivalries in US presidential administrations
Below is a sneak peek of this content! On November 3, 1969, as protests over the Vietnam War racked cities across America and a left-wing counter culture was taking hold, President Richard Nixon went on television and said, “And so tonight, to you, the great silent majority of my fellow… 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…]
This email is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this email on the Twitchy.com network OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
WERE YOU FORWARDED THIS EDITION OF THE HOT AIR DAILY?
You can get your own free subscription to the #1 blog delivered to your email inbox early each morning by visiting: http://www.hotair.com
This newsletter is never sent unsolicited. It was sent to you because you signed up to receive this newsletter on Hot Air OR a friend forwarded it to you. We respect and value your time and privacy. If this newsletter no longer meets your needs we will be happy to remove your address immediately.
Or Send postal mail to:
Hot Air Daily Unsubscribe
P.O Box 9660, Arlington, VA 22219
* Copyright Hot Air and its Content Providers.
All rights reserved.
AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NATIONAL REVIEW
BY JACK CROWE
June 22, 2020
MAYOR BILL DE BLASIO DISLIKES the pedestrian administrative work required to be an effective big-city mayor. He prefers to skip right to the stuff of national politics: making speeches, taking wholly symbolic action, using public employees as moving men, and napping on couches after long workout sessions that require a 45-minute commute.
De Blasio’s preference for symbolism over substance was on display again this weekend in New York City, where twenty-four people were shot within 24 hours, adding to a list of more than 1,000 suspects who have been indicted on gun -possession charges and immediately released because courts that have been closed due to coronavirus couldn’t accommodate their arraignments.
“We have over 1,000 people that have been indicted on a gun-possession charge, where the cases are open, and they are walking around the streets of New York today,” chief of crime-control strategies Michael LiPetri told the New York Post.
That number also excludes a massive backlog of 800 people who have been arrested on gun-possession charges but could not be formally indicted due to a lack of judicial resources. LiPetri also noted that a record high 17 percent of this year’s shootings have involved a parolee, either as the victim or the shooter.
“We’ve never seen a higher percentage of parolee-involved incidents with shootings, since we’ve been tracking it in ’05,” he said.
As of Monday morning, De Blasio had not yet found the time to weigh in on this complete breakdown in the administration of his city’s existing gun-control regime, which he tried to bring to Washington as a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate. He did, however, have time to give his mayoral seal of approval to the Museum of Natural History for its decision to remove an 80-year-old statue of President Theodore Roosevelt from its front steps.
“The City supports the Museum’s request. It is the right decision and the right time to remove this problematic statue,” de Blasio’s office said in a statement included in a New York Times report on the removal, which ran Sunday morning . . . somewhere around halfway through this weekend’s 24-hour shooting spree.
Shootings erupted across New York City over the weekend ahead of the long-awaited second phase of the city’s coronavirus reopening scheduled for Monday.
24 people were shot in the span of as many hours beginning on Saturday, with the court system facing a backlog of cases because of coronavirus closures. The NYPD said suspects arrested on gun-possession charges were being set free because of the court backlog.
Shootings were down in the months of March and April compared with 2019, following sweeping lockdowns of the city. However, the month of May saw shootings rise 64 percent compared with 2019, while murders increased by 79 percent over the same period, according to the NYPD. (NY Post)
South Korea confirmed Monday that the country is experiencing a second wave of coronavirus infections centering around Seoul after a holiday weekend in early May caused cases to spike.
“In the metropolitan area, we believe that the first wave was from March to April as well as February to March,” said Jeong Eun-kyeong, director of the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention director. “Then we see that the second wave which was triggered by the May holiday has been going on.”
South Korea was the first country after China to be hit with a large outbreak, peaking at more than 900 cases a day in February. The numbers had tapered off to fewer than 10 positive cases a day by late April, including three consecutive days with zero recorded infections. (BBC)
Hundreds of workers at Tyson Foods poultry plant in Arkansas have tested positive for coronavirus, though most of the workers who tested positive are asymptomatic.
Out of 3,748 Tyson employees tested in Benton and Washington Counties, 481 were found to have coronavirus, with 455 of those patients reporting no symptoms. The outbreak was centered at Tyson’s poultry plant in the town of Springdale.
China has reportedly ceased importing poultry from the facility upon learning of the outbreak. Tyson spokesman Gary Mickelson told the Associated Press that global and U.S. health organizations including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration have said there is no evidence of coronavirus transmission via food. (AP)
Eight corrections officers of color at the county jail where former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is being held say they were prohibited from guarding Chauvin and told they were a potential “liability” around him because of their race.
The Ramsey County corrections officers have filed racial discrimination charges with Minnesota’s Department of Human Rights over what they called a “segregation order,” the Star Tribune reported.
Chauvin, who is white, was booked in the Ramsey County Jail on $1 million bond after he was charged with second-degree murder and manslaughter in the May 25 death of George Floyd, who died in police custody after Chauvin knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes, even as Floyd pleaded for air before passing out. (Star Tribune)
Alexandra DeSanctis here. I’ll be filling in for Jim this week, notwithstanding what it says in your email inbox.
On the menu today: Outraged rioters spent the weekend indiscriminately toppling pretty much any statues they could get their hands on, President Trump returned to the campaign trail for a rally in Tulsa, and another quick reflection on the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s Bostock ruling.
The Canceling Craze Carries On
In a column last week, my boss Rich Lowry made some astute points about why conservatives don’t need to reflexively defend the continued presence of each and every Confederate monument, and I largely agreed with much of what he said.
I’m deeply uncomfortable with the notion that we can remove a few statues here and there as a means of atoning for the more unfortunate parts of our country’s history by erasing all traces of them from public view. That prospect is even more unnerving these days, considering the moral panic … READ MORE
ADVERTISEMENT
Every vote is a voice heard
Facebook is building the largest voter information effort in US history, starting with the new Voting Information Center, where you can find the latest resources about voting in the 2020 election.
“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
REPUBLICANS: President Trump’s reelection campaign, which encompasses the official campaign, the RNC, and joint fundraising committees, raised $74 million in May, and reported $265 million on hand. (release)
BATTLE FOR THE SENATE: The DSCC raised $11.2 million in May and closed the reporting period with $32.4 million in the bank. (FEC) The NRSC raised $10.1 million and ended the period with $40 million in cash on hand. (FEC)
CO SEN: Former state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff (D) launched a TV ad Friday attacking former Gov. John Hickenlooper (D). (Bloomberg Government) “A new political group” called Let’s Turn Colorado Blue formed last Tuesday to support Hickenlooper and “is spending at least $1 million on a scathing attack ad against” Romanoff. The new group “will not have to disclose its donors until after the primary. … On Friday, Gov. Jared Polis (D), Sen. Michael Bennet (D), and other leading state Democrats condemned Romanoff for spending $175,000 to air [his] attack ad against Hickenlooper.” (AP)
RACE FOR THE HOUSE: The DCCC expanded its fundraising advantage over the NRCC in May, raising $10.9 million and ending the period with $86 million on hand. The NRCC raised $10.6 million and had $55 million on hand. (FEC/FEC)
IA SEN: 2018 IA-03 candidate Theresa Greenfield (D) launched a TV ad Friday, running statewide. (Iowa Starting Line) Sen. Joni Ernst’s (R) senior adviser David Kochel “promised that the Democrat would soon face a barrage of negativity. … Democratic outside groups have booked $24.1 million to support … Greenfield with TV ads through Election Day, and Republican groups are close behind with $22.6 million on behalf of” Ernst. (New York Times) On Monday, Ernst challenged Greenfield to six debates. (release)
NORTH CAROLINA: A poll by Gravis Marketing sponsored by the One America News Network (June 17; 631 RVs; +/- 3.9%) found Trump led Joe Biden, 46%-43%. In the race for Senate, Sen. Thom Tillis (R) led former state Sen. Cal Cunningham (D), 46%-45%. In the gubernatorial race, Gov. Roy Cooper (D) and Lt. Gov. Dan Forest (R) were tied at 46% each. (release)
VA-10: Marine veteran Aliscia Andrews (R) won the Republican nominating convention on Saturday and will take on Rep. Jennifer Wexton (D) in November. Andrews won 58% of the vote at the drive-through convention. (Winchester Star) Andrews is at a severe cash disadvantage with $46,000 on hand, compared to $1.8 million for Wexton.
In July 2018, there were three Senate seats The Cook Political Report rated as “Likely Republican,” seats in red states that Democrats were nonetheless targeting. Ten days before the election, one moved into the toss-up column: Texas, where Beto O’Rourke embraced liberal positions, with some reporting that year linking him to Bernie Sanders. This cycle, there are four Senate seats considered “Likely Republican” and in one of them, we may see echoes of the O’Rourke dynamic. In Kentucky, Amy McGrath has avoided O’Rourke’s playbook, suggesting she could help Trump advance his agenda. Charles Booker, on the other hand, has celebrated endorsements from his party’s left wing; he has Sanders’ support, and that of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Booker’s campaign differs from O’Rourke’s in 2018. But should he clear tomorrow’s primary, the general election will become an altered version of the experiment O’Rourke ran two year ago, testing whether an unabashed progressive, and what kind of progressive, could earn a red state win. — Mini Racker
Fresh Brewed Buzz
“We can get over one term—I have absolute confidence, even if it’s not the miracle of a conservative Republican being elected in November. Two terms, I’m more troubled about.” — Former National Security Adviser John Bolton on Trump being reelected (ABC News)
Former Sen. Ted Kaufman (D-DE), “one of Biden’s longest-serving advisers, has tapped a half-dozen government veterans to work with him as part of a formal transition operation that has been established independent of the Biden campaign.” (NBC News)
“Fears about antifa, the amorphous left-wing protest group, are proving to be potent fundraising and data-gathering tools for prominent Republican political campaigns, chief among them that of” Trump himself. “The campaign has run ads invoking the group through at least seven different Facebook pages associated with the campaign.” (Daily Beast)
Trump said “that his niece, Mary Trump, is ‘not allowed’ to write her forthcoming book about him because doing so would violate a nondisclosure agreement she signed.” (Axios)
“The University of Wisconsin System regents’ leader has picked” former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson (R) “as the system’s interim president, delivering another twist in what has become a messy search to replace outgoing President Ray Cross during the coronavirus pandemic.” (AP)
“A half-dozen Republican congressional candidates who will be on the ballot Nov. 3 have promoted the QAnon conspiracy theory that Trump is leading a secret battle against a sprawling and powerful liberal child sex-trafficking ring—and more could be joining them. A survey by the progressive site Media Matters found that 53 candidates running for Congress in 2020 have promoted QAnon.” (NBC News)
“Iowa Democrats and a special interest group say” Ernst “has ‘put a for-sale sign on our democracy’ with fundraising practices that show a disregard for the law. … Iowa Republicans counter with charges that” Greenfield “displaced ‘mom-and-pop’ businesses to make way for an Aldi’s store that city officials later rejected.” (Waterloo-Cedar FallsCourier)
“Erie County District Attorney John Flynn said Friday that he would not pursue voter fraud and election fraud charges against” state Sen. Chris Jacobs (R), running in NY-27, who was “accused of wrongdoing by an anonymous complainant earlier this week.” (Buffalo News)
Rep. Katie Porter (D-CA 45) “is launching a political action committee, called Truth to Power PAC, that will direct funds she’s raised toward a slate of progressive congressional candidates around the country.” (Daily Beast)
Former South Carolina state Rep. Bakari Sellers (D) will host a podcast on the Ringer podcast network. (Hotline reporting)
Former Rep. Mark Foley (R-FL) is “finally going to close his campaign account,” 14 years after resigning from Congress. The $700,000 in the account will be donated to charity. (NBC News)
Rooster’s Crow
The House is in at 11 a.m. for a pro forma session. The Senate is in at 3 p.m.
Trump has lunch with Vice President Mike Pence at 1 p.m.
Swizzle Challenge
Mail is delivered by mule to residents living at the bottom of the Grand Canyon.
Shin Inouye won Thursday’s challenge. Here’s his challenge: Who was the first postmaster general?
Attendance for President Trump’s campaign rally at the BOK Center in Tulsa Saturday night was set at 6,200 by the Tulsa fire marshal and and… Read more…
The brother of CHAZ/CHOP shooting victim Lorenzo Anderson has claimed that the “protesters” hid his brother from him as he laid dying inside a tent…. Read more…
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer is famous for her tyrannical rule, her blind ambition, and her raw hatred for those who disagree with her. In March… Read more…
Seattle anarchist zone warlord Raz Simone had a meltdown this weekend over the refusal of an ambulance squad to enter the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone… Read more…
Mike Pompeo Secretary of State Mike Pompeo trolled John Bolton after the fired National Security Advisor told the Daily Telegraph he would likely vote for… Read more…
A week ago on Saturday night protesters torched the Wendy’s restaurant in Atlanta following the death of Rayshard Brooks. One video that went viral online… Read more…
A black man who brutally attacked a white Macy’s employee on camera in Michigan was entirely unprovoked, according to an investigation by the department store…. Read more…
This was the most informative interview on the attempted deep state coup of President Trump to date. Attorney General Bill Barr joined Maria Bartiromo this… Read more…
As reported earlier– Irami Osei-Frimpong, a University of Georgia graduate student and teaching assistant recently wrote that some white people may have to die before… Read more…
This email was sent to rickbulow1974@gmail.com. You are receiving this email because you asked to receive information from The Gateway Pundit. We take your privacy and your liberty very seriously and will keep your information in the strictest confidence. Your name will not be sold to or shared with third parties. We will email you from time to time with relevant news and updates, but you can stop receiving information from us at any time by following very simple instructions that will be included at the bottom of any correspondence you should receive from us.
Our mailing address is: 16024 Manchester Rd. | St. Louis, MO 63011