The Morning Dispatch: Sports Are Back, Finally!

Plus, are the polls to be trusted?

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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The United States confirmed 65,028 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 8.4 percent of the 774,193 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,058 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 144,242.

  • President Trump announced on Thursday that he is canceling the portion of the Republican National Convention scheduled to take place in Jacksonville, Florida, citing concerns over rising coronavirus cases in the state. “There’s nothing more important in our country than keeping our people safe,” Trump said. His formal nomination is still scheduled to occur in Charlotte, North Carolina, on August 24.
  • More than 1.4 million Americans filed for unemployment last week, marking the first week-over-week increase in initial unemployment claims in nearly four months. About 31.8 million Americans are currently collecting unemployment benefits; the CARES Act’s $600-per-week boost is set to expire at the end of this month.
  • Department of Justice Inspector General Michael Horowitz announced his office is looking into DoJ law enforcement officers’s use of force in Portland, Oregon, and Washington, D.C. in recent months. A statement said the review will include “examining the training and instruction that was provided to the DoJ law enforcement personnel; compliance with applicable identification requirements, rules of engagement, and legal authorities; and adherence to DoJ policies regarding the use of less-lethal munitions, chemical agents, and other uses of force.”
  • Michael Cohen—the president’s former attorney who was convicted in 2018 for lying to Congress and violating campaign finance laws—will be released from federal prison this afternoon. Cohen had been furloughed due to the coronavirus, but was rearrested and placed in solitary confinement after federal authorities claimed he refused to sign a home confinement agreement that would have prevented him from publishing his memoir during the rest of his sentence. A Manhattan judge deemed the fed’s actions “retaliatory,” but a spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons called that finding “patently false.”

The Return of Professional Sports

For millions of Americans—your Morning Dispatchers included—the gravity of the COVID-19 pandemic first set in when Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert tested positive for the virus, leading the NBA to announce it was suspending its season until further notice. That same night, Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson announced they had tested positive , and President Trump addressed the nation, announcing a ban on all travel from Europe. Believe it or not, that was 135 days ago, or nearly 40 percent of a year.

In the two days following that fateful March 11, the NCAA canceled all remaining winter sports tournaments, including men’s and women’s basketball tournaments, Major League Baseball cut spring training short and put the season on hold, and the National Hockey League and XFL both suspended their seasons indefinitely. As we wrote at the time, “If it wasn’t clear before, it sure is now: Life is going to be significantly disrupted for all of us for several weeks, if not months.”

It’s been months. American sports fans watched longingly as leagues around the world—Bundesliga, the Korean Baseball OrganizationAustralian Super RugbyLa Liga—began returning to play, while our coronavirus reality prevented us from doing the same.

The Polls Are Bad for Trump. Are They to Be Believed?

Considering the time warp we’ve been stuck in since March, it may come as a surprise for some to learn that the 2020 election is just 102 days away—and Republicans have a lot of ground to make back up if they hope to hold much power in Washington once that time is up.

At the top of the ticket, President Trump still trails Joe Biden by a wide margin, with the two candidates’ nearly nine-point gap in the RealClearPolitics polling average representing Biden’s biggest lead since he became the Democrats’ presumptive nominee. The news is equally grim for Trump when you zero in on the swing state numbers: New Fox News polls released yesterday show Biden up 11 points in Pennsylvania, 13 points in Minnesota, and nine points in Michigan. A new Quinnipiac poll has Biden up 13 in Florida. Even Rasmussen Reports—an outlier that tends to sample its polls in a manner far more favorable to the president than any other major pollster—has polls out this week showing Trump trailing Biden in Ohio and Pennsylvania by four and five points respectively.

There’s a lot of game left to be played, of course. One truism of the last few years has been that you can’t go wrong betting the media and, by extension, voters will have forgotten the latest explosive controversy by the time the next one rolls around.

We’re Blushing

In an important and incisive column in today’s New York Times, David Brooks looks at the corrosive culture of intellectual exclusion and segregation in America. “For many on the right the purpose of thinking changed. Thinking was no longer for understanding. Thinking was for belonging. Right-wing talk radio is the endless repetition off familiar mantras to reassure listeners that they are all on the same team. Thinking was for conquest: Those liberals think they’re better than us, but we own the libs.” On the left, many progressives are blindsided by reality, increasingly fragile and conformist. “Writers are now expected to write as a representative of a group, in order to affirm the self-esteem of the group. Predictability is the point.” Brooks points to Substack—the terrific platform we use to publish and distribute these newsletters—as part of a “a growing rebellion against groupthink and exclusion.” And he has some very generous words for the work of The Dispatch, too. (Thank you, David.)

Worth Your Time

  • Daniel Krauthammer—Charles’s son—explains why it matters to him that baseball is back in this essay for the Washington Post. “More than any other sport, baseball is youth, an exercise in memory,” Krauthammer quotes his father as saying. “It connects us to those whose love we felt so strongly when we first learned the game. His memories were with his brother. Mine are with him. He taught me to bat in our backyard. He was there at every Little League practice. And he took me to more Major League ballgames than I can recount.”
  • Thinkers and politicians on the right have had plenty to say about the left’s cancel culture tactics, but, as AEI’s Brent Orrell writes for The Bulwark, the right has a bit of a cancel culture problem as well.

Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • In yesterday’s French Press (🔒), David urges conservative voters not to make Republican senators and representatives pay for the incompetence of their president. Republicans should be judged on their merits, he argues, and support for Trump alone should not disqualify them from holding public office—particularly as we stare down the possibility of a unified Democratic president, Senate, and House. “If you think it’s obvious what [Republican senators] should have done, how many readers have faced such a choice: take a tough stand and likely lose your life’s work or muddle through and hope to emerge on the other side with your dignity and conscience intact?”
  • This week, Republican members of the House Freedom Caucus launched a show of force against Rep. Liz Cheney, and criticized her for not being sufficiently loyal to the president. Our Dispatch Podcast hosts break down why this happened and what it means for the future of the GOP.
  • What’s the latest scoop on Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen? Our Advisory Opinionshosts have some answers. Yesterday’s episode also features David and Sarah discussing the alleged Trump stormtroopers in Portland and a defamation lawsuit against MSNBC commentator Joy Reid.
  • On the site, Danielle Pletka previews what Joe Biden’s foreign policy would look like and suggests that it might not actually be that different from Donald Trump’s.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Sarah Isgur (@whignewtons), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), Nate Hochman (@njhochman), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

Photograph Alex Trautwig/MLB Photos/Getty Images.