Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Friday August 14, 2020
THE DAILY SIGNAL
Aug 14, 2020
Happy Friday from Washington, which Vice President Mike Pence left behind yesterday for a trip to Iowa to help Heritage Action take on the left with a new grassroots campaign called Fight for America. Rachel del Guidice and Fred Lucas report. On the podcast, four education watchers alert parents to a radical expansion of sex ed in public schools. Plus: the problem with President Trump’s executive action on jobless benefits, and the escalating effort by some to limit free speech. Eighty-five years ago today, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs into law the Social Security Act, which initially guarantees an income for the unemployed as well as retirees. Enjoy the weekend.
“It is remarkable to think [that] as liberal politicians are talking about dismantling the police department … we also see a rise in crime,” says Vice President Mike Pence.
A recent Trump memorandum doesn’t invent legislative policy out of thin air the way President Obama did with his memorandum creating the amnesty programs.
Progressive activists seek to expand sex education in schools across America to include topics such as sexual orientation and gender identity. Their proposed curriculum also promotes abortion.
In Jefferson City, Tennessee, a good Samaritan put a quick end to a violent assault outside a fast food restaurant, drawing his firearm on a man who was strangling a woman and slamming her to the ground.
Today’s “anti-racists” say racism means “any policy with an effect that is disproportionate.” So even a tax deduction is racist because on average, whites deduct more than blacks.
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Xi Jinping, the leader of the Chinese Communist Party, allegedly sent a veiled message in a recent manifesto suggesting he intends to be leader for life.
CDC: More than One in Four Young Adults Seriously Considered Suicide in Past Month
Attributed directly to the pandemic and “the impact of physical distancing and stay-at-home orders” (CDC). Another story notes “The data also flags a surge of anxiety and substance abuse, with more than 40 percent of those surveyed saying they experienced a mental or behavioral health condition connected to the Covid-19 emergency” (Politico). From Josh Kraushaar: Stunning figure — one that underscores concerns that shutdowns can create their own health crises (Twitter). From Sarah Lee: The irony of a population of young people being driven to consider ending their lives because they’ve been asked to hide away from a virus that is unlikely to kill them is almost too much to comprehend. Yet that is apparently part of what the nation must grapple with even as debate continues to rage over whether children should return to schools, college-age athletes are told to abandon their dreams and leave the field, and one candidate for president suggest a nation-wide mask mandate should be in effect for the next three months (Red State). Biden and Harris seek to make things worse (Twitter).
2.
Trump Announces Historic Peace Agreement Between Israel and UAE
From the story: President Trump’s Mideast strategy has been to strongly back Israel, support the Gulf monarchies, and press back hard against Iranian imperialism. His liberal critics insisted this would lead to catastrophe that never came, and on Thursday it delivered a diplomatic achievement: The United Arab Emirates and Israel agreed to normalize relations, making the UAE the first Arab League country to recognize the Jewish state in 20 years (WSJ). Even Biden praised the deal (Washington Examiner). And many said moving the embassy to Jerusalem would make this impossible (Twitter). From Seth Mandel: Jared Kushner ran circles–I mean he just absolutely lapped these ppl–around the Mideast hands messing up US policy in the region for decades. Same goes for Amb Friedman. That is no longer up for debate. The only question is whether those who criticized them will show humility (Twitter). A flashback to Harvard professor Nicholas Burns: If Pres. Trump moves our embassy to Jerusalem, it will be a historic mistake. All of his predecessors understood what it would cost the U.S. in influence/ credibity with the Palestinians+Arab World (Twitter).
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3.
Department of Justice Rules Yale Discriminates Against Asians
From the story: The agency said a two-year investigation into the Ivy League school found that Asian and white applicants have “one-tenth to one-fourth” the chance of being admitted as African American applicants with the same credentials (NY Post). A poll from early last year showed 73 percent of Americans believe race should not be a factor in college admissions. This was also true of 62 percent of blacks (Pew Research). Yale has announced they will continue to break the law (Twitter).
4.
Barr: Development in Russia Investigation Coming Today
From the story: Barr said that the development would not be “earth-shattering,” but would be “an indication that things are moving along at the proper pace as dictated by the facts in this investigation” (Fox News). From Mollie Hemingway: One big scandal, among so many in Russia collusion hoax that many media were co-conspirators in, was that the FBI hid that they knew the conspiracy theory was false — indeed, intimated otherwise! — in the key months before the 2018 elections. Good to get truth out ASAP (Twitter).
5.
Seattle Mob Goes Through Neighborhoods Threatening Residents
Caution, the words are vulgar (Twitter). One group was actually chanting “Who do we protect? Black criminals!” (Twitter). The mayor of Seattle is trying to get the state supreme court to stop a recall effort (Daily Caller).
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6.
Soccer Fans Boo as Teams Take a Knee During Anthem
With one soccer player complaining “they don’t understand what kneeling means.” The problem is, the fans do understand. And that’s why they boo (NY Post). From Mark Davis: More of this, please. Athletes in every sport must be shown how forgettable they will quickly become if they insist on defiling a patriotic tradition with distracting gestures of activism (Twitter).
7.
Five-Year-Old Assassinated While Riding His Bike
The media has completely ignored the story because the races aren’t right.
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There are four days left before primary voters determine who will make the November ballot; Florida Politics is working to keep you, our loyal readers, updated on the most consequential contests in the state.
In some corners, there’s a dearth of exciting primaries, with clear front-runners everywhere — from congressional races at the top of the ticket to commission seats at the bottom.
But in one place — Broward County — a lack of excitement couldn’t be further from the truth.
A new survey from Public Policy Polling shows nearly every race on the Democratic primary ballot will be decided by a few points at most.
The race to succeed longtime State Attorney David Satz is a (legit) four-way contest with Jim Kimok at 13% and Teresa Fanning-Williams, Sarahnell Murphy and Joshua David Rydell each tied at 10%. The rest of the pack is in the low single digits, though with 38% of Democrats undecided it wouldn’t be impossible for the race to break late in favor of one or the other.
Of all Broward County races, Clerk of Court Brenda Forman has the clearest lead.
The Sheriff race — perhaps the most-watched county election in the state — shows ousted former Sheriff Scott Israel just three points behind his successor, Sheriff Gregory Tony. Four other candidates are siphoning votes with one in six still undecided.
In the Broward Supervisor of Elections race, nearly two-fifths have yet to make up their minds, and as for State Attorney, that race features four candidates in the low double digits a with the leader, Chad Klitzman, holding an inside-the-margin lead.
About the only contest with a clear leader is Clerk of Court, where incumbent Brenda Forman is the pick by one in three voters, while her two competitors, Paul Backman and Mark Speiser, each poll at sub-20%.
Situational awareness
—@MattMcBradley: If this works out it will be a huge diplomatic breakthrough. The #UAE will become the first Gulf Arab country to normalize relations with #Israel and the first Arab country since #Jordan recognized #Israel in 1994.
—@vmsalama: Big deal, yes. But as a longtime UAE resident, I assure you this was a long time coming and UAE has been largely tolerant of Israel. As far back as 2008, I remember attending conferences in Dubai full of Israeli nationals who were granted exceptions to visit for 1 reason or another.
—@AmandaACarpenter: Someone will ask if he’s a [Kamala] Harris birther and he’ll deny any responsibility by saying something like “Oh! That’s what other people are saying. They have questions. Don’t you think people should be able to ask questions?” And then, everyone is talking about it.
—@LearyReports: The things being said about Harris and eligibility were said about [Marco] Rubio and [Ted] Cruz in 2016 and it was roundly dismissed, except on the fringe.
—@RonaldKlain: I’m just going to put this out there: ballots are not the only thing the Post Office delivers, and if you mess up the USPS, you are messing up seniors getting their medicines by mail; small businesses shipping their products; contractors who still get paid by check.
—@Weinsteinlaw: Not funding the post office to steal the election is treason.
—@RealJamesWoods: The former press flack for Kamala Harris has been hired by Twitter to purge conservative thought and followers for the platform. She’s going to rip through this campaign the way she ripped through WillieBrown’s marriage. Screw anybody in her way. Literally.
—@DaveJorgenson: I’m so tired of explaining to people that journalists need money to live and that’s why there’s a paywall
—@TomPelissero: The #Seahawks cut rookie CB Kemah Siverand this week after he was caught on video trying to sneak a female visitor into the team hotel, per sources. Clear message on the responsibility everyone has in the NFL’s COVID-19 world: Put the team at risk, suffer the consequences.
Days until
Florida primaries for 2020 state legislative/congressional races — 4; Florida Bar exams begin online (rescheduled) — 5; Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee begins — 5; Regal Cinemas reopen in U.S. — 7; Indy 500 rescheduled — 9; Republican National Convention begins in Charlotte — 10; NBA draft lottery — 11; Rev. Al Sharpton’s D.C. March — 15; U.S. Open begins — 17; Christopher Nolan‘s “Tenet” rescheduled premiere in U.S. — 20; Rescheduled running of the Kentucky Derby — 22; Rescheduled date for French Open — 37; First presidential debate in Indiana — 46; “Wonder Woman” premieres — 49; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 50; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 53; First vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 54; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 59; Second presidential debate scheduled at Miami — 62; NBA draft — 63; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 63; NBA free agency — 66; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 67; Third presidential debate at Belmont — 69; 2020 General Election — 81; “Black Widow” premieres — 85; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 87; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 98; “No Time to Die” premieres — 98; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 111; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 177; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 189; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 322; New start date for 2021 Olympics — 343; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 350; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 448; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 546; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 588; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 630; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 783.
Countdown to primary 1
“It’s the GOP vs. Donald Trump Republicans in primary for Florida’s 13th Congressional District” via Steve Contorno of the Tampa Bay Times — On one side is Amanda Makki, who already knows her way around Washington. She began her career on the Hill as a Congressional staffer before finding success as a lobbyist. Makki, 42, has the backing of top House Republicans, including Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy and his No. 2, Minority Whip Steve Scalise. On the other side is Anna Paulina Luna, a U.S. Air Force veteran-turned-conservative media personality who introduced herself to District 13 voters by firing a military-style weapon at targets and declaring in a video, “I’m sure as hell not a politician.” Endorsing Luna, 31, is U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz, one of Trump’s closest allies in Congress.
“Tea Party Express gets on the Byron Donalds train” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The Tea Party Express just hopped on the Donalds train. The conservative group endorsed the Naples Republican days out from a hotly contested Republican primary in Florida’s 19th Congressional District. “Byron Donalds is precisely the successful businessman and Tea Party leader we need in Washington fighting to drain the swamp and helping President Trump advance his conservative agenda,” said Tea Party Express Co-Founder Sal Russo. Billed as the largest Tea Party PAC, organizers stressed a long history with Donalds. Donalds later won election to the Florida Legislature in 2016 and was reelected in 2018. He decided this year to forgo a third term and run for the open Congressional seat. Long tied to the conservative movement, many Florida leaders within the Tea Party Express network praised Donalds.
“Outside spending floods CD 19 airwaves, mailboxes — mostly helping Donalds” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A look at campaign coffers tells only part of the story of who has the resources to win in Florida’s 19th Congressional District, but outside spending over the last few days flooded into Southwest Florida. Much of the outside money went to either boost Donalds or tear down his opponents. One exception was Honesty America. The Super PAC, which has ties to fast food mogul Casey Askar’s campaign, pumped another $13,268 into media placements that will target Donalds. The committee has put up ads against several candidates in the race, including William Figlesthaler and Dane Eagle. But the group may ultimately focus on Donalds. On Tuesday, the Conservative Outsider PAC reported several expenditures. That includes a $142,142 television ad and $9,220 on a mail piece, both hitting Eagle. That group is financially tied to Club for Growth, which has endorsed Donalds in the race. The Conservative Outsider PAC last month received a $250,000 donation from the Protect Freedom PAC, which just received $150,000 from Club For Growth Action in May on top of a $1.2 million donation in January.
“Default granted in Naples congressional candidate’s defamation lawsuit” via Daven Patel of the Naples Daily News — The Collier County Clerk of Court has sided with congressional candidate Askar in his lawsuit against a man he says falsely accused him of misrepresenting his education. The clerk issued a default against Andrew Duskin last week after he failed to respond in a timely fashion to a defamation lawsuit the Naples businessman filed last month. Askar’s attorney TonyLawhon said the default means that Askar has won the liability portion of the suit and can now seek a judgment for damages, including injunctive relief “that would require Duskin to stop spreading his false claims.”
Countdown to primary 2
“Mystery GOP-connected group in Senate race shuts down after Democrats file election complaint” via Steven Lemongello of the Orlando Sentinel — The mysterious GOP-connected “progressive” group targeting the Democratic primary front-runner in a key state Senate race shut itself down sometime in the last week after Democrats filed an elections complaint. The group targeted Democratic front-runner Patricia Sigman, using progressive-sounding language and endorsing one of her opponents, Rick Ashby, as the “true progressive,” though he said he had never heard of it. The group’s alleged violations “deprive the public of the ability to know ‘who gave it and who got it,’” according to the complaint, filed with the Florida Election Commission. Floridians for Equality and Justice registered with the state on July 21 but had already created a website on June 2, emailed out questionnaires on June 24 and sent out mailers beginning July 18, according to the complaint.
Patricia Sigman is under attack by a mysterious GOP-linked ‘progressive’ group.
“Shevrin Jones, Javier Fernández for the Florida Senate” via the Miami Herald Editorial Board — Getting anything done as a member of the minority Democratic Party in Tallahassee is tricky, but Jones has managed to do it well. He pushed for police in Florida to wear body cameras. Touched by the case of a female inmate who had a baby alone in a cell, he has called for “more dignity” for female inmates. He supports the full legalization of marijuana and a ban on assault weapons. On the coronavirus front, Jones says “the state reopened too soon.” It became personal when he contracted the virus. Jones, the first openly gay African American elected to the Florida Legislature, said he decided to donate his antibody-rich blood after he recovered.
“Mysterious robocall falsely claims Barack Obama is endorsing SD 35 candidate Daphne Campbell” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Just days ahead of the Aug. 18 primary, a robocall has emerged falsely claiming Obama has endorsed Senate District 35 candidate Campbell. Campbell, a former Senator who was ousted in 2018 from her District 38 seat, is one of six Democrats competing in the contest. Obama has not endorsed anyone in that six-person field. Yet the robocall stitches together a prerecorded script from Obama and splices in Campbell’s name where appropriate. In the script, Campbell’s name is read by a female voice clearly distinct from Obama’s. We’ve inserted her name in brackets where it appears in the script to make clear Obama does not actually speak her name.
Daphne Campbell gets supported by a suspicious robocall.
“‘Trump Team’ report cards rankles Southwest Florida pols” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — The appearance of report cards made to look like grades from Trump’s campaign has Southwest Florida politics agitated. Fliers showing the candidate grades from Team Trump 2020 Florida angered campaigns denoted with F grades. The concern isn’t the accusation of lack of loyalty to the President; that’s become the universal vernacular of primary season in a presidential election year. Rather, it’s the electioneering language from a group not registered as a political committee in the state of Florida. And it implies a relationship with Trump that seems not to exist. An example of the fliers circulating around Cape Coral shows grades in local House and Senate races. In House District 77, it gives Mike Giallombardo an A and Bryan Blackwell an “F.” In Senate District 27, it gives Ray Rodrigues an A and Heather Fitzenhagen an “F.” But what those grades are based upon is unclear.
“Democrat says she won Florida House seat after Jamie Grant’s resignation” via William March of the Tampa Bay Times — Jessica Harrington, Democratic candidate for the District 64 state House seat, said she intends to file a state Ethics Commission complaint against Grant, which she said could result in her being declared winner of the seat. Harrington said Grant, who sold his Carrollwood home in September, didn’t file to run for the office with his residential address as the law requires and improperly had his mail-in primary ballot sent to the address of his district office. Grant has denied the basis of Harrington’s accusations. He abruptly announced this week that he’s withdrawing from his reelection campaign to take a state administrative post.
“Literally faking the news: Michael Weinstein commits political version of mail fraud with latest deceit” via Peter Schorsch of Florida Politics — A campaign mailer sent to voters by Weinstein falsely attributes a quote that came out of his own mouth to the Palm Beach Post. Quoting oneself and attributing it to a respected newspaper violates every single standard of political (and ethical) practice. While we don’t want to give additional airtime to Weinstein’s false and bizarre claim that primary opponent Kelly Skidmore operates “straight out of Donald Trump’s playbook” — it is important context to share: Weinstein himself said this about Skidmore; the Palm Beach Post (who endorsed Skidmore!) did not. Yet that’s how his mailer reads. This is a clear attempt to confuse voters, and signals the mindset of a candidate who is far too comfortable walking a thin ethical line.
“In House Democratic primary, Broward incumbent faces competition from a progressive challenger” via Jessica Bakeman of WLRN — Elijah Manley is running to represent the community that raised him in the Florida House of Representatives. If elected, he’d be one of the youngest members ever in the Legislature and only the second out gay Black member. Manley is seeking to oust Rep. Bobby DuBose, a Black Democratic incumbent and incoming co-leader of the chamber’s minority caucus. After four years on the Fort Lauderdale City Commission and now six in the Legislature, DuBose is an established candidate who is highly respected among his colleagues. DuBose’s slate of major endorsements would suggest he has won the trust of his community, as well: teachers, firefighters, public employee unions, local clergy, the Sierra Club, the Sun-Sentinel editorial board.
Down ballot
“‘Unprecedented’ power. Miami’s political families seek office in August election.” Via David Smiley of the Miami Herald — The names on the Aug. 18 ballot need little introduction. [Francis] Suarez. [Keon] Hardemon. [Bruno] Barreiro. [Raquel] Regalado. [Alez] Diaz de la Portilla. This summer, Miami’s political dynasties — families that for decades have sought and held office from Dinner Key to Washington, D.C. — are again jockeying for power. Some are attempting to win their way back from voter-imposed exile. Others are hoping to expand their influence. And in a new twist that may represent the apex of Miami’s Game of Thrones, a father and son are hoping to become perhaps the most powerful political duo in South Florida history by stamping one surname on two of the top offices in the county.
Alex Penelas racks up more endorsements as he heads to the primary.
“LGBTQ group revokes endorsement of Miami School Board incumbent for anti-trans stance” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — In a rare move, SAVE Dade, a group devoted to protecting lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer people against discrimination, has revoked its endorsement of a Miami-Dade County School Board member seeking reelection. SAVE Dade executive director Orlando Gonzales said District 7 incumbent Lubby Navarro asked the group to remove her from their list of endorsed candidates. Gonzales said Navarro informed them that she had received and accepted an endorsement from the Miami-based Christian Family Coalition Florida, which calls itself “pro-family” on its website. In a voter guide posted on the coalition’s website, Navarro is marked as a “highly qualified” candidate who supports prohibiting “biological boys in girls’ bathrooms and locker rooms.”
“Hillsborough Sheriff’s employee lodges ethics complaint against candidate Charles Boswell” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — A Hillsborough County Sheriff employee is accusing Boswell, a candidate for Sheriff, of voter intimidation and a bevy of other voting violations. Boswell is running against incumbent Sheriff Chad Chronister in the GOP primary next week. Edward Raburn filed an ethics complaint with the Florida Elections Commission outlining a verbal confrontation between himself and Boswell on Aug. 5 at approximately 2:50 p.m. In the complaint obtained by Florida Politics, Raburn claims he was “standing in the parking lot of the Quintilla Greer Bruton Memorial Library” working as a campaign volunteer for Chronister’s campaign, wearing a Chronister campaign T-shirt and holding a “Chad Chronister for Sheriff” campaign sign. Raburn said the location is an early voting site and was open to polling at the time of the altercation.
“Campaign rivals accuse Orange Sheriff John Mina of silence on 1999 shooting” via Grace Toohey of the Orlando Sentinel — Two rival candidates of Mina questioned his commitment to transparency after the mother of a 17-year-old killed by Mina in a 1999 shooting spoke out about her son’s death. The Appeal, a policy-focused nonprofit journalism organization, published an article Wednesday in which Joseph Dungee’s mother said Mina has never spoken to her about the shooting, and the Orlando Police Department never gave her details about what happened. In a statement provided to the Orlando Sentinel, Mina denied that he had been silent about the shooting. Rather, he said he has “over the years, … talked about this case and understanding what it’s like to make these kinds of split-second decisions.”
“Investigators’ PAC launches attack ads against Rick Singh in Orange County” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — A political action committee created by Miami-based investigators Joe Carrillo and Rick Yabor has entered the Orange County Property Appraiser’s election starting with a blistering television commercial attacking Singh ahead of Tuesday’s primary election. One 30-second commercial from the Florida Public Corruption Task Force PAC, playing on Orlando-market television, opens appearing as if it is an attack ad against Trump. It displays a silhouette profile that looks like Trump while a narrator describes allegations involving sexual harassment, a phony charity, orders for subordinates to falsify or destroy documents, and lavish trips taken at taxpayers’ expense. And then the commercial takes a twist and declares the allegations are about Singh, whose picture replaces the profile.
The Florida Public Corruption Task Force PAC is going full throttle against Orange County Property Appraiser Rick Singh.
“Charter school groups behind ads attacking Karen Castor Dentel in Orange school board race” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida’s leading charter school companies have helped pay for political ads attacking Castor Dentel as she seeks reelection to the Orange County School Board. The glossy political mailers, one calling the former elementary school teacher “public enemy #1,″ were sent to voters in Castor Dentel’s district 6, which stretches from Pine Hills to Dover Shores and includes Audubon Park, Baldwin Park, College Park, Maitland and Thornton Park. The mailers were from a new group called Florida Education News, which through early August received $175,000 from a political action committee called Conservatives in Action. That committee’s biggest contributors, accounting for more than half of its donations, were from charter school management companies and charter school developers in Florida, records from the Florida Division of Elections and the Internal Revenue Service show.
“After campaign signs are removed, tempers flare at early voting site in North Port” via Timothy Fanning of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Nerves were so frayed in the parking lot at the early voting site at Biscayne Plaza in North Port on Monday that those trying to court voters before they went to the polls got into a shouting match so heated that the police were called. The nature of the argument: Someone had removed political signs from someone else’s vehicle, according to North Port Police Department records. Video reviewed by officers shows Mark Frandsen, the former president of the North Port Republican Club, and Conni Brunni, a community activist and volunteer for Sarasota County District 5 candidate Ron Cutsinger’s campaign, shouting and standing within inches of each other’s faces beneath the Republican Party of Sarasota County’s red canopy tent.
2020
“Joe Biden, appealing to Governors, calls for nationwide mask mandates to fight the virus.” via The New York Times — Biden called on Thursday for governors to require mask-wearing in their states, saying that he believed that all Americans should wear face coverings to fight the spread of the virus. “Every single American should be wearing a mask when they’re outside for the next three months at a minimum,” said Biden, the presumptive presidential candidate for the Democrats. The remarks came after Biden and 00, the presumptive vice-presidential nominee, met with public health officials in Delaware for a briefing on the virus, yet another signal of their intention to make the pandemic a major part of their effort to unseat Trump.
Joe Biden is calling on Governors to help enact a national mask mandate.
“The epic blandness of the Biden campaign” via John F. Harris of POLITICO — Back in early 2019, a group of about 15 campaign journalists took part in an informal survey of who they expected to be the Democratic presidential nominee. These reporters and editors, I happen to know, are all smart and well-connected. Unfortunately, the survey results cannot be offered as an exhibit for the case. The person who received the most predictions as the eventual nominee was Beto O’Rourke. The person who came in a close second was Harris. Biden was predicted by zero respondents. The survey is an artifact of the past that illuminates two important points about the present.
“Kamala Harris could help Biden with women, young voters, maybe some Republicans too” via Chris Kahn of Reuters — Nearly nine out of 10 Democrats approve of Harris as their party’s vice presidential nominee, and she is more popular than Biden among women, young voters and some Republicans, according to a poll. The Aug. 11-12 public opinion survey also found that 60% of Americans, including 87% of Democrats and 37% of Republicans, considered the selection of Harris — the first Black woman and Asian American nominated for vice presidency — to be a “major milestone” for the United States. The poll showed Biden’s lead over Trump was effectively unchanged after he announced his running mate choice, increasing by 1 percentage point among all Americans to an 8-point advantage.
“‘Forgotten voting blocs.’ Florida’s Black Caribbean voters identify with Harris” via David Smiley of the Miami Herald — If the Biden-Harris ticket wins this November, Harris, a first-generation American born to a mother from India and father from Jamaica, would also be the first vice president of Caribbean descent, a fact not lost on hundreds of thousands of immigrants living in the nation’s largest swing state. Harris’ place on the Democratic ticket is drawing praise from Florida’s Black community — an important segment of the Democratic electorate in the state. The Biden campaign has also announced that Harris’ chief of staff is Karine Jean-Pierre, a well-known Haitian-American political organizer.
“Trump says he’s blocking Postal Service funding because Democrats want to expand mail-in voting during pandemic” via Felicia Sonmez and Jacob Bogage of The Washington Post — Trump said Thursday that he does not want to fund the U.S. Postal Service because Democrats are seeking to expand mail-in voting during the coronavirus pandemic, making explicit the reason he has declined to approve $25 billion in emergency funding for the cash-strapped agency. Trump has railed against mail-in balloting for months, and at a White House briefing Wednesday, he argued without evidence that USPS’s enlarged role in the November election would perpetuate “one of the greatest frauds in history.” During the Wednesday briefing, Trump told reporters he would not approve the $25 billion in emergency funding for the Postal Service, or $3.5 billion in supplemental funding for election resources, citing prohibitively high costs.
Donald Trump has a clear agenda in blocking funds for the Postal Service.
“Trump allies plan ‘largest effort ever undertaken to mobilize the Jewish vote’” via David Smiley of the Miami Herald — Boasting that they are about to embark on “the largest, most sophisticated, most targeted state-of-the-art campaign” in history, leaders of a conservative Jewish advocacy organization announced Thursday that they plan to spend up to $10 million this fall in Florida and other swing states on behalf of Trump. Republican Jewish Coalition leaders said they have been gathering data about Jewish voters across the country in preparation for a targeted campaign to advertise Trump’s successes in the U.S. and the Middle East. At least $1 million will be spent on TV, and more than $1 million on digital ads and mailers, they said. Jewish voters heavily lean Democratic. But in recent years, Republican presidential candidates have performed better among Jewish voters.
“Ohio State football is canceled. Will Trump take the hit?” via Reid Epstein and Nick Corasaniti of The New York Times — The Big Ten Conference’s decision to cancel its football season reverberated this week across Ohio, where the Buckeyes’ football program looms larger than that of any of the state’s major league sports franchises. A pillar of autumn Saturdays will be missing. Dennis Kuchta, a 69-year-old retiree, whose son-in-law played on the offensive line for the Buckeyes, and others in this football-mad corner of the state were looking for someone to blame. “Trump just blew it,” Kuchta said.
“Facebook beefs up anti-misinfo efforts ahead of U.S. election” via Barbara Ortutay of The Associated Press — Beginning Thursday, U.S. Facebook users who post about voting may start seeing an addendum to their messages — labels directing readers to authoritative information about the upcoming presidential election. It’s the social network’s latest step to combat election-related misinformation on its platform as the Nov. 3 election nears — one in which many voters may be submitting ballots by mail for the first time. Facebook began adding similar links to posts about in-person and mail-in balloting by federal politicians, including Trump, in July. These labels will link to a new voter information hub similar to the one about COVID-19 that Facebook says has been seen by billions of users around the world.
Corona Florida
“Coronavirus: How COVID-19 fuels excess weekly deaths in Florida” via Jim Waymer of Florida Today — Due mostly to COVID-19, the 5,171 estimated deaths in Florida during the week ending July 18 was the highest death toll in the state in almost four years, about a third higher than would be expected, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC tracks weekly excess deaths nationwide to provide information about the death burden potentially related to the COVID-19 pandemic, including deaths directly or indirectly attributed to COVID-19. The federal agency defines excess deaths as the difference between the observed deaths in a specific time period and expected deaths in the same period.
COVID-19 is helping fuel Florida’s excess death count. The state recently had the highest death rate toll in almost 4 years. Image via AP.
“Florida adds 149 coronavirus deaths, more than 6,000 cases Thursday” via Romy Ellenbogen of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida added 149 new coronavirus deaths Thursday, bringing the total recorded since the pandemic began to 9,047 people, according to the Florida Department of Health. The state also added 6,236 new infections. Since the first coronavirus patient was identified in Florida in March, the state has recorded 557,137 cases. It’s unclear how many have recovered because the Florida Department of Health doesn’t release that information. Thursday’s announced deaths brought the weekly death average up to 168 people dead per day. Hospital admissions due to COVID-19 also increased by 598. The Tampa Bay area added 745 coronavirus cases and 29 deaths Thursday.
“Despite rising caseloads and deaths, Ron DeSantis claims there are ‘positive trends’” via John Kennedy of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — Florida added another 6,236 cases of COVID-19 Thursday, along with 148 more deaths, even as DeSantis continued his weekslong effort to steer attention toward any small gain the state makes. Holding a roundtable at the state Capitol, DeSantis hailed what he called “positive trends” among caseloads, hospitalizations and infection rates, even though the state’s own data seems to suggest few signs for celebration. Thursday’s toll brought the total number of Florida COVID-19 cases to 557,132, with 8,913 Florida residents dying of the disease since March.
“DeSantis defends less coronavirus testing, but seeks ‘consequences’ for delays” via Gray Rohrer and Tiffini Theisen of the Orlando Sentinel — DeSantis on Thursday explained the slowdown of coronavirus testing in Florida by saying fewer people are coming in to be checked out for COVID-19. He also said labs that are late in reporting results should face “consequences,’’ but he didn’t elaborate on what those should be. “I think part of the reason why some of our sites aren’t doing as much is because people aren’t going as much as they used to. If you look at the Orange County Convention Center, at the beginning of July, we were having 2,000 people show up to get PCR tested there; now 700 are going,” he said. Florida’s testing rate has fallen recently, from a high of 528,793 for the week ending July 12 to 424,256 for the week ending on Aug. 2, a nearly 20% drop.
Back to school?
“Ron DeSantis clarifies comparing schools reopening to Osama bin Laden raid” via Antonio Fins of The Palm Beach Post — DeSantis on Thursday clarified comparing the raid that killed bin Laden to the reopening of schools in Florida. Asked about his use of the 2011 Navy SEAL raid as an analogy, DeSantis stressed that the point was not about the level of danger. “It was more about inspiration and about figuring way to get it done than anything about comparing the danger to that,” DeSantis said during a roundtable in Tallahassee. “Obviously that’s a much different situation.” DeSantis made the initial comparison in an address to Florida residents Wednesday evening by citing what the superintendent of a Treasure Coast school district had told him about the start of the school year amid the ongoing threat of coronavirus infections.
Ron DeSantis had to clarify what he meant when he referred to returning to schools like SEAL Teams in the hunt for Osama bin Laden. Image via Colin Hackley.
“‘Impossible’: School boards are at heart of reopening debate” via Jeffrey Collins of The Associated Press — Helena Miller listened to teachers, terrified to reenter classrooms, and parents, exhausted from trying to make virtual learning work at home. She heard from school officials who spent hundreds of hours on thousands of details — buses, classrooms, football, arts, special education. She spent countless nights, eyes wide-open, her mind wrestling over the safety and education of the 17,000 children she swore to protect. She thought of her own kids, two in high school, and one middle-schooler — the reasons she ran for Rock Hill’s school board six years ago. And she made the hardest decision of her life: a vote to reopen schools amid the coronavirus pandemic.
“Judge moving quickly on school reopening fight” via Dara Kam of the News Service of Florida — A Leon County circuit judge fast-tracked lawsuits challenging Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran’s mandate that districts reopen brick-and-mortar schools this month. Corcoran’s emergency order requires schools outside of South Florida to reopen five days a week in August and offer “the full panoply of services” to students and families, unless state and local health officials say otherwise. The Florida Education Association teachers’ union filed a lawsuit challenging the order, alleging that the directive violates the state Constitution, which guarantees Floridians the right to “safe” and “secure” public schools. The Orange County teachers’ union filed a similar lawsuit.
“Some Duval teachers are prioritizing drafting wills along with lesson plans. One even penned her own obit.” via Emily Bloch of The Florida Times-Union — When Whitney Reddick posted her own obituary on Facebook, she didn’t intend for it to go viral. The Jacksonville special education teacher made national headlines over her summer vacation when her plea to Duval County Public Schools and state officials to keep public education virtual during the coronavirus pandemic was shared over and over. “It is crazy,” Reddick said. “I’m seeing my name in publications I’ve never even heard of. Hands down, this is not my first vocal stance, or the first activism that I’ve taken on the issue. So whenever it did take off, I was obviously humbled. I had no expectation of that whatsoever.” Reddick’s obituary of herself said things like “she left us while alone in isolation and on a ventilator at a Duval county hospital in Jacksonville, Florida” and that “even though she shouted from the rooftops … she succumbed to the ignorance of those in power [and] returned to work.” With the coronavirus pandemic still hitting local communities, teachers are being forced to think about a lot more than their lesson plans — they’re considering their own mortality.
“Hillsborough starting school with 1 week of online learning after state rejects 4-week plan” via Ryan Hughes of WFLA — Students in Hillsborough County will now just start the school year with one week of online learning instead of the originally-planned four weeks. A member of the school board for Hillsborough County Public Schools confirmed to WFLA Thursday that the state had rejected the district’s plan to start the school year with four weeks of online learning. The district now says it’s moving forward with just one week of online learning. As the plan stands now, the school will begin with eLearning on Aug. 24. Families who have opted to take part in traditional in-person learning will be able to send their kids back to brick-and-mortar school on Aug. 31. The plan the school board voted on last week would have meant no brick and mortar classes would be held for the first four weeks of the year.
“Palm Beach County students and teachers will have to wear masks when schools reopen” via Lois K. Solomon of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — When Palm Beach County school buildings reopen, students, teachers and all staff members will have to wear face coverings, the superintendent announced Wednesday. No date was set, but the School Board agreed at a special meeting that schools will invite students back one week after Palm Beach County enters Phase 2 of reopening from the coronavirus pandemic. The county is currently in Phase 1. Virtual learning begins for Palm Beach County’s students on Aug. 31. “When campuses reopen, students and staff will be required to wear facial coverings both at school and on the bus,” Superintendent Donald Fennoy told the board. The board held a special meeting to approve a revised reopening plan for the new school year.
Both students and teachers in Palm Beach County schools will have to wear masks when schools reopen. Image via AP.
“Palmetto High joins list of campuses with COVID-19 exposures. School begins Monday” via Giuseppe Sabella of the Bradenton Herald — Several employees at Palmetto High School have isolated for 14 days after they were exposed to COVID-19 on campus, according to an email from the school principal. “We were alerted today that we had a confirmed case of COVID-19 on our campus,” Principal Carl Auckerman said in a message to families on Wednesday evening. The school district and the Florida Department of Health in Manatee County launched an investigation, known as contact tracing, and found that “a number of school employees” had direct exposure to the infected person, the email continues.
“At least 80 Santa Rosa County teachers laid off, 80 reassigned due to low enrollment” via Annie Blanks of the NWD Daily News — At least 160 teachers in Santa Rosa County were either laid off or reassigned Wednesday, less than two weeks before the start of the new school year, due to declining student enrollment numbers amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Superintendent Tim Wyrosdick confirmed the layoffs to the News Journal on Thursday morning, saying “80-plus” teachers were moved from brick-and-mortar classrooms to virtual/remote positions and “80-plus” were let go completely. The layoffs come the week after the deadline for Santa Rosa County parents to indicate whether their children would return to brick-and-mortar school or choose an online school or remote learning option. About 82% of students said they’ll return to in-person learning this year, while 8% chose the online virtual school and 10% chose remote learning.
“FIU pushes back start of sports seasons” via the News Service of Florida staff reports — While DeSantis continues to lobby for colleges and high schools to move forward with their sports seasons, Florida International University said Thursday it will delay the start of intercollegiate sports until Sept. 16. “The health and well-being of our students, faculty and staff are our top priority,” university President Mark Rosenberg said in a statement. “With this in mind, and based on input from our FIU health care experts, the informed science surrounding COVID-19 and the current circumstances in our South Florida community, FIU will postpone all intercollegiate competitions through September 16. We are making this decision in an abundance of caution.” FIU is a member of Conference USA.
Corona local
“Miami is a proving ground for rapid COVID tests. Experts say results should be checked.” via Ben Conarck and Daniel Chang of the Miami Herald — At the peak of Florida’s July COVID-19 surge, state officials flooded Miami-Dade County’s state-run testing sites with rapid diagnostics designed to be used only on people with symptoms. The tests, which identify a protein on the virus called an “antigen,” are less sensitive than the tests more commonly used, called PCR tests, but antigen tests can produce results in minutes rather than days. Was the trade-off worth it? Florida health officials are still figuring it out, and Miami-Dade has become a proving ground for the tests. Jackson Health System, the county’s public hospital network, started using antigen tests on patients less than a week ago.
“South Florida hospitals seeing more children arriving with dangerous COVID-related illness” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — South Florida’s children’s hospitals are seeing more cases of a rare COVID-related illness that attacks children and teens. Ronald Ford, chief medical officer for Joe DiMaggio Children’s Hospital, said his hospital has treated 18 children with the rare multisystem inflammatory syndrome — seven of them since Aug. 1. Ford says he saw the increase coming when the state’s positive infection rate rose — and he expects more cases in the next few weeks. The syndrome tends to come on fast and attack children who were exposed to COVID-19 three to four weeks earlier. “Some arrive in shocklike states,” Ford said.
South Florida hospitals are seeing more children with symptoms that could be linked to COVID-19.
“Commissioner says local Democrats won’t stop him from tweeting about hydroxychloroquine” via Martin Vassolo of the Miami Herald — Even as a local Democratic Party official threatens to call for his removal from public office, Miami Beach Commissioner Ricky Arriola said he will not delete his Twitter account or stop sharing articles promoting the use of hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID-19. Arriola, a Democrat serving on a nonpartisan city commission, was criticized on social media last Friday for using his public Twitter page to share an opinion article, which called for the jailing of White House adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci for calling the antimalarial medication ineffective against the virus. Miami-Dade Democratic Party Chair Steve Simeonidis told the Miami Herald that he would support recalling the commissioner from office if he continues to promote “dangerous disinformation.”
“Family peddling coronavirus bleach ‘cure’ must pay for recall, judge rules” via Mario Ariza of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — A Florida church pastor and his three sons who peddled industrial bleach as a fake coronavirus “cure” have been permanently barred from distributing the product by a South Florida federal judge. Now, in addition to facing criminal charges for allegedly conspiring to sell the bleach as a false cure, the four men must bear the financial burden of recalling and destroying their purported miracle drug. The Genesis II Church of Health and Healing, based out of Bradenton, Florida, caught the attention of federal authorities back in March for advertising a mixture of bleach and fruit juice it claimed could cure COVID-19. There is no known cure for SARS-COV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.
“South Florida craft distilleries are sitting on hundreds of gallons of unsold hand sanitizer” via Phillip Valys of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — At ChainBridge Distillery in Oakland Park, Bela Nahori spends his days distilling fruit brandy, basil-infused vodka — and stressing out about the 500-gallon stockpile of hand sanitizer taking up space in the backroom. His distillery stopped making spirits and started pumping out much-needed hand sanitizer for the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. Nahori donated 5,000 gallons to front line workers and emergency responders, and sold tiny bottles to the public. By June, Nahori stopped, as demand for hand sanitizer plummeted and big brands like Purell returned to stores. He’s barely sold any since and doesn’t know what to do with the surplus of unsold disinfectant sitting in 55-gallon drums next to his copper still.
More local
“Hillsborough adds younger children to face mask rule” via C.T. Bowen of the Tampa Bay Times — More children must comply with Hillsborough County’s mandatory face mask rule, county leaders said Thursday. Hillsborough County commissioners, meeting for the second time as emergency managers, extended the county’s facial covering order, but reduced the number of people exempted. The order, requiring masks to be worn inside businesses if social distancing isn’t available, is now applicable to all children age 5 and older. The former Emergency Policy Group adopted the face mask rule June 22 and amended it a week later, at the suggestion of Temple Terrace acting Mayor Andy Ross, to excuse children younger than age 8 from complying. The commission disbanded that group last week and assumed control of the county’s coronavirus response. The order approved Thursday also will run concurrently with the county’s COVID-19 state of emergency, effectively eliminating the need for a weekly vote on the mask rule extension.
“Ocala City Council overrides Mayor’s face mask veto” via Carlos Medina of the Ocala StarBanner — With the 4-1 vote to override the veto, the ordinance went into effect immediately and will be valid for 60 days. Mayor Kent Guinn said he vetoed the measure because he feared it would increase demands on the Ocala Police Department, was largely unenforceable, and could foster confrontations between residents. He said calls related to the ordinance will fall well behind those for violent or property crimes. “We’ll try to comply as best we can with the mandate,” Guinn said. “It falls to the lowest of the lowest of the lowest of our priority calls.”
The Ocala City Council overruled Mayor Kent Guinn’s veto of a mask ordinance.
“Prison coronavirus outbreak takes toll on Baker County” via Drew Dixon of Florida Politics — The exponential jump in coronavirus cases in Baker County grew more intense this week as COVID-19 testing at a prison in the county showed massive increases in infections. The Baker County Corrections Institution recorded 561 positive tests for COVID-19, according to data released by the Florida Department of Corrections. In addition, 25 staff personnel at the facility tested positive. Some 639 people have been moved into medical quarantine at the prison, 15 are in security quarantine and six people are in medical isolation at the prison. The prison started COVID-19 testing about a week ago and now has a higher case count than the entirety of Baker County had when there were 429 cases countywide on Aug. 5. That figure jumped significantly Aug. 7 after the prison cases were added for a total of 630 infections. The prison took measures to isolate all inmates.
“Tallahassee bar suing state over business closures” via Karl Etters of the Tallahassee Democrat — A Leon County bar is one of the dozens in a proposed class action suit suing the state agency behind a statewide closure, saying it has resulted in a devastating loss of business. Just One More, a North Monroe Street bar near Lake Jackson, filed suit last month against Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation Secretary Halsey Beshears and DeSantis. The bar has been closed since June 26 after an executive order barred consumption of alcohol on premises for establishments not licensed to serve food. The idea was to help slow the spread of the coronavirus. The lawsuit says an untold number of establishments around the state are hamstrung, either suffering losses by remaining closed or possibly losing their licenses if they decide to make money.
A Leon County bar is suing the state over repeated closures. Image via Google Maps.
“Mike Norvell defends FSU football protocols, culture of transparency amid COVID concerns” via Curt Weiler of the Tallahassee Democrat — Norvell has tried to build a culture of openness and transparency, something that is even more important than usual amid lingering concerns over the coronavirus’ impact. That’s why Florida State’s head football coach was so taken aback when he was informed of the latest news as he was leaving the field at the end of FSU’s Thursday morning practice. He was told that a few of his players had expressed concerns on social media while the rest of the team was at practice Thursday morning over perceived deceit from FSU’s leadership which has endangered the team’s safety. Norvell again refused to disclose the number of positive tests FSU has had or the number of players currently quarantining, citing university policy.
Corona nation
“The true coronavirus toll in the U.S. has already surpassed 200,000” via Denise Lu of The New York Times — Nationwide, 200,000 more people have died than usual since March. This number is about 60,000 higher than the number of deaths that have been directly linked to the coronavirus. When the coronavirus first took hold in the United States in March, the bulk of deaths above normal levels, or “excess deaths,” were in the Northeast, as New York and New Jersey saw huge surges. That suggests that the official death counts may be substantially underestimating the overall effects of the virus.
“COVID-19 death toll rivals fatality rate during 1918 flu epidemic, researchers say” via Lenny Bernstein of The Washington Post — The increase in deaths in New York City during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic rivals the death toll there at the peak of the 1918 flu pandemic, according to an analysis published Thursday. The comparison, published online in the medical journal JAMA Network Open, found that the number of deaths from all causes was roughly equal during the two peak months of the flu epidemic and the first 61 days of the current outbreak. The H1N1 flu pandemic eventually killed 50 million people a century ago, about 675,000 of them in the United States. The current pandemic has claimed at least 746,000 lives worldwide, about 162,000 of them in the United States, according to a tally. There were 31,589 deaths from all causes in New York during the peak period of the flu epidemic, about the same as the 33,465 tallied in the 61 days after the first death on March 11 of this year, the analysis shows.
Researchers expect deaths from COVID-19 to surpass those of the Spanish Influenza outbreak of 1918.
“Health experts warn about perils of new virus data collection system” via Sheryl Gay Stolberg of The New York Times — Nearly three dozen current and former members of a federal health advisory committee, including nine appointed or reappointed by the health secretary, Alex Azar, are warning that the Trump administration’s new coronavirus database is placing an undue burden on hospitals and will have “serious consequences on data integrity.” The advisers, all current or former members of the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee, issued their warning in a previously unpublished letter shared with The New York Times. The letter was made public as both hospital officials and independent data experts around the country were reporting kinks in the new system, which critics say is undermining the government’s ability to understand the course of the pandemic.
“Young people have reported higher levels of anxiety and depression during the pandemic, a new survey finds.” via The New York Times — The collateral damage from the pandemic continues: Young adults and Black and Latino people, in particular, describe rising levels of anxiety, depression and even suicidal thoughts, and increased substance abuse, according to findings reported by the CDC. In a survey, U.S. residents reported signs of eroding mental health, in reaction to the toll of coronavirus illnesses and deaths and to the life-altering restrictions imposed by lockdowns. The researchers argue that the results point to an urgent need for expanded and culturally sensitive services for mental health and substance abuse. The online survey was completed by 5,470 people in late June. The prevalence of anxiety symptoms was three times as high as those reported in the second quarter of 2019, and depression was four times as high.
“Beset by coronavirus, health authorities brace for flu season” via Jared S. Hopkins of The Wall Street Journal — The approaching flu season threatens to overwhelm doctors and hospitals swamped by COVID-19 patients, sparking intense efforts to get people vaccinated against influenza. Both the new coronavirus and the seasonal flu virus are likely to spread in the fall and winter, and send many more sick patients to doctors’ offices and hospitals already struggling to treat COVID-19 cases, health and industry officials say. To reduce the pressure, drugmakers are making about 200 million flu shots this year for shipment to doctors, hospitals and pharmacies, up 13% from last year and a record. The federal government is also launching a campaign encouraging people to get the shots, while drugmakers and pharmacies explore novel measures to ensure more people get vaccinated, like offering flu shots curbside.
Corona economics
“Jobless claims dip below 1 million for first time in more than four months” via Eli Rosenberg of The Washington Post — About 960,000 workers filed for unemployment insurance last week, which marks the first time that initial claims dipped below 1 million since mid-March when the coronavirus pandemic first took hold and workers were told to stay home. The weekly claims figure for the week ended Aug. 8 fell below the 1.18 million claims from last week but remained well above historic highs. The pre-pandemic record for initial weekly claims was 695,000, from 1982, another recession. Another 488,000 new claims were filed for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, which is offered to gig and self-employed workers. All told, more than 28 million people are receiving some form of unemployment benefits as of the week of July 25, down more than 3 million from the previous week.
“Florida’s new jobless claims drop the most of any state” via Mike Schneider and Kelli Kennedy of The Associated Press — Florida’s death toll from the coronavirus topped 9,000 Thursday, while its pandemic-buffeted economy led the nation in a drop in the number of new jobless claims. The jobless claims are still historically high, as the state seeks to claw back economic activity still stunted by the continuing outbreak, and as schools around the state grapple with how to reopen classes safely. Some 55,106 Floridians filed for unemployment benefits last week, federal figures released Thursday show, a decline of 23,180 claims from the previous week — the biggest drop of any state. By comparison, at the same time in August 2019, there were 5,978 new jobless claims in Florida.
While jobless claims are still historically high, Florida’s most recent unemployment claim numbers dropped the most of any state in the country
“Some of Disney World and SeaWorld’s biggest fans are employees. But thousands remain on furlough.” via Gabrielle Russon of the Orlando Sentinel — In Central Florida, thousands of employees are sidelined even as the theme parks have reopened for business. Some are unsure if they will ever go back to their old jobs. At SeaWorld Orlando, the company has advertised to hire some new workers when it hasn’t recalled all the furloughed employees, several workers said, and they complained the company isn’t communicating with them. About 10,000 out of the 18,000 Disney hotel housekeepers and food/beverage workers in UNITE HERE Local 737 haven’t returned to work yet, said Jeremy Haicken, a leader of the union. The theme parks, which once never had a slow time in the year, are cutting expenses. After a $2 billion dollar quarterly loss, Disney World plans to shorten park hours so some days in September the Magic Kingdom will close as early as 6 p.m.
“Debt-ridden hotels lobby for taxpayer bailout” via Jason Garcia of the Orlando Sentinel — Hard-hit hotel companies are pushing especially hard for the legislation, which boosters have dubbed the “HOPE Act.” It “would be a huge help for us — and not just for us, but for other property owners that are in the same position that we are in,” said Deric Eubanks, the chief financial officer of Ashford Hospitality Trust Inc., during the company’s second-quarter earnings call last month. Ashford, which owns 117 hotels around the country, including nearly a dozen in Florida, is carrying more than $4 billion of hotel-backed mortgages. But advocates for workers are pushing back. Rather than spending billions to help hotels and other property owners pay off their lenders, they say Congress should focus on combating the public-health pandemic and helping front-line employees.
More corona
“Face masks with valves or vents do not prevent spread of the coronavirus, CDC says” via Reis Thebault and Angela Fritz of The Washington Post — In guidance updated late last week, the CDC warned against wearing masks with exhalation valves or vents, a type of face-covering made for hot and dusty construction work that has become a popular pandemic accessory because of its seemingly high-tech design. 3M, which makes valve masks for construction work, illustrates on its website how they work: inhaled air is filtered through the fabric part of the mask, and hot, humid exhaled air goes out through the valve. The system may be what you want when tearing out a kitchen for remodeling, but the valve defeats the purpose when you’re trying to slow the spread of a virus.
Simple cloth masks are more effective against spreading coronavirus than masks with vents or valves.
“Thanks to coronavirus and Zoom, we’re looking at the end stages of college as a commodity” via Megan McArdle of The Washington Post — A pandemic is an essentializing force; it strips away the frosting of rhetoric and habit and forces us to confront bare realities. Nowhere is this more apparent than in higher education, which over the past few decades has been one of two sectors that have just kept increasing their prices, the share of national income, and, of course, the share of our attention they claim. As students balked at full tuition for online education, Elizabeth Cohen, a political-science professor at Syracuse University, set off a minor Twitter storm: “Working at a college or university right now is hearing a lot of people say that they should pay less for something you’re working twice as hard to make available for them.”
“‘We’ve hit the iceberg’: NCAA medical adviser warns as fall season sinks” via Juan Perez Jr. of POLITICO — A top NCAA medical adviser gave grim guidance Thursday to the nation’s college sports leaders: it’s time to consider scrapping the fall season. “I feel like the Titanic,” said Dr. Carlos del Rio, the executive associate dean of the Emory School of Medicine and a member of an NCAA coronavirus advisory committee. “We need to focus on what’s important. What’s important right now is that we need to control this virus. And not having fall sports this year and controlling this virus, to me, would be the No. 1 priority.” Medical advisers for the Pac-12 Conference and the Big Ten called this week for competitions to be nixed this fall as new information is emerging on potential serious cardiac side effects of the virus, which continues to spread rapidly in many regions. The doctors also cited concerns about athletes traveling on commercial aircraft and the nation’s still-limited capacity for frequent, rapid-turnaround testing.
“Warren Thompson: Florida State has lied, failed to respond to health concerns” via Matt Baker of the Tampa Bay Times — Florida State receiver Thompson alleged Thursday that he has been “lied to multiple times” about safety issues during preseason camp, jeopardizing his health as the Seminoles move toward a football season in the coronavirus pandemic. “It has been shown to myself and the rest, that our leadership is based off an ‘I’ mentality with them only worried about their own future rather than their own athletes,” Thompson wrote on Twitter and Instagram. “I have been ridiculed about speaking up regarding this issue and it needs to be addressed for myself to safely continue the season.” First-year coach Norvell said he doesn’t know what lies Thompson alleges but said the two spoke Wednesday night with “all of the correct and relevant information of where we are.”
Florida State receiver Warren Thompson (left) is alleging he was “lied to multiple times” about safety issues during preseason camp. Image via AP.
“The pandemic will make movies and TV shows look like nothing we’ve seen before” via Steven Zeitchik of The Washington Post — Across the entertainment industry, casts and crew are beginning to return to work after a five-month hiatus. In states with loosened restrictions, such as Georgia and New York, production is starting to crank up under tight controls that alter how sets operate. Instead of crew members freely mingling, they’re being divided into “pods” that limit how production departments such as wardrobe or lighting can associate. COVID-19 officers monitor the health of the cast and crew to determine who is allowed on set. “Zones” dictate where cast and crew can go. These changes might seem technical, but they hint at the far-reaching effects the virus will have on final screen products.
“Goodbye to bartenders: Robots could soon make your drink” via Breanna T. Bradham of Bloomberg — While there seems to be a new video every day of maskless youth blithely partying outside (and inside) bars, many people have actually been drinking less during the pandemic. Half of Americans say they aren’t excited at all about heading back to their favorite watering hole, or any bar for that matter. Indeed, fear of enclosed spaces and sloppy, less-than-socially distanced crowds may change the drinking culture for a long time to come. It’s already threatening the future of your friendly bartender.
“For dogs, the pandemic means more walks but new anxieties” via Karin Bruilliard of The Washington Post — Just as the novel coronavirus pandemic has upended our daily lives, it has also changed those of our pets, many of which are getting a lot more attention and a lot more walks. But for many dogs and their owners, those walks have also changed: They are imbued with new anxieties, altered routines and carefully modified routes. Where once there might have been sociable butt-sniffs between canines, now there are sometimes awkward interactions between strangers who don’t share the same protocols on social distancing for dogs. Passersby are offering fewer caresses, and dog owners are more often turning down other people’s requests to pet for fear of unfamiliar hands depositing the virus on fur. Leashes are helping keep people six feet apart, but more of them on the sidewalks present new entangling hazards.
D.C. matters
“‘We need you to make good.’ Marco Rubio, Florida officials urge Trump to help growers.” via Alex Daugherty of the Miami Herald — The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement was supposed to be one of the Trump administration’s signature policy achievements, a trade deal to bolster Trump’s standing with voters in key swing states. But Florida’s produce industry was excluded from the deal, which went into effect on July 1, and the state’s political leaders are now urging the Trump administration to push for changes in the USMCA, three months before Election Day. In a virtual hearing on Thursday, Republicans and Democrats from Florida argued to United States Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross that the deal must be revised to prevent Mexican growers from undercutting Florida’s produce industry.
Marco Rubio is urging the federal government to help Florida produce farmers.
“U.S. cancels private charter flights to Cuba” via Yvonne H. Valdez of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The U.S. has suspended private charter flights between the United States and all airports in Cuba, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Thursday. The only charters allowed will be authorized public charters to and from Havana for emergency medical purposes, search and rescue, and other travel deemed to be of interest to the United States. Pompeo issued a statement Thursday saying the request is meant to “strengthen the economic pressure on the Cuban regime as a means to restrict the regime’s ability to repress its people and support the illegitimate [Nicolás] Maduro regime in Venezuela.” The Secretary of State made the request of Secretary of Transportation Elaine L. Chao, whose department issued the suspension.
“Nikki Fried, Ted Yoho warn of NAFTA, USMCA impact on Florida agriculture” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Fried testified on behalf of Florida farmers Thursday in opposition to various trade policies impacting the state’s agriculture industry. In her testimony at the United States Trade Representative hearing, Fried criticized the disruption suffered by some workers and industries under the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement. She also argued Trump‘s United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement falls short of patching NAFTA’s shortcomings. The meeting was held in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Department of Commerce. “With a $137 billion economic impact, agriculture is Florida’s second-largest industry and first during times of economic downturns like we are currently experiencing due to COVID-19,” Fried told trade experts.
Assignment editors — St. Petersburg Congressman Charlie Crist will deliver masks to Clearwater seniors and meet with Largo Mayor Woody Brown on COVID-19 relief: 10:15 a.m., Pine Berry Senior Living, 1225 S. Highland Ave., Clearwater; 10:40 a.m., Prospect Towers Senior Living, 801 Chestnut St., Clearwater; 11:30 a.m., Central Park Performing Arts Center portico (patio), 105 Central Park Dr., Largo.
Statewide
“Florida agency downplayed Deloitte’s history with unemployment before awarding it $135m contract” via Kirby Wilson and Lawrence Mower of the Tampa Bay Times — The company awarded a potential $135 million state contract doesn’t appear to have been penalized for its past work building Florida’s dysfunctional unemployment system. Neither a negative recommendation by the state’s unemployment agency nor $8 million in penalties appears to have counted against Deloitte Consulting before it was selected for the new contract, according to a review of the Agency for Health Care Administration’s bid process and the company’s applications. A critical factor that boosted Deloitte’s odds in scoring the new contract was that the bidding process the agency created for the job of overhauling the state’s Medicaid data intentionally downplayed each company’s past performance.
“Negative review didn’t doom unemployment website vendor’s bid for a new $110 million Florida contract” via Skyler Swisher of the Orlando Sentinel — Florida’s health care agency forged ahead with a deal to give a consultant a nine-figure deal to revamp its Medicaid system despite warnings from another agency that the company had bungled the state’s unemployment website. The Florida Agency for Health Care Administration announced last week it intends to hire Deloitte Consulting for a multiyear project worth at least $110 million. That decision outraged laid-off workers who had spent weeks trying to get their benefits through the dysfunctional CONNECT website Deloitte designed.
Deloitte does not appear to be suffering any penalties for its role in Florida’s unemployment website debacle.
“Candidate for utility job gave $50,000 to Senate committee before Senators voted for him” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — With more than $300,000 left in his political committee and only months remaining in his last term as a state legislator, Rep. Mike La Rosa wrote the largest check of his political career on July 2, steering $50,000 to the fund used to elect Republicans to the state Senate. La Rosa, a Republican from St. Cloud, is not running for the Senate but he did have other aspirations in which the Senate plays a role. On June 24, days before La Rosa wrote the hefty check, he applied for the Florida Public Service Commission, the board that regulates the state’s utilities, which pays $132,036 a year.
“Supreme Court to weigh two tobacco cases” via the News Service of Florida — For the second time this week, the Florida Supreme Court agreed to take up a potentially far-reaching case involving a verdict against R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. The Supreme Court decided to hear a dispute about $5 million in punitive damages that an Orange County jury awarded to the estate of Valton Sheffield, who died in 2007 of lung cancer. The 5th District Court of Appeal last year overturned the punitive damages award, agreeing with R.J. Reynolds that a circuit judge improperly applied a pre-1999 version of a state punitive damages law to the case. Changes made to the law in 1999 could have shielded R.J. Reynolds from paying punitive damages.
“Jessee Panuccio weighs in on Supreme Court pick” via the News Service of Florida staff reports — The legal battle over one of DeSantis’ latest picks to serve on the Florida Supreme Court took another twist Thursday, with a fight over whether a member of a panel that nominated Renatha Francis for a seat on the high court should be allowed to file a friend-of-the-court brief. Thursday’s wrangling came in a lawsuit filed by state Rep. Geraldine Thompson, a Windermere Democrat who alleges that the Florida Supreme Court Judicial Nominating Commission “exceeded the limits of its authority” by including Francis’ name on a list of nine nominees sent to DeSantis in January. Panuccio, a member of the nominating commission who served as a general counsel to former Gov. Rick Scott, filed the friend-of-the-court brief on Thursday despite the objections of Thompson’s lawyers.
“Florida advocacy group says environmental law hurts its chance to save nature” via Zachary T. Sampson of the Tampa Bay Times — When DeSantis signed the year’s signature environmental bill into law last month, a cadre of activists said he might have effectively killed their movement just as they were gaining a toehold. Folded into the Clean Waterways Act are lines blocking local governments from giving legal rights to parts of nature such as rivers, springs and forests. A proposal like that is already set to be voted upon by residents of Orange County this fall. Unless something changes between now and November, they will cast ballots on a charter amendment that would, with a majority, be illegal as soon as it passes. Speak Up Wekiva’s last-ditch argument hinges on the idea that preemption infringes upon citizens’ ability to self-govern.
“On Rainbow River, something nearly miraculous happened: A developer listened to reason” via Craig Pittman of Florida Phoenix — The people who love the Rainbow River have been sounding the alarm about something they viewed as a major threat: a proposed development that they feared would pollute the water and put thousands more tubers into the river at a time when it’s already at or past its capacity to handle crowds. Jim Gissy wanted to use 89 acres of his riverfront ranch property to build what he called “an eco-friendly resort.” Last week, he surprised the opponents by pulling the plug. He withdrew his permit applications and announced he would not build the resort. The ranch would remain a ranch.
A developer sold nearly half his riverfront land at Marion County’s Rainbow River to protect it from development.
“Clay County Sheriff Darryl Daniels arrested after sex scandal investigation” via Andrew Pantazi of The Florida Times-Union — Daniels was arrested Thursday on one felony charge and three misdemeanors following a yearlong investigation into a sex scandal. The scandal became public after the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office, where Daniels previously worked as the jail’s director, announced an internal investigation into a corrections officer with whom Daniels had sex. Daniels had instructed his staff to arrest the woman in May 2019 on stalking allegations, and his staff told prosecutors they didn’t feel there was just cause to arrest the woman. The woman, Cierra Smith, resigned while under investigation for misconduct claims. Prosecutors requested the Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigate Daniels. The Jacksonville State Attorney’s Office, though, couldn’t move forward with prosecutions because of a conflict of interest. DeSantis appointed Ocala State Attorney Brad King as a special prosecutor.
“Bay County commissioner accused of wage theft from immigrant workers in Netflix documentary” via Tony Mixon of the NWF Daily News — Bay County Commissioner Tommy Hamm was accused of wage theft in documentary series called “Immigration Nation,” which recently began airing on the popular streaming service. In episode four, an advocacy group called Resilience Force rounded up a several Mexican workers who claimed they worked for Winterfell, the construction company that Hamm owns. During the episode, the workers claimed to Saket Soni, executive director of Resilience Force, that they worked for Hamm and displayed the vests they were given that had Winterfell displayed on them. They also claimed all the houses they worked on had the Winterfell sign and that they have not been paid by the company or Hamm.
“FSU trustees support Faculty Senate in effort to remove B.K. Roberts’ name from College of Law building” via Byron Dobson of the Tallahassee Democrat — Florida State University’s Board of Trustees is backing the Faculty Senate’s efforts to gain legislative support to remove the name of the late Florida Supreme Court Chief Justice B.K. Roberts from the main building of the College of Law. Trustees approved the measure without discussion during Thursday’s meeting, which was held virtually. Trustee Max Alvarez was the lone dissenter, but he did not offer a reason. The resolution was presented by FSU College of Law Professor Erin Ryan, who also serves as vice-chair of the Faculty Senate Steering Committee.
“USF police fire officer, citing racist Twitter bio” via Divya Kumar of the Tampa Bay Times — A University of South Florida police officer was fired after an investigation concluded her racist Twitter bio could harm the reputation of the police department. Presley Garcia, an officer hired in 2018, was placed under investigation in early July after a reporter contacted the police department with screenshots of the Twitter account “@presleyyyg,” which has since been deleted. The account’s bio read “KKK member.” In his letter to Human Resources, recommending the office dismiss her, USF Police Chief Chris Daniel wrote that in the current climate, Garcia’s actions, or inactions for adequately scrubbing her social media of racist language, could bring harm to the image of other officers.
“Arthenia Joyner, Jane Castor among Women’s Hall nominees” via the News Service of Florida — Former state Sen. Joyner and Tampa Mayor Castor are among 10 nominees for the Florida Women’s Hall of Fame, the Florida Commission on the Status of Women announced. Other nominees are suffragist Alice Scott Abbott; Florence Alexander, founder of the management consulting firm Ebon Research Systems; Samira Beckwith, president and CEO of Hope Healthcare; Nancy Hogshead-Makar, a gold-medal-winning Olympic swimmer and attorney; suffragist May Mann Jennings; Alma Lee Loy, the first woman elected chair of the Indian River County Commission; children’s advocate Audrey Schiebler, a founding member of the Alachua County Council on Child Abuse; and community activist E. Thelma Waters.
Top opinion
“What would a Biden administration look like?” via Jonathan Bernstein of Bloomberg Opinion — We shouldn’t have expected to learn much from the official rollout of Sen. Harris as former Vice President Biden’s running mate — and for the most part, we didn’t. We already knew that there would be attacks on Trump over the pandemic and the economy, and both Biden and Harris did that. No one expects Biden to be like Trump in his approach to the presidency. But his request of Harris was actually a bit more revealing. Biden is for one thing echoing his own vice presidency, since he has said that his one request of President Barack Obama in 2008 was to play the role he’s offering to Harris now: the last voice in the room. That’s a central position in any administration, even more important than the active role that vice presidents have typically assumed since Walter Mondale.
Opinions
“Appoint allies for water quality” via The St. Augustine Record editorial board — DeSantis vowed to tackle water quality and preservation on a “war footing.” It was a rallying cry to a righteous cause. But the Governor can’t go to war without generals. And his ranks are puzzlingly bare. Nowhere is that more evident than on the governing board of the St. Johns River Water Management District, where five positions — of nine — are vacant and have been for most of DeSantis’ term. That’s a problem because these boards do important work. In Volusia, Flagler and St. Johns counties, the water management district oversees much of the conservation land in the area. It’s responsible for allocating water-use permits, some of which allow the withdrawal of millions of gallons of water per day from the aquifer.
“In Broward Clerk of Courts race, reject inept incumbent Brenda Forman and elect Mark Speiser” via The South Florida Sun-Sentinel editorial board — It appears that Forman, the inept incumbent, could get reelected. She has the potency of incumbency and the political power of “Forman,” the name of the well-regarded former clerk, Howard Forman, her ex-husband. The problem is that Brenda Forman is not up to the job, which pays $179,867 a year. She supervises about 800 people, many of whom are unhappy with her management style. Shortly after she took office in January 2017, some of the office’s most skilled workers quit in disgust. Forman’s election opponents amplify the criticisms. They say her office has lost or misplaced evidence, that training is poor, that her financial statements are inconsistent and that she’s dishonest.
Today’s Sunrise
Gov. DeSantis hosted a roundtable discussion to talk about one person who survived COVID-19 thanks to convalescent plasma from her son-in-law.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— While he concentrated on the good news, the Governor did NOT mention the 9,046 fatalities caused by COVID-19 in Florida so far — or the 148 new cases added to the list Thursday.
— As fatalities rise in the state prison system, Democrats in the Florida Legislature renew their call for the state to release nonviolent inmates who have almost finished their sentences and are facing the greatest threat from coronavirus.
— The state teachers’ union and the DeSantis’ legal team square off as a Tallahassee judge takes up the lawsuit challenging the state’s school reopening order. The state is trying to short circuit the lawsuit by asking the judge to toss it without holding a trial
— State officials go to bat for Florida’s agriculture industry as the U.S. Trade Representative holds a public hearing about the damage to Florida seasonal growers — first by NAFTA, and now by the USMCA trade deal.
— Checking-in with Florida Man, a county sheriff who is ordering his deputies not to wear masks in the office or on patrol.
Facing South Florida with Jim DeFede on CBS 4 in Miami: The Sunday show provides viewers with an in-depth look at politics in South Florida, along with other issues affecting the region.
Florida This Week on Tampa Bay’s WEDU: Moderator Rob Lorei hosts a roundtable featuring Max Richtman, president and CEO of the National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare; Orlando Sentinel columnist Scott Maxwell and USF-Tampa associate professor of Africana Studies and Anthropology Cheryl Rodriguez.
Political Connections Bay News 9 in Tampa/St. Pete: Host Holly Gregory joins Spectrum News Capital Reporter Troy Kinsey and political analysts Ana Cruz and Berny Jacques.
Political Connections on CF 13 in Orlando: Joining host Ybeth Bruzual are Seminole County Supervisor of Elections Chris Anderson; Stephanie Schriock, President of EMILY’s List; and Christian Zieglar, vice-chair of the Republican Party of Florida and 2020 Republican Convention delegate.
This Week in Jacksonville with Kent Justice on Channel 4 WJXT: Jacksonville University Public policy Institute Director Rick Mullaney; Sen. Joe Gruters, chair of the Republican Party of Florida and Rosy Gonzalez Speers, senior adviser for Down Ballot Elections at the Florida Democratic Party.
This Week in South Florida on WPLG-Local10 News (ABC): South Florida Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Carlos Migoya, CEO of the Jackson Health System.
Listen up
Biz & Tech with Blake Dowling of Aegis Business Technology: guest Samantha Vance is the founder and Executive Director of the Ladies Learning to Lead. Vance and Dowling discuss their professional history and each other’s involvement in organizations like the Florida Health Care Association, Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Big Bend, and (of course) Ladies Learning to Lead.
Dishonorable Mention: Rep. Chris Latvala, activist Becca Tieder, Ernest Hooper and communications expert Dr. Karla Mastracchio discuss politics and culture. Guest Ed Narain discusses Biden’s selection of Harris as his VP candidate. Maya Rudolph benefits from the selection, for sure! The hosts discuss the latest news of college football conferences canceling fall sports. Is it safe to play college football in a pandemic? They also talk about the movements started by Trevor Lawrence, KJ Sails, and other players regarding a player’s association and more.
Inside Florida Politics from GateHouse Florida: Reporters John Kennedy, Antonio Fins and Zac Anderson discuss how Harris could impact the presidential race in Florida, the upcoming Aug. 18 primary election and DeSantis’s latest efforts to open schools, including pushing for college sports.
podcastED: Step Up for Students President Doug Tuthill speaks with Stephen Sugarman the nationally recognized Berkeley Law School professor who was the co-author of several books with his colleague and redefinED guest correspondent John Coons. In this first of a three-part series, Sugarman recalls how he got started in the education reform movement by studying district wealth inequality across the country.
REGULATED from hosts Christian Bax and Tony Glover: Charles Rutherford II is an expert on ASTM’s D37 committee on cannabis. He has more than eight years as a business development director for Boveda’s world-class products and has saved scores of cultivation and packaging facilities a lot of money. He successfully ushered through the first-ever consensus-based global cannabis standards on proper cannabis storage through ASTM and is the leader of the Cannabis Drying subgroup in the Cannabis Focus Group within the National Conference on Weights and Measures.
Tallahassee Business podcast from the Tallahassee Chamber presented by 223 Agency: Lobbyist Chris Dudley of The Southern Group has shaped outcomes at the Capitol while remaining engaged in the Tallahassee community through service as Chair of the Tallahassee Downtown Improvement Authority and as a former Board member of the Greater Tallahassee Chamber of Commerce. Dudley shares various insights into the industry. After serving as Deputy Chief of Staff to Gov. Jeb Bush, Dudley made the leap into lobbying by joining The Southern Group while the firm was still in its infancy. 20 years later, The Southern Group has become a major force in the Florida government.
The New Abnormal from host Rick Wilson and Molly Jong-Fast: Kurt Andersen has been tooling on Trump for decades — the Spy magazine co-founder once even tricked Trump into cashing a check for 17 cents. Andersen tells hosts Jong-Fast and Wilson that Trump did us all a favor. He showed America just how rigged our system is in favor of the ultrarich. “His final ad [of the 2016 campaign] was all ‘Wall Street has taken all your wealth and ruined the working class. And we must defeat these people of whom my opponent is a puppet,’” Anderson recounts. “Well, yeah, you had a point. But you didn’t actually govern at all on that basis. So maybe, maybe he’s sort of put that critique of the system on the table
The Yard Sign with host Jonathan Torres: Chris Licata, Chris Verkuilen, Anibal Cabrera, and Torres talk Trump’s Executive Orders, Beirut port explosion, Biden VP pick in the upcoming primary election.
Instagram of the day
Aloe
“NBA lays out plan for player guests to enter Disney bubble” via Tim Reynolds of The Associated Press — NBA players could have some family members or close friends inside the season-restart bubble with them by the end of the month. And that raises the possibility of having a real, albeit small, cheering section for some playoff games. The league detailed the policies for guest arrivals to teams on Wednesday in a memo, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press. The opportunity to bring guests into the bubble at Walt Disney World will be only for teams advancing to the second round of the playoffs, and the earliest any guest could satisfy quarantine rules and be reunited with a player is Aug. 31. In most cases, players would be limited to four guests.
Milwaukee Bucks’ Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) drives to the basket past Washington Wizards’ Anzejs Pasecniks, right, during the first half of an NBA basketball game in Lake Buena Vista. Image via AP.
“Disney to stream a new ‘Star Wars’ holiday special with Legos” via Lisa Richwine and Nick Zieminski of Reuters — A new “Star Wars” holiday special produced with Legos will debut on Walt Disney Co’s Disney+ streaming service Nov. 17, the company said Thursday. The special will feature Rey and other characters from the most recent “Star Wars” movie trilogy. It will take place on Chewbacca’s home planet of Kashyyyk and focus on Life Day, an important holiday in the galaxy far, far away. Life Day was first introduced in a 1978 “Star Wars” holiday variety special that was widely panned by TV audiences. In the new special, the hero Rey sets out on an adventure with the droid BB-8 and is “hurled into a cross-timeline adventure through beloved moments in Star Wars cinematic history,” Disney said.
“Amway Center may host WWE SummerSlam on Aug. 23” via Jay Reddick of the Orlando Sentinel — Amway Center may be getting its first live event in more than five months. WWE is negotiating to bring its SummerSlam pay-per-view event to Orlando on Aug. 23, a city spokeswoman said. Though no fans would be allowed inside, it would bring life to an arena that has been dormant since a Billie Eilish concert on March 10. Just days later, the pandemic put an end to most public gatherings of any size. The wrestling promotion, whose last public live event was March 11 with a shoulder-to-shoulder crowd of about 400 fans at the company’s training facility in east Orlando, has continued to stage wrestling shows multiple times per week during the pandemic, largely on a closed set, and was declared an “essential business” by DeSantis in April.
“New Florida film industry leader thinks showbiz can give state’s lagging economy a boost” via Gina Jordan of WLRN — Film and TV productions shut down around the country as COVID-19 spread. Film Florida, a not-for-profit trade association, has a new president who thinks shows biz productions could be a major part of Florida’s economic recovery. “When an average feature film or TV series films in a location, they spend roughly $20 million in the local community in just 3 or 4 months while hiring approximately 1,500 Floridians,” says Gail Morgan, new president of the Film Florida Board of Directors. She says Florida is losing too many productions to Georgia and other states that offer incentives, like tax rebates. “Florida is only one of 17 states in America that doesn’t have a program, and it’s the only state in the southeast without a program which puts us at a major competitive disadvantage.”
“Brown booby seabird makes first-ever stop at Current River” via Wes Johnson of the Springfield News-Leader — An ocean-dwelling seabird more common to Florida and South America made an unusual stop recently on the Current River in Ripley County. The Missouri Department of Conservation believes it’s the first recorded instance of a brown booby stopping in Missouri. The bird was first spotted by Debbie Prance-Orosz this past Saturday while she and her family were out enjoying the river. Not knowing what the bird was, she snapped a photo and posted it to her Facebook page. “We first got word of it after it was posted to Facebook this past weekend wondering what it was,” said MDC Forester and avid birder Steve Paes. “We didn’t know where it was, other than somewhere on the Current River. After asking around, I got a tip on its location. On Monday, I set out on the river with Cindy Bridges with the Missouri Birding Society and we eventually found it perched on a dead tree.”
Happy birthday
Happy birthday to former Sen. Joe Abruzzo, John Konkus and Meredith Stanfield.
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“Israel and the United Arab Emirates announced on Thursday that they will normalise diplomatic ties and forge a broad new relationship… Under the accord, which U.S. President Donald Trump helped broker, Israel agreed to suspend its planned annexation of areas of the occupied West Bank.” Reuters
Many on both sides are encouraged by the deal and see the potential for other Arab states to take similar steps:
“For once, Trump didn’t need to manufacture any superlatives. This was, as he tweeted, a ‘HUGE’ achievement. The UAE joins Jordan, which reached a peace agreement with Israel in 1994 and Egypt, which signed a pact with its former enemy in 1979…
“Quiet contact between Israel and the UAE has been an open secret for more than a decade… [Israeli PM Benjamin] Netanyahu and MBZ [Emirates Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Zayed] were drawn together by shared interests: They agreed that Iran and its proxies threatened the Middle East; they mistrusted the Obama administration and its secret nuclear diplomacy with Iran; they favored more trade and investment across the region; and they liked the Trump administration’s transactional realpolitik… Trump’s surprise announcement might be an ‘August surprise’ in the presidential campaign. But it’s welcome news for Israel, the Arabs and the United States.” David Ignatius, Washington Post
“The Abraham Agreement is huge. The deal brokered by the Trump administration breaks the Gulf Arab bloc against Israel, a massive diplomatic coup for the White House. The terms of the deal also shows other Arab states that Trump can exert a moderating influence on Israel to boot…
“Now that the UAE has made this move, one has to wonder who’s next. Saudi Arabia might be the most significant, but its insistence on proselytizing the extreme Wahhabi strain of Sunni Islam would make a reversal on recognizing Israel the most difficult. The smaller states in the Gulf might have to move first before the Saudis could sell it to the hardliners in the royal family and clerics in the kingdom. If this starts a chain reaction of recognition for Israel in the region, not only will that bolster Netanyahu’s standing at home but it will make the Palestinians start thinking that a smaller sovereign state beats nothing at all.” Ed Morrissey, Hot Air
Other opinions below.
From the Right
“President Trump’s Mideast strategy has been to strongly back Israel, support the Gulf monarchies, and press back hard against Iranian imperialism. His liberal critics insisted this would lead to catastrophe that never came, and on Thursday it delivered a diplomatic achievement: The United Arab Emirates and Israel agreed to normalize relations, making the UAE the first Arab League country to recognize the Jewish state in 20 years…
“The UAE deal strengthens the anti-Iran coalition and withdraws an excuse—annexation—that the left could use to attack Israel. Whoever wins in November, the breakthrough leaves the U.S. in a better position in the Middle East.” Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal
“It’s notable that the UAE has signed its agreement with Israel when there are no peace negotiations whatsoever. And that is the most striking element of the normalization agreement. It reflects two realities of today’s Middle East: First, Israel and most Gulf states have been quietly cooperating for the past 20 years… The other important reality is that no one in the Middle East can say with a straight face that Israel is the source of the region’s instability…
“Israel had nothing to do with the collapse of the U.N.-recognized government in Yemen — the Iranian-supported Houthis did. Israel had nothing to do with the collapse of Syria — that was the fault of the country’s dictator, Bashar al-Assad. And Israel had nothing to do with the rise of Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. In all of these cases, the regimes and groups most vocally opposed to Israel also served as the region’s chief arsonists… In assessing the region, the UAE’s leaders have seen one state thrive as its neighbors burned. They have chosen the strong horse.” Eli Lake, Bloomberg
“For nearly four years, Washington foreign policy experts and Obama administration alumni warned that the Trump administration was jeopardizing any prospects for Middle East peace. By withdrawing from the Iran nuclear deal, we were told, the U.S. would alienate itself from its allies. By moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, it would inflame the anger of millions of Arab Muslims. By recognizing Israeli sovereignty in the Golan Heights, it would estrange the Arab states. By maintaining close relations with the Israeli government, it would imperil the lives of Palestinians…
“Obama and Biden do deserve ‘credit,’ just not in the way Biden claims. I think their years-long effort to court Iran spooked the Sunni states so badly that the looming prospect of a Biden presidency has the leaders of those states considering bold gambits right now like the one we saw this morning. If you’re expecting your patrons in Washington to shift from trying to isolate Iran to trying to build relations with Iran come January, you might want to seize the opportunity immediately to build an anti-Iran alliance with other regional powers.” Allahpundit, Hot Air
From the Left
“For Netanyahu, the agreement offers a positive headline at a moment when a pandemic-induced economic crisis is eroding his popularity and threatening to fracture his fragile coalition government… For Trump, the agreement bolsters a relatively scant foreign-policy record ahead of the 2020 election… As for the Palestinians, the deal leaves non-Israeli inhabitants of the West Bank subject to the military rule of an occupying power and 2 million Gazans living under an Israeli blockade on a small strip of land that has no sustainable source of drinking water and which the United Nations has deemed ‘uninhabitable.’” Eric Levitz, New York Magazine“A Saudi academic told me that Trump was easier for him to understand than for me, because I live in a country where nepotism is a crime, and he lives in one where it is the system of government. The idea that a president would appoint his son-in-law to manage the most sensitive aspects of his administration offends me. To a Saudi, he said, it is just how things get done…“Every politically connected Saudi knows that Kushner has direct communication lines to Mohammed bin Salman (MbS), the crown prince and de facto ruler of the country, and to Mohammed bin Zayed (MbZ), the crown prince of Abu Dhabi and counterpart to MbS in the UAE. There is no remotely comparable Palestinian figure with whom Kushner or Trump could chitchat or bargain. So it should be no surprise that the first harvest of this administration’s Middle East strategy would be an agreement that ignores the Palestinians altogether and instead deals with one of these billionaire princes.” Graeme Wood, The Atlantic“The UAE… understood from conversations with the administration that formal peace would give it access to previously off-limits U.S. weaponry, such as advanced drones. Until now, these weapons had been denied to them because of the U.S. commitment to preserving Israel’s qualitative military edge… The United States provided Egypt advanced weaponry after President Anwar Sadat made peace with Israel. Similarly, Jordan did not get F-16s until King Hussein concluded a peace treaty with Israel. The equation of easing the military edge requirements when a country makes peace with Israel is now going to be applied again to the UAE.” Dennis Ross, Washington Post“This deal will certainly encourage the other gulf sheikhdoms — Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia — all of which have had covert and overt business and intelligence dealings with Israel, to follow the Emirates’ lead. They will not want to let the U.A.E. have a leg up in being able to marry its financial capital with Israel’s cybertechnology, agriculture technology and health care technology…“Free advice for [President of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud] Abbas: Come back to the table now and say you view the Trump plan as a ‘floor,’ not a ‘ceiling’ for Palestinian aspirations. You will find a lot of support from Trump, the Europeans and the Arabs for that position. You still have leverage. Israel still has to deal with you, because your people in the West Bank are not going to just disappear, no matter what happens with the U.A.E. and Israel.” Thomas L. Friedman, New York Times
🎬 Acting Homeland Security SecretaryChad Wolf told me in an interview for “Axios on HBO” that he “would be concerned” about a President Biden. Watch a clip.
See the full interview Monday at 11 p.m. ET/PT on all HBO platforms.
🗳️ On Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. ET, join Axios’ Margaret Talev and Kim Hart for our virtual Democratic National Convention coverage, including a conversation with Green Bay Packers president and CEO Mark Murphy. Register here.
1 big thing: New worry about kids’ risk from virus
Illustration: Eniola Odetunde/Axios
The coronavirus isn’t as deadly for children as it is for adults, but kids still get it and can still get seriously sick from it. The risk is higher for Black and Hispanic children, Axios Vitals author Caitlin Owens reports.
Why it matters: In communities with high caseloads, cases among children could explode as schools reopen. And kids in the communities already hit hardest by the pandemic are the most at risk.
The big picture: We don’t know much about children and the coronavirus, mainly because the closure of schools and day cares has limited kids’ contact with other people, shielding them from the virus more than adults.
In the 20 states that report ages for hospitalizations, plus New York City, between 0.6% and 8.9% of child cases ended up hospitalized, according to a report by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.
The AAP report found a 40% increase in child cases during the second half of July — yet another indication that the virus can spread easily among children when given the opportunity.
A CDC reportreleased last week found that, although children’s hospitalization rate is low, children who are hospitalized are admitted to the ICU at almost the same rate as adults.
Mirroring almost every other pandemic trend, Black and Latino children have had it worse than white children.
Hispanic children have been hospitalized eight times more than white children, per the CDC. Black children have been hospitalized five times more.
Thankfully, very few children have died from their infections.
The story of American business in the pandemic is a tale of two markets: tech firms and online retailers as winners awash in capital alongside collapsing brick-and-mortar and mom-and-pop shops, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.
Why it matters: The virus has created an environment where losing industries like traditional retail and hospitality — as well as a sizable portion of firms owned by women, immigrants and minorities — are wiped out.
This dichotomy of winners and losers could shape the face of American business for decades to come.
What’s happening: Banks are tightening lending standards and weeding out some of the neediest borrowers.
The Fed’s latest surveyof senior loan officers finds that banks have raised interest rates and collateral requirements as well as loan covenants and are charging higher premiums for what they see as riskier loans.
What we’re hearing: Lenders are applying a “COVID filter” to determine which companies are risky, making decisions largely based on firms’ performance from January through June, says Alex Cohen, CEO of Liberty SBF, a commercial real estate lender that works with the SBA to provide firms government funding.
“If you’re a prime borrower whose business has done well, survived and thrived, during COVID, your access to capital is significantly better than businesses that have had any disruption whatsoever,” he tells Axios.
“For businesses like hospitality, health care, restaurants — which have been the hardest hit of any that we cover — access to capital is just extremely difficult if not impossible.”
The bottom line: While big companies have borrowed a record $1.9 trillion in corporate debt, including leveraged loans, investment grade and junk bonds thanks to the Fed’s unprecedented asset purchases …
More than 80,000 small businesses permanently closed from March 1 to July 25, including about 60,000 local businesses, or firms with fewer than five locations, according to Yelp.
3. Exclusive: Biden ad calls for nationwide mask mandates
Joe Biden’s campaign today launches an ad calling for “NATIONWIDE MASK MANDATES,” after Biden said yesterday that every governor should require outdoor mask use for at least three months, Axios’ Hans Nichols reports.
Why it matters: With Sen. Kamala Harris in place to amplify the message, the campaign is signaling it will hit President Trump on the pandemic every day.
A campaign official tells Axios the ad, “Ready to Lead,” will run in Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida, Arizona and Nevada.
“Joe Biden knows we need to listen to medical experts, and take action now,” the narrator says. “That starts by expanding testing; calling for mask mandates nationwide, starting immediately;and producing more protective gear here at home.”
A second virus-themed ad, “Dignity,” targets seniors, with cuts from Biden’s big virus speech on June 30, played over scenes of the former vice president comforting older Americans.
Both ads, as well as a 60-second spot released yesterday, are part of massive existing buys worth $20 million this week, and $24 million next week.
In a new memo, deputy campaign manager Kate Bedingfield says Trump has told more than 150 virus lies:
“As Vice President Biden has said many times, the American people can face any challenge if you simply tell them the truth.”
The memo underscores the Biden campaign’s theory of the election: It will come down to the virus and Trump’s response to it.
Between the lines: Bedingfield’s memo signals that, if elected, Biden would be prepared to tell Americans things they may not want to hear when it comes to controlling the virus.
Biden acknowledged yesterday that masks are “uncomfortable,” before adding that a mandate would get “our kids back to school sooner and safer.”
The other side: Trump appears to welcome a mask smackdown, instantly pouncing on Biden’s call for governors to require Americans to wear masks “when they’re outside for the next three months, at a minimum.”
At a White House briefing, Trump called it a “sweeping new mandate to law-abiding citizens.”
With masked coaches, refs and fans, America’s first mid-pandemic high school football game was played yesterday at Mustang Stadium in Herriman, Utah.
The Davis Darts beat the Herriman Mustangs, 24-20, per the Salt Lake Tribune.
“Game Tonight: SOLD OUT,” said a hand-lettered sign out front.
Utah is the first of at least 35 states to try to play prep football this fall, according to MaxPreps.
14 states and D.C. are pushing the season into 2021.
5. Behind the scenes: How the Israel-UAE deal came together
The breakthrough in talks among the U.S., Israel and UAE on yesterday’s normalization deal began in June, with an op-ed in the Israeli press in which UAE Ambassador Yousef Al Otaiba stressed that Israel had to choose between normalization and annexation, Barak Ravid reports for Axios from Tel Aviv.
At the end of June, Al Otaiba approached Jared Kushner and White House envoy Avi Berkowitz with a proposal: The UAE would agree to normalization with Israel in return for an Israeli announcement that West Bank annexation was off the table.
Kushner liked the proposal, and Berkowitz began attempting to lay the groundwork.
The White House had its own reservations about annexation, which Berkowitz discussed with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in meetings over three days in late June.
Momentum grew. Kushner spoke on the phone several times with Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Zayed (MBZ), the UAE’s de facto ruler.
He and Berkowitz had at least two dozen meetings with Israel’s ambassador to Washington, Ron Dermer, and Al Otaiba.
Several days ago, an agreement was reached in principle but was kept secret.
The deal was finalized on Wednesday in a conference call among President Trump, Netanyahu and MBZ.
What’s next: Trump said he’ll host Netanyahu and MBZ at the White House for a signing ceremony in about three weeks.
6. Axios-Survey Monkey poll: Gulf in voting plans for Rs, Ds
An Axios-SurveyMonkey poll finds that 80% of conservative Republicans plan to vote in person, compared with just 33% of liberal Democrats, Axios White House editor Margaret Talev writes.
Seven in 10 Republicans surveyed say mail-in voting is less likely to produce fair and accurate results, while Democrats say on balance they believe it will make the results slightly more fair and accurate.
Why it matters: As President Trump seeks to delegitimize absentee voting and politicize the Postal Service, the findings in this national survey document the potential for wide mistrust.
SurveyMonkey chief research officer Jon Cohen says: “For Republicans, the lack of trust in the system has shot up.”
Dodger Stadium will become a voting center in November, with more teams expected to make dormant arenas and stadiums available soon, AP reports.
Any registered voter in Los Angeles County will be able to visit the stadium over a five-day period. Parking will be free.
The stadium site is part of a campaign by More Than A Vote, a nonprofit coalition of Black artists and athletes, including LeBron James, Patrick Mahomes and Sloane Stephens.
Most seals are elusive. But in Weymouth, England, a seal called Sammy approaches people on the beach, and catches the occasional ride on a paddle board.
Mike Allen
📱 Thanks for reading Axios AM. Please invite your friends tosign up here.
Jobs are fully back for the highest wage earners, but fewer than half the jobs lost this spring have returned for those making less than $20 an hour, according to a new labor data analysis.
With staff — and in some cases patients and visitors — entering and leaving facilities, community-acquired infections almost inevitably find their way inside.
The president’s latest broadside makes explicit his intent to block urgently needed money to help state and local officials administer elections during the pandemic.
By Amy Gardner, Josh Dawsey and Paul Kane ● Read more »
Staffers for Joe Biden hope that running mate Sen. Kamala D. Harris (D-Calif.) can connect with groups whose support for the Democratic national ticket is far from guaranteed.
President Trump previously acknowledged that the Constitution grants citizenship to people born in the territorial United States. That includes Kamala Harris.
Fact Checker | Analysis ● By Salvador Rizzo ● Read more »
The agency asked U.S. Customs and Border Protection in late May to provide surveillance aircraft and a Blackhawk helicopter carrying a “fast rope” commando team, newly obtained government correspondence shows.
President Trump has pushed the Department of Homeland Security into a focus on immigration and has put the powerful agency into the center of his domestic agenda.
Yale denied wrongdoing. The Justice Department said it concluded that the university gave too much weight to race in its consideration of applicants, in violation of federal civil rights law.
In 1920, the author’s American-born great-grandmother married a Russian immigrant in New York City. A strange law, the 1907 Expatriation Act, deprived her and thousands of other U.S. women of their citizenship.
Voters are about to take their first long look of the 2020 presidential campaign at presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden — and that may not be a bad thing for President Trump.
Labor market indicators suggest that the early temporary job losses of the pandemic are increasingly becoming permanent, putting the long-term health of the economy in further doubt.
President Trump’s campaign has redeployed to the field to woo voters in person despite a summer coronavirus surge as presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s team wagers that people scarred by the pandemic prefer virtual engagement.
The White House is worried about a spike in homeowners defaulting on their mortgages in the absence of further coronavirus economic relief, according to multiple former administration officials.
Louisiana may be turning the corner on the coronavirus surge that began in late June. Cases appear to be dropping, and hospitals are seeing a decline in COVID-19 patients.
The Environmental Protection Agency is poised to eliminate direct regulation of methane from oil and gas operations formally Thursday, teeing up a clash with big oil majors who had pressed the administration to keep the regulations intact.
Conservative activist Laura Loomer is no stranger to controversy. But she believes if she wins the Republican primary to face off against Democratic Rep. Lois Frankel for a November showdown in President Trump’s Palm Beach backyard, she can be a congresswoman.
Four major news networks have not reported on a story of a 5-year-old white child who was allegedly shot in the head at point-blank range by a 25-year-old black man while he played in the street.
The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services has received $850 million from the federal government to combat COVID-19, agency Secretary Dr. Mandy Cohen said Tuesday.
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Frustrated by the mounting tally of Local School Councils voting to keep Chicago police officers stationed on their campuses, more than 100 hundred students and supporters of police-free schools marched to Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s block Thursday afternoon, only to be turned away by a thick wall of police.
“We didn’t get as close as we wanted to, but we’re here,” an organizer said into a megaphone. Rather than try to get through, the group formed a circle around the intersection of Wrightwood and Kimball avenues, where they spent the next half-hour continuing the rally that started at noon at Logan Square Park.
Longtime state Sen. Terry Link was charged Thursday with a federal count of income tax evasion — the third Democratic state senator to face felony charges in a little more than a year.
The one-page criminal information filed in U.S. District Court accused Link, of Vernon Hills, of failing to report income on his 2016 tax return to the IRS. Link listed his income as $264,450 when in fact his income “substantially exceeded” that amount, according to the charge.
Englewood residents and organizers have big plans for the building at the intersection that unites the east and west parts of their community. It will be home to a Fresh Market grocery and food co-op, the first step of a redevelopment that aims to transform vacant lots and abandoned buildings into amenities that include the food store, a recycling operation, a health center, a business incubator, mixed-use housing, a job training site and a restaurant.
While the effects of Chicago’s violence are wide-reaching—devastating families and scarring communities—it also takes a toll on the religious leaders who serve as spiritual guides for those who choose to follow. For many pastors, ministry extends beyond their church walls and into the streets. And as the cycle of bloodshed unfolds, ministers and priests must also bear a portion of the trauma, as they comfort families in mourning and eulogize the dead.
Katey Frederking, 28, used to live in Ravenswood. But she listed her condo two weeks ago, and is looking to move to the suburbs for her health and a yard for her dogs. She said COVID-19 was a catalyst for the move.
“If you asked me 10 years ago, I would have told you the suburbs were the worst place ever. But we’re doing this for me and for my dogs,” said Frederking, who was diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder about two years ago.
Taxpayers spent nearly $66 million fashioning McCormick Place into an emergency coronavirus hospital with 2,750 beds this past spring amid fears that COVID-19 patients would overwhelm hospitals in the Chicago area.
Those fears turned out to be unfounded. Just 38 patients were transferred to the sprawling convention center — meaning taxpayers’ cost for the makeshift hospital turned out to be more than $1.7 million per patient, on average. Tim Novak and Robert Herguth have the story…
Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s aides defended her push for the little-used coronavirus hospital built by Walsh Construction as an important “insurance policy” in a time of “immense emergency.”
Trevian Kutti has already ruffled feathers in the world of Illinois politics, saying she plans “to keep my knee on [the] neck” of the state’s top pot official, who like her, is African American.
It has been nearly a year since a source identified Link as the unnamed state senator who cooperated with the feds against another state lawmaker, then-state Rep. Luis Arroyo.
“It’s important to understand that the devastation that has taken place here in the city of Harvey is unlike anything that has happened,” said Harvey Mayor Christopher Clark.
The city’s role in relocating General Iron from Lincoln Park to a majority Latino neighborhood is one of many actions that violate civil rights, the complaint alleges.
Lower tax rates make the Chicago casino proposition “attractive enough” for companies to make a run for it, according to the Las Vegas firm that previously said it would be a no-go.
Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Friday (thankfully). 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, 162,938.Tuesday, 163,465. Wednesday, 164,537. Thursday, 166,027. Friday, 167,242.
President Trump waded into the waters of birtherism once again on Thursday as he questioned whether Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) is eligible to serve as vice president or president (she is), incurring a barrage of criticism from Democrats.
The president’s comments came in response to a reporter during a press conference on Thursday night. As The Hill’s Brett Samuels notes, Trump referred to a recent column by John Eastman, a conservative attorney, who called into question the citizenship status of Harris’s immigrant parents. Harris was born in Oakland, Calif., making her a natural-born citizen and eligible to be president or vice president (Politifact).
“I just heard that. I heard it today, that she doesn’t meet the requirements,” Trump said. “And by the way, the lawyer that wrote that piece is a very highly qualified, talented lawyer.”
“I have no idea if that’s right. I would have assumed the Democrats would have checked that out before she gets chosen to run for vice president,” Trump continued. “I don’t know about it. I just heard about it.”
The Eastman column was retweeted by Jenna Ellis, a Trump campaign adviser, who falsely asserted that Harris’s eligibility is “an open question.”
Harris is the first woman of color to be named to the presidential ticket of a major political party. Democrats and some Trump critics were quick to hammer the president for peddling misinformation on live TV about the senator.
“Donald Trump was the national leader of the grotesque, racist birther movement with respect to President Obama and has sought to fuel racism and tear our nation apart on every single day of his presidency,” said Andrew Bates, a Biden spokesman. “So it’s unsurprising, but no less abhorrent, that as Trump makes a fool of himself straining to distract the American people from the horrific toll of his failed coronavirus response that his campaign and their allies would resort to wretched, demonstrably false lies in their pathetic desperation.”
Trump’s remarks came shortly after he launched an offensive against the Democratic ticket, accusing former Vice President Joe Biden of politicizing the pandemic with his call to require Americans to wear masks outdoors to curb coronavirus transmissions.
As Niall Stanage writes in his latest memo, while Trump is in the early stages of taking aim at Harris, there are major political pitfalls for the GOP as he does. The president’s standing among female voters of all ages has eroded during his term. Name-calling and false innuendo tied to race and gender potentially hurt the president’s appeal among suburban female voters, who helped him win in key battleground states in 2016.
Reuters: Biden campaign raises $48 million in 48 hours after naming Kamala Harris as VP choice.
The Washington Post: With early momentum, Harris to focus on connecting with minorities, activists, women in swing states.
Meanwhile, the president also returned to a controversy he is intent on stirring about mail-in voting, which he maintains without evidence leads to widespread voter fraud. After saying earlier in the day that he would oppose giving the U.S. Postal Service more funding ahead of the election, Trump told reporters a few hours later that he would not veto a bill that increases Postal Service funding ahead of Election Day.
“Sure. A separate thing. I would do it,” he said. “But one of the reasons the post office needs that much money is to have all these millions of ballots coming in from nowhere.”
However, the president added that he is not prepared to direct the postmaster general to reverse some policies Democrats have criticized as undermining the reliability of the Postal Service (The Hill).
> Conventions: The president revealed on Thursday that he will deliver his acceptance speech to delegates participating in the Republican National Convention from the White House lawn.
Trump announced his decision in an interview with the New York Post. He had weighed an address from Gettysburg, Pa., after canceling an in-person convention that was to be held in Jacksonville, Fla., because of Florida’s high infection rate with the coronavirus.
The four-day virtual GOP event will also include a featured speech by Sen. Tim Scott (S.C.), the only Black Republican senator, Bloomberg News reported. “Honoring the Great American Story” is the convention theme.
Politico: Trump’s prime-time convention plan: A D.C. ballroom and government backdrops. The Andrew W. Mellon Auditorium, an ornate federal building, will serve as a “central hub” for speeches and staff. The unusual arrangement is already drawing ethical concerns that federal resources will be used for campaign events and that administration officials will violate the law by campaigning for the president on government property. The president’s flagship hotel, already a gathering spot for Republicans, is a short walk from the Mellon Auditorium. Trump and Vice President Mike Pence, who are not constrained by the Hatch Act, are expected to deliver their campaign speeches on federal property during the GOP convention.
On the Democratic side, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was added to the packed slate of speakers (The Hill). The news angered some progressive activists who don’t believe a billionaire should address the party, according to CNN.
Fox News: Hillary Clinton suggests she’s willing to serve in a Biden administration: “I’m ready to help any way I can.”
The New York Times: How Biden chose Harris: A search that forged new stars, friends and rivalries.
New York Post: Trump says a spike in violent crime, high taxes could help him win New York in 2020 election. “We’re putting New York in play,” he said during an interview with The Post. Trump lost New York by 22 points in 2016.
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. Our goal is to help register 4 million voters.
ADMINISTRATION: Trump announced a breakthrough Middle East agreement on Thursday, telling reporters that Israel and the United Arab Emirates would establish “full normalization of relations” and that in exchange Israel would forgo for now “declaring sovereignty” over occupied West Bank territory (The New York Times and The Associated Press).
The Hill: Five takeaways from the Israel-UAE agreement.
The president, speaking in the Oval Office, called the agreement, which is expected to be signed in Washington in several weeks, the “most important diplomatic breakthrough” in 40 years.
He heaped credit on son-in-law Jared Kushner, a senior adviser, who told reporters that under the terms of the accord, “Muslims will be welcome in Israel.”
Trump asserted that other countries would join a pact that solidifies opposition to regional power Iran, which the UAE, Israel and the United States view as the main threat in the conflict-riven Middle East (Reuters).
On the other side, some Israeli settlers and their political allies expressed disappointment that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would forfeit his plan to claim sovereignty over West Bank territory. Trump says it is “more than taking it off the table, they agreed not to do it,” while Netanyahu says it’s still “on the table,” and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Daniel Friedman, a bankruptcy lawyer by profession, said, “it’s not off the table permanently” (Haaretz).
The Hill: White House national economic adviser Robert O’Brien says Trump should be a front-runner for the Nobel Peace Prize. It’s not the first time the president and his team have mentioned their interest in winning a prize bestowed on former President Obama in 2009 for “extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between people.”
CONGRESS: Negotiations toward a coronavirus relief package are at a standstill as White House and Democratic negotiators remain trillions apart on an overall price tag and the Senate officially adjourned for the month long August recess on Thursday.
It’s been a full week since Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) last met to haggle in person over another massive COVID-19 relief deal, but recent days have been filled by a public back-and-forth between the two sides.
On Thursday, the remarks escalated as Pelosi told reporters that talks will resume only when Republicans come to the table with an offer of at least $2 trillion — a number Mnuchin and Meadows have dismissed.
The House in May passed a $3.4 trillion relief measure, and Republicans entered into negotiations with Democrats with a spending ceiling of $1 trillion. For Democrats, accepting less than $2 trillion would appear to be caving on priorities included in May’s Heroes Act, including assistance for schools, city and state budgets and for election security in November. Those are not items on the GOP wish list.
“When they’re ready to do that, we’ll sit down,” Pelosi said during her weekly press conference in the Capitol (The Hill).
“We are miles apart in our values,” Pelosi said. “Perhaps you mistook them for somebody who gave a damn. That isn’t the case. This is very far apart.”
As Pelosi spoke, Meadows addressed reporters at the White House briefing room, saying that the White House offered Democrats reasonable alternatives in short-term bills to extend unemployment insurance that recently expired and on other items. In the meantime, he pointed to executive actions released over the weekend.
“The president has been very clear for us to be aggressive and forward-leaning to make sure that they get protected, and yet what we’re seeing is politics as usual from Democrats on Capitol Hill,” Meadows said (The Washington Post).
At the moment, GOP negotiators are open to a deal between $1 trillion and $1.5 trillion, which Meadows told Senate Republicans during a conference call on Thursday, according to CNN.
The impasse has led to an increasingly likely outcome: That any coronavirus relief package will have to wait until September as Democrats and the GOP have other pressing matters to attend to in the coming weeks. Namely, the Democratic National Convention, which starts virtually on Monday, and the Republican National Convention that starts a week later.
The Senate is not expected to return until Sept. 8 without a deal in the interim. Negotiators are also not expected to meet in person in the near future, with Pelosi indicating that she will return to San Francisco and address next week’s Democratic National Convention from there (The Washington Post).
The Hill: Senate leaves until September without coronavirus relief deal.
The Associated Press: For Americans waiting on virus aid, no new relief in sight.
More in Congress: With talks stalled, Schumer is set to throw his support behind the RESTAURANTS Act — a $120 billion grant program for independent restaurants — this morning, becoming the first of the big four congressional leaders to do so. Thus far, a bipartisan group of 27 senators and 177 House members co-sponsor the bill, which would be separate from the Paycheck Protection Program. “I am proud to stand with the Independent Restaurant Coalition and support the RESTAURANTS Act to give restaurants the relief they need to weather this crisis so they can eventually fully reopen and bring back to work millions of workers who have lost their jobs,” Schumer said in a statement. “Restaurants can’t wait.”
IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CORONAVIRUS: Five months into a pandemic that is out of control in many parts of the world, Americans, U.S. governors and the president are still debating masks worn indoors and outside to protect against COVID-19 spread.
On Thursday, Biden and Harris called for a nationwide mask mandate for outdoor activities, and the president, who has the authority to make that happen, responded that wearing face coverings is up to governors and individuals, not the federal government (The Hill and NPR).
The former vice president said on Thursday that “every governor” should require masks for the next three months, arguing the simple and inexpensive precaution would save more than 40,000 lives in that period. Biden cited unnamed public health experts for the estimate.
“Every single American should be wearing a mask when they’re outside for the next three months,” Biden said. “Every governor should mandate mandatory mask wearing” (Reuters).
Trump, during an evening press briefing on Thursday, said “we will continue to urge Americans to wear masks when they can’t socially distance,” adding, “We want to have a certain freedom. That’s what we’re about.”
The president challenged Biden’s recommendation for a mandate, saying, “I trust the American people … and Joe doesn’t.”
In Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp (R) fanned the mask controversy in his state by announcing he dropped a lawsuit filed in July challenging Atlanta’s mandate for masks, promising to issue an executive order on Saturday that will effectively allow cities to keep their mandates on the books but will only allow them to enforce such requirements on government property, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Meanwhile, the United States notched more than 1,500 new deaths caused by COVID-19 on Wednesday, marking the deadliest day in this country since the end of May (CNBC).
> Vaccines: Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, told The Hill’s Reid Wilson in an interview that he is skeptical that a Russian vaccine will prove to be safe and he promises to protect U.S. vaccine development efforts from political interference.
OPINION
Harris can only hurt Biden, by Bradley A. Blakeman, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/30US4a8
Lose the nasty words, Mr. President — it does you no good, New York Post editorial board. https://bit.ly/2PRo60d
Israel-UAE deal clears annexation muddle. But not for everyone, by diplomatic reporter Noa Landau, Haaretz analysis. https://bit.ly/30UvUF1
A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
How Facebook is preparing for the US 2020 election
— Launched new Voting Information Center
— More than tripled our safety and security teams to 35,000 people
— Implemented 5-step political ad verification
— Providing greater political ad transparency
The Senate will convene at 10 a.m. for a pro forma session. The full Senate is scheduled to meet next on Sept. 8.
The president departs the White House this afternoon for Bedminster, N.J. He will speak to the City of New York Police Benevolent Association there at 5 p.m.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo Is in Vienna, Austria, participating in a business roundtable this morning with Austrian Finance Minister Gernot Bluemel and with representatives of Austrian companies. Later, Pompeo participates in the launch of U.S.-Austria Friendship Tram with Vienna Mayor Michael Ludwig and meets with Austrian President Alexander Van der Bellen. At midday, the secretary lays a wreath at the Holocaust Memorial with Austrian leaders of faith communities and then meets with Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg, with whom he will share a working lunch. This afternoon, Pompeo talks with the news media along with the Austrian foreign minister and later meets with International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi. Later today, the secretary meets with staff and families of the U.S. Missions in Vienna, then sits down this afternoon in Vienna with Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Dendias. The secretary attends a working dinner tonight with Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz. Pompeo will continue his travels this week to Warsaw, Poland, before returning to Washington.
Economic indicator: The U.S. Census Bureau reports at 8:30 a.m. on U.S. retail sales in July.
👉 INVITATION: The Hill has a new virtual 2020 Conventions Hub! Be part of digital events and get the latest news about the Democratic and Republican national conventions. The Hill dives into The Big Questions Morning Briefings daily during the conventions with pollsters, party leaders and campaign veterans moderated by The Hill’s editors.
JOIN IN to talk about the latest political developments shaping the country. RSVP now for The Big QuestionsDNC and RNCmorning virtual briefings each convention day at 11 a.m. EDT, featuring political analysts and editors who discuss up-to-the-minute trends and 2020 election developments. Reminder dates: Democratic National Convention, Aug. 17-20; Republican National Convention, Aug. 24-27.
PLUS, The Hill’s special virtual afternoon briefings go deeper on key issues, including Energy: Access & Reliability; Agenda for Affordable Housing; COVID-19: The Way Forward; and Energy & National Security. Check out the full schedule and RSVP now to hold a spot!
➔ International: Lebanon: The FBI is joining the investigation into the causes of the deadly blasts in Beirut on Aug. 4, according to State Department officials (The Hill). … Russia is using an intelligence hacking tool codenamed “Drovorub” to try to break into Linux-based computers commonly used across computer server infrastructure, including in national security systems, the Defense Department and by the U.S. defense industrial base, according to a report by the National Security Agency and the FBI released on Thursday. The NSA and FBI connected Drovorub to a specific Russian intelligence team, the 85th Main Special Service Center, military unit 26165. The particular unit is associated with the same hackers who broke into the Democratic National Committee in 2016 (Reuters).
➔ U.S. economy: The S&P 500, an index that tracks the country’s largest publicly traded companies, has all but erased its pandemic losses and is poised to break a new record. The market’s performance is earning praise from Trump, although the yawning disconnect between ebullient market returns and the deep economic pain many Americans are feeling could be a setback for the president (The Hill). … Weekly jobless claims fell below 1 million last week, but remain high, according to Thursday’s government report (The Associated Press). White House acting chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers Tyler Goodspeed told Bloomberg News that the drop in claims last week was “encouraging” but the U.S. economy “has a long way to go.” … The United States has hit a fiscal cliff with jobs, economic recovery hanging in the balance (Reuters).
➔ Sports: No. 1-ranked Novak Djokovic (pictured below), who tested positive for COVID-19 in June, said on Thursday that he will compete in the U.S. Open tennis tournament after initially saying he might skip it (The Associated Press). … After not playing for more than two weeks, the St. Louis Cardinals are set to take the field once again for a doubleheader on the road Saturday against the Chicago White Sox. The ballclub has not played since July 30 as they have had 10 players and eight staff members test positive for COVID-19 (ESPN).
And finally … 👏👏👏 Bravo to this week’s Morning Report Quiz winners!
These puzzle masters googled or guessed correctly when we posed trivia questions about vice presidential running mates: Mary Anne McEnery, John Donato, Donna Minter, Dylan Dombroski, Terry Pflaumer, Phil Kirstein, Donna Nackers, Candi Cee, Mike Ferrell, Joe Glauber, Patrick Kavanagh, Daniel Bachhuber, Scott King, Mike Roberts, Stuart Babendir, Jack Barshay,Shaun Donnelly, Luther Berg, RJ Agostinelli, Pam Manges, Peter J. Stewart and Joseph Albert.
They knew that in 1972, Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern chose at the last possible minute then-Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri to be his vice presidential running mate (pictured below). The McGovern-Eagleton ticket lasted just 18 days. McGovern discovered that Eagleton had been treated for mental illness, including with electroshock therapy, but had not disclosed the information at the outset.
GOP presidential nominee Richard Nixon “surprised everyone” and “irritated many” during his party’s convention in 1968 by announcing Maryland Gov. Spiro Agnew was his choice to be his running mate.
In addition to then-Sen. Joe Biden (D-Del.), former President Obama’s campaign strategists interviewedEvan Bayh of Indiana and Tim Kaine of Virginia as potential running mates in 2008.
Harris on Tuesday made history as Biden’s pick, but not because of her gender. The first woman chosen to be a VP nominee of a major U.S. political party was Geraldine Ferraro in 1984.
The Morning Report is created by journalists Alexis Simendinger and Al Weaver. We want to hear from you! Email: asimendinger@thehill.com and aweaver@thehill.com. We invite you to share The Hill’s reporting and newsletters, and encourage others to SUBSCRIBE!
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POLITICO Playbook: A day in the life of American politics in 2020
Presented by
DRIVING THE DAY
THESE DAYS ARE DIZZYING, so you’d be forgiven for not being able to keep track of all the developments in our body politic. Yes, there are some good things going on — JARED KUSHNER, who we’ve ribbed for some time, has even won over TOM FRIEDMAN with his Middle East dealmaking tactics. But there are also some sordid and oh-so-Washington developments worth reviewing. In a bygone era, any one of these incidents would spark days of coverage. Now, each is but a blip.
— WITH A PANDEMIC coursing through America, Congress is home for the month, and won’t return until mid-September. With an election 81 DAYS away, congressional leaders left town without coming to a deal with the White House on a stimulus relief bill that could help ease the pain of struggling Americans. It seems exceedingly unlikely a deal will come together before Sept. 30 — if at all.
— THE PRESIDENT suggested he thought Sen. KAMALA HARRIS (D-Calif.) might be ineligible to be VP — reprising a racist conspiracy theory he used against BARACK OBAMA.HARRIS was born in Oakland, Calif. Some of his advisers cringed. It seemed desperate. L.A. Times: “Baseless birther attack on Kamala Harris shows how Trump is struggling to define her”
— THE PRESIDENT used these terms to describe women Thursday: He said Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (D-N.Y.) “yaps”; he called HARRIS a “madwoman”; and he assailed MSNBC host MIKA BRZEZINSKI as the “ditzy airhead wife” of Joe Scarborough.More from Quint Forgey on Trump’s attacks
— THE PRESIDENT will break with all norms and accept the Republican Party’s nomination on the White House lawn, he told the N.Y. Post. Oh — and he also said he’ll try to win New York, which he lost by 22 points in 2016. THE COVER of the N.Y. POST is a photo of DONALDTRUMP in front of a portrait of ABE LINCOLN with this: “‘NEW YORK IS IN PLAY’” … Dems would love TRUMP to spend money there.
— MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE — a QAnon supporter who is likely to come to Congress in November with full support from House Majority Leader KEVIN MCCARTHY and the GOP leadership — suggested in a recently found video that MS-13 were hitmen for OBAMA and killed SETH RICH, a DNC employee who was murdered in 2016 in what police have said was a random armed robbery attempt. She was also a 9/11 truther, although she walked that back Thursday.
— MICHAEL COHEN, the president’s former attorney who was recently in prison, published excerpts from his book “Disloyal.” NYT’S ANNIE KARNI:“‘I bore witness to the real man, in strip clubs, shady business meetings, and in the unguarded moments when he revealed who he really was: a cheat, a liar, a fraud, a bully, a racist, a predator, a con man,’ Mr. Cohen writes, claiming he has gained from those experiences a singular understanding of the president. …
“‘I STIFFED contractors on his behalf, ripped off his business partners, lied to his wife Melania to hide his sexual infidelities, and bullied and screamed at anyone who threatened Trump’s path to power,’ he writes.”
WE DON’T PRETEND TO KNOW what any of this means. But it doesn’t speak well of the state of American politics in 2020.
HEADS UP … DEVELOPMENTS TODAY … A.G. BILL BARR said this on SEAN HANNITY’S show Thursday night about the JOHN DURHAM-led investigation into the origins of the Crossfire Hurricane investigation: “I have said there are going to be developments, significant developments, before the election. But we’re not doing this on the election schedule. We’re aware of the election. We’re not going to do anything inappropriate before the election.
“But we’re not being dictated to by this schedule. What’s dictating the timing of this are developments in the case. And there will be developments. Tomorrow, there will be a development in the case. You know, it’s not an earth-shattering development, but it is an indication that things are moving along at the proper pace, as dictated by the facts in this investigation.”
WHAT THE BIDEN CAMPAIGN IS READING … KYLE CHENEY: “Besieged on all sides, Ron Johnson says his probe ‘would certainly’ help Trump win reelection”: “Sen. Ron Johnson this week said his probe of Obama-era intelligence agencies would help President Donald Trump win reelection, igniting fury from Democrats who say it was an explicit admission he’s using his committee to damage Joe Biden’s candidacy for president.
“‘The more that we expose of the corruption of the transition process between Obama and Trump, the more we expose of the corruption within those agencies, I would think it would certainly help Donald Trump win reelection and certainly be pretty good, I would say, evidence about not voting for Vice President Biden,’ Johnson said in a little-noticed Tuesday interview with Minneapolis-based radio hosts Jon Justice and Drew Lee.
“Democrats compared the remark to comments made in 2015 by House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy, who boasted that the Republican-led Benghazi investigation was successful because it had helped tank Hillary Clinton’s poll numbers. Facing sharp criticism, McCarthy later walked back those comments.”
Good Friday morning.
NEW POLL … NPR/PBS NEWSHOUR/MARIST: “Democrat Joe Biden’s lead has expanded to double-digits against President Trump in the presidential election, an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll finds. Biden now leads Trump 53% to 42%, up from an 8-point advantage at the end of June.
“It comes as 71% of Americans now see the coronavirus as a real threat, up significantly over the last several months, as more than 167,000 Americans have died and more than 5 million have become infected with the virus.
“And yet, more than a third of Americans (35%) say they won’t get vaccinated when a vaccine comes available; 60% say they will. There are huge splits by education and party on this. Those with college degrees are 19 points more likely to get vaccinated than those without (72% to 53%), and Democrats are 23 points more likely than Republicans (71% to 48%).”The poll
NEW: SPEAKER NANCY PELOSI will join us TUESDAY at 1:30 P.M. for a virtual interview as part of our Playbook convention coverage. Register to watch
— ALSO: Check out our new “PLUG IN WITH PLAYBOOK” morning show we’re debuting MONDAY at 9 A.M. during both the DNC and RNC conventions, with guests like DNC Chair TOM PEREZ, Dem Convention CEO JOE SOLMONESE, Sen. TIM KAINE (D-Va.), SYMONE SANDERS and NRSC Executive Director KEVIN MCLAUGHLIN. More guests to be announced.The schedule
WILD STORY … WAPO’S CAROL LEONNIG and NICK MIROFF: “Secret Service sought tactical aircraft to protect White House amid Floyd demonstrations”: “The Secret Service sought to bolster its protection of the White House with surveillance aircraft and a Blackhawk helicopter carrying a ‘fast rope’ commando team after crowds protesting the police killing of George Floyd knocked down temporary barricades and one man got onto the complex grounds in late May, according to newly obtained government correspondence.
“That breach — combined with the throngs of protesters that converged outside the White House the night of May 29 — prompted agents to rush President Trump to a reinforced bunker and spurred a deeper concern about the White House’s vulnerability.
“In a letter a week later, the Secret Service asked U.S. Customs and Border Protection to provide aircraft that could be used in a rapid-response helicopter operation, the records show. Customs and Border Protection ultimately provided the agency with live information from a surveillance plane, but the Secret Service determined that the helicopter was not necessary, according to administration officials familiar with the plans, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal discussions.”
WHAT JARED AND AVI HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR … NYT’S TOM FRIEDMAN: “A Geopolitical Earthquake Just Hit the Mideast”: “For once, I am going to agree with President Trump in his use of his favorite adjective: ‘huge.’
“The agreement brokered by the Trump administration for the United Arab Emirates to establish full normalization of relations with Israel, in return for the Jewish state forgoing, for now, any annexation of the West Bank, was exactly what Trump said it was in his tweet: a ‘HUGE breakthrough.’
“It is not Anwar el-Sadat going to Jerusalem — nothing could match that first big opening between Arabs and Israelis. It is not Yasir Arafat shaking Yitzhak Rabin’s hand on the White House lawn — nothing could match that first moment of public reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians.
“But it is close. Just go down the scorecard, and you see how this deal affects every major party in the region — with those in the pro-American, pro-moderate Islam, pro-ending-the-conflict-with-Israel-once-and-for-all camp benefiting the most and those in the radical pro-Iran, anti-American, pro-Islamist permanent-struggle-with-Israel camp all becoming more isolated and left behind. It’s a geopolitical earthquake.”
VEEPSTAKES DEEP DIVE … NYT, A1: “How Biden Chose Harris: A Search That Forged New Stars, Friends and Rivalries,” by Alex Burns, Jonathan Martin and Katie Glueck: “It was early in Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s vice-presidential search when he asked his advisers a sensitive question about Senator Kamala Harris. He kept hearing so much private criticism of her from other California Democrats, he wanted to know: Is she simply unpopular in her home state?
“Advisers assured Mr. Biden that was not the case: Ms. Harris had her share of Democratic rivals and detractors in the factional world of California politics, but among regular voters her standing was solid.
“Mr. Biden’s query, and the quiet attacks that prompted it, helped begin a delicate audition for Ms. Harris that has never before been revealed in depth. She faced daunting obstacles, including an array of strong competitors, unease about her within the Biden family and bitter feuds from California and the 2020 primary season that exploded anew.” NYT
“And in coming weeks, the Biden campaign plans to deploy the U.S. senator from California to swing states — often virtually, but at times in person — to connect with Black voters, young activists and suburban women, groups whose support for Biden is solid but far from guaranteed. Joint television interviews are in the works over the next few weeks.
THE POST OFFICE’S MANUFACTURED CRISIS …
— PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER: “USPS says Pennsylvania mail ballots may not be delivered on time, and state warns of ‘overwhelming’ risk to voters,” by Jonathan Lai and Ellie Rushing: “The U.S. Postal Service has warned Pennsylvania that some mail ballots might not be delivered on time because the state’s deadlines are too tight for its ‘delivery standards,’ prompting election officials to ask the state Supreme Court to extend the deadlines to avoid disenfranchising voters.
“The warning came in a July 29 letter from Thomas J. Marshall, general counsel and executive vice president of the Postal Service, to Pennsylvania Secretary of State Kathy Boockvar, whose department oversees elections. That letter was made public late Thursday in a filing her Department of State submitted to the Supreme Court, asking it to order that mail ballots be counted as long as they are received up to three days after the Nov. 3 election date.”
— WAPO’S AMY GARDNER, JOSH DAWSEY and PAUL KANE: “[Louis] DeJoy, a longtime GOP fundraiser, is in frequent contact with top Republican Party officials and met with the president in the Oval Office last week in advance of a tense meeting that DeJoy had with Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), according to people with knowledge of recent events who spoke on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly.”
TRUMP’S FRIDAY — The president will leave the White House at 2 p.m. en route to Bedminster, N.J. He will arrive at 3:50 p.m. Trump will speak to the City of New York Police Benevolent Association at 5 p.m.
TV TONIGHT … PBS’ “Washington Week” with Bob Costa: Yamiche Alcindor, Mary Jordan, Jonathan Martin and Ayesha Rascoe.
SUNDAY SO FAR …
CBS
“Face the Nation”: Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot … Dmitri Alperovitch … Scott Gottlieb.
FOX
“Fox News Sunday”: Panel: Jason Riley, Kristen Soltis Anderson and Mo Elleithee. Power Player: Democratic convention highlights.
ABC
“This Week”: Jason Miller. Panel: Chris Christie, Rahm Emanuel, Sara Fagen and Yvette Simpson.
NBC
“Meet the Press”: Panel: Charles Benson, Kasie Hunt, Jeh Johnson and Carol Lee.
Gray TV
“Full Court Press with Greta Van Susteren”: House Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (D-S.C.) … Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas).
Sinclair
“America This Week with Eric Bolling”: President Donald Trump … Michael Solan … Jose Aristimuño … Hogan Gidley … Madeleine Westerhout.
RIC GRENELL: “We are happy to announce that the leaders of Kosovo and Serbia will meet at the White House for a negotiation on September 2.”
FUN READ — “The boys and girls on the Zoom,” by Eli Okun and John Harris: “It is an odd turn of events in the media business. Four years ago, after most journalists were caught surprised by Donald Trump’s victory, there was an almost universal critique about how the profession needed to do better next time. Reporters needed to get off Twitter, get off cable and get off their asses. Entire tomes were written on the subject.
“Start filling up notebooks, the argument went, with quotes from aldermen and barbers, from mayors and cab drivers, and families at the food court. That is how journalists liberate themselves from conventional wisdom and the distorting effects of their cultural bubbles and learn what’s really happening in the country.
“Instead, due to the coronavirus pandemic, journalists are spending more time on their asses than ever—phone in one hand, and television remote in the other. The presidential campaign has gone remote in multiple senses of the word—the most dramatic shift in the rhythms and day-to-day logistics of newsgathering that political journalism has seen in decades. In 1973, writer Timothy Crouse coined a term with a classic media book, The Boys on the Bus. Over the years, the craft lost its historic chauvinism and women boarded the bus. This year—and perhaps into the future—the bus is canceled. A latter-day Crouse might write The Boys and Girls on Zoom.” POLITICO
WSJ: “Beirut Explosion Likely Sparked by Maintenance at Warehouse, According to U.S. Assessment,”by Jared Malsin, Benoit Faucon and Nazih Osseiran in Beirut: “Maintenance work likely led to the explosion of a large cache of ammonium nitrate that devastated a large part of the Lebanese capital last week, a U.S. government assessment concluded, according to a person familiar with the matter.
“The assessment adds to the emerging picture of what caused the Aug. 4 blast that killed more than 160 people, with at least 60 others still missing. The explosion has stoked public outrage toward Lebanon’s government, with many protesters demanding justice after the explosive material was stored for years in the port adjacent to the heart of Beirut, and calling for their country’s leaders to be held accountable for years of poor governance and corruption.
“After days of protests that forced Prime Minister Hassan Diab’s cabinet to resign earlier this week, Lebanon’s parliament in its first session since the explosion approved Thursday a state of emergency that grants sweeping powers to the military.”
LITTLE ROCKET MAN — “North Korea lifts lockdown in city, rejects flood, virus aid,” by AP’s Kim Tong-Hyung in Seoul, South Korea: “North Korean leader Kim Jong Un lifted a lockdown in a major city near the border with South Korea where thousands had been quarantined for weeks over coronavirus worries, state media said Friday.
“But Kim, during a key ruling party meeting on Thursday, also insisted the North will keep its borders shut and rejected any outside help as the country carries out an aggressive anti-virus campaign and rebuilds thousands of houses, roads and bridges damaged by heavy rain and floods in recent weeks.” AP
HMM … MATTHEW KARNITSCHNIG on “Mike Pompeo’s summer feel-good tour of Europe”: “One sign that the trip is not all about business for Pompeo is the presence of his wife, Susan. … Before ending their trip in Warsaw on Saturday, the pair will enjoy a rare treat: a summertime Vienna nearly free of tourists. In addition to a visit to the Hapsburgs’ former imperial palace, a chat with the president and a meeting with Austria’s boy-wonder chancellor, Sebastian Kurz, Pompeo is expected to ride around the city center in one of Vienna’s iconic trams.
“Exactly why Pompeo, who is spending two nights in Vienna, is devoting so much attention to neutral Austria is something of a mystery. No secretary of state has spent so much time on a bilateral visit to the Alpine nation, which doesn’t belong to NATO and is officially neutral, in living memory.
“Asked last week what Pompeo hoped to achieve there, Philip Reeker, the acting assistant secretary of state for Europe, struggled to offer specifics: ‘I think we’ll have an opportunity to look broadly at the shared common values and perspectives that we have with Austria.’”
SPOTTED at a Zoom gathering for George W. Bush DHS alums Thursday night: Tom Ridge, Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Jim Loy, Duncan Campbell, Susan Neely, Ed Cash, Steve Cooper, James McCament, Alison Williams, Pam Turner, Jim Williams, Pat Hughes, Parney Albright, Gary Shiffman, Dave Epperson, Brian Cairns, Tim Stout, Ken Hill, Chris Furlow and Ted Gangsei.
MOVING ON UP … Joy Lee will be Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s press secretary. She joined Pelosi’s press shop in 2015 and most recently was deputy press secretary.
TRANSITIONS — Jonathan Burks is joining Walmart as VP of global public policy. He most recently was at the Brunswick Group, and is the former chief of staff to former Speaker Paul Ryan. The staff letter … Anton Becker is now assistant VP at Story Partners. He most recently was senior specialist of policy comms at SHRM, and is a Frank Pallone and Tammy Duckworth alum.
BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Denise Feriozzi, principal at Civitas Public Affairs. A trend that doesn’t get enough attention: “I’ve been watching closely how local leaders — whether it’s mayors, city councilors or school board members — have really been stepping up in this moment. They are making incredibly important decisions on public health and safety, deciding when and how to reopen schools and reforming policing. In politics and especially in Washington, we don’t value these offices enough and yet they can affect people’s day-to-day lives the most.” Playbook Q&A
BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) is 56 … Kate Carr (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … NYT’s Adam Goldman … Boris Epshteyn, strategic adviser for coalitions on the Trump campaign and a former special assistant to the president, is 38 (h/t Steven Cheung) … Tim Carney of the Washington Examiner and AEI … Paige Willey of the White House … Erik Sperling … POLITICO’s Peter Canellos and Colby Bermel … Bill Couch … Lori Montgomery, WaPo deputy national editor … Lynne Cheney is 79 … Dan Sena, owner/partner at Sena Kozar Strategies … David Ellis … Elliott Hulse of the World Bank … Jessica Pavel … Ian Rayder, deputy Colorado secretary of state … Katrin Bennhold, Berlin bureau chief for the NYT (h/t Ben Chang) … Gary Endicott … former Rep. Tom Campbell (R-Calif.) is 68 … former Rep. Robin Hayes (R-N.C.) is 75 … Bloomberg’s Tiffany Stecker … Jen Myers of the University of Virginia …
… Rob Flaherty, digital director for Joe Biden’s campaign … Shoaib Qureshi … Sean Miles, principal at the Mayfair Group, is 53 … Martin J. Sweet is 5-0 … Matt J. Lauer, global head of comms and strategy at Mercuria Energy Trading and EVP at MSLGroup … David Samson is 81 … Melissa Johnson … John Meza, VP of comms and government affairs at the Borderplex Alliance, is 34 … Liz Sternby … Paige Decker, director of members services and coalitions for the House Ways and Means GOP … Darren Goode is 46 … POLITICO Europe’s Maïa De La Baume … Tori Sachs is 32 … Edelman’s Jere Sullivan … Gray Kinsella … Josh Goldberg … Jeff Krehely … Spike Whitney … Mark Mitchell … Jane Hautanen … Eric Wohlschlegel … Nicole Stickel … Matt Nappe … Alia Awadallah … Michigan state Rep. Jon Hoadley, who’s running for Congress … Jon Selib is 45 … Josh Freed … Catherine Coleman Flowers
“For the eyes of the Lord are on the righteous, and his ears are open to their prayer. But the face of the Lord is against those who do evil,” (1 Peter 3:12, ESV).
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Aug 13, 2020 03:10 pm
URBANDALE, Iowa – Heritage Action for America will announce their Fight for America campaign at a town hall event at the Flynn Barn at Living History Farms starting at 3:30 pm (CST). Vice President Mike Pence will headline the event, and featured guests include Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Chad Wolf, U.S. Senator Joni Ernst, and Governor Kim Reynolds.
Watch it below:
“We are honored that Vice President Pence is joining us for the launch of this important campaign,” said Jessica Anderson, Executive Director of Heritage Action. “As the extreme Left increases their anti-American rhetoric and promotes lawlessness around the country, it’s more important than ever to stand up and fight for America. We are grateful for the Vice President’s support, and we look forward to energizing the conservative grassroots across the nation through the Fight for America campaign.”
This interactive town hall will host several members of local law enforcement and feature questions and testimony from Heritage Action Sentinels discussing the importance of fighting for American values and a path forward for an America that is safe and secure. As a health precaution, the town hall will be limited in attendance to 50 people, but Heritage Action will live stream the event to its network of one million activists nationwide.
Fight For America is a multi-faceted campaign organized by Heritage Action and The Heritage Foundation, with each organization working in its respective arena, to energize conservative grassroots to advocate for American values and institutions in the face of radical extremism, bolster community support for law enforcement officers, call for accountability within our education system, and reinforce that the way to fight for America is to vote for America. The campaign will feature Action’s extensive canvassing in key swing states, digital engagement, issue polling, and a pro-law enforcement effort to be announced at the event.
The effort follows the momentum of Heritage Action’s Project 2020, a grassroots effort to directly counter the Left’s policy foothold on swing voters. The initiative launched earlier this year with a phone banking effort in WI, IA, NC, and PA, and returned to in-person canvassing in July. The campaign is building a long-term conservative coalition, and has already reached over 4 million swing voters in key areas.
“Heritage Action is fighting for conservative values in communities across the nation, but we know we cannot wage these battles alone,” continued Anderson. “To successfully counter the Left, we have to encourage those around us—our neighbors, family, classmates—to take this pro-American message to the streets. Our nation is at a crossroads, and we are using every tool at our disposal to drive one message for the next three months: it’s time to fight for America.”
By Caffeinated Thoughts on Aug 13, 2020 12:03 pm
VAN METER, Iowa – David Young, Republican nominee in Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District race, today released his first television ad of the 2020 general election called “Alli.”
“Alli” tells the story of Alli and Jennifer Steele of West Des Moines who met with David in Washington, DC and told him their story and situation of insurance not covering treatment for a rare congenital anomaly of Alli’s. At their request and in response, Young, as the original and lead Republican sponsor, introduced H.R. 6689 – The Ensuring Lasting Smiles Act. The bipartisan bill was introduced on August 28, 2018. The bill would require insurance companies to cover such corrective treatments and pre-existing conditions.
“Finding solutions to problems and fighting for Iowans with pre-existing conditions is my record and my passion. Alli and Jennifer shared their story and I listened and led. Alli and Jennifer are incredible advocates for themselves and other Iowans in the same situations and I will always fight for them and those with pre-existing conditions,” Young said in a released statement.
Watch:
Transcript:
Jennifer Steele: My daughter Alli was six when she was diagnosed with a rare congenital anomaly, which is a pre-existing condition.
Narrator: Insurance companies refused to cover treatment. They met with David Young.
Alli Steele: After speaking with David Young, I thought he would take action and he did.
Jennifer Steele: David introduced bipartisan legislation to require insurance companies to cover pre-existing conditions.
Alli Steele: I know David Young will fight for Iowans with pre-existing conditions because he did for me.
Jennifer Steele: I trust David to fight for Alli and for all Iowans with pre-existing conditions.
David Young:I’m David Young and I approved this message.
Young was elected to serve Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives in 2014 and reelected in 2016. He served on the influential Committee of Appropriations. Prior to his service in Congress, Young served Iowans as U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley’s Chief of Staff from 2006-2013. A graduate of Johnston High School and Drake University, Young is a seventh generation Iowan and resides in Van Meter.
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 travel to Bedminster, New Jersey where he will speak to the City of New York Police Benevolent Association. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 8/14/20 – note: this page will be updated during the day if events warrant Keep …
President Donald Trump holds a news conference Thursday to update the nation on recent developments. These briefings typically focus on Coronavirus news and developments, but reporters ask questions on a variety of topics. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 5:30 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some …
Considering the state of conservatism in national politics today reminds of one of an old anti-war anthem from yesterday. “We hope they’re hidingWe hope they’re playing a gameBut we know this is really happeningWhere have all the conservatives gone?” With apologies to Joseph Kerschbaum The rioting and protests in many …
Hundreds of Bend, Oregon protesters blocked two Immigration and Customs Enforcement buses and clashed with federal agents in an hours-long standoff Wednesday night. Demonstrators crowded two unmarked ICE buses for more than 10 hours after the agency arrested two men immigration officials said were a “threat to the public,” according …
Democrat Donkey Drop… Having lived through the Carter, Clinton, and Obama presidencies, we have come to the realization that nothing good ever comes from a Democrat President. Biden is a walking disaster and would be worse than Obama (if that’s possible). Biden will be just one more jackass in the …
The start of the new school year is right around the corner and many parents are concerned about the fact that their children will, once again, be learning in a “virtual” environment due to concerns related to the coronavirus. While the concept of “virtual” learning poses many challenges to students …
One hundred ten days after she was murdered, bludgeoned by a hammer, dismembered, burned, and buried in a shallow grave by a river, Fort Hood Army Specialist, Vanessa Guillen’s mother and family will finally be allowed to lay her to rest. Vanessa was twenty years old. Specialist Aaron David Robinson, …
White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany holds a briefing Thursday to update the nation on recent developments. The briefing is scheduled to begin at 1:00 p.m. EDT. Content created by Conservative Daily News and some content syndicated through CDN is available for re-publication without charge under the Creative Commons license. Visit …
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris made their first appearance together as running mates in a mostly empty building in Wilmington, Delaware. What a bunch of total B.S. it was. To paraphrase an old song by Bob Dylan: “Like Judas of old they lie and deceive/ Things are going to get …
HIDALGO, Texas—Officers with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Field Operations (OFO) at the Hidalgo International Bridge intercepted alleged cocaine and methamphetamine worth $2,034,000 hidden in a commercial passenger bus arriving from Mexico this past weekend. “We inspect all type of vehicles arriving from Mexico, whether they are cars, …
Two Alabama schools were forced to switch to virtual instruction after an individual connected to both schools tested positive for coronavirus, a local news outlet reported. Moulton Elementary School and Moulton Middle School each canceled in-person classes and opted to transition into virtual classes until August 26, when the schools …
An election model from FiveThirtyEight gives presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden a 71% chance of winning the presidency in November. Former Vice President Biden’s odds are the exact same as Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s were in 2016, though the website’s editor-in-chief, Nate Silver, said the identical odds were a coincidence. …
A director at the Atlantic Council told a State Department official that the think tank was partnering with Burisma Holdings despite “uneasiness” with bribery allegations against the Ukrainian energy company. Burisma began sponsoring the Atlantic Council in early 2017 as part of a push to rehabilitate its image in the …
Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi suggested Wednesday that the ride-sharing app will likely close down for several months in California if a court doesn’t overturn a ruling that changes the classification of the company’s drivers to full-time employees. “If the court doesn’t reconsider, then in California, it’s hard to believe we’ll …
DENVER — A Colorado man pleaded guilty today to threatening to murder federal law enforcement officers with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO). Timothy Hummel, 26, of Colorado Springs, Colorado, made his initial appearance remotely while free on bond. His bond was continued at the …
Politico recently conducted a poll and discovered, much to its delight, that the public is opposed to reopening K–12 schools in the fall by a margin of 53 to 38 percent. The public here includes single people, parents, single–parents, grandparents, assorted Never Trumpers and the ‘Resistance.’ According to the demographic …
In several cartoons I predicted Hillary Clinton would run for president again in 2020. She can’t help herself–her life’s quest has been about reaching for penultimate power. After Biden was nominated, I had a sneaking suspicion that he would choose Hillary as his running mate. I was wrong. Or maybe …
Happy Friday, faithful friends of the Kruiser Morning Briefing.
Now that Biden 2020 is officially Biden-Harris 2020 it’s time once again to update and reexamine something we’ve done here once or twice and ponder the consequences of the worst happening in November.
The Biden-Harris ticket is so fraught with ick that I almost miss Clinton-Kaine.
Almost.
We all know that Joe Biden will end up doing whatever those around him tell him to do after they promise him a juice box and a My Little Pony. So it’s the Harris half of Biden-Harris that may be the only known quantity here but, as we discussed yesterday, she may have some morphing to do in order to woo progressive voters.
The mainstream media hacks have been falling all over each other to convince Regular Folk America that Kamala Harris is a moderate. This is beyond laughable, of course, but one has to consider the fact that the Democrats are so far left now that she probably is considered moderate inside the progressive bubble. Here in the real world, Sen. Harris is plenty left. Given der Bidengaffer’s transformation, the Biden-Harris ticket is left of left.
It’s a good thing for the Democrats that Joe Biden has so much big Democrat donor money behind him. Last year, after Kamala Harris’s two weeks of looking good in late June and early July, the money people soon began to sour on her. By early September, the money people were already over her. For the Biden-Harris campaign’s sake, they better hope the money people aren’t getting that irritated stomach feeling again now that Madame Charm is on the ticket.
The worst looming danger in a Biden-Harris win is that their victory would almost certainly mean that the Republicans will lose the Senate. That will just be tossing the keys to the asylum to the lunatics and it’s progressive game-on then.
Last year during her leftward primary lurch, “moderate” Harris co-sponsored the “Medicare for All” nightmare with communist Bernie Sanders. She also teamed up with Bartender of the Year nominee Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for some leftist fantasy called the “Climate Equity Act.”
If you want to see the federal government transition from egregious tax collecting to tax vampirism, Biden-Harris is the ticket for you. I mean, it’s no secret that everyone’s taxes will go up under Democrat rule, but — and I didn’t think this was possible — they’ve gotten even more cavalier about gouging the American taxpayer in the last two years.
Despite Harris’s reputation as a tough prosecutor and attorney general, she’s going to have to go along with all of the BLM cop-hating fever that’s sweeping progressive cities. What’s ironic here is that the Dems have a real opportunity to use her record to undercut the president’s “law and order” message but they can’t, once again thanks to the fact that Biden-Harris is a pure identity politics ticket.
We’ve all seen how awful the violence has been in cities where the rioters have the backing of municipal authorities, just wait until the White House is giving them the thumbs up.
Given that Sen. Harris is going to be the real power player in the Biden-Harris administration, her record is worthy of more scrutiny than any other veep nominee in history. Victoria wrote an excellent post on Wednesday detailing what a nightmare Harris is on civil rights.
When the Biden-Harris administration inevitably becomes the Harris-(Insert Insane Socialist Here) administration, the nation will be ruthlessly ruled by someone who is actually almost all of the bad things that the Left accuses Trump of being. It will be an unmitigated nightmare.
Biden-Harris is not your Democratic presidential ticket of old. These two are now the standard-bearers for a party that’s been gleefully covering for and cheering on ragingly violent anarchists since May. A Biden-Harris win will put the wheels of American destruction in motion the second they are declared winners.
Recapping:
Biden-Harris means higher, debilitating taxation.
Biden-Harris means a lemming rush off of the progressive cliff.
Biden-Harris means President Harris.
Biden-Harris means goodbye to the America actual Americans love.
I will leave you with this for your weekend entertainment pleasure. A Twitter user sent me this full vid of my appearance on Rock & Roll Jeopardy! back in the 90’s. I blew it in Final Jeopardy with a classic mistake: I second-guessed my first instinct and put down the wrong answer. Still, it was a fun game. I deserve all of the mocking though, as this brain-fart remains eternally shameful. Happy weekend, my friends.
You’ll probably won’t ever see me clean-shaven again unless I’m on trial. So don’t rule it out.
Trump draws bipartisan praise for peace deal between Israel and UAE . . . Israel and the United Arab Emirates struck a landmark deal Thursday to establish formal diplomatic ties and dramatically deepen mutual economic cooperation, issuing a surprise joint announcement with President Trump that could reshape the power structure of the Middle East and further isolate America’s chief foe in the region, Iran.
The agreement makes the UAE, a key U.S. partner, the third Arab nation after Egypt and Jordan to have established active diplomatic ties with Jerusalem. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that the development will kick off “a new era of peace” between his nation and the entire Arab world. As part of the deal, Mr. Netanyahu suspended his government’s controversial plan to annex areas of the West Bank, although that wasn’t enough to satisfy frustrated Palestinian leaders, who cast the Israel-UAE normalization as a betrayal and said it amounted to “treason” on the part of the Emirates. In the U.S., however, the development drew widespread praise, even from the president’s likely Democratic opponent in the November election, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden. Trump administration supporters described it as a hard-fought and much-needed diplomatic win for a president facing sagging poll numbers and criticism over his handling of the COVID-19 outbreak. Washington Times
Coronavirus
Nasal spray may prevent people from catching the virus . . . A nasal spray may prevent humans from catching Covid-19 and could even be more effective than wearing PPE, scientists claim. Experts at the University of California, San Francisco created ‘AeroNabs’. They hope it will act as a short-term tool to prevent thousands of people becoming infected before a vaccine is eventually discovered. AeroNabs contains nanobodies, which are antibody-like immune proteins that have been engineered to target SARS-CoV-2, the virus behind the pandemic. Daily Mail
Coronavirus shaping up as battle that will last years . . . The coronavirus pandemic is likely to be a challenge for years to come even with a vaccine, according to pharmaceutical and public-health experts. While a vaccine will provide some measure of protection to societies around the globe, the virus is likely to flare up from time to time and be constantly battled, much like the flu and other pathogens. Humanity’s record against viruses is poor. Only one virus has been fully driven out of existence in humans – smallpox. The rest are managed, with brushfires stomped out when they flare up. Bloomberg
California megachurch holds services for thousands . . . To hear Pastor John MacArthur tell it, all Grace Community Church did was open its doors and the people came. The megachurch in suburban Los Angeles had closed its doors in mid-March because of the coronavirus pandemic. The church reopened in late July. “People started slowly coming back and they just kept coming until there were six or seven thousand.” According to an order issued July 29, houses of worship in Los Angeles County must limit indoor gatherings to 100 people or 25% of the building’s capacity, whichever is lower. CNN
Politics
Biden picked Harris from among four finalists . . . Ms. Harris was one of four finalists for the job, along with Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Susan E. Rice, the former national security adviser. But in the eyes of Mr. Biden and his advisers, Ms. Harris alone covered every one of their essential political needs. Ms. Rice had sterling foreign-policy credentials and a history of working with Mr. Biden, but was inexperienced as a candidate. Ms. Warren had an enthusiastic following and became a trusted adviser to Mr. Biden on economic matters, but she represented neither generational nor racial diversity. Ms. Whitmer, a moderate, appealed to Mr. Biden’s political and ideological instincts, but selecting her also would have yielded an all-white ticket. New York Times
Harris has done nothing as a US senator . . . Over her 3½ years, she has quietly amassed one of the most liberal records in the chamber while standing out as one of the least bipartisan members in terms of her willingness to work across the aisle with Republicans, according to analysts who study bill-writing patterns.She has no laws to her name but has made a splash in committee hearings, where her confrontation with future Supreme Court Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh. Washington Times
Harris profited from relationship with married boyfriend Willie Brown . . . When they met around 1993, Brown, a noted lawyer and civil rights leader, was the speaker of the California assembly and regarded as one of the State’s most influential legislators. He had turned 60 while Harris was 29. As Brown’s ‘new steady’ she soon found herself rubbing shoulders with many of California’s political movers and shakers. As well as gifting his young squeeze a BMW car, the relationship reaped even more tangible benefits when Brown handed Harris two influential positions. ‘Brown Harris to the California Medical Assistance Commission, a job that pays $72,000 a year. Brown also appointed Harris to the state’s Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board, a lucrative position worth a further $97,088 a year, according to the same article. Daily Mail
But, you know, that was then.
Trump pans Biden mask mandate . . . President Donald Trump rebutted Joe Biden’s demand that Americans to wear masks for the next three months to combat the spread of coronavirus. ‘Americans must have their freedoms,’ Trump said. ‘He does not identify with what authority the president has to issue such a mandate or how federal law enforcement could possibly enforce it. Or why we would be stepping on governors throughout our country,’ Trump said. Daily Mail
Biden is already thinking of ways to run our lives.
Fauci says there’s no reason people can’t vote in person . . . Dr. Anthony Fauci said it should be safe for people to vote in person as long as they take sufficient precautions. “I think if carefully done according to the guidelines, there’s no reason that I can see why that not be the case,” Dr. Fauci told National Geographic in an interview that aired Thursday. He pointed out that grocery stores have marks intended to keep people at least six feet apart. Washington Times
Trump opposes postal service funding in bid to block mail-in voting . . . President Donald Trump said Thursday he opposes funding for the U.S. Postal Service and election security grants in an effort to stymie mail-in voting for the upcoming presidential election.Democrats “want 3½ billion dollars for something that will turn out to be fraudulent, that’s election money, basically. They want 3½ billion dollars for the mail-in votes, OK, universal mail-in ballots,” Trump told Fox Business Network’s Maria Bartiromo, in response to a question on talks on the next coronavirus relief package. Politico
Resistance contemplates armed battle to remove Trump . . .
The day after Election Day is going to be very bad news. The results are almost certain to be contested, given President Trump’s distrust of mail-in voting and Democrats’ unwillingness to contemplate another four years of Trump. According to Byron York in the Washington Examiner: With 80 days left before the presidential election, a new and dangerous rhetoric has emerged from some corners of the Resistance. A number of President Trump’s most implacable critics are fantasizing about deploying the U.S. military to remove him from the White House on Jan. 20, 2021, based on their assumption that a.) he will lose the election, and b.) he will refuse to leave office on his own. White House Dossier
Are Democrats willing to go along again with winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College? Given that there is an African American on the ticket, will there not be allegations that racism or voter suppression brought about Trump’s victory?
Hillary would like to serve in a Biden administration . . . The former 2016 Democratic presidential candidate said she is “ready to help in any way I can” when asked if she would take a job in a Biden administration. “I’m ready to help in any way I can,” Clinton said at the 19th Represents Summit on Thursday. “Because I think this will be a moment where every American — I don’t care what party you are, I don’t care what age, race, gender, I don’t care — every American should want to fix our country … So if you’re asked to serve, you should certainly consider that.” New York Post
She never stops.
Trump floats false theory Harris not eligible to run . . . President Donald Trump floated a false theory about presumptive Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Kamala Harris from the White House briefing room podium on Thursday. Trump campaign senior legal adviser Jenna Ellis propagated the suggestion on ABC that Harris’ birth to non-citizen immigrant parents disqualifies her from holding the presidency. Trump said he had “just heard” about the idea when asked to respond to the theory. Harris was born in Oakland, California and is qualified to hold the presidency. Daily Caller
Trump to deliver convention speech from White House lawn . . . President Trump on Thursday confirmed to the The Post he intends to give his Republican National Convention speech from the White House lawn, defying critics who said the location was inappropriate.
During an exclusive Oval Office interview, the president said he would visit the battlefield at Gettysburg at a “later date.” New York Post
Video || Huffington Post reporter asks Trump if he regrets “All the lying” . . . S.V. Dáte a reporter for the liberal Huffington Post, wanted to know today if President Trump regrets his lies to the American people. Well, actually, S.V. Dáte wanted to make a statement that Trump lies to the American people, and so he did. Because that’s how we do it in objective journalism these days. Probably the most noteworthy part of the exchange, since we already know the press has an opinion and expresses it, is that Trump didn’t go for the bait. White House Dossier
Michael Cohen in book describes doing Trump dirty work . . . The book also includes a flurry of admissions from Cohen, some of which he already pleaded guilty to and was given a three-year prison sentence for. ‘I stiffed contractors on his behalf, ripped off his business partners, lied to his wife Melania to hide his sexual infidelities, and bullied and screamed at anyone who threatened Trump’s path to power,’ Cohen admitted. Daily Mail
I wouldn’t trust Michael Cohen to babysit my kids, but hey, Trump did, and this is news.
National Security
Russia hacking tool targets US government computers . . . The NSA and FBI said that Russia’s Main Intelligence Directorate, known as the GRU, was using a hacking tool code named “Drovorub” to break into Linux-based computers. “Linux systems are used pervasively throughout National Security Systems, the Department of Defense, and the Defense Industrial Base – as well as the larger cybersecurity community writ large,” Keppel Wood, chief operations officer in the NSA’s Cybersecurity Directorate, told Reuters. “The malware has the potential to have a widespread impact if network defenders don’t take action against it.” Reuters
International
Beatings, arrests in Belarus as Lukashenko clings to power . . . Accounts of violent beatings of protesters and mass detentions mounted in Belarus on Thursday as the country’s embattled president, Aleksandr G. Lukashenko, deployed brute force to cling to power. Widespread protests against Mr. Lukashenko, an authoritarian who has ruled for 26 years, have gripped the Eastern European country ever since he claimed victory in a presidential election on Sunday that his opponents and international governments widely considered fraudulent. New York Times
Money
Fed testing digital currency . . . The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston is partnering with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to develop, test, and research a hypothetical digital currency over a two to three year period. Federal Reserve Board Governor Lael Brainard said that the Fed is investigating whether a central bank digital currency would be safe and efficient for widespread use. Fox Business
You should also know
DOJ says Yale discriminates against Asians and whites . . . The U.S. Justice Department on Thursday accused Yale University of illegally discriminating against Asian American and white applicants in its undergraduate admissions process in violation of U.S. civil rights law. The findings are the result of a two-year investigation in response to a complaint by Asian-American groups concerning Yale’s conduct, the department said in a statement. The department said it was prepared to file a lawsuit against Yale if the school did not take “remedial measures.” Reuters
Black Lives Matter crowd demands Seattle homeowners give up property . . . Black Lives Matter activists in Seattle are demanding homeowners willingly give up their property to Black people as a form of reparations because they’re “coming for it” one way or the other. “Give up your house,” exclaimed one of dozens of activists marching through a neighborhood. “Give black people back their homes. You’re sitting their comfortably — comfortable as f— as if they didn’t help gentrify this neighborhood. Washington Times
Guilty Pleasures
Travelers stuck at home buy airline food to relive flying experience . . . America Edwards was supposed to visit Australia with her parents earlier this year, but the coronavirus pandemic scuttled the trip. To re-create the experience, she did the next best thing: She bought airplane food online. For a few dollars, Ms. Edwards purchased two JetBlue-branded snack packs that included crackers, cheese and dried fruit. Her family ate the snacks one night, when instead of being in Australia, they were waiting out the pandemic at their home in Kalamazoo, Michigan. Wall Street Journal
Business idea: Create a service that helps people lose their luggage.
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THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: Trump Openly Resists Funding to Help the Postal Service
Plus, Marjorie Greene hasn’t won a seat in Congress and she’s already causing problems.
Happy Friday! Yesterday was one of those ludicrous overstuffed days where we start to worry this email’s going to get too long to fit in your inboxes. So no time for idle chatter—on to the news!
A reminder: This is the version of TMD available to non-paying readers. We’re happy you’ve made The Dispatch part of your morning routine, and we hope you’re enjoying The Morning Dispatch and the rest of our free editorial offerings. If you do, we hope you’ll consider joining us as a paying member. In addition to the full version of TMD each day, you’ll get extra editions of French Press, the G-File, Vital Interests, our campaign newsletter called The Sweep, and our other paid products. And members can engage with the authors and with one another in the discussion threads at the end of each of our articles and newsletters. If this appeals to you, we hope you’ll please join now.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
The United States confirmed 55,456 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 5 percent of the 1,115,758 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,172 deaths were attributed to the virus on Thursday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 167,106.
President Trump announced Thursday that the U.S. had brokered a landmark peace deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, scrambling diplomatic relations across the Middle East and further isolating Iran as a common regional enemy. “Now that the ice has been broken,” Trump said, “I expect more Arab and Muslim countries will follow the United Arab Emirates’ lead.”
Congress is moving further away from a coronavirus aid deal, with leaders still hopelessly deadlocked and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell announcing that—barring an unexpected breakthrough—the Senate will not hold any more votes until September 8.
The Supreme Court has declined to block a Rhode Island rule easing access to absentee voting that the Republican National Committee had challenged in court. Rhode Island law requires an absentee ballot to be signed by two witnesses or a notary public, but a lower court had ordered that rule eased—a decision to which state election officials had consented—following a lawsuit last month.
President Trump told the New York Post Thursday he would probably give his GOP nomination acceptance speech from the White House, a move cleared Wednesday by a federal ethics office.
Sec. of State Mike Pompeo acknowledged for the first time publicly that he confronted Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov about U.S. intelligence that Russia had been offering bounties to the Taliban to kill American soldiers. “If the Russians are offering money to kill Americans or, for that matter, other Westerners as well, there will be an enormous price to pay,” Pompeo said he told Lavrov.
The Department of Justice announced Thursday it concluded that Yale University has been discriminating against Asian American and white undergraduate applicants in its admissions process. A Yale spokeswoman said the school is “proud” of its admissions practices, and that it “will not change them on the basis of such a meritless, hasty accusation.”
Four days after a mammoth wind storm rampaged across Iowa and Illinois, hundreds of thousands of Iowa and Illinois residents are still without power.
Defund the U.S. Post Office?
In an interview with Fox Business Thursday morning, President Trump said he opposes increased funding for the U.S. Postal Service because, in his own words, “that means you can’t have universal mail-in voting because they’re not equipped to have it.” Democrats want to allocate $25 billion in emergency funding to the Postal Service so that states can better prepare for the tidal wave of absentee ballots that will make their way through government postal services prior to the election.
But the president doesn’t see it that way. “[Democrats] want $3.5 billion for something that’ll turn out to be fraudulent, that’s election money basically,” Trump said. “They want $3.5 billion for the mail-in votes. Universal mail-in ballots. They want $25 billion, billion, for the Post Office. Now they need that money in order to make the Post Office work so it can take all of these millions and millions of ballots.”
The president made similar comments in a Wednesday press conference, suggesting increased federal funding to the USPS is the only means by which the Democrats can successfully implement universal vote-by-mail nationwide. “They don’t have the money to do the universal mail-in voting. So therefore, they can’t do it, I guess,” he said. “Are they going to do it even if they don’t have the money?”
Marjorie Greene Is Already Causing Problems for the GOP
We noted Wednesday QAnon sympathizer Marjorie Taylor Greene’s victory in the Republican primary runoff for Georgia’s 14th Congressional District. She’s declared that the 2018 midterm election was “an Islamic invasion of our government.” She’s claimed that Hillary Clinton has sacrificed chickens in her backyard to the ancient Canaanite deity, Moloch. “I know a ton of white people that are as lazy and sorry and probably worse than black people,” Greene once said in reference to unemployment.
In the two days since she’s been a nominee, and odds-on favorite to win in November, she’s only put the Republican Party in a tougher spot.
Another video emerged on Thursday, this one exposing Greene’s conspiratorial beliefs surrounding the 9/11 attacks in 2001. Speaking at the 2018 American Priority Conference, Greene referenced the “so-called plane that crashed into the Pentagon” on September 11, 2001, claiming it’s “odd” that “there’s never any evidence shown for a plane in the Pentagon.” (Greene did not apologize for the remarks, but did admit Thursday on Twitter that she “now know[s] that is not correct.”)
Where does Republican leadership stand on Greene’s candidacy?
Well, President Trump welcomed Greene to the party on Wednesday, calling her a “future Republican Star” and a “real WINNER!” She’s also been endorsed by prominent House Freedom Caucus members like Reps. Jim Jordan, Matt Gaetz, and Andy Biggs.
Things get a little more complex in House leadership. When Greene’s comments about the midterms being an “Islamic invasion” and Black Lives Matter activists being “idiots” first surfaced in mid-June, an aide for House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy called them “appalling” and said McCarthy “has no tolerance for them.” But yesterday, after her victory in the GOP primary, a McCarthy spokesperson told The Dispatch the Minority Leader “look[s] forward” to Greene’s victory in November.
In another piece for the site, Charlotte broke down the landmark peace deal announced yesterday between Israel and the United Arab Emirates.
President Trump announced Thursday that the White House had brokered an historic agreement to establish full diplomatic ties between the United Arab Emirates and Israel. Unlike previous agreements between Israel and its Arab neighbors, this agreement is unique in a number of ways: The parties worked to reach an agreement discreetly, without the intense public scrutiny that accompanied peace agreements with Egypt in 1979 and Jordan in 1994. The UAE is also the first Gulf state and non-contiguous Arab country to establish ties with Israel. Given the coordination of foreign policy with its neighbors, the UAE could be the first of several Gulf states to recognize Israel, the result of which would be normalized relations between the Jewish state and its predominantly Sunni Arab neighbors.
The agreement, which President Trump shared over Twitter, laid out a mutually beneficial relationship in which the UAE would fully acknowledge Israel’s right to nationhood; in exchange, Israel has agreed to refrain from declaring sovereignty over stretches of the West Bank. Israel is undoubtedly one of the primary military and economic powers in the region, with advanced nuclear and cybersecurity capabilities. The 2010 Stuxnet computer worm, for example, unleashed extensive damage to Iran’s budding nuclear program. As a result of the agreement, the UAE is poised to gain access to elements of the Israeli technological and security apparatus.
Kevin Roose’s latest column has a provocative headline: “Think QAnon Is on the Fringe? So Was the Tea Party.” But he might have a point. “Democrats dismissed it as a fringe group of conspiracy-minded zealots,” he writes. “Moderate Republicans fretted over its potential to hurt their party’s image, while more conservative lawmakers carefully sought to harness its grass-roots energy. Sympathetic media outlets covered its rallies, portraying it as an emerging strain of populist politics — a protest movement born of frustration with a corrupt, unaccountable elite. Then, to everyone’s surprise, its supporters started winning elections.” While QAnon adherents’ beliefs are far, far more radical than Tea Party activists a decade ago, Roose’s description above could fairly easily apply to the spread of both movements.
There are several moments in this profile of Jared Kushner from Franklin Foer in The Atlantic that will make you say ‘wow.’ Here’s one of them. “On the path to becoming Donald Trump’s favorite, Kushner suffered his father-in-law’s sadistic jibes. The president liked to joke about how he considered Kushner an inadequate spouse for his daughter. He would muse about how he wished Ivanka had married the quarterback Tom Brady,” Foer writes. “There was often the implication that Jared was somehow insufficiently manly. Impersonating Jared, he liked to break into a sniveling, high-pitched voice. He would mimic how Jared would ask him to call a donor. ‘Oh, Mr. Trump, can you please call him, Mr. Trump? He will give you so much money, Mr. Trump.’ After the TV host Joe Scarborough heard Trump’s imitation, he related the moment to Kushner. Instead of reacting with anger, Kushner merely told Scarborough that he never called his father-in-law ‘Mr. Trump.’”
A couple days ago, you might have seen headlines (including in this newsletter!) about an unnerving new study suggesting that buffs—the stretchy fabric accessory that covers your mouth, nose, and neck, also called a gaiter—aren’t just ineffective for preventing the transmission of COVID-19, they’re actually worse than going about unmasked. Science reporting site Quartz has a piece up now cautioning that the jury’s still out. The money paragraph: “The truth is, this study was never intended to study the efficacy of buffs and other face masks at all; it was more about designing a new way to test mask efficacy. And without comparing this new droplet-measuring method to existing methods, it shouldn’t be used to completely rule out buffs as a face covering.”
David and Sarah share some thoughts on Marjorie Taylor Greene and what a QAnon congresswoman might mean for the future of the GOP on Thursday’s Advisory Opinions episode. The pair also discuss the new police officer body camera footage leading up to George Floyd’s killing, as well as the constitutional underpinnings of John Eastman’s Newsweek piece questioning Kamala Harris’ eligibility for office on birtherist grounds.
Yesterday’s midweek edition of The Sweep features a deep dive from TMD’s own Nate Hochman on Texas’ 21st Congressional District and the race to represent it. “First-term Republican Rep. Chip Roy, a Tea Party-style conservative who voted against the first-round coronavirus relief package, is in a dead heat against progressive Wendy Davis seven years after her 11-hour-long filibuster against abortion restrictions launched her onto the national stage.”
Stacey Matthews: “So today I learned from former Hillary Clinton campaign comms director Jennifer Palmieri that the word ‘phony’ is a ‘gendered‘ word that is ‘used to present women in power in an unfavorable light.’ Who knew?”
David Gerstman: “Interesting bits of news this week. A few days ago, the Gulf Cooperation Council called on the United Nations Security Council to extend its embargo of arms to and from Iran to be extended. The arms embargo, which had been open-ended was shortened to five year with the implementation of the nuclear in 2015. (The UNSC is voting on the extension of the embargo Thursday and Friday. Whatever the vote, I assume that Russia or China will veto.) Also, Senators Cory Booker (D – NJ) and Rob Portman (R – Ohio) introduced legislation to monitor the anti-normalization efforts of Arab nations with respect to Israel. And the big news Thursday, was that President Trump announced that Israel and the United Arab Emirates agreed to seek full normalization. Each of these stories support or is related to Noah Pollak’s observation that “Arab states make peace with Israel when Israel is strong and when its alliance w/ the US is strong, not when Israel and its alliance with the US are weak.” Unsurprisingly, Ben Rhodes, one of the architects of the Obama administration’s efforts to show “daylight” between Israel and the U.S. was not pleased with the news of the Israel-UAE agreement. Rhodes tweeted, “This agreement enshrines what has been the emerging status quo in the region for a long time (including the total exclusion of Palestinians). Dressed up as an election eve achievement from two leaders who want Trump to win.” The lack of self-awareness in that tweet is remarkable as it was President Obama’s efforts (promoted by Rhodes) to strengthen Iran at the expense of Israel and Iran’s Gulf neighbors that gave that “emerging status-quo” an extra urgency.”
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“As coronavirus cases rise across the nation, the media and the Democrats (but I repeat myself) have struck upon a narrative: COVID-19 has been mishandled by Republicans. This is, to be sure, a dubious proposition….”
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Historic Middle East Foreign Policy Win For Trump
Israel and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) announced Thursday they would be establishing diplomatic relations, including, “investment, tourism, direct flights, security, telecommunications, technology, energy, healthcare, culture, the environment, the establishment of reciprocal embassies, and other areas of mutual benefit.”
This deal, which was brokered with the help of the U.S., is a big deal for peace in the Middle East as it means one of the leading Gulf Arab countries will officially recognize Israel as the Jewish state, something most Arab nations refuse to do.
It’s a significant win for the Trump administration’s foreign policy record and another piece of evidence pointing to just how wrong our elites are, especially in the Middle East. When Trump moved the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, former Obama administration officials and foreign policy “experts” decried the decision as one that would alienate Arab states, and a “historic mistake.” They were wrong.
From The 2020 Campaign “Trail”
Democratic Nominee Joe Biden and his new running mate Sen. Kamala Harris hosted their second campaign event Thursday, where they did not take any questions from the press, but did suggest they would institute a “mask mandate nationwide.”
“Biden described mask-wearing as a patriotic, civic duty, given its role in stopping the spread of the respiratory illness, echoing President Trump’s recent rhetoric. “It’s not about your rights. It’s about your responsibilities as an American,” Biden said.”
“She’s beautiful and talented, but her attempted coolness is often contrived, like a jean-wearing teacher straining to relate to her students. It’s not that convincing. But Hollywood will boost this burgeoning narrative of Harris as “the picture of vigor,” already emergent in the corporate media.”
Churches vs. COVID
Every day, the list of churches and pastors suing their states for the right to assemble and worship amidst government-mandated lockdowns grows. Three more Minnesota churches filed suits against Gov. Tim Walz (The Federalist) Thursday, on the same day a California judge blocked a church’s request to block Gov. Newsom’s prohibiting of all services, even in-home Bible studies.
On the flip side, many Christians grow frustrated that their own churches are keeping their houses of worship closed, even in states with looser lockdown orders. Kylee Zempel writes at The Federalist:
“Are we, the church, so afraid of physical death that we would hasten the spiritual death of searching people by hiding our proverbial light under bushel or letting Satan blow it out? At the first possibility of adversity, have we forgotten about the eternal life secured for us through the gospel? How long are we willing to let masks muffle our worship? How long will we forgo intimate fellowship?”
Weekend Reads and Podcasts
Life won’t wait. Neither will babies. (The American Mind)
About that Cardi B Song: Pots, Kettles, and Progressives Calling Conservatives ‘Puritans’ (The American Conservative)
I enjoyed the Colson Center’s “Strong Women” podcast with special guest Federalist Senior Editor Mollie Hemingway where she talks gender roles, being a woman in politics, and her own faith. (Colson Center)
Power couple Sean Duffy and Rachel Campos-Duffy take over The Federalist Radio Hour to discuss education, race, and parenting (The Federalist)
Madeline Osburn is a writer and podcast producer at The Federalist. You can follow her on Twitter @madelineorr and subscribe to The Federalist Radio hour here. She lives in Texas with her very tall husband and very tiny dog.
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.
Aug 14, 2020 01:00 am
Democrats must surely worry about the optics of bowing to the rioters’ will. But they worry even more about what might happen if they should refuse to do as BLM and Antifa demand. Read More…
Aug 14, 2020 01:00 am
America’s suicide attempt has been both cultural and economic. If we do not reverse course, America will be neither a land of opportunity nor a land of freedom. Read More…
Aug 14, 2020 01:00 am
The barbarians are not only inside the gates, but they are being enabled by woke Democrats who now run the cities and states. Read More…
Aug 14, 2020 01:00 am
Those who seek to divide us as Americans remain incredulous at the loyalty that the president commands. We must maintain that loyalty through to November. Read More…
Aug 14, 2020 01:00 am
Resistance from within the government to policies advocated by Republicans doesn’t require a conspiracy — only that the personnel of that government pursue their personal interests. Read More…
Rules of engagement in the insurgency
Aug 14, 2020 01:00 am
The troops confronting the forces of anarchy are a thin blue line, the nation’s police forces. They are being handicapped by ludicrous rules of engagement. Read more…
COVID-19 is isolating a lot of us
Aug 14, 2020 01:00 am
The recluse wants to blame President Trump for as much as possible. Refusing to breathe fresh air helps with that. Read more…
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The federal government reportedly hosted a celebrated nuclear research lab’s three-day retreat specifically designed for white males to consider their innate notions of white supremacy and racism — and it … Read more
June Medical shows that 47 years after Roe, the court still can’t agree on the standards for state abortion limits. Five justices at the very least aren’t committed to abortion on demand.
Pregnant women get lots of ads and advice, but I bet that almost none of the people making all the other lists have as much pregnancy practice as I do.
Despite the corruption in the industry hardly showcased by the Netflix series, this man has faith that there is still room for legal, healthy, and safe ways for big cat handlers to continue doing their work.
It’s both an on-demand release and a hilarious comedy, and a provocative cultural satire that resists the urge to get bogged down in anti-Trump politics.
The Transom is a daily email newsletter written by publisher of The Federalist Ben Domenech for political and media insiders, which arrives in your inbox each morning, collecting news, notes, and thoughts from around the web.
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The 9/11 Memorial and Museum caretakers have decided to cancel the annual “Tribute in Light” held to commemorate the victims of the terrorist attacks that took place on September 11, 2001. The reason they have cited is concern for the health of workers who would normally be putting up, maintaining, and taking down the special lights that shine two beams into the sky that symbolize the Twin Towers that fell that day.
Were the workers they’re “protecting” consulted? No. Would they have likely have happily worn the allegedly necessary face masks and practiced social distancing when they could? Absolutely. Does this have anything to do with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s obsession with authoritarian control over his city? One can only assume. According to the NY Post:
The iconic Lower Manhattan 9/11 memorial display that features twin beams of light to honor victims of the terror attacks will not shine this year over coronavirus concerns, organizers said Thursday.
The annual “Tribute in Light” display requires a large crew to pull off, the 9/11 Memorial and Museum said on its website, posing health risks this year that “were far too great.”
The museum said it was an “incredibly difficult decision” to nix the lights, but announced an alternative citywide initiative to commemorate the 19th anniversary of the September 11 attacks.
The new plan, dubbed the “Tribute in Lights,” will feature buildings across the city lighting up their facades and spires in blue on 9/11.
“In a spirit of unity and remembrance, the city will come together for a “Tribute in Lights” to inspire the world and honor the promise to never forget,” the museum said.
In the latest episode of Conservative News Briefs, JD expresses his outraged and explains why this is intended to keep American spirits low at a time when we need every boost we can get. Remembering 9/11 and declaring to the world that we will not fall so easily is an important annual event that radical leftists in New York City have now stolen from us all.
This is just the latest example of coronavirus panic being used to cancel events that actually unify us. Meanwhile, nobody had concern for those who created the BLM mural in front of Trump Towers. This has become a parody of American life.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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 is known for his sharp retorts to belligerent journalists. His mini-arguments with the likes of Jim Acosta are well-documented because the vast majority of the time he makes them look like the fools they are. But it was responses like the President had for Huffington Post White House correspondent S.V. Dáte that really set him apart from every President we’ve had in the modern era.
HuffPo Reporter @SVDate “Mr. President, after three and a half years, do you regret at all, all the lying you’ve done to the American people?”
Questions like these do not deserve a response which is why the President didn’t give him one. What makes the activist-journalist even more of an embarrassment to himself, his publication, and his profession is that he was actually proud of being shunned by the President of the United States.
Throughout our history, journalists have been biased. Anyone who believes this is a new phenomenon is simply wrong. But what’s different now and was apparent during the last administration as well is that they no longer pretend to be unbiased. They may claim to be, but they don’t act like it. Everyone is biased. It’s part of human nature. But the self-control that was once expected of those who are supposed to be our constitutionally protected truth-seekers for the American people is completely gone.
The reality is this: President Trump has neither the time nor the inclination to waste a single syllable on activist journalists. Those who claim to be unbiased yet act like this are even more dishonest than Democrats on Capitol Hill.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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 current narrative from mainstream media following the announcement that Senator Kamala Harris is Joe Biden’s running mate is that she’s a “pragmatic moderate.” It’s a joke. But following a show JD did yesterday pointing out some of her policy proposals that prove she’s neither pragmatic nor moderate, we were hit with a bunch of comments and emails saying we were wrong. So, we looked up her record on Capitol Hill. It was worse than I expected.
WATCH: The media have been scrambling to label Kamala Harris a “pragmatic moderate.” They’re lying to you!
“There is this effort to make her more moderate than her voting record is.…If you look at the data, she has one of the more liberal…voting records in the Senate.” pic.twitter.com/PvljBKNhVx
— Trump War Room – Text TRUMP to 88022 (@TrumpWarRoom) August 12, 2020
We turned to GovTrack, a nonpartisan tracker of government activities. They look at every vote on Capitol Hill and determine whether a vote is considered right or left. Then, they score the lawmakers based on a score from 0-1 with 1.00 being totally conservative and 0.00 being totally progressive.
In 2017, her first year in the Senate, she was ranked 93rd out of 100. That means only seven other Senators voted more often in a leftist manner. The following year, she made up ground and jumped to 96th. But it was last year when she achieved her goal of being the most progressive-voting Senator on Capitol Hill by scoring a 0.00. She voted as far to the left as possible literally every time throughout the year, a feat not even Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren had been able to achieve.
In this episode of the Rucker Report, we cover this as well as offer a replay of JD’s appearance on the Rory Sauter Show. It may even be considered a preview of Rory joining the Freedom First Network.
Kamala Harris has spent her entire time in DC trying to be the most “woke,” social justice Senator on Capitol Hill. Her record doesn’t say “pragmatic moderate.” Her record reveals she’s a radical progressive and Neo-Marxist.
COVID-19 may take down an independent news outlet
Nobody said running a media site would be easy. We could use some help keeping this site afloat.
Colleagues have called me the worst fundraiser ever. My skills are squarely rooted on the journalistic side of running a news outlet. Paying the bills has never been my forte, but we’ve survived. We have ads on the site that help, but since the site’s inception this has been a labor of love that otherwise doesn’t bring in the level of revenue necessary to justify it.
When I left a nice, corporate career in 2017, I did so knowing I wouldn’t make nearly as much money. But what we do at NOQ Report to deliver the truth and fight the progressive mainstream media narrative that has plagued this nation is too important for me to sacrifice it for the sake of wealth. We know we’ll never make a ton of money this way, and we’re okay with that.
Things have become harder with the coronavirus lockdowns. Both ad money and donations that have kept us afloat for a while have dropped dramatically. We thought we could weather the storm, but the so-called “surge” or “2nd-wave” that mainstream media and Democrats are pushing has put our prospects in jeopardy. In short, we are now in desperate need of financial assistance.
The best way NOQ Report readers can help is to donate. Our Giving Fuel page makes it easy to donate one-time or monthly. Alternatively, you can donate through PayPal as well. We need approximately $11,500 to stay afloat for the rest of 2020, but more would be wonderful and any amount that brings us closer to our goal is greatly appreciated.
The second way to help is to become a partner. We’ve strongly considered seeking angel investors in the past but because we were paying the bills, it didn’t seem necessary. Now, we’re struggling to pay the bills. This shouldn’t be the case as our traffic the last year has been going up dramatically. June, 2018, we had 11,678 visitors. A year later in June, 2019, we were up to 116,194. In June, 2020, we had 614,192. We’re heading in the right direction and we believe we’re ready talk to patriotic investors who want to not only “get in on the action” but more importantly who want to help America hear the truth. Interested investors should contact me directly with the contact button above.
Election year or not, coronavirus lockdowns or not, anarchic riots or not, the need for truthful journalism endures. But in these times, we need as many conservative media voices as possible. Please help keep NOQ Report going.
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.
by Gary Bauer: A Historic Deal
President Trump today announced a historic peace deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates. Yes, the same President Trump who the left claims is incompetent and mocked around the world.
Dubbed the “Abraham Accord,” both nations are agreeing to full diplomatic relations, including trade, tourism and the establishment of embassies. This marks the first peace treaty between Israel and an Arab country in more than 25 years and only the third such deal. Egypt and Jordan also have peace treaties with Israel.
“This normalization of relations and peaceful diplomacy will bring together two of America’s most reliable and capable regional partners. Israel and the United Arab Emirates will join with the United States to launch a Strategic Agenda for the Middle East to expand diplomatic, trade, and security cooperation.
“Along with the United States, Israel and the United Arab Emirates share a similar outlook regarding the threats and opportunities in the region, as well as a shared commitment to promoting stability through diplomatic engagement, increased economic integration, and closer security coordination.
“Today’s agreement will lead to better lives for the peoples of the United Arab Emirates, Israel, and the region.”
Biden’s Malarkey
Joe Biden’s “No Malarkey” tour took a big detour yesterday. I could go on for pages dissecting all the absurd things he and Kamala Harris said during their big kickoff event, but I’ll stick to the two most outrageous.
Biden once again knowingly lied and engaged in raw demagoguery when he described the president’s reaction to the 2017 Charlottesville riots in a way he knows is totally false.
He’s done it before, and he’s been called out by liberal fact checkers. Yesterday, Biden described the Nazis in the streets and the people resisting them, and he claimed Donald Trump said there were good people on both sides. President Trump said no such thing and Biden knows it.
Anybody who says Joe Biden is a “decent man” needs to think again. He is engaged in a deliberate effort to smear the president of the United States in the worst way possible.
Does he seriously want to compare the actions of the Obama/Biden Administration to Donald Trump when it comes to terrorists and dictators?
Let’s see: Barack Obama and Joe Biden tried to buy off the mullahs of Iran, literally flying pallets of cash to Tehran in the middle of the night. Donald Trump ended that sweetheart deal and imposed the toughest sanctions ever.
Donald Trump also took out Iran’s terrorist mastermind, Gen. Qasem Soleimani. The Obama/Biden team surrendered Iraq and Syria to Soleimani. And Joe Biden didn’t want to take out Osama bin Laden!
Do they want to compare how Obama called ISIS the “JV team” while Trump wiped them out?
Do they want to compare how they sold out to communist China, while Donald Trump has confronted them every step of the way?
Do they want to compare how Obama ended the embargo on communist Cuba and coddled Venezuela’s dictators versus how Trump confronted both oppressive regimes?
Is there any “mainstream media” reporter who still believes that journalism requires certain standards of honesty and professionalism and who’s willing to take Biden to task for that outrageous statement?
She’s No Moderate
The New York Times described Senator Kamala Harris as a “pragmatic moderate.” ABC‘s George Stephanopoulos said that Harris “comes from the middle of the road, moderate wing of the Democratic Party.” The Associated Press touted “her relatively centrist record.”
This is why President Trump often refers to the media as “the enemy of the people.” They are lying to you! And here’s proof:
The non-partisan site GovTrack provides an ideological score to all members of Congress based on how they vote. Harris was elected to the Senate in 2016, assuming office in 2017. Here’s how she ranked each year:
There is nothing “centrist” about Harris’s record. She started out not in the “middle of the road” or among the party’s “moderate wing,” but on the far-left fringe, and Harris has moved to the left every single year.
To be further left than Elizabeth Warren and Comrade Sanders and still have the media call you a “pragmatic moderate” is quite a trick. But the fake news media are trying to trick the American people.
Defending Criminal Aliens
Last night so-called “progressives” blocked the streets of Bend, Oregon, in order to prevent federal ICE agents from removing two criminal illegal aliens. The protest spanned several hours, and local authorities made it absolutely clear that they stood with the criminal aliens.
Bend Police essentially apologized to the mob. Chief Mike Krantz noted that his officers were not helping ICE in any way whatsoever, and that they were only on the scene “to allow free speech and a peaceful area to assemble.”
Bend Mayor Sally Russell tweeted her opposition to the ICE arrests, adding, “I am very worried for everyone in our community, and especially our Latinx community.”
By the way, Sally Russell is not a “Latinx.” Three-quarters of Hispanics have never heard the term “Latinx” and only 3% of Hispanics actually use it.
Not to be outdone, District Attorney John Hummel tweeted, “I’ve never been so disgusted by my government and so proud of my community.”
Really? Because I suspect there are a lot of law-abiding Oregonians who would be disgusted that local government officials are shielding criminal aliens. That’s nothing to be proud of.
If the mayor, the DA and the police chief aren’t willing to enforce the law, they should resign or be impeached! Thankfully, someone is enforcing the law and that would be President Trump.
Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Ken Cuccinelli issued a strong statement insisting that getting criminal aliens who threaten public safety off the streets was part of ICE’s mission.
Cuccinelli also warned, “ICE will take all necessary measures to ensure the safety of its officers and detainees, and will vigorously pursue prosecution against anyone who puts them in harm’s way.”
It is disturbing how so many progressives think they are justified in essentially seceding from the rest of the country because they don’t like certain federal laws.
Good News
Weekly unemployment claims fell more than expected. Economists had predicted 1.1 million new unemployment claims and the figure came in at 963,000. That marks the first time that weekly unemployment claims were below one million since the pandemic began 20 weeks ago.
That means there is some growth in the economy, and it’s all the more amazing as it comes at a time when some states are shutting down again to fight Covid-19.
———————– Gary Bauer (@GaryLBauer) is a conservative family values advocate and serves as president of American Values and chairman of the Campaign for Working Families
Tags:Gary Bauer, Campaign for Working Families, A Historic Deal, Biden’s Malarkey, Defending Criminal AliensTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Several of the 2020 Democratic presidential primary candidates favored the abolishment of the Electoral College. Or, as once-confident candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren put it, “I plan to be the last American president to be elected by the Electoral College.”
Furor over the Electoral College among the left arose from the 2000 and 2016 elections. Al Gore and Hillary Clinton, respectively, won the popular votes. But, like three earlier presidents, they lost the Electoral College voting — and with it the presidency.
The Founding Fathers saw a purpose in the Electoral College. It ensured that small, rural states would retain importance in national elections.
The Electoral College lessens the chance of voting fraud affecting the outcome of a national vote by compartmentalizing the outcome among the various states. It usually turns the presidential election into a contest between two major parties that alone have the resources to campaign nationwide.
The college is antithetical to the parliamentary systems of Europe. There, a multiplicity of small extremist parties form and break coalitions to select heads of state, often without transparency.
Yet to change the U.S. Constitution is hard — and by intent.
Historically, a constitutional amendment has required a two-thirds vote of both houses of Congress and an additional ratification by three-fourths of the states through votes of their legislatures.
But now there is a chance that some states could render void the Electoral College without formally amending the Constitution.
To circumvent the Constitution, Democrats have pushed “The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact,” an agreement among a group of states that would force state electors to vote in accordance with the national popular vote and ignore their own state tallies.
Already, 15 states that have 73 percent of the 270 electoral votes necessary to win the presidency have joined.
Liberal academics are supporting an array of other proposed constitutional changes as well. They ask: Why do two Wyoming senators each represent about 290,000 voters while each California senator represents 20 million?
Forget that the founders established a constitutional republic, not a radical democracy, in order to check and balance popular and often volatile public opinion. One way was by creating an upper-house Senate that would slow down the pulse of the more populist House of Representatives.
Nevertheless, there is an ongoing effort to dream up ways to create more, and apparently liberal, senators — to change the rules rather than the hearts and minds of the voters.
In his recent eulogy at Rep. John Lewis’s funeral, former President Barack Obama proposed giving statehood to liberal Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. That would instantly give Democrats four additional senators.
Others want senators allotted by population. That was the argument in a recent Atlantic article titled “The Path to Give California 12 Senators, and Vermont Just One.”
Turning to another issue, there is nothing in the Constitution that specifies the exact size and makeup of the Supreme Court. It only offers guidance on how justices are appointed and confirmed, and that there will be a chief justice. But since 1869, the Supreme Court has been fixed at eight associate justices and one chief justice.
Democratic presidential primary candidates Pete Buttigieg, Kamala Harris, Beto O’Rourke, and Elizabeth Warren said they would consider ending that 151-year tradition and “pack” the court with additional justices in the fashion of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s failed 1937 effort.
The left is apparently afraid of a second Donald Trump presidential term that might allow him four or five Supreme Court picks over eight years in office. The effect of such appointments could be mitigated by expanding the court to 12 or more justices, along with altering the rules for selecting them.
In his eulogy for Lewis, Obama also called for an end to the Senate filibuster. He claimed it was a racist relic from the Jim Crow era used to stymie needed social change.
Given recent polling, Obama now apparently believes Trump will lose the election, and Congress with it. But he also seems to fear that fundamental progressive transformation could be checked by a filibuster-happy Republican Senate minority.
Democrats were perfectly happy with the filibuster — or the mere threat of the filibuster — from 2017 to 2019, when the Democratic Senate minority blocked much of the Trump agenda.
But efforts to change time-honored rules for short-term gain are becoming more common.
Sanctuary cities nullify federal immigration law to empower illegal immigration. The nonenforcement of laws against rioting and looting has become common in big cities. The First Amendment is inert on college campuses.
The left should beware. Politics are volatile and often change. When Democrats destroy longstanding rules for short-term advantage, they may regret it when they too are in need of sober traditions and the U.S. Constitution.
———————— Victor Davis Hanson (@VDHanson) is a senior fellow, classicist and historian and Illie Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution where many of his articles are found; his focus is classics and military history. He has been a visiting professor at Hillsdale College since 2004. Hanson was awarded the National Humanities Medal in 2007 by President George W. Bush. H/T Fox News.
Tags:Victor Davis Hanson, US Constitution, Traditions, Under Attack, by DemocratsTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dr. Walter E. Williams: Most people who call themselves Marxists know very little of Karl Marx’s life and have never read his three-volume “Das Kapital.” Volume I was published in 1867, the only volume published before Marx’s death in 1883. Volumes II and III were later edited and published in his name by his friend and collaborator Friedrich Engels. Most people who call themselves Marxist have only read his 1848 pamphlet “The Communist Manifesto,” which was written with Engels.
Marx is a hero to many labor union leaders and civil rights organizations, including leftist groups like Black Lives Matter, antifa and some Democratic Party leaders. It is easy to be a Marxist if you know little of his life. Marx’s predictions about capitalism and the “withering away of the state” turned out to be grossly wrong. What most people do not know is that Marx was a racist and an anti-Semite.
When the U.S. annexed California after the Mexican-American War, Marx wrote: “Without violence nothing is ever accomplished in history.” Then he asked, “Is it a misfortune that magnificent California was seized from the lazy Mexicans who did not know what to do with it?” Friedrich Engels added: “In America we have witnessed the conquest of Mexico and have rejoiced at it. It is to the interest of its own development that Mexico will be placed under the tutelage of the United States.” Many of Marx’s racist ideas were reported in “Karl Marx, Racist” a book written by Nathaniel Weyl, a former member of the U.S. Communist Party.
In a July 1862 letter to Engels, in reference to his socialist political competitor, Ferdinand Lassalle, Marx wrote: “It is now completely clear to me that he, as is proved by his cranial formation and his hair, descends from the Negroes from Egypt, assuming that his mother or grandmother had not interbred with a nigger. Now this union of Judaism and Germanism with a basic Negro substance must produce a peculiar product. The obtrusiveness of the fellow is also nigger-like.”
In 1887, Paul Lafargue, who was Marx’s son-in-law, was a candidate for a council seat in a Paris district that contained a zoo. Engels claimed that Paul had “one eighth or one twelfth nigger blood.” In an April 1887 letter to Paul’s wife, Engels wrote, “Being in his quality as a nigger, a degree nearer to the rest of the animal kingdom than the rest of us, he is undoubtedly the most appropriate representative of that district.”
Marx’s anti-Semitic views were no secret. In 1844, he published an essay titled “On the Jewish Question.” He wrote that the worldly religion of Jews was “huckstering” and that the Jew’s god was “money.” Marx’s view of Jews was that they could only become an emancipated ethnicity or culture when they no longer exist. Just one step short of calling for genocide, Marx said, “The classes and the races, too weak to master the new conditions of life, must give way.”
Marx’s philosophical successors shared ugly thoughts on blacks and other minorities. Che Guevara, a hero of the left, was a horrific racist. He wrote in his 1952 memoir, “The Motorcycle Diaries”: “The Negro is indolent and lazy and spends his money on frivolities, whereas the European is forward-looking, organized and intelligent.”
British socialist Beatrice Webb griped in The New Statesmen about declining birth rates among so-called higher races, which would lead to “a new social order” that would be created “by one or other of the colored races, the Negro, the Kaffir or the Chinese.” The Soviets espoused the same “Jewish world conspiracy” as the Nazis. Joseph Stalin embarked upon a campaign that led to the deaths of Jewish intellectuals for their apparent lack of patriotism. By the way, the Soviet public was not told that Karl Marx was Jewish. Academics who preach Marxism to their classes fail to tell their students that his ideology has led to the slaughter of tens of millions of people. What’s worse, they fail to even feign concern over this fact.
White liberals are useful idiots. BLM, antifa and other progressive groups use the plight of poor blacks to organize left-leaning, middle-class, college-educated, guilt-ridden suburbanite whites.
These people who topple statues and destroy public and private property care about minorities as much as their racist predecessors.
Their goal is the acquisition and concentration of power and Americans have fallen hook, line and sinker for their phony virtue signaling. ————————————- Dr. Walter Williams (@WE_Williams) is an American economist, social commentator, and author of over 150 publications. He has a Ph.D. and M.A. in Economics from the UCLA and B.A. in economics from California State University. He also holds a Doctor of Humane Letters from Virginia Union University and Grove City College, Doctor of Laws from Washington and Jefferson College. He has served on the faculty of George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics, since 1980. Visit his website: WalterEWilliams.com and view a list of other articles and works.
Tags:Walter Williams, commentary, Are Today’s Leftists, Truly Marxists? To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by John Stossel: Black Lives Matter protests led many people to want to do something useful to reduce racial injustice. Racial justice groups are being flooded with money.
Big companies made multimillion-dollar donations.
“Bad idea,” says black radio host Larry Elder in my new video.
“It is condescending… and not helpful. I urge white people to chill. Stop helping us, because you’re making things worse!”
Making things worse, he says, because it supports the activists’ claim that “blacks are victims of racism. (But) if racism were in America’s DNA, Obama never could have got elected. Racism has never been more insignificant a factor in one’s success than right now.”
I push back. “It must be a huge problem or there wouldn’t be all this protest!”
“Well, they’re being lied to,” Elder responds. Teachers, black activists, and the media give “young people the impression that racism remains this huge problem in America when it is not.”
It’s not, he says, because today any person who does three things can succeed: “Finish high school, don’t have a kid until you get married, get a job. Do those things, you will not be poor.”
The biggest problem facing the black community today, says Elder, is the absence of fathers. In the 1960s, most black children were raised in two-parent households. That changed when our government’s war on poverty began.
The handouts sent the message that it’s the government’s job, not your responsibility, to take care of you and your kids. “A mother with two children makes more money than she would make on minimum wage because of all the goodies she gets through the welfare state!”
Now, he says, Black Lives Matter actually encourages the breakup of families. Their website does say, “disrupt the Western-prescribed, nuclear family.”
That’s a Karl Marx idea straight from “The Communist Manifesto.” Black Lives Matter co-founder Patrisse Cullors proudly describes herself as a “trained Marxist.”
Elder calls her and the anti-capitalist protesters “phonies.”
“Do they really want socialism?” Elder asks. “Do they really want inferior products? They are all wearing Nike and using Apple products. They’re hypocrites.”
But they’re winning!
They are even redefining what racism means. Today’s “anti-racists” say racism means “any policy with an effect that is disproportionate.” So even a tax deduction is racist because on average, whites deduct more than blacks.
“Anti-racism presumes things about the world that simply can’t be true,” says Kmele Foster, lead producer at Freethink. “We are all at bottom, whatever our race, individuals. Anti-racism takes that and flips it on its head.”
Recently, Washington’s Museum of African American History and Culture, part of the taxpayer-funded Smithsonian Institute, posted that “white culture” means things like “nuclear family,” “self-reliance,” “rigid time schedule,” and “delayed gratification.”
The poster is “despicable,” says Foster. “It’s offensive to suggest that black people can’t aspire to or possess all the values outlined in a document like this. Black people can be punctual. Black people are, in fact, successful in this country.”
The poster was removed, after complaints.
I wanted to ask Black Lives Matter about things like that. We contacted all 14 U.S. chapters. Not one would agree to an interview.
Too bad. I wanted to ask the “anti-racists” if they notice that they and white supremacists now support similar segregationist policies, like blacks- (or whites-) only spaces. Foster points out that both white supremacists and anti-racists believe “race is an immutable attribute of who we are.”
He prefers Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision: a nation where “people are judged not by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”
“Black Lives Matter leaders don’t really want the vision of MLK,” says Elder. “They want a color-coordinated society—as long as they’re the ones who do the coordinating.”
——————- John Stossel is author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individuals Succeed.” Shared article on The Daily Signal.
Tags:John Stossel, The Racism, of the ‘Anti-Racist’ MovementTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Bill Donohue: On August 6, President Trump accused Joe Biden of being “against God.” When I read this on August 7, I released the following tweet: “Trump has no business smearing Biden’s personal faith. What he said is indefensible. He should stick to policy matters, not personal ones.”
In a Politico/Morning Consult survey released in June, only 27% of registered voters said they believed Trump to be religious. That should have given Trump pause when he slammed Biden for being “against God.” The question for voters, however, is not whether a candidate is personally religious; rather, it is whether his polices are religion-friendly. On this score, Trump wins hands down.
The Biden camp knows this to be true, which is why they are rolling out his personal faith credentials. It’s all they have. Biden’s surrogates, such as E.J. Dionne, are praising his devoutness, citing his remark that his faith is the “bedrock foundation of my life.” That may be true. It is also true that Biden’s lust for abortion rights—he is more extreme now than ever before—has led priests to deny him Communion.
“I think his own faith and values narrative allows us to have inroads into these [faith] communities in ways that Democrats might previously not have been able to do,” says John McCarthy of the Biden team. Similarly, John K. White, a Catholic University professor, is impressed that Biden “carries a rosary with him.”
Up to a point, symbolic speech matters, but the race for the White House is not a piety parade. If that were the case, there would be few candidates from either party. The race, for the faithful, is about who has the best record defending religious liberty. This is where Biden is in deep trouble. What specific legislation has he sponsored that would advance this end?
It won’t do, as some have argued, to say that climate change is a pro-life issue (one that is embraced by Biden). This gambit—trying to jam matters unrelated to traditional life issues into the pro-life portfolio—has not worked in the past, and it is not going to work this time, either. Automobile safety is also a life issue, but no one seriously thinks it is a pro-life issue the way abortion, euthanasia and doctor-assisted suicide are.
Still, Trump’s critics say that because his personal life is marred with moral failings, people of faith cannot be taken seriously when they say they will vote for him. This common refrain deserves a serious response.
Let’s say that in a presidential race, the Republican candidate is very generous in his charitable giving. He gives to organizations that help needy children, hospitals, and the like. He also has a good record hiring minorities. But his voting record on government assistance to the poor and affirmative action is almost non-existent.
Let’s say the Democrat is extraordinarily stingy, giving practically nothing to charity. He also sports a lousy hiring record—his employees are almost exclusively white. But his voting record on government assistance to the poor and affirmative action is excellent.
Would it not be rational for Democrats to vote for the Democrat, in spite of the superior personal record of the Republican?
Al Gore is known to the public as a champion of the poor. But in 1997, the vice president and his wife Tipper contributed a whopping total of $353 to charity. Their salary was $197,729. To put it differently, their charitable giving was less than one-tenth the typical contribution for someone with their adjusted gross income.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg is known to the public as a champion of affirmative action. But in 1993, when being considered for a seat on the Supreme Court, she was asked by Sen. Orrin Hatch to explain why, in 13 years as a judge, not one of her 57 law clerks was black. “If you confirm me to this job,” she said, “my attractiveness to black candidates is going to improve.”
Would it make sense if someone supported government assistance to the poor not to vote for Gore because he is a miser? Would it make sense for someone who supports affirmative action not to support Ginsburg because she is a hypocrite?
Voting involves making tough decisions, weighing all sorts of contrary variables, the conclusion of which is not always neat. But the mature voter will select the candidate who is best for the nation, notwithstanding his own personal shortcomings. It’s the policies that should matter, not the persona.
————————- Bill Donohue (@CatholicLeague) is a sociologist and president of the Catholic League.
Tags:Bill Donohue, Catholic League, Scoring, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, On ReligionTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Daniel John Sobieski: So Joe Biden has picked the runt of the litter, an also-ran loser in the Democratic primaries who never one a primary, barely escaped sitting at the kiddies table, whom the voters didn’t think was qualified to be president, yet whom Biden wanted to be a heartbeat away. Or maybe his puppet masters, the voices in his earpiece, and the voices in his head picked her from a list loaded with more baggage than an airport carousel.
Biden picked a running mate who labeled him a racist opponent of school busing who cavorted and collaborated with segregationist Democrat colleagues in the Senate where Biden supported legislation leading to the incarceration of young black males. Of course, Harris did her part in incarcerating young black males with a vengeance as states attorney in San Francisco and attorney general of California.
Kamala Harris also believes Biden is a sexual predator, saying we should believe his accusers, even staffer Tara Reade, who has credibly accused him of sexual assault. Reade certainly brings more evidence to the table than Brett Kavanaugh’s accuser, whom Harris viciously attacked in one of the most unhinged attempts at character assassination we have ever seen.
The Hill reported:
Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) said Tuesday that she believes women who say they felt uncomfortable after receiving unwanted touching from former Vice President Joe Biden. “I believe them and I respect them being able to tell their story and having the courage to do it,” Harris said during a presidential campaign event in Nevada in April 2019 before Biden had officially entered the race.
As PJ Media reports:
And then there’s Tara Reade, in 2019, she said that Biden used to touch her inappropriately while she was a staffer in his Senate office in 1993. “He used to put his hand on my shoulder and run his finger up my neck,” Reade said. “I would just kind of freeze and wait for him to stop doing that.” She later expanded on those allegations, claiming in March 2020 that Biden sexually assaulted her by pushing her up against the wall, kissing her and sliding his hand up her shirt and up her skirt. Reade says attempted to file a claim, but Biden was ultimately protected by loyalists on his staff. The credibility of her claims was boosted by the release of a clip of the Larry King Live show during which her mother called in anonymously asking the panel for advice on how to handle a situation with her daughter and a prominent U.S. senator. Kamala Harris may have believed Tara Reade before Joe Biden jumped in the race, but when Biden was the frontrunner and then presumptive nominee, she ignored Reade’s sexual assault allegations when they resurfaced in 2020.
All Trump has to do is take clips from their debate exchanges and attacks on Biden from Kamala’s interviews and append the tag line, “I’m Donald J. Trump and I approve her message.”
Harris’ well-rehearsed attack on Joe Biden that nearly derailed his candidacy during the clown-car Democratic presidential debates should have come as no surprise to those who have watched her rise to political prominence. Never mind its relevance or accuracy. For Harris, the ends always justify the means.
For a time it looked as if Harris wasn’t even on the short list, consistently failing to make the top tier in the Democratic presidential primary debates, after being ignored in either another Biden brain cramp or deliberate snub in which he called former Illinois Sen. Carol Moseley Braun the only African-American woman to serve in the Senate, and after a heated attack from Harris during a debate regarding Biden’s record on school busing:
The debate-stage skirmish was one of the seminal moments of the Democratic primary. Harris, who is Black, said Biden made “very hurtful” comments about his past work with segregationist senators before she slammed his opposition to busing as schools began to integrate.
“There was a little girl in California who was a part of the second class to integrate her public schools, and she was bused to school every day,” she said. “And that little girl was me.”
At the time, Biden called her comments “a mischaracterization of my position.”
Biden’s pick of Harris fulfills Biden’s identity-politics decision to pick a “woman of color” although Sen. Elizabeth Warren, the fake Cherokee Indian, could have qualified. Harris is glib, if not articulate, a stark contrast to a Biden who can’t complete a sentence or remember where he is. It comes as Biden steadily slips among minority voters.
More great news for the Trump campaign. Blacks and Minority voters are at record highs for President Trump.
Rasmussen Reports released their latest polling of likely black voters of President Trump’s job approval is now over 40%:
If Trump gets just 20% of the African-American, vote it is curtains for the Democrats and a landslide for Trump. Biden’s patronizing of African-Americans is typified by his arguably racist and demeaning remark that if blacks do not vote for him, they are not in fact black.
For eight years Obama-Biden did nothing while Kamala Harris, as a former California state attorney general and San Francisco district attorney, did measurable harm to the community she claims to be a leader of.
She is counting on strong support from African Americans. But many black voters are wary of her 27 years as a prosecutor enforcing laws that sent African Americans to prison…
Still, her home state’s high rate of incarcerating people of color goes a long way in explaining the trouble she has had selling her candidacy to black voters nationwide. In California and many other states, racial disparities in imprisonment have intensified resentments of what many see as deeply ingrained discrimination in America’s criminal justice system…
But the prisons remain emblematic of chronic racial inequities in the justice system. African Americans make up less than 6% of California’s population but 29% of its inmates, according to the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Latinos are 39% of the population but 43% of the inmates.
Tucker Carlson of Fox News calls Harris a corrupt and dangerous fraud who sees laws and powers only as means to punish her enemies, pursue her agenda, and get elected. As Carlson noted:
Carlson, who called Biden’s vice presidential pick the “most consequential” choice in U.S. history, disputed Sen. Kamala Harris’s authenticity on her progressive positions, saying the “front-runner” only stands by issues she knows will get her ahead in the polls. He cited the California Democrat’s low polling numbers at the time that she ended her own bid for the presidency and dropped out of the Democratic primary race.
“The wrap on Harris in exit polls is that she’s a fraud,” Carlson said. “She doesn’t really believe in anything, she’ll say whatever it takes. Of course, that is also Harris’s primary strength.”
Kamala Harris, like Biden, support Planned Parenthood’s crimes against the unborn and takes money and endorsements from the abortion industry. One remembers her resorting to lies, falsehoods and innuendo in the Supreme Court confirmation hearing for Justice Brett Kavanaugh. Biden is dangerous because he will let others control him and run the show. Harris is worse. She will know what she’s doing and will do it with astounding relish and ruthlessness.
As Sen. Cory Booker’s “Spartacus moment” fizzled, Harris knew an “Elmer Gantry moment” when she saw one. As Jonathan S. Tobin noted in National Review:
She first earned notoriety in the Senate last year by demonstrating open incivility bordering on bullying when she interrogated Attorney General Jeff Sessions and the national-intelligence chiefs. Bullying witnesses and cutting them off before they have a chance to answer is her modus operandi during hearings…
The same qualities were on display during her questioning of Kavanaugh. But while, like the other Democrats, she never succeeding in outsmarting the judge, she was the only one to momentarily flummox him by bringing up the Mueller investigation.
She started with an impossibly general and specious query about whether he had ever discussed the Mueller probe with “anyone.”…by asserting, even by implication, that Kavanaugh might somehow be part of the Russia-collusion discussion, Harris gave liberal Democrats exactly the kind of red meat they crave.
Along with her snide and disrespectful prosecutorial tone, that made her the winner of the first day of the Kavanaugh primary.
But Harris did more than badger, mislead, and imply in her attempt to slander Kavanaugh. Harris circulated a deceptively edited video designed to further her narrative that far from being an originalist that would apply the law fairly on any case, including those involving abortion, Kavanaugh was an active participant in the campaign to repeal Roe V. Wade. As Ashe Schow noted in the Daily Wire:
Harris’ Twitter account put out a clip that appeared to show Kavanaugh referring to birth control blanketly as “abortion-inducing drugs.”
This is clearly deceptive, as it’s obvious this was not the beginning of one of Kavanaugh’s answers. Kavanaugh’s full sentence, which would have only required one or two extra seconds had Harris’ team started at the beginning, made it clear he was summarizing what a party in a Supreme Court case said.
Kavanaugh said, “In that case, they said filling out the form would make them complicit in the provision of the abortion-inducing drugs that they were, as a religious matter, objected to.”
Harris was willing to falsify evidence to slander Kavanaugh and push the false narrative that Kavanaugh was just another pro-lifer waging a war on women. As she tweeted:
Kavanaugh chooses his words very carefully, and this is a dog whistle for going after birth control. He was nominated for the purpose of taking away a woman’s constitutionally protected right to make her own health care decisions. Make no mistake – this is about punishing women.
Make no mistake — >her abuse of Kavanaugh and Biden was about advancing the career of Kamala Harris. Ironically, she owes her advancement to her association with former Democratic Speaker of the California Assembly Willie Brown. As the Washington Examinernoted:
Kamala Harris’ first significant political role was an appointment by her powerful then-boyfriend Willie Brown, three decades her senior, to a California medical board that has been criticized as a landing spot for patronage jobs and kickbacks.
Then 30, Harris was dating 60-year-old Willie Brown, at the time the Democratic speaker of the California State Assembly, when he placed her on the California Medical Assistance Commission in 1994. The position paid over $70,000 per year, $120,700 in current money, and Harris served on the board until 1998.
The medical commission met twice a month, and Harris, a United States senator for California since 2017 and now a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate, missed about 20% of the meetings each year…
Hey, politics makes strange bedfellows, as they say. Can we count her as a hardcore feminist then? Conservative Twitter icon James Wood has dubbed her #HeelsUpHarris, Kamala Harris is a dangerous and malevolent political opportunist who doesn’t belong in the same zip code as the White House — and the Lincoln Bedroom.
———————– Daniel John Sobieski is a former editorial writer for ‘Investor’s Business Daily’ and freelance writer. H/T McIntosh Enterprises.
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by Arnold Ahlert: “Loving the people you lead, caring deeply about them, is the basic prerequisite of leadership. The leaders of today’s Democratic Party do not. They despise this country. They have said so. They continue to. That is shocking, but it is also disqualifying. We cannot let them run this nation because they hate it. Imagine what they would do to it.” — Fox News host Tucker Carlson, July 6, 2020
Carlson is right. Democrat Party politicos have made it clear they believe our nation is a systemically racist, xenophobic construct so irreparably flawed that only “fundamental transformation” can save it. That the endgame of such transformation would be the acquisition of unassailable power by Democrats is sold as “coincidental” by those same leftists and their corporate mouthpiece, the mainstream media.
Thus, Americans are supposed to believe the Democrats’ desire to eliminate the Electoral College, grant amnesty to 11-22 million illegal aliens, pack the Supreme Court with additional justices, and force-feed hate-America propagandist “history” to public school students is nothing more than the same political business as usual that attends every election season.
Nothing could be further from the truth. Ever since the Left’s stunning defeat in 2016, courtesy of a political novice with many flaws — but an undeniable love for America — Democrats have done everything they can think of to undermine Donald Trump’s presidency. Even before he was inaugurated, a movement was initiated to flip Electoral College electors. On Inauguration Day itself, The Washington Post ran a story with the headline, “The campaign to impeach President Trump has begun,” meaning the effort to remove him from office was preconceived.
And then came the plots. They ranged from puerile, as in the New York Times story about former Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein wearing a wire as a means of amassing evidence to prove Trump was unfit for office and thus removable under the 25th Amendment, to the worst scandal in American history, as in the attempted coup that went by the name of Crossfire Hurricane, engendered by the most corrupt administration this nation has ever endured.
In between, there were three years of a wholly unjustified investigation into “Russian collusion!” followed by an attempted impeachment led by party hack Adam Schiff, who hid exculpatory evidence and blatantly lied about speaking with the Ukraine “whistleblower” prior to the hearings. Whistleblower is in quotes because, despite media denials, the Intelligence Community Inspector General ultimately released a statement admitting the office changed its forms for whistleblowers so that firsthand knowledge of the wrongdoing they were reporting was no longer required.
Then came the pandemic for which Trump was first branded a racist and xenophobe for noting it originated in China and for quickly initiating a travel ban. He subsequently became a man with “blood on his hands” for acting too slowly, even as the sclerotic bureaucracies that existed long before Trump came on the scene failed to meet even the most basic challenges of pandemic management
.
As the virus gained hold, Democrats showed their true colors, precipitating draconian and wholly capricious lockdowns (churches closed, abortion clinics and liquor stores open), even as those who protested these unconstitutional maneuvers in states like Michigan were deemed dangerous, while those who obliterated history and looted and burned cities to the ground were deemed righteous and peaceful — until those demonstrations “intensified,” as our feckless media characterized their descent into blatant anarchy.
In response, Democrats aligned themselves with antifa, a conglomeration of upper-middle-class fascist thugs whose “revolutions” consist of burning down police stations and businesses (many minority-owned), assaulting police, blocking major highways, and indiscriminately destroying historical artifacts. Democrats are also aligned with Black Lives Matter, an entity run by self-admitted Marxists, whose true agenda was laid bare in Chicago this week when they held a rally for the looters who perpetrated at least $60 million in property damage and injured 13 police officers. “That is reparations,” a BLM organizer stated. “Anything they wanted to take, they can take it because these businesses have insurance.”
Has there ever been an American political party so contemptuous of its own nation that it is willing to allow its own jurisdictions to descend into complete chaos, even as it champions efforts to defund police departments? Has there ever been one willing to hold the American public hostage in the midst of an economy-crushing pandemic for nothing more than a fiscal shakedown aimed at bailing out Democrat-run cities and states, many of them illegal sanctuaries, for decades of wholesale mismanagement, wholly unrelated to the pandemic?
More important, has there ever been a party with more contempt for ordinary Americans? Last week, former Clinton adviser and CNN political commentator Paul Begala declared that President Donald Trump was “sucking up” to his “white nationalist base.” In other words, a major player in the Democrat Party automatically assumes that “white nationalist base” is a pejorative term — in a nation with a Caucasian majority that believes in American exceptionalism.
All of the above is quite revealing. Democrats are so contemptuous of our nation’s institutions and laws that they believe any election or agenda where they fail to prevail is illegitimate and should be resisted — by any means necessary.
“The American Left is different from a lot of the global illiberal lefts in that they’re the only ones that don’t like their country,” asserted Chris Bedford, senior editor of The Federalist, in an appearance on Carlson’s show. “The Cubans, the Soviets, the Chinese, they’re all fiercely patriotic. We don’t have that.”
What we have instead is a globalist agenda wholly supported by Democrats. One where the nation-state itself is an anachronism, and international labor, even slave labor, will be abided, irrespective of the devastation wreaked on American workers. One where a cadre of multinational corporate elites completely disdain patriotism and national security in favor of market share, silence dissenting opinions, and/or completely cancel their promulgators. One where surveillance and data mining are sold as beneficial, even as they ultimately evolve into totalitarian-based “social credit systems” akin to those in Communist China — the same Communist China with whom elitists in business, academia, and Hollywood still curry favor, even as millions of their fellow Americans have been devastated by China’s contemptible duplicity regarding the pandemic.
Not even elections are sacrosanct. Despite the utter fiasco revealed by mail-in voting in New York — where thousands of ballots were invalidated and results of local races remain undecided six weeks after the polls closed — the same Democrat Party that eschews voter ID as “racist” still contends voting by mail is a viable way to run a national election.
That a similar delay — or much worse — in determining who is president could undermine all faith in the integrity of the election process? Only a party that hates America would be willing to so thoroughly bastardize one of our most cherished privileges.
“Once upon a time, trying to torch a federal courthouse would earn years in prison,” states Victor Davis Hanson. “And simply taking over a large chunk of a downtown to re-create Lord of the Flies was unthinkable. Not now.”
In their quest for control, a Democrat Party that hates America is openly abetting the unthinkable. Come November, it is up to the American electorate to disabuse them of their execrable ambitions — in no uncertain terms.
———————– Arnold Ahlert is a political analyst who writes for the Patriot Post.
Tags:Democrats, Hate the Nation, They Want to RuleTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
Tags:AF Branco, editorial cartoon, Head Fake, Kamala Harris, against fracking, the green new deal, defund police, open borders, etc, but calls herself, a moderate.To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Kerby Anderson: Let me start with an important question. Should teachers be considered essential workers? Over the last few months we have designated police officers and firefighters along with doctors, nurses, and health care professionals as essential workers. We even designated grocery workers, delivery drivers, food processors, and truck drivers as essential.
These people (and many more we could list) went to their jobs every day. Some complained, but most considered the potential risks and did what they could to prevent catching the coronavirus. We owe these people a tremendous debt of gratitude. By contrast, lots of public-school teachers and the teachers’ unions are resisting any attempt to reopen the schools. There have been petitions and even protests. That’s why most schools will be closed this fall.
We closed down school systems months ago because we assumed that children would be a most vulnerable group during a pandemic. We now know that children are the least vulnerable to the virus. The American Academy of Pediatricians advocated that schools have “a goal of having students physically present in schools.” The New England Journal of Medicine warns that “Children living in poverty, children of color, English language learners, children with diagnosed disabilities, and young children face especially severe losses.”
Will some teachers be more at risk than others if schools reopen? That is possible, but one survey found that only 17 percent of public-school teachers are in the vulnerable age range of 55 or older. This would have to be managed. Public schools in other countries in Europe and in Australia have been able to do this successfully.
For years we have been told that educating the next generation is essential. So why shouldn’t governors, mayors, and school administrators designate teachers as essential workers? It is a question that I suggest you ask them, especially during this election season.
————————– Kerby Anderson@KerbyAnderson) is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.
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by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS) has taken a huge toll on America. One doesn’t need to be a Trump supporter to see it.
One only needs to read The Atlantic.
There are days when nearly every article ballyhooed in the rag’s promotional email is about how awful the president is.
There is a lot of awful in Washington, though, not just Trump. Where’s the rest of the news?
Of course, this isn’t just about Trump. The Atlantic was once a liberal journal. No more. Now it is relentlessly progressive.
Take a recent article on Georgia Governor Brian Kemp.
“The governor has demonstrated a willingness to defer to the president instead of his own constituents,” writes Amanda Mull, in “America’s Authoritarian Governor,” begging the question of which constituents.
They are, last I checked, not in total agreement.
Ms. Mull contends that Kemp’s deference to Trump (TDS Alert) sacrifices — yes, she uses the word “sacrifice” — “Georgians’ safety to snipe at his political foes, and shore up his own power at the expense of democracy. In short, Kemp is a wannabe authoritarian, and millions of Georgians have suffered as a result, with no end in sight.”
No end — er, except the 2022 election.
And how is Kemp an “authoritarian”? Mull objects to the governor not shutting down commerce quickly enough, hard enough, thoroughly enough, according to the scientists she selects.
Though epidemiologists are not of one mind on how to deal with the current contagion, somehow politicians who reject the advice of her “authorities” — well, they are “the authoritarians.”
The fact that shutting down commerce is itself something we expect from the most authoritarian of regimes . . . did it not cross the reporter’s mind?
Worse than mere TDS.
This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.
—————————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
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Susan Rice’s bizarre Inauguration Day email about that meeting helps explain the campaign of leaks, lies, and obstruction that followed.
by Mollie Hemingway: Information released in the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the case it brought against Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn confirms the significance of a January 5, 2017, meeting at the Obama White House. It was at this meeting that Obama gave guidance to key officials who would be tasked with protecting his administration’s utilization of secretly funded Clinton campaign research, which alleged Trump was involved in a treasonous plot to collude with Russia, from being discovered or stopped by the incoming administration.
“President Obama said he wants to be sure that, as we engage with the incoming team, we are mindful to ascertain if there is any reason that we cannot share information fully as it relates to Russia,” National Security Advisor Susan Rice wrote in an unusual email to herself about the meeting that was also attended by Deputy Attorney General Sally Yates, FBI Director James Comey, and Vice President Joe Biden.
A clearer picture is emerging of the drastic steps that were taken to accomplish Obama’s goal in the following weeks and months. Shortly thereafter, high-level operatives began intensely leaking selective information supporting a supposed Russia-Trump conspiracy theory, the incoming National Security Advisor was ambushed, and the incoming Attorney General was forced to recuse himself from oversight of investigations of President Trump. At each major point in the operation, explosive media leaks were a key strategy in the operation to take down Trump.
Not only was information on Russia not fully shared with the incoming Trump team, as Obama directs, the leaks and ambushes made the transition chaotic, scared quality individuals away from working in the administration, made effective governance almost impossible, and materially damaged national security. When Comey was finally fired on May 9, in part for his duplicitousness regarding his handling of the Russia collusion theory, he orchestrated the launch of a Special Counsel probe that continued his efforts for another two years. That probe ended with Mueller finding no evidence of any American colluding with Russia to steal the 2016 election, much less Trump or anyone connected to him.
An analysis of the timeline from early 2017 shows a clear pattern of behavior from the federal officials running the collusion operation against the Trump campaign. It also shows how essential media leaks were to their strategy to sideline key law enforcement and intelligence officials and cripple the ability of the incoming Trump administration to run the country.
Here’s a timeline of the key moments and news articles of the efforts, per Obama’s direction, to prevent the Trump administration from learning about the FBI’s operation against it.
January 4: Following the closure of a pretextually dubious and politically motivated FBI investigation of Flynn at the beginning of January, the leadership of the FBI scrambled to reopen a case against Flynn, the man who in his role as National Security Advisor would have to review their Russia collusion investigation. FBI officials openly discussed their concern about briefing the veteran intelligence official on what they had done to the Trump campaign and transition team and what they were planning to do to the incoming Trump administration. Flynn had to be dealt with. The FBI’s top counterintelligence official would later memorialize discussions about the FBI’s attempts to “get [Flynn] fired.” No reopening was needed, they determined, when they discovered they had failed to close the previous investigation. They found this mistake “amazing” and “serendipitously good” and said “our utter incompetence actually helps us.” Even more noteworthy were texts from FBI’s #2 counterintelligence official Peter Strzok to FBI lawyer Lisa Page noting that the “7th floor,” a reference to Comey and his deputy director Andrew McCabe, was running the show.
January 5: Yates, Comey, CIA Director John Brennan, and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper briefed Obama on Russia-related matters in the Oval Office. Biden and Rice also attended. After the Obama briefing, the intelligence chiefs who would be leaving at the end of the term were dismissed and Yates and Comey, who would continue in the Trump administration, were asked to stay. Not only did Obama give his guidance about how to perpetuate the Russia collusion theory investigations, he also talked about Flynn’s conversations with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak, according to both Comey and Yates. Interestingly, Clapper, Comey, and Yates all said that they did not brief Obama about these phone calls. Clapper testified he did not brief Obama on the calls, Yates learned about the calls from Obama himself during that meeting, and Comey also testified he didn’t brief Obama about the calls, even though the intelligence was an FBI product. Rice, who publicly lied but later admitted under oath to her widespread use of unmasked intelligence at the end of the Obama administration, likely briefed Obama on the calls and would have had access to the intelligence. Comey mentions the Logan Act at this meeting.
It was this meeting that Rice memorialized in a bizarre inauguration-day email to herself that claimed Obama told the gathered to do everything “by the book.” But Rice also noted in her email that the key point of discussion in that meeting was whether and how to withhold national security information, likely including details of the investigation into Trump himself, from the incoming Trump national security team.
January 6: An ostensibly similar briefing about Russian interference efforts during the 2016 campaign was given to President-elect Trump. After that briefing, Comey privately briefed Trump on the most salacious and absurd “pee tape” allegation in the Christopher Steele dossier, a document the FBI had already used to obtain a warrant to spy on Trump campaign affiliate Carter Page. Comey told Trump he was telling him because CNN was looking for any reason it could find to publish a story about Russia having compromising information on him, and he wanted to warn Trump about it. He did not mention the dossier was completely unverified or that it was the product of a secretly funded operation by the Clinton campaign and Democratic National Committee.
January 10: In an amazing coincidence, CNN found the excuse to publish the Russia claims after a high-level Obama intelligence operative leaked that Comey had briefed Trump about the dossier. This selective leak, which was credulously accepted by CNN reporters Evan Perez, Jim Sciutto, Jake Tapper and Carl Bernstein, may have been the most important step in the operation to harm the incoming Trump administration. The leak of the briefing of Trump was used to legitimize a ridiculous dossier full of allegations the FBI knew to be false that multiple news organizations had previously refused to report on for lack of substantiation, and created a cloud of suspicion over Trump’s campaign and administration by insinuating he was being blackmailed by Russia.
January 12: The next part of the strategy was the explosive leak to David Ignatius of the Washington Post to legitimize the use against Flynn of the Logan Act, a likely unconstitutional 1799 law prohibiting private individuals, not public incoming national security advisors, from discussing foreign policy with foreign governments. Ignatius accepted the leak from the Obama official. He wrote that Flynn had called Kislyak. “What did Flynn say, and did it undercut the U.S. sanctions? The Logan Act (though never enforced) bars U.S. citizens from correspondence intending to influence a foreign government about ‘disputes’ with the United States. Was its spirit violated?” Flynn’s routine and appropriate phone call became fodder for a developing grand conspiracy theory of Russia collusion. In discussions with investigators, both DOJ’s Mary McCord and Comey conspicuously cite this Ignatius column as somehow meaningful in the approach they would take with Flynn. “Nothing, to my mind, happens until the 13th of January, when David Ignatius publishes a column that contains a reference to communication Michael Flynn had with the Russians. That was on the 13th of January,” Comey said of the column that ran online on January 12. In fact, quite a bit had happened at the FBI prior to that leak, with much conversation about how to utilize the Logan Act against Flynn. And the leak-fueled Ignatius column would later be used by FBI officials to justify an illegal ambush interview of Flynn in the White House.
January 23: Another important criminal leak was given to Ellen Nakashima and Greg Miller of the Washington Post, also based on criminal leaks. Their article, headlined “FBI reviewed Flynn’s calls with Russian ambassador but found nothing illicit,” was intended to make Flynn feel safe and put him at ease about the FBI stance on those calls the day before they planned to ambush him in an interview. The article was used to publicize false information when it said, “Although Flynn’s contacts with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak were listened to, Flynn himself is not the active target of an investigation, U.S. officials said.” In fact, emails prior to this date confirm Flynn was their prime target. This article was later cited by McCabe as the reason why they were justified in concealing from Flynn the real purpose of their interview. Flynn later asked McCabe if he knew how all the information about his phone calls had been made public and whether it had been leaked. Any potential response from McCabe to Flynn has been redacted from his own notes about the conversation.
January 24: Comey later admitted he broke every protocol to send agents to interview Flynn and try to catch him in a lie. FBI officials strategized how to keep Flynn from knowing he was a target of the investigation or asking for an attorney to represent him in the interview. The January 23 Washington Post article, which falsely stated that Flynn was not an FBI target, was key to that strategy. Though the interviewing agents said they could detect no “tells” indicating he lied, and he carefully phrased everything in the interview, he later was induced to plead guilty to lying in this interview. Ostensibly because White House officials downplayed the Kislyak phone calls, presumably in light of what Flynn had told them about the calls, Yates would go to the White House the next day and insinuate Flynn should probably be fired.
February 9: The strategy to get Flynn fired didn’t immediately work so another leak was deployed to Greg Miller, Adam Entous and Ellen Nakashima of the Washington Post. That article, headline “National security adviser Flynn discussed sanctions with Russian ambassador, despite denials, officials say,” was sourced to people who happened to share senior FBI leadership’s views on the Logan Act. This article was also based on criminal leaks of top secret information of phone call intercepts and laid out the FBI’s case for why Flynn’s contacts with a foreign adversary were a problem. The fact that such phone calls are routine, not to mention Flynn’s case that improved relations with Russia in a world where China, North Korea, and Iran were posing increasing threats, never made it into these articles for context.
February 13: The operation finally succeeded in getting Flynn fired and rendering him unable to review the operations against the Trump campaign, Trump transition team, and Trump administration.
March 1: Flynn was the first obstacle who had to be overcome. Attorney General Jeff Sessions was the next. The Trump loyalist with a strong Department of Justice background would also need to be briefed on the anti-Trump efforts unless he could be sidelined. Comey admitted that early in Sessions’ tenure, he deliberately hid Russia-related information from Sessions because, “it made little sense to report it to Attorney General Sessions, who we expected would likely recuse himself from involvement in Russia-related investigations.” To secure that recusal, yet another leak was deployed to the Washington Post’s Adam Entous, Ellen Nakashima and Greg Miller. The leak was intended to tar Sessions as a secret Russian agent and was dramatically spun as “Sessions Spoke Twice To Russian Envoy: Revelation contradicts his testimony at confirmation hearing.” One meeting was in passing and the other was in his function as a United States Senator, but the hysteria was such that the Post authors could get away with suggesting Sessions was too compromised to oversee the Department of Justice’s counterintelligence operations involving Russia. It is perhaps worth noting that the Special Counsel idea was pushed in this article.
March 2: Sessions recused himself from oversight of the FBI’s anti-Trump operation, providing no meaningful oversight to an operation that would be spun into a Special Counsel by mid-May. With the removal of Trump’s National Security Advisor and his Attorney General, there was no longer any chance of Trump loyalists discovering what Obama holdovers at the FBI were actually doing to get Trump thrown out of office. After Trump fired Comey for managerial incompetence on May 9, deceptively edited and misleading leaks to the New York Times ordered by Comey himself were used to gin up a Special Counsel run exclusively by left-wing anti-Trump partisans who continued the operation without any meaningful oversight for another two years.
This stunning operation was not just a typical battle between political foes, nor merely an example of media bias against political enemies. Instead, this entire operation was a deliberate and direct attack on the foundation of American governance. In light of the newly declassified documents released in recent days, it is clear that understanding what happened in that January 5 Oval Office meeting is essential to understanding the full scope and breadth of the corrupt operation against the Trump administration. It is long past time for lawmakers in Congress who are actually interested in oversight of the federal government and the media to demand answers about what really happened in that meeting from every single participant, including Obama and Biden.
———————– Mollie Ziegler Hemingway (@mzhemingway) is a senior editor at The Federalist.
Tags:Mollie Hemingway, Obama, Biden Oval Office, Meeting On January 5, Was Key To, Entire Anti-Trump OperationTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Mario Murillo Ministries: I do not fear man. God has taught me to obey His voice and no other. There have been countless times I wanted to react against injustice and evil when the Holy Spirit restrained me. I fear no government agency. That is the work of Christ in my life and not personal bravery.
We did not shut down our tent crusades because we feared man or virus. That is a point that I must drive home to you. The rest of this will not have the impact I am praying for unless you clearly understand that.
Unlike a church that owns their own building, for a tent crusade you must get a permit. No permits were available after the shutdown. I was fully prepared to obtain private land and force the issue. But God said no.
Being sidelined while California was being destroyed by a virus and her government was torture. Again and again, I thought about how desperately needed our tent meetings were.
I thought of Jesus waiting to heal the sick until He was thirty years old. How much misery He saw. How many times He must have yearned to intervene.
When I saw the riots. When I saw the spike in murder, addiction and suicide. I can’t describe to you my yawning frustration.
As the months passed my inner pain grew worse. I pleaded with the Lord to release me. Surely the risk of jail would be better than sitting on the sidelines.
The Holy Spirit never fully explained why we had to shut down. Of course we wanted people to be safe but that was not the main reason. Someday I know God will tell me why I had to wait. As soon as He tells me, I promise, I will tell you.
Our internet ministry and social media exploded during the shutdown. It seemed I should be content to enjoy this new found success. But I am a soul-winning warrior. Always have been, and always will be! If all I ever do is make videos and post things on the internet it will surely kill me.
In the last few weeks the fire in my bones intensified until I despaired of holding it in! I could not just hear, I could feel the anguish of lost souls in California. I was on the brink of an eruption. Then at the precise moment…it happened today. God spoke.
“REOPEN THE TENT CRUSADES.” Instantly I felt peace and excitement. It is from that peace and excitement that I make the following announcement:
We will reopen the Living Proof Crusade along Highway 99 on Sunday October 11. The tent goes up on the beautiful Granite Park where we have several acres of parking and direct access to hurting neighborhoods. How did we get this site? Well, you just have to believe in miracles my friend.
Not only that, but the tent will be up for 6 days! The meetings will be at 6:30 PM every night from Sunday October 11th until Friday October 16th. But there is so much more to tell you!
An army of trained and anointed workers will descend on Fresno. They will carry the message of hope so gravely needed in this hour. The acute loneliness, despair, and addiction will be confronted and healed in Jesus’ name!
We have purchased new equipment that will more than satisfy any concerns about cleanliness. We have luxury bathroom trailers. We will take great pains to make sure the tent, chairs and grounds are spotless!
Most of all, we expect the anointing to flow in a measure we have never known before. It will not surprise me if we see impossible healings that will rock the medical community.
I am preparing 6 original soul winning/healing messages—messages born out of my time of being sequestered!
Our expectancy for this tent crusade like crackling electricity! We have never felt expectancy like we do right now.
These verses perfectly describe what it will be like, what will happen under our tent:
Isaiah 61: 1 “The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me, Because the Lord has anointed Me
To preach good tidings to the poor; He has sent Me to heal the brokenhearted, To proclaim liberty to the captives, And the opening of the prison to those who are bound; 2 To proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord, And the day of vengeance of our God; To comfort all who mourn…”
Out of all of those words, one jumps out at me: vengeance! It is time to make the devil pay for what he has done to California and our nation! It is time for vengeance on all the lies, political tyranny and suffering in America.
Forgive me…but is it wrong to hope that on October 11 a fire from heaven will fall—a fire that will not be quenched until it engulfs the whole nation with revival!
It is not a coincidence that this tent crusade will occur right before the most urgent election of our life. For that reason I am calling on all who read this to begin to pray fervently for this crusade.
Under normal circumstances—which is something we have not been under for a long time—we would not press you to travel to Fresno to be a part of a historic relaunch of our Living Proof Tent crusades. This is a once in lifetime opportunity for you to be a part of an epic outpouring of the Holy Spirit.
Remember: Sunday October 11- Friday October 16th at 6:30 PM Granite Park 3978 N Cedar Ave, Fresno, CA 93726.
The shutdown is over! The vision resumes with more power and momentum than ever! Satan will pay dearly for what he has done to California and America.
To all of the partners of Mario Murillo Ministries let me make this official. Your prayers and support kept us strong and ready. You faith in the calling of this ministry is being rewarded with a magnificent comeback. So we will be rejoicing over a great harvest of souls. The addict, the suicidal teenager, the gang banger, and the victimized citizens of California are going to be visited by Jesus in glory and fire. Hallelujah!
———————- Mario Murillo is an evangelist Mario Murillo, minister, blogger.
Tags:Mario Murillo, Ministries, The Moment, I Have Been Waiting For, Has ArrivedTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Fred Lucas: A federal prosecutor in Texas is drawing a new kind of attention by digging into the “unmasking” of Trump campaign associates that occurred in the waning days of the Obama administration.
Attorney General William Barr last month revealed to the House Judiciary Committee that he had assigned U.S. Attorney John Bash of the Western District of Texas to probe what the Obama administration did in the name of national security.
Unmasking occurs after federal intelligence agencies incidentally pick up U.S. citizens’ conversations with foreign officials who are under surveillance.
Identities of those Americans are supposed to be protected, but top government officials who are privy to intelligence reports may request that the redacted identities of specific persons be disclosed, or “unmasked.”
In the most notorious case, Obama administration officials sought to unmask Michael Flynn, the retired Army lieutenant general who was President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming national security adviser.
The matter gained further attention after notes surfaced showing a Jan. 5, 2017, meeting in the Oval Office that included President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, national security adviser Susan Rice, and FBI Director James Comey.
In the meeting, which occurred 15 days before Trump’s inauguration, they discussed Flynn, who had been chief of the Defense Intelligence Agency for two years in Obama’s second term.
This could raise the issue of abuse of power, leading some commentators, as well as Trump, to refer to the Flynn unmasking as “Obamagate.”
Barr has said, however, that neither Obama nor Biden are under investigation. The Senate Judiciary Committee also is investigating the unmasking issue.
Here are four things to know about Bash, the prosecutor directed by Barr to look into it.
1. Former Trump White House Legal Adviser
John Franklin Bash III, now 37, went to work in the Trump White House counsel’s office in early 2017 as special assistant to the president and associate counsel to the president.
His wife, Zina Bash, was a member of the White House Domestic Policy Council. She previously worked for the 2016 Republican presidential campaign of one of Trump’s main rivals for the nomination, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas.
Cruz and Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, both recommended that Trump appoint Bash to replace U.S. Attorney Richard Durbin. As first assistant U.S. attorney for the district, Durbin got the top job when Obama appointed U.S. Attorney Robert Pitman as a federal judge in 2014.
Trump nominated Bash for the U.S. attorney post on Sept. 11, 2017. The Senate confirmed him Nov. 9.
Cornyn said at the time: “Texans deserve a principled prosecutor with a record of accomplishment and commitment to upholding the law, and John fits the bill.”
The Western District of Texas includes San Antonio, Austin, Waco, Del Rio, Alpine, Midland, and El Paso. Covering 600 miles of border with Mexico, the office has more than 140 lawyers.
“John Bash is a brilliant lawyer who will be an outstanding United States attorney,” Cruz said in a prepared statement when Trump nominated him. “He is committed to the fair and effective enforcement of the law, and has the integrity, judgment, and skill necessary to serve the people of the Western District as its chief federal law enforcement officer.”
2. Worked for Obama Administration
From 2012 to 2017, Bash was an assistant to the U.S. solicitor general, the Justice Department’s No. 4 official.
Bash represented the Obama administration before the Supreme Court in 10 cases focused on national security and criminal law.
Before working in the Obama Justice Department, Bash was an associate at the Washington law firm of Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher from 2008 to 2012.
3. Clerked for 2 Supreme Court Justices
Bash clerked for both an incumbent Supreme Court justice and a jurist who would go on to serve on the high court.
From 2007 to 2008, Bash was a law clerk for Justice Antonin Scalia.
From 2006 to 2007, he clerked for Circuit Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh on the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, whom Trump would name to the court in 2018.
4. Academics and Journalism at Harvard
Bash received his Bachelor of Arts degree summa cum laude from Harvard University in 2003 and his Juris Doctor magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 2006.
While at Harvard, Bash was a staff writer for The Harvard Crimson, the campus newspaper, usually writing conservative opinion pieces.
In one 2001 commentary, he argued for bringing ROTC back to Harvard’s campus. That same year, he wrote a piece on why conservatives should oppose capital punishment.
——————- Fred Lucas (@FredLucasWH) is the White House correspondent for The Daily Signal.
Tags:Fred Lucas, 4 Things, to know about, Prosecutor, probing ObamagateTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author: Given everything that has happened over the last several millennia, you can’t be surprised by anything. But still.
I had to check the text of the bill, A06578 in the New York State Assembly, to make sure the stories are accurate. It checks out: some lawmakers really do want to compel aspiring “shampoo assistants” to take 500 hours of training before they suds up your hair. (Apparently, though, you will still be allowed to give yourself a home-shower shampoo, even without training. Maybe future legislation will close this loophole.)
The culpable assemblymen are Carrie Woerner, (518) 455-5404, and John T. McDonald III, (518) 455-4474. A companion bill, S8862, is sponsored by co-conspirator State Senator Jen Metzger, (518) 455-2400.
According to the legislation, certificate holders may shampoo and rinse but not, you know, perform delicate surgical procedures like waxing or placing artificial braids.
One odd thing about the bill is this stipulation: “All shampoo assistant certificates shall expire one year from the date of issuance.” So . . . every year, shampoo assistants must put in another 500 hours?
On the other hand . . . come on, man. Think of the risk.
What if the water is too hot and the shampoo assistant is brand-new and hasn’t had the 500 hours training, so she gets burned and burns the head of the customer, or even heats the water on a stove until it boils and then pours it over her own head and the customer’s head?
How would she know not to do that without any training whatsoever?
This is . . . I’m Paul Jacob.
—————— Paul Jacob (@Common_Sense_PJ) is author of Common Sense which provides daily commentary about the issues impacting America and about the citizens who are doing something about them. He is also President of the Liberty Initiative Fund (LIFe) as well as Citizens in Charge Foundation. Jacob is a contributing author on the ARRA News Service.
Tags:Paul Jacob, Common Sense, Five-Hundred Hour, Shampoo ShamTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Dr. Steven Battle: The mission of public health is to recommend policies and utilize procedures to ensure the health of a population and keep leaders from getting fired — or voted out of office. Ensuring a thriving economy and environment free of violence is the responsibility of civilian government authorities. This clearly implies that public health recommendations and policies are inherently political, and we are living with the repercussions of this reality now more than ever. As a physician who has completed residency training and board certification in both emergency medicine and preventive medicine/public health, and been practicing for over 20 years in military and civilian organizations, what follows is my high-altitude take on our current COVID-19 crisis.
The severity of public health counter-measures overwhelmingly reflects a political calculation. Public health authorities and civilian government leaders weigh multiple factors beyond the epidemiology or health care policy implications of interventions. All too frequently, when making decisions on interventions to improve the health of a population, the medical discipline of preventive medicine/public health takes a back seat to non–health care considerations.
A review of notable U.S. public health initiatives of the past 100 years reveals different policy strategies depending on political forces — for example, the federal government responses to the West Africa Ebola epidemic and the HIV pandemic.
West Africa 2013–2016 was the site of the most widespread outbreak of the Ebola virus in history. There were over 11,000 deaths and more than 17,000 survivors, many of whom reported post-recovery symptoms termed “post-Ebola syndrome.” U.S. and international aid flooded into the region. There was no halt of travel into the U.S. from any of the six African countries involved. Travel restrictions for such dramatic circumstances intuitively and scientifically were warranted. However, due to concerns of the economic impact of such a measures, these completely appropriate interventions were eschewed. Unnecessary and inefficient measures of screening and contact tracing placed an enormous strain on federal and state public health authorities. The U.S. and the rest of the world were fortunate to escape the West African Ebola virus epidemic with very few (but not zero) cases imported into Western nations. The impact to individual liberties of U.S. government interventions regarding Ebola were negligible.
Now consider the case of the government’s response to the HIV pandemic. Worldwide, as of 2016, approximately 36.7 million people worldwide have HIV. As of 2018, about 700,000 people have died of HIV/AIDS in the U.S. since the beginning of the HIV epidemic, and nearly 13,000 people with AIDS in the United States die each year. What have been the major public health interventions against this scourge? There has been a decades-long public awareness effort. Pharmaceutical innovations and better prophylaxis against opportunistic infections have resulted in a dramatic improvement in fatality rates. However, there is a significant disease burden and massive expenditures on HIV/AIDS treatments. Lifetime cost to treat one person with HIV is over $500,000. There was never any government mandates or controls placed on individuals to reduce transmission of this terrible disease. There were no widespread closures of bath houses or massage parlors catering to homosexuals. There was no increased enforcement of prostitution laws. There has been minimal impact on civil liberties of the response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
There are examples of our government severely infringing on people’s rights and property in efforts to improve population health and well-being. A hundred years ago, Prohibition was intended to decrease alcohol-related problems such as alcoholism, family violence, and saloon-based political corruption. There was a moral component to the effort, but in retrospect, it was clearly a radical public health effort. The effect on individuals and business, and entire industries, was massive. However, the ban on the production, importation, transportation, and sale of alcoholic beverages was ratified by 36 of 48 states, and Congress passed enabling legislation. It is not widely recognized, but Prohibition was, in fact, an enormous public health success. Regardless, during the Depression, Prohibition was repealed — however, this was again achieved through thoroughly democratic means.
Consider the contrast of these efforts to our current COVID-19 response. Massive disruptions in individual and societal norms and liberties have been implemented by government authorities of all levels. Why have the political/public health calculations of infringing on freedom changed so dramatically? The institutions that protect constitutional freedoms are severely damaged. This is vastly different from the constitutional Prohibition/Repeal efforts.
Tightly knit, well financed political groups or communities who have powerful political allies can usually successfully impact political decisions and thus public health policies. Unfortunately, these are not the circumstances we find with COVID-19. Draconian infringements on individual liberties have successfully been implemented precisely because they impact all of us as individuals. Politically, the individual is far more vulnerable than any group. Responses to COVID-19 should be based on encouraging individuals to behave responsibly, not oppressing use through clumsy, poorly effective, ham-handed government mandates and laws.
The fix to the contamination of public health by politics is to embrace non-governmental solutions. The private sector has the efficiencies, expertise and incentives to lead us back to a vibrant, open, free society. It will be the private sector developing the best medical interventions for COVID-19. Developing best practices and utilizing the best or new medical interventions and vaccines will be accomplished by health care professionals and organizations and vaccine and pharmaceutical companies.
Of note, the private sector is already developing assessment and intervention products that will help ensure the safest possible environments for people to interact socially, conduct business and otherwise perform all the activities of daily living that we had grown accustom to prior to this pandemic. On multiple fronts, private-sector innovators are developing and implementing the most advanced techniques available to keep employers, employees, customers, and students and teachers as safe as possible. By utilizing expertise in public health and industrial hygiene, and rigorous, standardized procedures for surveillance, reporting, environmental monitoring, and behavioral interventions, some businesses are finding a way to protect themselves and their customers effectively. One innovative method is assessment, training, validation, and certification of business by external experts. At this very moment, these exciting interventions are being rolled out in many parts of our countries across various industries such as manufacturing, gaming, education, restaurants, and entertainment.
A strong focus on private-sector innovations and asking for similar public health strategies that have been used for decades to be applies is reasonable and moral. Recommitting our government to prioritize securing our liberties and entrusting private-sector experts to develop solutions will reawaken our society and restore our health, safety, security, freedom, and success.
———————– Dr. Steven Battle shared this article in the American Thinker
Tags:IDr. Steven Battle, American Thinker, 10,000 foot take, CONVID-19To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
by Newt Gingrich: The longer former Vice President Joe Biden stays hidden in his basement, the further away he gets from everyday Americans.
Only the left can get to him in his basement, and the result is a steady slide to politically disastrous positions.
His most recent attack on the American people was his endorsement (or borrowing) of the Cory Booker-James Clyburn plan to use the federal government to destroy the suburbs by forcing changes imposed by Washington bureaucrats. The plan would seek to diversify American suburbs by withholding federal dollars from communities which do not change local zoning ordinances to accommodate denser housing.
Now, this policy is opposed by 65 percent of all Americans, with just 23 percent favoring government playing a role in diversifying neighborhoods, according to Rasmussen Reports. Among Democrats, 56 percent say it’s not the government’s job to dictate local community plans – along with 73 percent of Republicans and 68 percent of independents.
“People of all races, colors, and creeds move to the suburbs for the same reasons: Single-family homes with big gardens on wide streets that have minimal traffic and quality, safe schools that aren’t too far away from home. It’s all about raising children where they can safely play outdoors and get a good education. These things, of course, are the opposite of what one finds in a densely populated city.”Of course, the tremendous increase in violence in big cities and the collapse of unionized bureaucratic schools have increased the desirability of moving to the suburbs.
Of course, the tremendous increase in violence in big cities and the collapse of unionized bureaucratic schools have increased the desirability of moving to the suburbs.
Despite this near 3:1 majority against his policy, Biden would require any state getting highway grants to develop a program to change zoning, so it is more “inclusionary.”
As Sen. Booker’s website explains, the states “could choose to reduce restrictions on lot size, eliminate parking requirements, or allow accessory dwelling units and multifamily homes. These actions would allow for the construction of greater housing density… Municipalities could also institute a ‘density bonus,’ which allows developers to build more units if a portion of them are maintained as affordable housing units.”
Biden indicated his support for government imposed suburban change on his website. Biden would:
“Eliminate local and state housing regulations that perpetuate discrimination. Exclusionary zoning has for decades been strategically used to keep people of color and low-income families out of certain communities. As President, Biden will enact legislation requiring any state receiving federal dollars through the Community Development Block Grants or Surface Transportation Block Grants to develop a strategy for inclusionary zoning, as proposed in the HOME Act of 2019 by Majority Whip Clyburn and Senator Cory Booker.”Rupert Darwall made crystal clear how out-of-touch with suburban reality the radical Democrats are in an Aug. 10 article entitled, “The Democrats Put the Suburbs — and Family Life — on the November Ballot.” He wrote the piece shortly after President Donald Trump rescinded a similar diversity rule from the Obama Era. In response, Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy called President Trump “a proud, vocal segregationist” in a tweet. As you can imagine, the Twitter mob parroted Murphy.
But, as Darwall wrote: “Somehow, Democrats still see the suburbs as racially homogenized, lily-white enclaves — something they haven’t been for a long time.” Citing a study by Joel Kotkin and professor Alan Berger, Darwall pointed out that far more Americans live in the suburbs than in city center (151 million versus 25 million). More importantly, he wrote “a majority of African-Americans in the nation’s 100 largest metropolitan areas live in the suburbs. More Hispanics have been moving to the suburbs than whites, and the Asian population in suburban areas is growing nearly twice as fast as that of Asians living in inner-city cores.”
So, the foundational Democratic argument that our suburbs aren’t diverse is baloney. But Darwall got to something more important. This desire by Democrats to control our neighborhoods seems to have more to do with contempt for suburban voters who don’t go along with radical agendas. Darwall pointed out that when President Obama spoke on this topic, he rarely – if ever – used the word “suburb.”
“‘When it comes to development, it’s time to throw out old policies that encouraged sprawl,’ [Obama] told the U.S. Conference of Mayors in January 2010. Sprawl. Note the word. That’s how progressives chose to describe where most Americans live and many others aspire to live. It’s the housing equivalent of Obama’s clinging-to- guns-or-religion comment or Hillary Clinton’s ‘basket of deplorables’ remark.”
This all comes from a real belief held by many elitist Democrats that most Americans are misguided or ignorant and must be guided and directed by their enlightened leaders in Washington DC.
Just consider the case of Westchester County, New York. The Obama-Biden administration tried to use Westchester as a petri dish for its community-building scheme – never mind that at the time Westchester was already the fourth most diverse county in the state.
In a 2013 speech, County Executive Rob Astorino described how the Obama-Biden government bullied local leaders there to enact the federal overreach:
“The Federal government has a very different agenda and vision for Westchester. In fact, HUD calls us, its ‘grand experiment.’ That means Washington bureaucrats, who you will never see or meet, want the power to determine who will live where, and how each neighborhood will look. Now what’s at stake is the fundamental right of our cities, towns and villages to plan and zone for themselves. This ‘home rule’ is guaranteed by the New York State Constitution. HUD thinks it can trample on Westchester, because it has the misguided notion that zoning and discrimination are the same thing. They are not. Zoning restricts what can be built, not who lives there.Astorino concluded: “It all comes down to this: HUD thinks that Westchester is some kind of ‘grand experiment.’ That it can strip away our constitutionally protected rights. And that it can dismantle local zoning. I say Westchester is our home – not a test tube. I say Westchester residents didn’t stop becoming American citizens the day the deal was signed in 2009. And, I say nothing gives HUD the right to turn the American Dream upside down.”The fight over the suburbs is going to be a fight over whether Biden’s Washington bureaucrats can dictate how to change every neighborhood in America without regard to the wishes of the people living there.
It will be a decisive choice between a Washington-based bureaucratic dictatorship and local freedom.
As usual, Biden will likely be in the basement – but supporting the Washington bureaucrats. President Trump will stand with the suburban Americans who are being threatened.
———————- Newt Gingrich (@newtgingrich) is a former Georgia Congressman and Speaker of the U.S. House. He co-authored and was the chief architect of the “Contract with America” and a major leader in the Republican victory in the 1994 congressional elections. He is noted speaker and writer. This commentary was shared via Gingrich Productions.
Tags:Joe Biden, Declares War, on Suburban Americans, Newt GingrichTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!
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Fauci says temperature checks are not reliable: Temperature checks on students and teachers are becoming commonplace amid the reopening of classrooms, but Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Thursday that temperature checks aren’t a reliable way to screen for COVID-19 infection. “We have found at the NIH, that it is much much better to just question people when they come in and save the time, because the temperatures are notoriously inaccurate, many times,” Fauci said at an event with the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Because of this, the White House and National Institutes of Health have abandoned temperature checks as a screening tool. Meanwhile, as the number of coronavirus cases reached more than 5.2 million in the U.S., presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden on Thursday called for immediate mask mandates nationwide for the next three months. “Every single American should be wearing a mask when they’re outside for the next three months, at a minimum,” he said, calling on every governor to make it mandatory. “The estimates by the experts are it will save over 40,000 lives in the next three months.”
Trump opposes funding USPS in bid to block vote by mail: President Donald Trump suggested Thursday that he is unwilling to strike a deal with Democrats to allocate funding for the ailing U.S. Postal Service, which could impact mail-in voting during the election in November. The day before, Trump said he would not approve $25 billion in emergency funding for the Postal Service or $3.5 billion in supplemental funding for election resources — a proposal Democrats claim came directly from the agency’s Board of Governors. “They need that money in order to make the post office work, so it can take all of these millions and millions of ballots,” Trump said in a Fox News interview. “If we don’t make a deal, that means they don’t get the money. That means they can’t have universal mail-in voting.” Trump’s comments only fueled more allegations from critics that he is seeking to manipulate the postal system for political gain. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi claimed the president is creating obstacles for voters and is “afraid of the American people.” Earlier, Pelosi and 174 other Democrats signed a letter sent to Louis DeJoy, the new head of the USPS, saying that “the Postal Service’s smooth functioning is a matter of life-or-death.” DeJoy replied that he anticipates an increase in election mail volume, but that the USPS has ample capacity to deliver election mail on time.
Black women won’t reach equal pay with white men until 2130, report finds: Black women will not achieve equal pay with white men for at least another century, according to a report released Thursday by the Institute for Women’s Policy Research (IWPR). The study indicates that Black women will not bring home the same earnings as white men for the same jobs until 2130. “What that means in real terms is that my daughter and my daughter’s daughter will not see pay equity in their lifetime if we do nothing to accelerate closing the pay gap,” Nicole Mason, president and CEO of the IWPR, told “Good Morning America.” “Since 1960, the pay gap [for all women] has only closed by about 20 cents.” The IWPR’s report came on the same day as Black Women’s Equal Pay Day, a day meant to recognize that Black women have to work more than 220 days into 2020 to earn what a white man in the same job earned in 2019. White women caught up to their male counterparts this year by April 9. The pay gap Black women face is felt more heavily this year during the coronavirus pandemic, during which Black women have been hit disproportionately hard financially.
Kindergarten teacher shares positive message to parents: As some parents worry about sending their kids back to school amid the coronavirus pandemic, Dana Kimmell, a mother and kindergarten teacher at Sundown Lane Elementary School in Canyon, Texas, is doing her best to assuage fears. “[Kindergarten is] the first step in the children’s education and it should be exciting, not scary,” Kimmell told “Good Morning America.” Kimmell posted a comforting message on her Facebook page, giving parents a glimpse at what their kids will be dealing with when they return to the classroom and how she will make students feel at ease. The post, which also included guidance on social distancing and hand hygiene, quickly went viral. Kimmell told “GMA” that she’s received “so much positivity” in response. “Parents tell me they feel a sense of peace after they read it,” she said. The school has benefited too: Sundown Lane has received many of the items on its Amazon wish list since the post went live, Kimmell said.
GMA Must-Watch
This morning on “GMA,” Shania Twain performs live! Plus, don’t miss Zeus, our Pet of the Week, as we honor him for all he does to help his owner who has autism. And as parents get ready for virtual learning, we have some great tips on how to make the transition as easy as possible for you and your kids. Also, Jason Sudeikis joins us live to talk about his new Apple TV show, “Ted Lasso.” All this and more only on “GMA.”
President Donald Trump requested an absentee ballot amid criticism over mail-in voting; the CDC director says school reopenings are “going to have to be decided one school at a time,” and the U.S. brokers an historic agreement in the Middle East.
Here’s what we’re watching this morning.
Trump requests absentee ballot as mail-in voting controversy continues
President Donald Trump, whose campaign has tried to thwart mail-in voting, has requested an absentee ballot that will allow him to cast a ballot in Florida’s Aug. 18 primary via the U.S. Postal Service.
On Thursday, the president continued his longstanding tirade against mail-in voting ahead of the Nov. 3 election at Thursday’s White House press briefing.
He has also so far resisted congressional Democrats’ efforts to add billions of dollars to U.S. Postal Service budget to help fund the extra work needed to process more voting by mail as a result of the pandemic. However, he said at the briefing that he would not veto a bill that would give the Postal Service extra funding.
Meanwhile, the Postal Service said it’s unlikely there will be enough time to request, complete and return mail-in ballots in Pennsylvania to be counted for the Nov. 3 presidential election.
Pennsylvania last year passed a law that allows all its voters to vote by mail. Social distancing because of the pandemic has inspired officials coast-to-coast to limit polling places and encourage citizens to use the mailbox.
“We’re going to need to do it safely. We’re going to need to do it sensibly. And we’re going to have to do it based on the unique circumstances, the kinetics of the epidemic and in the areas that the schools are beginning to try to wrestle with this reopening,” CDC Director and virologist Robert Redfield told “NBC Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt.
Redfield added that in communities where the virus continues to be transmitted at high rates, districts shouldn’t feel pressure from the CDC or the White House to welcome students back without measures in place.
“We don’t want to pressure anybody,” he said. “Our guidance is there to help them begin to open, as I said, safely and sensibly. The timing of that is going to have to be decided one school at a time.”
As part of the agreement, Israel will suspend declaring sovereignty over areas outlined in the Trump administration’s Mideast peace plan, a joint statement said, adding the country would focus on expanding ties with other countries in the Arab and Muslim world.
Currently, Israel officially has peace deals with only two Arab countries — Egypt and Jordan — where it has fortified embassies.
Relations between Israel and Gulf States have quietly warmed in recent years as they have been pushed together by their common enemy, Iran, and by an ally in the Trump administration. The agreement could lead other states, such as Saudi Arabia, to potentially follow suit.
“I heard it today that she doesn’t meet the requirements,” Trump said during a White House briefing in response to a question about Harris’ citizenship. The question referred to an op-ed essay in Newsweek that falsely claims the California senator is ineligible to serve as president because her parents came to the U.S. from other countries.
Harris is a U.S. citizen who was born in Oakland, California. Her mother emigrated from India and her father from Jamaica. If elected, Harris would become the first female, first Black and first Asian American vice president.
Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., gives the convocation at the 2017 commencement ceremony at Howard University in Washington, her alma mater. (Credit: Marvin Joseph / The Washington Post via Getty Images)
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If at-home cooking has you considering upgrading to an Instant Pot, you might want to consider this guidance from food experts before buying the right model for you.
One fun thing
After the game plan changed for group sports because of the pandemic, one young girl ran with a different idea.
In Texas, 8-year-old Caroline Cary decided to lead weekly workout classes in her neighborhood. Now, every Saturday, kids start their morning off with a boot camp in her front yard. Laps, stretches, burpees and frog jumps are all part of the workout.
“You need to get your body grooving and it’s fun to exercise a lot,” said Caroline.
But there’s more to these classes than just exercise. Caroline is donating the sign-up fees to the Association for Frontotemporal Degeneration, in honor of her grandmother living with the condition.
See Caroline’s boot camp, get your coronavirus questions answered and meet kids who are sharing tips for starting the new school year remotely on Nightly News Kids Edition.
I’m filling in for Petra Cahill while she’s taking a break. If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: rachel.elbaum@nbcuni.com
If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.
Thanks, Rachel
NBC FIRST READ
From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg
FIRST READ: Here’s why the Post Office is the most important story in politics right now
After weeks of tension over accusations of political meddling at the Postal Service, it feels like the dam is breaking.
In just the last day or so:
The president saidin his most explicit terms yet that, by holding up emergency funds for the Postal Service, he would be ensuring that the post office would be unable to “take all of these millions and millions of ballots.” More: “Now, if we don’t make a deal, that means they don’t get the money. That means they can’t have universal mail-in voting. They just can’t have it.”
The Biden campaign directly accused the president of attempting to “sabotage” the service, calling it an “assault on our democracy.” (Biden himself added that Trump “doesn’t want an election.”)
Trump seemed to suggest that he would NOT veto a coronavirus bill that included postal funding if it made it to his desk, but he also continued to make claims — without evidence — that mail balloting conducted with that funding would be fraudulent.
Vice reported (and NBC News confirmed) that the Postal Service is removing sorting machines from facilities around the country without any official explanation.
We learned that USPS warned secretaries of state in Michigan and Pennsylvania that their deadlines for mail balloting might be too tight to meet the service’s “delivery standards.”
We learned that the president and his wife have requested absentee ballots in Florida for the second time as Palm Beach residents
The Washington Post reported that new Postmaster General Louis DeJoy, who instituted the recent changes that have slowed mail nationwide, is “in frequent contact with top Republican Party officials” and met with the president in the Oval Office last week.
Photo by Sarah Silbiger / Reuters
Oh, and amid all of this, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell adjourned the Senate until after Labor Day, signaling that talks on coronavirus relief — and the emergency mail funding that could be connected to it — have officially completely broken down.
This story is now definitely in the public bloodstream — and it’s not going away.
Our question: Does all the attention this story is getting backfire for Trump if Democratic voters start reassessing — again — how and when they’ll cast their votes to ensure they’re counted?
Spaghetti, meet wall
Outside of the mail story, the Trump administration had a positive message they COULD have run with all day yesterday.
In a diplomatic breakthrough, the United States brokered a deal between Israel and the UAE to normalize ties.
But instead of zeroing in on a historic deal, Trump stepped all over that message by making headlines about a laundry list of other things.
Floating a conspiracy theory about Kamala Harris being ineligible to serve as president. Calling Harris “angry” and a “madwoman” and saying that Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez “yaps” … Announcing that he’ll break with protocol and accept the Republican nomination on the White House grounds … telling the New York Post that he has a shot to win New York, a state that he lost by 22 points four years ago… saying Democrats “don’t want to have cows … or any form of animals” — without any further explanation.
Meanwhile, other than a brief response on the USPS story, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris talked about one message on Thursday: Pushing a national mask mandate to save lives and slow the spread of coronavirus.
Which message do voters want? “Wear a mask”? Or Trump’s scattershot approach?
TWEET OF THE DAY: California Dreamin’
Barr the door
Speaking of the dam breaking… Trump’s mail comments on Fox Business yesterday deservedly got a lot more attention, but don’t miss this statementfrom President Trump yesterday on Bill Barr’s handling of the Durham probe into the origins of the Russia investigation.
The president told the network that he hopes that U.S. attorney John Durham “is not going to be politically correct” and won’t limit his findings to “just get a couple of the lower guys.” (That comment came after he suggested that Barack Obama and Joe Biden “knew everything.”)
And he made this ominous statement about Barr: “Bill Barr can go down as the greatest attorney general in the history of our country, or he can go down as an average guy. We’ll see what happens.”
Barr, for his part, is promising a “development” in the probe today, although not an “earth-shattering” one.
It’s another example of how the president’s comments publicly pressuring investigators will probably backfire, though.
For any DOJ investigation to have a real-world impact, the investigators would have to have credibility. (That’s what Jeff Sessions was thinking when he recused himself from the Mueller investigation, and look where that ended up!)
But Trump’s threats continually undermine the ability of his Justice Department to be viewed as anything but political.
Help is not on the way
After talks on a coronavirus relief bill hit a standstill, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell adjourned the Senate today until after Labor Day. While senators will be on a 24 hour notice to get back to D.C. if a deal is made, there are no signs that negotiations are continuing.
But while the Hill will likely be quiet for the rest of the summer, September will be busy not just dealing with coronavirus relief legislation, but also with investigations into the slow-down of mail, senators campaigning for reelection and a government funding bill – since current funding runs out on Sept. 30.
DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today
5,274,473: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 61,225 more than yesterday morning.)
168,329: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 1,522 more than yesterday morning.)
64.6 million: The number of coronavirus TESTS administered in the U.S., according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.
20.8 million: Over 20.8 million people have been sickened by coronavirus worldwide, according to a New York Times tracker.
Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at a new poll finding that half of registered voters expect that it will be DIFFICULT to cast their ballot this fall.
ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?
Israel and the United Arab Emirates announced they’d formalize relations on Thursday – a decision cheered by Bahrain and Egypt and denounced by Palestinians.
Belarusian authorities released some detained protesters after widespread condemnation and ahead of the European Union meeting to discuss sanctions.
The Justice Department accused Yale University of discriminating against Asian American and white applicants.
President Trump echoed the racist “birther” theory that California Sen. Kamala Harris doesn’t meet the requirements to be vice president. Harris was born in California.
President Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen said in his new book that Trump worked with Russia to win the 2016 election.
The Biden campaign reported it raised $48 million since announcing Harris as the V.P. choice.
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Joe Biden is calling for a three-month nationwide mask mandate to fight the coronavirus, drawing further divides between how he and the president think the pandemic should be handled. Also, President Trump is vowing to block funding for the U.S. Postal Service that would aid mail-in voting. All that and all that matters in today’s Eye Opener. Your world in 90 seconds.
Watch Video +
Biden calls for three-month nationwide mask mandate
Watch Video +
Artist Chanel Miller on reclaiming her identity after sexual assault
A short documentary reveals the city’s nightmare of homelessness, addiction, crime, and violence.
By Christopher F. Rufo City Journal Online
August 13, 2020
“There is a nearly unanimous belief that we will ultimately conquer the virus and its hold on our economy. But the longer that it takes, the more permanent the damage that will be done.”
By Beth Akers Economics21
August 14, 2020
“Each day brings reports of fresh horror. More than 1,000 people have been shot so far this year, which is shaping up to be twice as bloody as 2019.”
By Seth Barron New York Post
August 14, 2020
Andy Smarick asked 18 experts in the fields of education, philosophy, policy and culture to weigh-in about the intersection of education, character and virtue.
By Andy Smarick R Street
August 4, 2020
The Manhattan Institute welcomed SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce to discuss policy changes to shareholder voting, as well as her broader vision for the future of U.S. securities regulation. Sworn in on January 11, 2018, Commissioner Peirce has long been a leading thinker about these issues—including as a former contributor to the Manhattan Institute’s legal-policy weblog.
On August 10, Maryland Governor Larry Hogan joined the Manhattan Institute to discuss his new book, Still Standing, and how America’s governors can lead the nation out of crisis.
What do young progressives believe? On August 6, Manhattan Institute fellow and City Journal contributing editor Coleman Hughes; New York Times opinion columnist, Ross Douthat; and columnist for Tablet Magazine, Wesley Yang discussed the “Successor Ideology” that is quickly becoming a major force in our national life.
Nicole Gelinas joins Seth Barron to discuss recent violence on New York’s Upper West Side, why the decision to house homeless men in nearby hotels isn’t good for them or their neighbors, and the risk that the city faces of losing wealthier residents due to quality-of-life concerns.
With America and its cities still reeling from the Covid-19 pandemic and the recent civil unrest, Manhattan Institute scholars are charting a path forward at the federal, state, and local levels. Read more in the Summer 2020 update from president Reihan Salam.
Manhattan Institute is a think tank whose mission is to develop and disseminate new ideas that foster greater economic choice and individual responsibility.
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REALCLEARPOLITICS MORNING NOTE
08/14/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note
Going Postal; Harris-Clinton Nexus; Quote of the Week
By Carl M. Cannon on Aug 14, 2020 08:53 am
Good morning. It’s Friday, Aug. 14, 2020, the day of the week when I reprise an instructive or inspirational quotation. Today’s comes from the first American woman of color chosen as a political party’s vice presidential nominee.
Not Kamala Harris — remember, this is a history-themed column. I’m referring to Charlotta Spears Bass, who accepted the No. 2 slot on the Progressive Party ticket in 1952. She didn’t win, obviously, as that year’s election was won in a landslide by Dwight Eisenhower and his running mate Richard Nixon. The Progressives’ ticket of Vincent Hallinan and Charlotta Bass was kept off the ballot in many states and garnered 141,000 voters out of 61 million cast.
Nonetheless, Charlotta Bass was making history, which she understood better than anyone.
“I stand before you with great pride,” she said in her acceptance speech at the Progressives’ Chicago convention. “This is a historic moment in American political life. Historic for myself, for my people, for all women.”
I’ll have more from this pioneering activist in a moment. First, I’ll like to point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer an array original material from our own reporters, columnists, and contributors this morning, including the following:
* * *
GOP Should Reject Trump’s War on the Post Office. A.B. Stoddard argues that the president is undermining the USPS to sow distrust in election results, and warns Republicans that it could backfire on them.
Kamala Harris Is the Final Piece of the Puzzle. Hillary Clinton supporters Jessica Tarlov and Antjuan Seawright are pleased by the policy linkage they see represented in Joe Biden’s running mate choice.
Can Harris Leave California Behind? Bill Whalen questions whether Golden State “cool” will taint the VP nominee as she speaks to Americans in places with quite different values.
GOP Must Not Ignore Fast-Growing Asian American Electorate. Myra Adams breaks down data showing that the growth of this often overlooked demographic is outpacing other racial/ethnic groups, and that it increasingly leans Democratic in presidential elections.
Madeleine Westerhout’s Road to Redemption in Trump World. The former Oval Office executive assistant, fired for talking out of school, tells Philip Wegmann what she’s done to get back in the president’s good graces.
Bipartisan Deal on Economic Recovery Is Possible. Here’s How. At RealClearPolicy, Julie Anderson and Shai Akabas offer this prescription for seemingly intractable lawmakers.
Five Facts About Delayed COVID Test Results. No Labels’ primer is also at RCPolicy.
Why U.S. Climate Action Must Include Developing Countries. At RealClearEnergy, David Yellen examines our role in coordinating governments to speed up action.
* * *
Born on Valentine’s Day 1874 in South Carolina, Charlotta Amanda Spears moved to Rhode Island as a young woman where she worked for her brother’s newspaper, the Providence Watchman. In 1910, she left for Los Angeles where she worked on another black-owned newspaper, The Eagle, which was soon turned over to her by its ailing owner. Charlotta brought veteran African American editor and organizer Joseph Blackburn Bass down from San Francisco to edit it. She married Bass, took his surname, renamed the paper The California Eagle, and spent the next four decades in pursuit of social justice.
“For 40 years I have been a working editor and publisher of the oldest Negro newspaper in the West,” she told her fellow Progressives in 1952. “During those 40 years I stood on a watchtower, watching the tide of racial hatred and bigotry rising against my people and against all people who believe the Constitution is something more than a piece of yellowed paper to be shut off in a glass case in the archives, but a living document, a working instrument for freedom.”
Like many blacks of her generation, Bass had been a loyal Republican; she’d helped run the West Coast get-out-the-vote efforts for Thomas Dewey in 1944. But in 1948, Henry A. Wallace, who’d served as the second of Franklin Roosevelt’s three vice presidents, abandoned the Democratic Party to launch a re-imagined Progressive Party. Heeding Wallace’s call, Bass left the Republican Party to join the new movement.
She was 78 years old in the summer of 1952 — the same age Joe Biden will be in November — a time in life when most people are reminiscing about their careers, not launching new chapters. Bass addressed this point directly in her speech, recalling the joy she felt at joining a truly integrated political party.
“Now perhaps I could retire,” she said. “I had helped to found a home for my people. I looked forward to a rest after 40 years of struggle. But how could I retire, and where could I retire, as long as I saw what Frederick Douglass saw and felt what he did — the need to stand up for the downtrodden, to open my mouth for the dumb, to remember those in bonds as bound with me.”
An NBC news crew visited the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) last week – after months of seeking permission. The lab is suspected of being a possible source of the Covid-19 pandemic. The Chinese response to the NBC team was predictable: Nothing to do with us… We have no idea where the virus came from.
The Chinese Communist Party has lately become decidedly more aggressive. Consider a few examples:
The CCP is ramping up its non-kinetic “unrestricted warfare” against us, which includes fomenting street riots. It is listing more companies in our stock markets to finance the PRC’s malevolence. And the Chinese Communists make no secret of their determination to prevent President Trump’s reelection.
But what if Beijing has something even worse in mind? We cannot ignore evidence that the CCP is preparing for actual conflict with us. The PRC has declared a “people’s war” against America and dictator Xi Jinping has directed his rapidly growing military to get ready for it. China’s civilians have lately been subjected to air defense drills and encouraged to stockpile food and water in anticipation of imminent conflict.
If we hope to deter war, we better prepare for it, too.
This is Frank Gaffney.
DAVID GOLDMAN, Author of How Civilizations Die, Best known for his series of essays in the Asia Times under the pseudonym Spengler:
The arresting of Jimmy Lai
How the Chinese have diminished the freedom of Hong Kong
Are the Chinese preparing to wage war against another international actor?
The unrestricted warfare plan of the Chinese Communist Party
ROBERT CHARLES, Former Assistant Secretary of State at the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs in the Bush Administration, Author of Eagles and Evergreens:
A lawsuit against the National Rifle Association
An attack on the Second Amendment
KEN TIMMERMAN, President and CEO of the Foundation for Democracy in Iran, Author of Deception: The Making of the YouTube Video Hillary and Obama Blamed for Benghazi, Author of Dark Forces: The Truth About What Happened in Benghazi, Nationally recognized investigative reporter:
Ken’s new book that explores the potential of election fraud in the US
How does voting fraud take place in the United States?
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Reform the Supreme Court? Read the Federalist Papers
By Ethan Yang | “Senator Harris and her Progressive allies would do best for the country to attempt to restore respect and understanding of the Supreme Court, not undermine it by turning it into another political game. What’s at stake is a…
Retail Spending Hits New High in July but Gains Are Not…
By Robert Hughes | Retail sales and food-services spending posted another gain in July, rising 1.2 percent from the prior month following an 8.4 percent jump in June and an 18.3 percent record surge in May. The gains come after two devastating…
By Raymond C. Niles | “Looking ahead to a more authoritarian future, will old-fashioned lobbying be enough to secure a measure of business freedom any more? What new steps will businesses need to take in the future to protect themselves from…
By Roger W. Koops | Dear Younger Generations; I am writing to the younger generation. When you become an old-timer like me, anyone younger is of the younger generation. My focus is on the slightly more than half of the population of the U.S. who…
By Jeffrey A. Tucker | “New Zealand looks and feels like paradise. Sadly, thanks to brutal and deeply incompetent political leadership, that paradise is lost, lost to the superstitions of the COVID faith that power, police, and adoring news…
By Richard M. Salsman | “If any legitimate public service (like the rule of law and law enforcement) fails, it should be mended, not ended, reformed, not scorned. Indeed, that has been the general (and positive) trend in American law and law…
We are on the cusp of a dramatic wave of technological change – from blockchain to automated smart contracts, artificial intelligence and machine learning to advances in cryptography and digitisation, from Internet of Things to advanced communications technologies.
This book presents a call to arms. The liberty movement has spent too much time begging the state for its liberties back. We can now use new technologies to build the free institutions that are needed for human flourishing without state permission.
On the menu today: why John Eastman’s ideas about Kamala Harris and who else does and does not qualify as a U.S. citizen don’t hold water; a warning about a deep depression among America’s young people; and oh yeah, go figure — a sign of peace in the Middle East!
Here Comes the ‘Natural-Born Citizen’ Debate Again
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. Our goal is to help register 4 million voters.
“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
Attorney General Bill Barr joined Sean Hannity on Thursday to announce the new program Operation Legend to fight violence crime. AG Barr was then asked… Read more…
Someone needs to tell Joe Biden he is not the President of the United States. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris delivered remarks after their Covid-19… Read more…
Coming soon to a Democrat-run city near you! A Black Lives Matter mob held a rally in a gentrified neighborhood reportedly in Seattle on Wednesday… Read more…
This is a heartbreaking update. A Dallas judge this week issued an order allowing Anne Georgulas power over her 8-year-old son James Younger’s medical decisions…. Read more…
Hillary Clinton just won’t go away. Twice failed presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton didn’t rule out serving in a Biden Administration. “I’m ready to help in… Read more…
In March 2019 New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern passed gun-grabbing legislation following a mass shooting at Christchurch mosque. Ardern banned assault rifles and military-style… Read more…
President Trump on Thursday evening blasted Joe Biden and Kamala Harris for politicizing a pandemic and calling for a nationwide mask mandate. Joe Biden and… Read more…
A Justice Department investigation found that Yale University illegally discriminates against Asian Americans and White Americans in undergraduate admissions in violation of civil-rights law. The… Read more…
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Back when California was a swing state, it was commonplace to have a Golden Stater on the national ticket. Not that it made all that much difference. Dwight Eisenhower would have won twice regardless of his running mate, but it’s a matter of record that he ran with Richard Nixon, the pride of Yorba Linda. Later, Nixon would win two terms, carrying his home state twice, as did transplanted Californian Ronald Reagan.
President Trump this week tapped a new coronavirus adviser whose views on the pandemic closely align with his own. Scott Atlas, who spoke at Wednesday’s coronavirus briefing at the White House, is a radiologist, a senior fellow at the conservative Hoover Institution of Stanford University and a frequent Fox News commentator.
What is the point of the European Union? Only a few years ago such a question, especially coming from a British Brexiteer such as me, might have been written off as simply provocative rudeness from an ideological foe. Today, however, in the light of the EU’s incapacity to meet the strategic challenges posed by China’s aggressive foreign policy, the health challenges posed by COVID-19, the economic challenges caused by the global lockdown, and the budgetary challenges posed by Britain (its second-largest net contributor) leaving, it is legitimate to ask what the EU is really for at this stage of the 21st century.
On August 5, economist Tyler Cowen wrote: How about that Russian vaccine they will be trying in October? To be clear, I won’t personally try it, and I don’t want the FDA to approve it for use in the United States.
Hoover Institution fellow Scott Atlas defends himself against the unscientific attacks. Atlas notes that there is an overwhelming body of scientific data to back his recommendations concerning COVID-19.
Hoover Institution fellow Michael Petrilli talks with Erin Einhorn, a national reporter for NBC News, and David Griffith about her recent piece on outdoor classrooms.
Hoover Institution fellow Casey Mulligan discusses whether giving extra money to people on unemployment would negatively affect the economy. There are certain industries like travel that deserve special programs for situations like this but does everyone deserve to qualify?
Despite a state government that has historically hoarded power and opportunity for the few, women in Alabama have for decades championed causes and led movements to bring equity, fair treatment and opportunity to the many. Alabama women have risen from racism, poverty and prejudice to make waves that ripple across the nation, not just the state.
A new face walked out with President Trump during his daily coronavirus briefing on Monday: Scott Atlas, MD, a board-certified radiologist. “He’s working with us and will be working with us on the coronavirus,” Trump said during the Aug. 10 meeting. “And he has many great ideas. And he thinks what we’ve done is really good, and now we’ll take it to a new level.”
Bjorn Lomborg’s False Alarm does not “deny” the likelihood of global warming as set out in the United Nations’ Reports on Climate Change. Lomborg expresses belief in the U.N.’s central estimate of a temperature increase of 7.2 degrees Fahrenheit above pre-industrial levels by 2100. He argues, however, that after another 80 years of economic growth, such an increase will not impose particularly burdensome costs. Mitigation and adaptation are the right approach to dealing with rising temperatures, rather than ultra-expensive attempts to attack the problem head on.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., lashed out at President Donald Trump over the weekend for unilaterally extending the federal unemployment supplement and providing other relief to Americans struggling because of the pandemic. She called his executive actions “absurdly unconstitutional.” No, they are not. If anything, Trump’s actions were restrained. He could have gone much further — and he still might.
The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University.
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