The Morning Dispatch: Report Details Trump Campaign’s Connections With Russia

Plus, another fringe candidate wins a GOP congressional primary.

Happy Wednesday! We hope you enjoy the (relative) brevity of today’s TMD. Spend those extra two minutes in your morning wisely.

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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The United States confirmed 43,698 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday, with 6.7 percent of the 648,783 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 1,301 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 171,793.

  • Postmaster General Louis DeJoy announced the U.S. Postal Service will suspend operational changes—removing collection boxes, slashing overtime pay, cutting USPS hours—until after the 2020 election “to avoid even the appearance of any impact on election mail.” DeJoy’s comments did not address whether restructuring efforts already enacted would be reversed. He is scheduled to testify before the Senate on Friday and the House on Monday.
  • The S&P 500 and NASDAQ hit all-time highs at market close on Tuesday, fully recovering from February and March’s historic plunge. The rebound—fueled by tech giants—marks the quickest recovery from a bear market in history.
  • The University of Notre Dame announced plans to suspend in-person instruction for at least two weeks after experiencing a surge in coronavirus cases on its campus; 19 percent of COVID-19 tests conducted on campus Monday came back positive. Michigan State University President Samuel Stanley Jr. told students planning to live on campus this fall to “stay home and continue their education with MSU remotely.”
  • Mali President Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta announced his resignation on Wednesday, hours after mutinous soldiers stormed the capital and arrested him in a suspected coup. “I do not wish for blood to be shed anymore so I can maintain power,” Keïta said on state television.

Russiagate: Hoax, or Not a Hoax?

After an investigation lasting more than years into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election, the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee released its findings in a 966-page report detailing extensive efforts by Vladimir Putin’s government to sow chaos and influence outcomes in American politics. As the United States gears up for a contentious 2020 election—with various foreign adversaries holding a stake in its outcome—the mechanisms by which Moscow exploited American democracy for its own gain are worth reviewing.

The report outlines several key findings, each of which provide evidence of Russia’s “aggressive, multi-faceted” interventions to undermine Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign.

One key finding of the investigation: extensive links between Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort and Russian intelligence officer Konstantin Kilimnik. Manafort’s Russian contacts date back to 2004, when he established relationships with Kilimnik and Russian industrialist Oleg Deripaska. Manafort conducted “influence operations” across the globe on behalf of Russian-aligned interests.

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Florida Voters Embrace Provocateur Laura Loomer in GOP Primary

Last week, we filled you in on Marjorie Taylor Greene, the QAnon-spouting conspiracy theorist who believes that the 2018 midterms were “an Islamic invasion of our government,” has argued that the Obama administration deputized the criminal gang MS-13 to murder its enemies, and is all but certainly heading to Congress, having won her primary last week in Georgia’s ruby-red 14th Congressional District.

The GOP’s problems keeping the fringe at bay continued yesterday, one state south. This time, the Republican candidate who surged to primary glory in Florida’s 21st District was right-wing provocateur and self-proclaimed “proud Islamophobe” Laura Loomer. We’ve coveredLoomer’s antics before: Suffice to say here that apart from her unflinching religious bigotry (“We should never let another Muslim into the civilized world”), she’s best known for wacky stunts like chaining herself to the door at Twitter headquarters to protest her banishment from the site.

Loomer’s campaign began as just such an internet stunt: She argued that by declaring herself a candidate she had made herself a public figure, and therefore Twitter had to let her back on. They didn’t, but she kept campaigning anyway—boosted along the way by encouraging retweets from President Trump and endorsements from Roger Stone and Rep. Matt Gaetz. Joe Gruters, chairman of the state party, sings her praises. Last night, she won her primary by about 17 points, to the pleasure of, among others, the president.

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Worth Your Time

  • Ride-sharing companies Uber and Lyft will likely shut down all operations in California on Friday. The companies’ exodus from the state follows a recent judicial order that gives the companies until August 18 to comply with AB 5, a law that tightly regulates independent contractors in the state. “Uber employs approximately 140,000 drivers in California and Lyft employs roughly 80,000,” writes Brad Polumbo for the Foundation for Economic Education this week. “These 220,000 working Californians will now lose their source of income in the middle of a pandemic and recession, all thanks to the naive intervention of Sacramento regulators who thought they could plan the market.”
  • If all goes according to plan, we should see a COVID-19 vaccine approved for public use by the end of this year or early 2021. But that approval is not the finish line—there’s still the matter of manufacturing and distributing enough doses. In a Bloomberg column, Scott Duke Kominers and Alex Tabarrok explain all that goes into a vaccine, and what the United States can be doing now to prepare for what will become one of the most crucial supply chains in recent memory. “Supply chains failed as the pandemic began, and we can’t let that happen again with vaccines,” the duo write. “Nobody should die because poor preparation keeps us from being able to deploy lifesaving technology quickly. We have to be ready to produce billions of doses as soon as a vaccine is approved—and that means we need to invest now.”

Presented Without Comment

Also Presented Without Comment

Ben Max @TweetBenMax

coming in October from @NYGovCuomo

Toeing the Company Line

  • At this rate, we might have to rename the podcast The Remnant with David French—at least until Jonah returns to the swamp. Whatever you want to call the podcast, National Review’s Jim Geraghty was on it, talking the three C’s: coronavirus, convention, and the campaign.

Let Us Know

TV viewership of the Democratic National Convention thus far is down from where it was in 2016, but online viewership is reportedly up dramatically. Almost 29 million tuned in to the virtual festivities Monday night—were you one of them? What do you think of the remote format? Will you watch the Republican National Convention next week?

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

Photographs by Photo by Jim Watson and Emmanuel Dunand/AFP/Getty Images.