MORNING NEWS BRIEFING – SEPTEMBER 23, 2020

Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Wednesday September 23, 2020

THE DAILY SIGNAL

September 23 2020

Good morning from Washington, where President Trump is attacked by the left for asking the Senate to consider a Supreme Court nominee in an election year. History shows he is far from alone, Fred Lucas reports. In the style of Soviet communists, Black Lives Matter is erasing its past, Mike Gonzalez and Andrew Olivastro write. On the podcast, Gonzalez describes links he’s found between communist China and a Black Lives Matter founder. Plus: the mob threatens Senate leaders; the president’s crisp U.N. speech; and the nation’s high-tech threats. On this date in 1949, President Harry Truman tells Americans that the Soviet Union has exploded its own nuclear bomb.

COMMENTARY
Like the Soviets, Black Lives Matter Purges Its History
By Andrew Olivastro
The Black Lives Matter organizations that swiftly captured the nation’s attention have expeditiously and quietly been softening their rhetoric and removing the most un-American statements from their websites.
NEWS
4 Things to Know About Supreme Court Vacancies in Election Years
By Fred Lucas
Of the 29 times a Supreme Court vacancy has occurred in an election year, 22 different presidents nominated a replacement—either before the election or in the lame-duck period.
ANALYSIS
Ties Apparent Between China and Project of Black Lives Matter Co-Founder
By Rachel del Guidice
Alicia Garza, one of three founders of the Black Lives Matter organization, partnered with a left-wing San Francisco group known to carry water for China.
COMMENTARY
What’s Needed for Health Care Reform: Personalized Care That Puts You and Your Doctor in Charge
By Marie Fishpaw
Read what top conservative health care thinkers, including former Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Sen. Rick Santorum, think needs to be done.
COMMENTARY
Shaping Our Technological Future
By Klon Kitchen
A slew of laws, regulations, requirements, and guidance documents have all been aimed at improving the nation’s technological defenses and strategic standing.
COMMENTARY
In UN Speech, Trump Highlights US Response to COVID-19, Faults China
By Brett Schaefer
Trump demanded that China be held accountable for its role in the COVID-19 pandemic by ignoring its obligations to report transparently on the outbreak in a timely fashion and to cooperate with WHO.
COMMENTARY
The Left’s Shameful Targeting of Lawmakers’ Homes
By Katrina Trinko
As leftist activists go to the homes of Sens. Mitch McConnell and Lindsey Graham, why aren’t liberal leaders calling for them to stop the politics of personal intimidation?
NEWS
ICYMI: 6 Things to Know About Supreme Court Prospect Amy Coney Barrett
By Rachel del Guidice
Barrett has seven children, two of them adopted from Haiti, one of whom also has Down syndrome.
LOGO-CHARCOAL_75percent.jpg

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In the United States, following the death of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, democrats are threatening that if the Trump administration fills her vacant seat ahead of the November elections, they will expand the Supreme Court and pack it with their own judges.

 

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DAYBREAK

Your First Look at Today’s Top Stories – Daybreak Insider
Having trouble viewing this email? View the web version.
The Daybreak Insider
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2020
1.
As Expected, Media Begins Attack on Faith of Supreme Court Candidate

First Newsweek, which was forced to issue a correction, claimed a group Amy Coney Barrett is associated with was the inspiration for The Handmaid’s Tale (Daily Wire).  Then Reuters attacked Cohen’s “religious community” as being similar to “the totalitarian, male-dominated society of Margaret Atwood’s novel ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’” (Reuters). They later re-wrote the story (National Review). From Denny Burk: Straight-up religious bigotry pretending to be a news report. Badly done@ReutersPolitics (Twitter). From Alexandra DeSanctis: This is an excellent example of “journalists” setting out with their (anti-Catholic) conclusion already lined up and then filling the article with cherry-picked comments and claims to try to make it true (Twitter). From Tim Carney: These people KNOW they shouldn’t do it, but they cannot help themselves (Twitter). From Ben Sasse: These ugly smears against Judge Barrett are a combination of anti-Catholic bigotry and QAnon-level stupidity. People of Praise is basically a Bible study —and just like billions of Christians around the world, Judge Barrett reads the Bible, prays, and tries to serve her community. Senators should condemn this wacky McCarthyism” (National Review). From Guy Benson: Am told that at least two more major news organizations are working on stories about Barrett’s religious beliefs (Twitter). Sohrab Ahmari explains why he believes Barrett is the best pick (NY Post). Judge Amy Coney Barrett at Hillsdale College discussing the job of a judge (Twitter).

2.
Biden Continues to Avoid Supreme Court Questions

Andrew McCarthy points out that Biden answers very few questions and it’s imperative he does as his party is planning on “Expanding and packing the Supreme Court would be a direct result of this, and a radical one. But it is only one of a plethora of radical steps that would follow — expanding and packing the lower federal courts, statehood for the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, single-payer healthcare, elements of the Green New Deal, a massive bailout for mismanaged blue states, breaking up and regulating into submission private businesses, hamstringing the nation’s police forces, gutting the Second Amendment, sweeping immigration amnesty, and so on” (National Review). From another story: Legislation expanding the Supreme Court would need Mr. Biden’s signature, and he was asked Monday by a Wisconsin news station whether he was open to it. His answer: “It’s a legitimate question, but let me tell you why I’m not going to answer that question. Because it will shift the whole focus, that’s what [Trump] wants.” This is a calculated political dodge, and moderator Chris Wallace shouldn’t let Mr. Biden get away with it in next week’s first presidential debate. Would he veto court-packing legislation? (WSJ).

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3.
Schumer Invokes Senate Rule to Slow Progress

In a silly fit, Senator Chuck Schumer invoked the “two-hour rule,” claiming “We invoked the two-hour rule because we can’t have business as usual when Republicans are destroying the institution as they have done” (CBS News). Meanwhile, Charles Cooke explains “the idea that the Democratic Party is going to pack the courts is ridiculous… Whom exactly do we imagine is going to vote for this? Joe Manchin, who voted to confirm Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh? Jon Tester? Kyrsten Sinema? Any meaningful Democratic Senate majority would be built atop victories in Arizona, Iowa, and North Carolina. Are these swing-staters really going to line up behind this nuclear option during the first year of their new jobs?” (National Review). Turns out, what Schumer is upset about is a complete farce: McConnell is perfectly consistent in 2016 and 2020 (WSJ).

4.
Something More Died with Scalia and Ginsburg

The story looks at their friendship, despite ruling so differently, and how divided we are as a country.

Stream

5.
China Expands Forced Labor Program in Tibet

From the story: Beijing has set quotas for the mass transfer of rural laborers within Tibet and to other parts of China, according to over a hundred state media reports, policy documents from government bureaus in Tibet and procurement requests released between 2016-2020 and reviewed by Reuters. The quota effort marks a rapid expansion of an initiative designed to provide loyal workers for Chinese industry (Reuters).  The Wall Street Journal notes “Beijing bans foreign reporters from Tibet. Other foreigners can enter only on a tour sanctioned by the government. Until Beijing opens up, the world is justified in concluding it has something to hide” (WSJ).

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6.
Georgia Democrat Compares Police to Gangsters and Thugs

Democrat Raphael Warnock is running for U.S. Senate against Kelly Loeffler.

The Federalist

7.
California Shuts Down Unemployment Claims After Massive Fraud Discovered

Apparently, the state responded only after a news organization uncovered it.

Hot Air

8.
Three NFL Coaches Fined Six Figures for Not Wearing Masks

Even those who already had the virus.  Logic has no home here.

NY Times

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THE SUNBURN

A new survey shows concerns about Joe Biden’s prospects with Miami-Dade County Hispanics may be overstated.

The data comes courtesy of an internal poll from the Daniella Levine Cava county mayoral campaign. The survey polled her race as well as the presidential contest.

According to those results, Biden leads President Donald Trump by a 21-point margin in Miami-Dade County, 58%-37%. Among Hispanic voters, Biden leads by 10 percentage points.

Joe Biden’s pull with Florida Hispanic voters may be overstated. Image via AP.

That contrasts with results from a Miami Herald/Bendixen & Amandi International poll which showed Biden and Trump running almost even among Hispanics. That survey had Biden’s lead with that demographic at just 1 point, 47%-46%.

The Levine Cava survey should not be taken as gospel, however. Though Levine Cava is running in a nonpartisan race, she has staked out her lane as a progressive and has earned consistent support from the Miami-Dade Democratic Party.

While publicly-released internal campaign polls results can be accurate, campaigns always have an incentive to withhold internal polls with poor results and publicly release those favorable to their — or their party’s — respective bids.

The poll isn’t all good news for Biden. With a 21-point lead overall in the county, Biden still trails the pace set by former Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016. Clinton won Miami-Dade by 30 points that year, though still lost the state overall.

Other polls do show Biden over-performing Clinton among white and elderly voters, which has allowed him to hold a slight edge in statewide surveys.

As for Levine Cava, the internal poll has her up 13 points in the race to become the next Miami-Dade County Mayor.

Levine Cava is competing against Esteban “Steve” Bovo in the contest to replace outgoing Mayor Carlos Giménez. The poll puts Levine Cava at 45% support, with Bovo earning 32%.

Change Research conducted the online survey, which ran from Sept. 14-17. It sampled 436 Miami-Dade County voters and has a margin of error of 4.7 percentage points.

Situational awareness
@realDonaldTrump: I will be announcing my Supreme Court Nominee on Saturday, at the White House! Exact time TBA.

Tweettweet:

@GovRonDeSantis: As Americans, we have a right to peacefully assemble but engaging in mob violence will not be tolerated in the state of Florida. I look forward to working with the Legislature next session to sign a new proposal into law that protects our citizens and law enforcement officers.

@nikkifried: Thank you @MikeBloomberg! This will go a long ways to fighting voter suppression in Florida.

@BillGalvano: I’m very pleased to see that despite the fiscal and budgetary constraints fostered by COVID-19, our state remains strong and our economy robust as Florida‘s AAA bond ratings have once again been affirmed. FL’s fiscal health remains secure thanks to conservative fiscal leadership.

@FentriceForFL: Governor [RonDeSantis, you’ve got 99 problems, but protesters ain’t one.

Tweettweet:

@MaryEllenKlas: Never would have imagined that Florida’s court system would see this: $16 million injection of funds from Michael Bloomberg to pay the court fines and fees of nearly 32,000 Black and Hispanic Florida voters with felony convictions

@loriberman: Only in Florida do we have to crowdsource funds to restore constitutional rights.

@NWS: Because 2020, we now have Zombie Tropical Storms. Welcome back to the land of the living, Tropical Storm #Paulette

Days until
First presidential debate in Indiana — 6; Preakness Stakes rescheduled — 10; Ashley Moody’s 2020 Human Trafficking Summit — 13; first vice presidential debate at the University of Utah — 15; NBA season ends (last possible date) — 21; second presidential debate scheduled in Miami — 23; NBA draft — 23; Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” premieres — 23; NBA free agency — 25; Florida Chamber’s Future of Florida Forum — 27; HBO debuts 2000 presidential election doc ‘537 Votes’ — 28; third presidential debate at Belmont — 29; 2020 General Election — 41; “Black Widow” premieres — 44; NBA 2020-21 training camp — 49; The Masters begins — 50; “No Time to Die” premieres — 58; Pixar’s “Soul” premieres — 58; College basketball season slated to begin — 63; NBA 2020-21 opening night — 70; Florida Automated Vehicles Summit — 70; “Wonder Woman 1984” rescheduled premiere — 93; Super Bowl LV in Tampa — 137; “A Quiet Place Part II” rescheduled premiere — 150; “Top Gun: Maverick” rescheduled premiere — 282; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 303; “Jungle Cruise” premieres — 311; “Spider-Man Far From Home” sequel premieres — 411; “Thor: Love and Thunder” premieres — 507; “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” premieres — 560; “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse” sequel premieres — 741.
SCOTUS watch
Joe Biden’s moderation contrasts with Democratic rage as court fight looms” via Annie Linskey and Matt Viser of The Washington Post — Biden lamented the 200,000 U.S. deaths in the coronavirus pandemic, discussed the importance of unions, warned of the health risks posed by Trump’s rallies, and touted his roots in Scranton, Pennsylvania. But over nearly 30 minutes, speaking in a small industrial city in Wisconsin, he never mentioned the Supreme Court vacancy or the political earthquake that has followed the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. It was the clearest sign yet of Biden’s belief that most voters are not animated by the divisive fight that is consuming many in Washington. His approach contrasts sharply with the bubbling anger among many Democrats over Republican tactics regarding the Supreme Court, a fury that began on the left but is seeping into the party’s mainstream.

Lindsey Graham pledges GOP will support Donald Trump’s nominee, despite not knowing who nominee is” via Aaron Blake of The Washington Post — Now that three key GOP senators, Mitt RomneyCharles E. Grassley and Cory Gardner, have said they will not object to their leaders pressing forward with a Supreme Court nominee, despite their party’s 2016 stance against doing so in a presidential election year, the direction this fight is headed seems pretty clear. But some Republicans are going quite a bit further than that. They’re effectively signing off on whomever the nominee is, despite there not actually being a nominee yet. Sen. Thom Tillis said as much this weekend in announcing his support. “There is a clear choice on the future of the Supreme Court between the well-qualified and conservative jurist President Trump will nominate and I will support, and the liberal activist Biden will nominate and Cal Cunningham will support, who will legislate radical, left-wing policies from the bench,” Tillis said.

Lindsey Graham is vowing to support Donald Trump’s SCOTUS pick.

Gov. Ron DeSantis not pressing White House about Barbara Lagoa SCOTUS bid” via A.G. Gancarski of Florida Politics — The Governor said he knows the President has a process, and that the White House knows how to reach him. “I haven’t spoken to the President or anyone at the White House about it, partially because I’ve appointed justices and there’s a process you go through,” DeSantis said. “As you have questions, you can pick up the phone, you can call, you can ask, and that’s what I’ve done when I’ve done it. Trying to do lobbying, I’m not sure that’s effective either way. So, I’ve not had discussions with them,” DeSantis added, before stressing that his lack of involvement is no reflection on Lagoa herself. “She’s done a great job.”

A new conservative Supreme Court justice could boost religious rights at the cost of LGBTQ protections” via Samantha Schmidt and Sarah Pulliam Bailey of The Washington Post — A conservative replacement for Ginsburg, who died on Friday, could provide a major boost to religious rights while threatening years of advancements for the LGBTQ community, legal experts and activists say. In cases spanning same-sex marriage rights to workplace protections, the Supreme Court has in recent years delivered landmark victories to gay and transgender Americans. But these watershed rulings have also left unresolved the polarizing conflict between those who want to safeguard religious rights and those who want to expand LGBTQ protections. Ginsburg not only played a critical role in voting in favor of LGBTQ rights but also voted to keep religious exemptions within narrow boundaries, said David B. Cruz, Newton Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law. Her absence, and her replacement by a conservative justice, could help tip the scale toward curtailing LGBTQ rights.

Sally
‘Up and running’: Gulf Power restores energy to all Northwest Florida customers after Hurricane Sally” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Power was restored late Monday to all Gulf Power customers impacted by Hurricane Sally in North Florida, the company announced. Hurricane Sally, which made landfall as a slow-moving Category 2 storm, left 285,000 customers without energy in the storm’s wake. The five-day recovery effort was driven by 7,000 workers operating out of 12 staging sites. It was also completed despite areas of flooding across the northwest portion of the Florida Panhandle. “I want to thank our community partners for their support in so many ways as we worked together to get our region back up and running,” said Gulf Power President Marlene Santos. Gulf Power also credited its sister company, Florida Power & Light Company, for providing mutual aid. In all, FPLC sent more than 1,800 employees and contractors to support the recovery effort.

Gulf Power has restored power to all its Panhandle customers. Image via AP.

Walton commissioners want quick action on hurricane debris” via Jim Thompson of Northwest Florida Daily News — Walton County commissioners want quick action on the removal of household debris resulting from the rain, flooding and other local impacts of Hurricane Sally. With a unanimous Tuesday vote, commissioners granted approval for County Administrator Larry Jones to work with Waste Management and AshBritt Environmental, the county’s disaster response and environmental services contractor, to get the pickup of those household debris on a fast track along with the county’s own public works personnel. Jones told commissioners at their Tuesday morning meeting that as floodwaters from the storm have receded, the county has been getting a number of calls from residents who need to dispose of large items that are now stacked in front yards around the county.

Escambia County has $183 million in damage so far as it recovers from Hurricane Sally” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — Escambia County is continuing to recover from the effects of Hurricane Sally, which made landfall six days ago. Officials’ latest estimate is the county is close to $183 million in damage to city, county, school district and Emerald Coast Utilities Authority properties. The county is still waiting on the federal government to declare Hurricane Sally a major disaster for Florida and unlock financial assistance for individuals from the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Escambia County Administrator Janice Gilley said Tuesday at a news conference she had spoken with Jared Moskowitz, director of the Florida Division of Emergency Management, about the declaration. “He did assure me that he feels extremely confident in us getting a major declaration this week,” Gilley said.

Skanska confirms 22 barges washed ashore during Hurricane Sally, 12 onto private property” via Jim Little of the Pensacola News Journal — Skanska, the company hired to build the new $430 million Pensacola Bay Bridge, confirmed to the News Journal on Tuesday that 22 of its barges broke loose and washed ashore during Hurricane Sally, crashing into private sea walls, bridges and docks. Company officials said they had 55 barges on the bridge construction project, and 12 of the 22 barges that ran aground during Hurricane Sally on Sept. 16 ended up on private property. Since then, the company has only issued general statements on the situation and largely refused to answer specific questions from the press and public.

Hurricane Sally pushed Skanska barges inland, many landing on private property. Image via the Pensacola News Journal.

Escambia County Sheriff’s Office confirms woman’s body found near Innerarity Point” via the Pensacola News Journal — The Escambia County Sheriff’s Office found a woman’s body near Innerarity Point on Monday and is awaiting word from the medical examiner’s office on identification. Sheriff David Morgan told the News Journal that the body could very well be that of a kayaker reported missing following Hurricane Sally but the ECSO was waiting for confirmation. Agnieszka Sobierajska, 45, was last seen Sept. 16 kayaking in the 16000 block of Innerarity Point Road before she went missing. Morgan initially announced during a Tuesday news conference that two bodies had been found, but a spokeswoman later clarified that he misspoke and only one woman’s body has been recovered.

The models
To get a reasonable idea of how the presidential race is playing out, state polling is the way to go — particularly in battleground states like Florida. There are outlets that offer a poll of polls, gauging how Trump or Biden are doing in select areas, then averaging the polls to get a general idea of who leads nationwide. Sunburn will be updating these forecasts as they come in:

CNN Poll of Polls: As of Monday, the CNN average is steady with Biden in the lead at 51% compared to 44% for Trump. The CNN Poll of Polls tracks the national average in the presidential race. They include the most recent national telephone surveys meeting CNN’s standards for reporting and which measure the views of registered or likely voters. The poll of polls does not have a margin of sampling error.

FiveThirtyEight.com: As of Monday, public opinion shows that many think the winner of the 2020 election should appoint Ginsburg’s replacement. It’s unclear, at this point, what effect this will have on the presidential race — so don’t put too much stock in anyone’s takes. Bottom line: This is a big development and could shake up an otherwise stable race in unexpected ways. So far, Biden is staying steady at a 77 in 100 chance of winning compared to Trump, who has a 23 in 100 shot. FiveThirtyEight also ranked individual states by the likelihood of delivering a decisive vote for the winning candidate in the Electoral College: Pennsylvania leads with 32.8%, while Florida comes in second with 13.9%. Other states include Wisconsin (9.5%), Arizona (6.6%), Michigan (6.6%), North Carolina (4.7%), Nevada (3.5%) and Minnesota (2.9%).

In polls of recent polling, Joe Biden is staying ahead.

PredictIt: As of Tuesday, the PredictIt trading market has Biden slightly up, at $0.59 a share, with Trump moving down slightly to $0.44.

Real Clear Politics: As of Tuesday, the RCP average of polling top battleground states gives Biden a lead over Trump 49.7% to 43.1%. The RCP average of polls has Biden on balance at +6.6 points. A single poll (Rasmussen) has Trump up by one point.

Sabato’s Crystal Ball: There are several nearly equally brutal congressional races to be decided and with them the partisan control of the House and Senate. My “Seats-in-Trouble” forecasting models based on the Cook Political Report’s handicapping of congressional contests in mid-August predicts Democrats to gain five seats, and with them, a majority status in the Senate. It also predicts Republicans to gain five seats in the House — but we should not be too surprised if the likely turbulence of the presidential contest in the remaining weeks reverberates into some of these congressional races as well. Do they make Maalox in red and blue?

The Economist: As of Tuesday, their model predicts Biden is very likely to beat Trump in the Electoral College. The model is updated every day and combines state and national polls with economic indicators to predict a range of outcomes. The midpoint is the estimate of the electoral-college vote for each party on Election Day. According to The Economist, Biden’s chances of winning the electoral college around 6 in 7 or 85%; Trump’s chances are around 1 in 7 or 14%. They still give Biden a 97% chance (better than 19 in 20) of winning the most votes, with Trump at only 3%.

Presidential
Bill Stepien: Trump travel, grassroots campaigning worth $48 million a week” via Mike Allen of Axios — A stark difference between the Trump and Biden campaigns is Trump-Mike Pence‘s aggressive continuation of traditional door-knocking amid the pandemic, while Biden emphasizes virtual techniques. And Trump travels more. Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien is now quantifying the difference, arguing in a new memo that candidate travel and the campaign’s ground game give the president an advantage at a time when the airwaves are saturated. The approaches reflect the candidates’ deliberate optical contrasts in their response to the virus. Trump holds packed rallies, while Biden sports a mask at events where taped circles separate attendees.

—”Judge extends Wisconsin absentee cutoff 6 days post-election” via Scott Bauer and Todd Richmond of The Associated Press

—“Top Philadelphia elections official warns of ‘electoral chaos’ over ‘naked ballots’” via Zak Hudak of CBS News

Rank-and-file union members snub Biden for Trump” via Holly Otterbein and Megan Cassella of POLITICO — Biden has pitched himself to voters as a “union man,” a son of Scranton, Pennsylvania, who respects the dignity of work and will defend organized labor if he wins the White House. To rank-and-file members in some unions, especially the building trades, it doesn’t matter. They’re still firmly in Trump’s camp. Labor leaders have worked for months to sell their members on Biden, hoping to avoid a repeat of 2016 when Trump outperformed among union members and won the White House. But despite a bevy of national union endorsements for Biden and years of what leaders call attacks on organized labor from the Trump administration, local officials in critical battleground states said support for Trump remains solid.

Supporters of Donald Trump greet Democratic candidate Joe Biden as the arrives at a union training center in Hermantown, Minnesota. Image via AP.

Biden doesn’t have a problem with Hispanics — he has one with Hispanic men” via Syra Ortiz-Blanes and Alex Roarty of the Miami Herald — As Democrats are nervous that Biden is faring poorly with Hispanic voters, especially among Cuban Americans, veteran pollsters and Latino experts say the Democratic nominee’s problems are disproportionately concentrated among Hispanic men — a group of voters who don’t consider themselves to be strongly supportive of Trump but are willing to overlook potential flaws for economic reasons. The gender gap is an often overlooked nuance they say should shape both campaigns’ understanding of the Hispanic vote entering the final weeks of the race, and one that could ultimately swing the outcome between Biden and Trump in Florida and other critical battleground states.

Trump registered his trademark in Cuba in 2008 to build hotels, casinos and golf courses” via Nora Gámez Torres of the Miami Herald — Despite earlier promises in Miami that he would not do business in Cuba until the island was “free,” Trump applied in 2008 to register his Trump trademark in the Caribbean nation for a variety of commercial activities, including investing in real estate, hotels, casinos and golf courses. A search of the Cuban Industrial Property Office database shows that Trump hired a Cuban lawyer, Leticia Laura Bermúdez Benítez, to submit the application in October 2008. The address listed was that of the Trump Organization. As is common in Cuba, where red tape is rampant, the trademark was not approved until much later, until March 2010. It expired in 2018, well into Trump’s presidency.

The fight for Florida’s Latino voters: Biden courts Puerto Ricans as Trump rallies Cubans” via Francisco Alvarado of The Guardian — Every Saturday for several months, Abel Iraola has kept track of the boisterous crowd of Trump supporters that gathers near an exit ramp of the Palmetto Expressway in Hialeah, the city with the highest concentration of Republican Cuban Americans in Florida. A 28-year-old Democrat, Iraola lives two blocks away from the spot where the impromptu gathering gives him a sense of what his party’s presidential nominee, Biden, is up against in the race to win Florida’s Latino vote. “He and everyone in the Democratic Party should be concerned about turning out more Hispanic voters than Trump until the final results come in,” Iraola said. “We shouldn’t have to be worrying about the Hispanic vote in Florida.” Yet recent polls show Biden has lost ground among Florida’s Latino voters compared to his predecessors Barack Obama and Clinton, both of whom outperformed their Republican rivals among this key voting bloc in the last three presidential elections.

Equality Florida issues first federal endorsement for Biden” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — Equality Florida Action endorsed Biden for President, along with running mate Kamala Harris. This marks the first time Florida’s leading LGBTQ advocacy group issued support for any candidate for federal office. “Our endorsement of a Biden-Harris ticket is a testament to the grave stakes of this election,” said Nadine Smith, Equality Florida’s executive director. She made clear the organization sees an extension of Trump’s tenure and Pence’s influence on policies regarding LGBTQ rights. must be stopped. Pence has outwardly supported private schools with policies prohibiting the acceptance of LGBTQ students, and his influence was reported on Trump administration legal positions like fighting workplace protections.

Mike Bloomberg raising millions to help Florida felons vote” via Brendan Farrington of Florida Politics — Just days after DeSantis won a court victory to keep felons from voting until they’ve paid off fines, restitution and court fees, Bloomberg has stepped in to help them pay off the debts. Bloomberg is part of an effort that raised more than $20 million dollars to help felons who have completed their prison sentences vote in the presidential election. That’s in addition to the $100 million he has pledged to help Biden win Florida, a crucial state with 29 electoral college votes that Trump hopes will keep him in the White House. A federal appellate court ruled on Sept. 11 that in addition to serving their sentences, Florida felons must pay all fines, restitution and legal fees before they can regain their right to vote.

New ads
Democrats’ ads say Trump failed Puerto Rico” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — National Democrats have released a pair of new digital advertisements in Central Florida to remind how Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico three years ago and to declare that “President Trump has failed Puerto Rico.” The Democratic National Committee spots feature footage of the storm, the damage, and Trump tossing paper towels into a crowd during his Oct. 3, 2017, visit to the island. The Facebook ad will run in the Orlando and Kissimmee areas, the center of Florida’s Puerto Rican community. A 15-second silent video for Facebook features those scenes and headlines from various news reports. They include a Washington Post story quoting Trump complaining that the commonwealth’s storm relief was costing the government too much money, and a report as recent as Sunday, when NBC News reported little progress had been made toward storm recovery, three years after the storm.

To watch the ad, click on the image below:

2020
Florida Democratic Party struggling to account for its operating money” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — How much money does the Florida Democratic Party have in the bank for staff payroll, federal campaigns, and other expenses that are reported to federal authorities? It’s clear that the federal version of the Florida Democratic Party has lived hand-to-mouth all year. It entered September with far less cash than its monthly expenses, and far less money than the Republicans have in their accounts reported to federal authorities. Republican Party of Florida is reporting coming out of August with more than $8 million in the bank, at least 10 times more federally-reportable money on hand than the Democrats. But it’s unclear exactly how much money the Democrats do have. All year long the Florida Democratic Party’s federal entity has struggled to account for its internal finances, at least to the satisfaction of the Federal Election Commission.

Is the mail getting slower? Our tracker says yes” via Emily Badger, Quoctrung Bui and Margot Sanger-Katz of The New York Times — Unusual mail delays have persisted into September, according to data on about 54,000 pieces a day of first-class mail tracked in a continuing project by The Upshot. Delivery of the mail began to slow in July, with the start of new policies aimed at making the Postal Service more efficient. But after apparent improvements in late August, the share of first-class mail, like letters and postcards, arriving late rose again in the first two weeks of September. In the most recent data, mail delays are about as bad as they have been at any point this year. The slowdown has been noticeable on a national scale: to companies that send thousands of pieces of mail daily; to software firms that track that mail; and to the Postal Service itself, which has shared data about the delays with Congress.

John Rutherford touts bipartisanship in new TV ad — Republican U.S. Rep. Rutherford is out with a new TV pitching himself as a bipartisan leader as he runs for reelection in Florida’s 4th Congressional District. The ad says Rutherford “works across the aisle to deliver results for us. Recognized as one of the most bipartisan members of Congress, he puts people over politics to find real solutions, like fighting to safely and responsibly reopen our economy and keeping taxes low to support job creators and families.” Ad buy listings shows the Rutherford campaign has bought broadcast time in the Jacksonville market to run the ad from Tuesday through Sunday. Rutherford faces Democratic nominee Donna Deegan in November.

To watch the ad, click on the image below:

Ponzi schemes, office rentals, party ties draw scrutiny on Margaret Good campaign” via Jacob Ogles of Florida Politics — A new attack ad on Good questions her law firm’s client list. A state party ad supporting her raised eyebrows for noting a history of voting against the party. And critics want to know why Good’s campaign rents office space from a property she owns. It’s all more scrutiny on the Sarasota Democrat’s effort to deny Republican U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan an eighth term representing Florida’s 16th Congressional District. The most pointed attack comes from Buchanan’s campaign, who put up a negative ad slamming the Sarasota attorney professionally. “Margaret Good has a secret. She doesn’t want you to know that she works for a white-collar law firm that defends scam artists and con men,” a narrator explains. “Dozens of ordinary people in Sarasota were defrauded out of their retirement and education savings in a Ponzi scheme.” Newspaper clippings in the ad reference a case against Sarasota advertising executive Gary Todd Smith. The campaign said the firm Good works for, Eastmoore, Crauwels & DuBose, defended the convicted schemer.

To watch the ad, click on the image below:

Happening today — Candidates for Florida’s 19th Congressional District — Republican Byron Donalds and Democrat Cindy Banyai – will appear at a virtual meeting of the Tiger Bay Club of Southwest Florida, noon. Registration at zoom.us/webinar/register.

DCCC, NRCC release dueling ads alleging corruption in Carlos Giménez-Debbie Mucarsel-Powell race” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — National Democratic and Republican organizations are releasing dueling ads in the race for Florida’s 26th Congressional District, accusing each candidate of dealing in corruption. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee released a new ad Tuesday targeting Giménez, the current Miami-Dade County Mayor. He’s seeking to unseat Democratic Rep. Mucarsel-Powell in CD 26. The DCCC ad largely runs allegations from a Mucarsel-Powell campaign ad that ran last month. That ad was eventually updated due to misstatements within it, at least one of which the new DCCC spot repeats. “For ‘Corrupt Carlos’ Giménez, taking care of the family means shady deals and government contracts,” the ad’s narrator begins. “While he was Mayor, ‘Corrupt Carlos” administration gave millions to businesses with ties to his family. His family even managed the company that built the fatal FIU bridge. And after the accident, ‘Corrupt Carlos’ tried to push a new multimillion-dollar construction contract to their firm. Getting rich at our expense: For ‘Corrupt Carlos’ Giménez, it’s a family affair.”

To watch the ad, click on the image below:

Donna Shalala says she ‘won’t rest’ during COVID-19 response efforts in new congressional ad” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Democratic Rep. Shalala is touting her work advocating for COVID-19 relief measures in a new campaign ad released Tuesday. Florida’s 27th Congressional District, which Shalala represents, is located in the eastern part of Miami-Dade County. It spans Coral Gables, South Miami and Miami Beach. Miami-Dade County has served as the epicenter of the COVID-19 outbreak in Florida, accounting for nearly one-quarter of all confirmed cases in the state. “My focus is on keeping our community safe and getting our economy back on track,” Shalala begins in the new 30-second ad. “I helped pass relief bills that expanded unemployment and guaranteed financial assistance to small businesses here in Miami-Dade. Our office worked hard to help constituents navigate the broken state unemployment process. I won’t rest until our community is safe and our economy is back on track.” The spot will run on both English and Spanish TV stations. Shalala is defending her seat against Republican candidate Maria Elvira Salazar.

To watch the ad, click on the image below:

Maskless voters won’t be kept away from polls on Nov. 3, election officials say” via Lisa J. Huriash and Andrew Boryga of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — After touting the safety of voting sites, Broward election officials now say they won’t stop people from voting if they don’t wear masks. The statement from the Broward elections supervisor stunned legal experts who say permitting maskless voting would clearly conflict with COVID-19 court rulings that already have upheld mask laws. The Broward County Supervisor of Elections told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel that it cannot turn away anti-maskers who are eligible to vote in the Nov. 3 presidential election: They have a right to vote under federal law. And elections officials argue that outweighs any local law on masks.

Florida sends thousands of voter registration invites — to already registered voters” via Jeff Schweers of the Tallahassee Democrat — Voters who claim a special public records exemption because of the sensitive, confidential or dangerous nature of their job are getting postcards from the Department of State’s Division of Elections wrongly telling them they may not be registered. The multistate Electronic Registration Information Center (ERIC) that the state Division of Elections used to identify over 2 million potentially eligible, but unregistered (EBU) voters didn’t filter out the untold thousands of voters whose personal information is protected. “My whole family got one,” said Leon County Supervisor of Elections Mark Earley. That includes himself, his wife and son.

Leg. campaigns
Wait, what? Loranne Ausley says she would accept campaign cash from anyone” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Ausley doesn’t care who gives her campaign money, according to an answer she gave during an SD 3 candidate forum Tuesday. Forum moderator Jim Rosica, Tallahassee Democrat News Director, posed the question. “Is there any interest group or org that you will not accept a campaign contribution from?” Ausley answered simply, “No.” Given a chance to clarify when Rosica asked, “You’ll take money from anybody,” Ausley affirmed with, “yes.” Her statements are particularly odd considering Ausley has been under attack from her opponent, Republican Marva Preston, over a PPP loan the Florida Democratic Party initially accepted. Preston’s campaign launched a TV ad blasting Ausley for accepting PPP funds. Ausley rejected the claim and called on Preston to pull the attack ads.

Say what? Loranne Ausley seems to suggest she would take campaign donations from anyone.

Parkland Mayor Christine Hunschofsky wins HD 96 seat after opponent withdraws” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Hunschofsky is the new Representative-elect in House District 96 after her opponent, write-in candidate Muhammad Amin, withdrew from the contest. “It’s official! Today I received word from the Division of Elections that my opponent has withdrawn,” Hunschofsky wrote on Twitter late Monday night. “I am so incredibly grateful for the opportunity to serve as your State Representative and cannot wait to be sworn in to continue my service to you and our community.” The Division of Elections website now lists Hunschofsky as “unopposed” and has removed Amin as an active candidate. Amin had mounted only a nominal challenge to Hunschofsky. Amin did not appear to be actively raising money while Hunschofsky, who ran as a Democrat, had collected more than $120,000 in total.

Down ballot
Daniella Levine Cava poll shows her leading Steve Bovo by 13 points in Miami-Dade mayoral race” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — As expected, Levine Cava is leading large among Democrats while Bovo is securing Republican support. The survey shows Levine Cava with a 77%-2% advantage among Democrats. Bovo leads with Republicans by a 73%-6% margin. The remainder of both those groups are undecided. The race is technically nonpartisan, though both Levine Cava and Bovo have staked out clear lanes in the election. Levine Cava does have the edge with nonparty affiliated voters. She leads Bovo 40%-30%, with 30% still undecided. Internal polls should be analyzed with a healthy dose of skepticism. While those results can be accurate, campaigns always have an incentive to withhold internal polls with poor results and publicly release those favorable to their bid.

Internal polling shows Daniela Levine Cava with a lead over Steve Bovo, something that should be taken with a grain of salt.

Corona Florida
DeSantis defends agencies’ response to coronavirus” via Jim Turner of The News Service of Florida — DeSantis said Florida Chief Financial Officer Jimmy Patronis and Attorney General Ashley Moody have been able to get information from agencies when needed during the “difficult times.” “I know Jimmy and Ashley … they meet with whoever they want to meet with, and they obviously have been able to do that,” DeSantis told reporters. DeSantis said most of the agencies that have been at the front of the response to the pandemic — such as the Department of Economic Opportunity, which oversees the state’s unemployment system, the Agency for Health Care Administration, the Department of Health and the Department of Business and Professional Regulation — have leaders that fall under the Governor’s control.

Ron DeSantis sticks up for his agencies and their coronavirus response. Image via Colin Hackley.

DeSantis backs liability protections amid coronavirus pandemic” via Christine Sexton of the News Service of Florida — Saying that fear of lawsuits is holding back the economy, DeSantis on Tuesday said he supports placing limits on coronavirus-related litigation and is willing to consider such a bill during a potential special legislative session in November. The comments marked the first time DeSantis has publicly supported limiting lawsuits for Florida businesses that are grappling with the COVID-19 pandemic. DeSantis said the Legislature could consider a bill to give liability protection to “run-of-the-mill businesses” during a session that also could involve his controversial plan to crack down on disorderly protesters. DeSantis unveiled the plan about protesters Monday and suggested Tuesday that a special session could be held when lawmakers return to Tallahassee for a Nov. 17 post-election organization session. “There is a lot of concern about liability,” DeSantis said. “I believe it holds the economy back.”

Corona local
Broward school officials: We’re ready for October reopening” via Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Broward schools are ready to reopen to students, administrators said Tuesday. But many employees still disagree. The School Board was meeting Tuesday night to decide whether to accept a proposal from Superintendent Robert Runcie to open schools Oct. 5 for elementary, K-8 and special needs schools and Oct. 12 for middle and high schools. Students have been learning at home since late March due to the COVID-19 pandemic. On Tuesday night, board members appeared to be leaning toward an opening in October, but they hadn’t reached a decision on specific dates. Broward and Miami-Dade are the only Florida school districts yet to open.

Robert Runcie insists Broward schools are ready to reopen Oct. 5.

Miami School Board votes for later soft school opening Oct. 14, full opening Oct. 21” via Colleen Wright of the Miami Herald — At the end of what may be a record-breaking 29-hour special meeting that began Monday, the Miami-Dade County School Board voted unanimously Tuesday to push back the gradual start of in-person classes until Oct. 14, more than a week later than first proposed. The board is following the staggered reopening of schools that Superintendent Alberto Carvalho recommended Monday, but with later dates to make sure schools are ready and teachers and staff are protected from the spread of coronavirus. A soft opening of schools is expected for students in pre-K, kindergarten and first grade and students with special needs on Oct. 14. All elementary school students, plus students in sixth, ninth and 10th can return the next day.

Relaxing Palm Beach County rules may be ‘lesser of two evils,’ official says” via Jane Musgrave of The Palm Beach Post — Concerned that pub-starved young people are leaving restaurants drunk and driving to private parties, a Palm Beach County commissioner said Tuesday it could be time to further relax restrictions designed to curb the spread of the deadly coronavirus. “You’ve got to pick the lesser of two evils,” Commissioner Melissa McKinlay said, joining at least one other commissioner who has pushed to ease rules that are hurting workers and business owners. “The thought of groups of young people driving out to Loxahatchee drunk scares me as much as COVID does.” While it appeared that McKinlay was advocating the reopening of bars, she said later that she only wanted to allow restaurants to remain open past midnight, possibly until 2 a.m.

Off-campus partying spreads COVID-19 among college students in Palm Beach County” via Wells Dusenbury of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — One day after Palm Beach County officially reopened schools for in-person instruction, Dr. Alina Alonso, Palm Beach County’s Health Department Director, voiced concerns over the growing number of cases in the 15-24 age range. Alonso, however, said she doesn’t expect a large surge among kids in elementary or middle schools, but rather older students — specifically high school seniors and college students — who “venture out to start doing the things that we tell them not to do.” … “Universities — that’s where we’re seeing our large number of positivity,” Alonso said Tuesday during a briefing at the Palm Beach County commissioners meeting. “Not on campus, but when they go off-campus.

Hundreds of PBC teachers are staying home. Schools can’t find enough subs.” via Andrew Marra of The Palm Beach Post — With hundreds of teachers declining to return to campus, Palm Beach County public schools are struggling with a glut of unstaffed classrooms in the first days of in-person classes. Nearly 900 school district teachers — roughly 1 of every 13 — chose to stay home Tuesday, using sick leave or other personal time, the district said. The absences are a modest decline from the 944 who did not show for work Monday when campuses reopened. Unable to find enough substitutes, many principals are resorting to asking teachers to supervise two classes at once or sending other employees to monitor rooms. When a class monitor can’t be found, some teacher-less students are being directed to wait in overflow rooms until their next class.

Photos show a mass of students at Boca Raton High. School Board member calls it a ‘misstep.’” via Austen Erblat and Scott Travis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — It didn’t take long for pictures to surface online showing an alarming moment at Boca Raton High School: students packed tight, shoulder to shoulder, with no hint of social distancing. The pictures, posted on Snapchat on Monday reignited questions about returning to school as COVID-19 cases continue to grow. Now, Palm Beach County School Board member Karen Brill is offering an explanation for the crowd of students. The students were huddled under an awning to avoid heavy rain, Brill said. She also said the district didn’t expect so many students to return in person. Some 1,700 went back to Boca Raton High, about 55% of the school’s 3,100 students. Only one-third of students returned overall in the district.

Students crowded at Boca Raton High School, under a covered outside hallway this week. Image via Snapchat.

More local
Four more students positive at Newsome High as Hillsborough Schools reports highest daily COVID-19 numbers” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — The Hillsborough County School District reported its highest daily case numbers since the start of the in-person school year on Aug. 31. On Monday, the district saw 24 new cases, including 19 students and five staff members. This report surpasses the previous record in the district of 17 new daily cases, which was reached twice, once on Sept. 9 and again last Tuesday. Four of Monday’s student cases were from Newsome High School, which continues to report the most student cases in a single school across the county. With the latest figures, the district has reported 205 cases since the start of the school year, including 151 students and 54 staff members.

No fans at Super Bowl 55? Anything is possible” via Rick Stroud of the Tampa Bay Times — The Tampa Bay Bucs have started this season with no fans in the stands at Raymond James Stadium. Is it possible Super Bowl 55, slated for Feb. 7, will be fan-less as well, or at least not played before a full-capacity crowd? The NFL certainly is looking at contingency plans if the current coronavirus pandemic hasn’t subsided by early next year. “Well, we certainly have to prepare for that,” said Jonathan Barker, head of live events and production for the NFL. “Our hope is going to be to fill this stadium with fans. That’s our hope. But the smart thing to do is to prepare just in case. If we find ourselves on Feb. 7 where we’re in a different scenario, we’re going to just make sure we’re ready for that.” The Bucs, who played without fans in this past Sunday’s home opener against the Panthers and will do the same Oct. 4 against the Chargers, have said they hope to begin admitting some fans by Oct. 18′s home game against the Packers.

Corona nation
‘Unfathomable’: U.S. death toll from coronavirus hits 200,000” via Carla K. Johnson of The Associated Press — The U.S. death toll from the coronavirus topped 200,000 Tuesday, by far the highest in the world, hitting the once-unimaginable threshold six weeks before an election that is certain to be a referendum in part on Trump’s handling of the crisis. “It is completely unfathomable that we’ve reached this point,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, a Johns Hopkins University public health researcher, eight months after the scourge first reached the world’s richest nation, with its state-of-the-art laboratories, top-flight scientists and stockpiles of medical supplies. The number of dead is equivalent to a 9/11 attack every day for 67 days. It is roughly equal to the population of Salt Lake City or Huntsville, Alabama. And it is still climbing. Deaths are running at close to 770 a day on average, and a widely cited model from the University of Washington predicts the U.S. toll will double to 400,000 by the end of the year as schools and colleges reopen and cold weather sets in.

Health care workers line up for free personal protective equipment in front of a mural by artist Romero Britto at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami. Image via AP.

Is Halloween canceled? As parents and attractions gear up to celebrate, CDC stresses caution” via Erin Jensen of the USA Today — Will Americans ghost Halloween this year? The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health made headlines earlier this month after it prohibited Halloween activities, like trick-or-treating, and later revised its guidelines to say celebrations are permitted but are not recommended. Though some amusement parks and cities have modified their seasonal celebrations, L.A. County’s short-lived ban appears to be the first attempt from a major municipality to pause trick-or-treating due to the pandemic. But as the Halloween season approaches, people across the country may be asking themselves “should we stay, or should we go?” In a year that’s been terrifying in its own real-life ways, some parents want to let their kids celebrate while cities are hoping to continue with holiday traditions to boost residents’ spirits. Yet medical experts caution that the threat of coronavirus still looms. At the end of August, members of Congress asked the CDC to provide direction on the safety of Halloween activities in a letter to director Dr. Robert Redfield.

COVID-19 testing is hampered by shortages of critical ingredient” via Dan Frosch of The Wall Street Journal — Supply shortages are forcing health systems across the country to limit who gets tested for COVID-19, hindering efforts to ramp up testing as flu season approaches. The latest testing problems largely stem from a shortage of reagents, the chemicals used to process the tests, medical officials said. Some hospitals and other testing operations that spent months bolstering their capacity are now reverting to restricting COVID-19 tests to the most essential patients, as they did in the spring. Mark Steadham, president and chief executive of Morris Hospital and Healthcare Centers, about 55 miles from Chicago, said his facility could now conduct about a third of the testing it was doing this summer. That’s because in recent weeks, it has only been getting a third of its previous weekly allocation of 20 Abbott rapid-testing kits due to the reagent shortage. Each kit runs 24 tests.

CDC advisory panel to delay vote on initial COVID-19 vaccine rollout” via Peter Loftus of The Wall Street Journal — A federal vaccine advisory committee will put off a vote on recommending who should get the initially limited doses of any COVID-19 vaccine in the U.S. until the committee members learn more about the vaccines that could become available first. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, a group of external medical experts that advises the CDC., was initially expected to vote at a meeting Tuesday on a plan to give priority to initial doses of any COVID-19 vaccine that passes muster in clinical trials. The ACIP may wait until government officials authorize a specific vaccine or vaccines for use before voting on how to give priority to initial doses, one of the people familiar with the matter said. Some information, like how effective a vaccine is, may not become available for several weeks. Typically, the committee votes only on recommendations for the use of vaccines after they have been cleared by regulators. The next scheduled committee meeting is in late October.

A CDC advisory panel is holding off a decision on prioritizing a vaccine, if and when it comes. Image via Bloomberg/Wall Street Journal.

Rising coronavirus case numbers in many states spur warning of autumn surge” via Joel Achenbach and Karin Brulliard of The Wall Street Journal — Progress in slowing the march of the novel coronavirus has stalled in much of the United States, and the pathogen is spreading at dangerous rates in many states as autumn arrives and colder weather, traditionally congenial to viruses, begins to settle across the nation, public health data shows. Organizations that track the virus, have logged recent increases in case numbers and test positivity rates, worrisome trends as the United States surpassed the grim milestone of 200,000 deaths. Hospitalizations and deaths remain lower nationally than at their midsummer peak, but those numbers always lag several weeks behind trends in new infections. Twenty-seven states and Puerto Rico have shown an increase in the seven-day average of new confirmed cases since the final week of August. Minnesota, Montana, Oklahoma, Puerto Rico, Wisconsin, Wyoming and Utah set record highs Monday for seven-day averages.

Reopening colleges likely fueled COVID-19 significantly, study finds” via Melissa Korn and Brianna Abbott of The Wall Street Journal — Colleges and universities that reopened for face-to-face instruction might have caused tens of thousands of additional cases of COVID-19 in recent weeks, according to a new study conducted by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Indiana University, the University of Washington and Davidson College. The researchers estimated that an extra 3,200 cases a day occurred in the U.S. that likely wouldn’t have happened had schools kept classes online. The team behind the report, slated to be posted online Tuesday on the preprint server medRxiv, included professors of epidemiology, health economics and higher education. The manuscript has yet to be peer-reviewed.

Corona economics
Florida breaks 4 million pandemic-related jobless filings” via Drew Dixon of Florida Politics — Florida unemployment claims related to coronavirus broke a dubious threshold in the past week, exceeding the 4 million mark, according to Department of Economic Opportunity data released Tuesday. While the new threshold is bleak, the number of increased weekly jobless filings connected to the pandemic continued a slowing trend for most of the past two months. There were about 60,000 new claims in the past week for a total of just more than 4 million unemployment claims since the pandemic gripped the state in March. That weekly increase is about the same amount as the previous week. That was the lowest weekly count since the pandemic began and continued a trend that saw decreasing new weekly claims under 100,000 throughout most of the late summer.

Poll: Dim view of economy stable as election nears” via Josh Boak and Emily Swanson of The Associated Press — According to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, 60% of Americans describe the national economy as poor and 40% deem it good. That’s a rebound in confidence from low points in April and May when just 29% called the economy good as the coronavirus pandemic took hold of the country. About 4 in 10 Americans — 43% — say they expect the economy to improve in the next year, about the same as in July. But just 28% said they expect things to get even worse, a slight improvement from the 35% who said so in July and a significant improvement from May when 40% expected things to continue getting worse.

With the election only weeks away, Americans have soured on the economy. Image via Getty.

Grand Chicago hotel in foreclosure, a symbol of COVID-19’s toll on hospitality industry” via Peter Grant of The Wall Street Journal — The Palmer House Hilton has been one of Chicago’s grandest hotels for more than a century. Charles Dickens and Oscar Wilde were guests. Frank Sinatra serenaded diners at its supper club. Over the past 15 years, the owner spent $173 million to overhaul the hotel, modernizing most of the 1,641 rooms. But today, the property faces a bank foreclosure and has become one of the most potent symbols of the troubled hospitality industry during COVID-19. Wells Fargo Bank said in court papers last month that the hotel’s owner, real estate investor Thor Equities, was in default on its $333.2 million first mortgage, making the property one of the first major foreclosure actions during the pandemic.

More corona
Pentagon used taxpayer money meant for masks and swabs to make jet engine parts and body armor” via Aaron Gregg and Yeganeh Torbati of The Washington Post — A $1 billion fund Congress gave the Pentagon in March to build up the country’s supplies of medical equipment has instead been mostly funneled to defense contractors and used to make things such as jet engine parts, body armor and dress uniforms. The change illustrates how one taxpayer-backed effort to battle the novel coronavirus, which has killed about 200,000 Americans, was instead diverted toward patching up long-standing perceived gaps in military supplies. The Cares Act, which Congress passed earlier this year, gave the Pentagon money to “prevent, prepare for, and respond to coronavirus.” But a few weeks later, the Defense Department began reshaping how it would award the money in a way that represented a major departure from Congress’ intent.

Airlines plead for mandatory virus tests to prop up demand” via Christopher Jasper of Bloomberg — Universal coronavirus tests for departing passengers offer the only realistic hope of reviving demand for flights in the absence of a vaccine, the International Air Transport Association said. The 100% adoption of rapid antigen tests, which should be available next month, would remove any need for quarantines that are currently “killing” the market, IATA chief Alexandre de Juniac said on a media call Tuesday. While the call for testing isn’t new, the outlook has turned increasingly grim for airlines taking stock of a disappointing summer with rising infection rates and restrictions dashing hopes for a recovery. To date, the industry’s many calls for a unified approach to air travel have been hampered by individual countries loath to surrender health policy responsibilities to outsiders.

Airlines are trying to convince a frightened public that measures like mandatory face masks and hospital-grade air filters make sitting in a plane safer than many other indoor settings; it isn’t working. Image via AP.

Sidewalks, streets and parks provided a respite from coronavirus closures. But winter is coming.” via Emily Davies of The Washington Post — Peer into a backyard in Columbia Heights and a quartet plays. Walk down the waterfront on the Wharf and a masked instructor stretches into downward-facing dog. Dine on 17th Street NW and massage chairs sprawl across turf grass. This was summer in the District, disease and desolation punctured by pockets of joyful commerce, spread across sidewalks, street corners and public parks. Over the past few months, warm weather and entrepreneurial spirit have transformed many of D.C.’s public spaces into pandemic-sanctioned gathering spots. More than 550 restaurants have spread onto bike paths and parking lanes forming “Streateries” and “parklets”; and dozens of retailers and boutique fitness studios have moved their services outdoors in an effort to keep the businesses alive. Before winter bears down, small-business owners and customers alike are determined to take advantage of the final temperate days as vital sources of revenue and relief. But looming over the city is a pervasive fear of winter, which threatens to clear the streets and send residents, wary of the health risks of socializing indoors, back to the confines of their homes.

Statewide
‘We will not go down without a fight’: Democratic leaders rail against DeSantis’ protest bill” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Florida Democratic leaders railed against DeSantis’ controversial bill proposal to crack down on police protests. “Let’s be extremely clear about something — this is a blatant overreach from the Governor and Republicans who are actively undermining the Constitution,” Rep. Shevrin Jones said about the proposed legislation during a virtual meeting Tuesday. “We will not go down without a fight.” The Democratic leaders criticized the pace DeSantis is moving on the bill. The Governor suggested Tuesday that lawmakers could put the bill on an expedited path to pass by November, despite not calling a Special Session in response to the crises the state has faced since March, Democrats were quick to point out.

Democrats are pushing back on Ron DeSantis’ proposal to strengthen penalties for violent protests. Image via AP.

DeSantis issues $255M in federal COVID-19 relief to 55 Florida counties; $700M still unallocated” via John Haughey of Florida Trend — Florida will disperse $255 million in a second round of federal Coronavirus Relief Fund allocations across 55 of the state’s 67 counties, DeSantis’ office announced. Congress approved $150 billion for state and local governments when it adopted the $2.2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act. Florida received about $8.33 billion from the CARES Act for government assistance. Under the bill, 55 percent was reserved for the state and 45 percent reserved for direct payments to municipalities. Of the $3.75 billion earmarked for counties and cities, more than $2.47 billion was distributed in direct payments from the U.S. Treasury to the 12 urban Florida counties with populations greater than 500,000 people. The remaining $1.28 billion has been in state coffers since March, minus $574 million dispersed in two allocations.

Cabinet approves six conservation deals” via The News Service of Florida — DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet approved spending more than $9 million to protect 5,200 acres across five counties from future development. The deals will establish conservation easements on five agricultural properties totaling 3,367 acres. Such easements restrict future development while allowing landowners to continue using property for such things as agriculture. A sixth land deal, for 1,901 acres in Marion County owned by Florida Power & Light, will use $3.05 million from the Florida Forever conservation program. The FPL land, comprised of 25 noncontiguous parcels along the Ocklawaha River, is listed in a staff report as providing habitat for such things as Florida black bears and scrub jays.

Happening today — The state Board of Executive Clemency — Gov. DeSantis and members of the Florida Cabinet — will be, 8 a.m., Cabinet meeting room.

Settlement reached in judge dispute” via Jim Saunders of The News Service of Florida — Judge John Van Laningham received a five-day unpaid suspension this spring after he accused John MacIver, then the chief judge of the state Division of Administrative Hearings, of making what are known as improper “ex parte communications” when reviewing an order in a case about a South Florida horse track. Van Laningham, who raised the questions in footnotes in the case, was accused of insubordination and misconduct. Van Laningham challenged the discipline at the state Public Employees Relations Commission, later spawning a case at the 1st District Court of Appeal about whether MacIver could be forced to testify in the dispute. But the settlement, reached by Van Laningham and the Division of Administrative Hearings, will end the legal battling.

Regulators weigh insurance rate hikes” via The News Service of Florida — State regulators delved into potential large increases in property-insurance rates for customers of First Community Insurance Co. The Office of Insurance Regulation held a public hearing on a proposal that would lead to an average 24.5% rate increase statewide, though actual increases would vary, depending on factors such as locations of properties and types of policies. For example, the company is seeking an overall 25.4% increase for homeowner “multi-peril” policies, an overall 25.9% increase for condominium-unit policies and an overall 0.3% increase for tenant policies, according to information presented during the hearing.

Citizens Board of Governors: Carlos Beruff in, José Félix Díaz out” via Insurance Journal — Florida’s Citizens Property Insurance Corp., the state-run insurer of last resort, announced two recent changes to its board of governors. Joining the board in August was Beruff, a Manatee County business owner. Beruff was appointed by Senate President Bill Galvano and replaces Blake Capps for a three-year term that ends July 31, 2023. The board also was informed of the resignation of Diaz, a former Florida House of Representative member who was appointed to Citizens Board of Governors in July 2020 by House Speaker José Oliva. Citizens said the timing to serve on the board did not work out for former Diaz “due to other business interests.”

Carlos Beruff is in for the Citizens Insurance Board of Governors.

Popular California marijuana company gets Florida license, prepared to open in 2021” via Samantha J. Gross of the Miami Herald — A California-based cannabis company known for its celebrity partnerships, colorful marketing and crowd-drawing interiors is headed to Florida. COOKIES, headed up by Bay-area rapper Gilbert Anthony Milan Jr., or “Berner,” has acquired one of Florida’s 22 coveted medical marijuana treatment center licenses and plans to begin business in 2021. The license was purchased from Port Richey license holder Tree King-Tree Farm Inc., which has not dispensed any medical marijuana since it acquired its license in May 2019. The transfer was finalized Friday, according to the state’s Office of Medical Marijuana Use. A COOKIES spokeswoman declined to disclose details of the deal, including the value of the purchase. In July 2019, Michigan company Green Peak Innovations announced it had signed an agreement to purchase Tree King-Tree Farm Inc.’s license for $48 million. A spokesman for GPI did not return a request for comment.

Happening today — The Citizens Property Insurance Board of Governors meet, 9 a.m. Call-in: 1-786-635-1003. Code: 95637927111.

Happening today — The State Board of Education meets, 9 a.m., Florida Holocaust Museum, 55 Fifth St. South, St. Petersburg.

D.C. matters
The White House blames voters for the messes Trump made” via Dana Milbank of The Washington Post — Trump has blamed just about everybody but himself for the country’s multiplying woes: China, the World Health Organization, Democrats, his predecessor, his opponent, governors, mayors, the press, scientists, antifa and his own appointees. So it was perhaps inevitable that we would arrive at this point: Trump’s White House is now blaming the voters. In the White House driveway Tuesday morning, Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows, was asked about the spontaneous surge in contributions to Democrats since Republicans announced, 80 minutes after the first report of Justice Ginsburg’s death, that they would ram through a replacement. He called it “very sad” and concluded: “But that just shows you, at this particular time in history, we have a very divisive electorate.”

Donald Trump’s mess? Blame it on voters. Image via Getty.

Local notes
Delray Beach Utilities Department target of county inspector general investigation” via Mike Diamond of The Palm Beach Post — Palm Beach County Inspector General John Carey has joined forces with the state Department of Health in an investigation of Delray Beach’s Utilities Department. The health department launched its investigation July 1 after it received allegations that city officials covered up problems in its reclaimed water program. A number of people on the barrier island drank and showered with partially treated sewage water that got into their drinking water pipes through cross-connections. The then-director of the Utilities Department told the state that no one got sick when, in fact, several people did. The incident occurred in December 2018. The state recently told the city it is also investigating why its storage tanks were not cleaned every five years as required.
Smoldering
Trump mocks reporters who were roughed up by police during protests” via Brett Samuels of The Hill — Trump on Tuesday mocked journalists who were hit with rubber bullets and assailed by police while covering protests against racial injustice this summer. The President, during a rally in Pennsylvania, recounted watching the demonstrations play out as he lamented that law enforcement had not been allowed to go in and break up the protests. But he was more gleeful when describing how MSNBC’s Ali Velshi was hit in the knee with a rubber bullet, though he misidentified the reporter and the object that struck him. “Remember that beautiful sight? The street was a mess,” Trump said, describing Minneapolis. “That idiot reporter from CNN got hit on the knee with a can of tear gas, right? And he went down. ‘I’ve been hit. I’ve been hit.’”

Donald Trump called it a ‘beautiful thing’ that MSNBC journalist Ali Velshi was struck by a rubber bullet during a George Floyd protest in Minnesota.

Florida activists push back against proposed increased punishment for protesters” via Travis Gibson of News4Jax — A day after DeSantis rolled out a legislative package to crack down on protesters by creating a host of new crimes, a group of Florida civil-rights activists came out strong against the proposed laws. Representatives from the Tallahassee Community Action Committee, Southern Poverty Law Center Florida, and a St. Augustine pastor who is known for leading peaceful protests and others were among those who spoke out during a virtual news conference against what they called “draconian rhetoric” that DeSantis is using in his proposed legislation. “We believe that this proposed policy is being used to distract the media and organizers from focusing on the real problem: Gov. DeSantis’s failures as a Governor,” the group of activists wrote in a news release.

Stonewall Jackson renamed Roberto Clemente middle school” via Leslie Postal of the Orlando Sentinel — The Orange County School Board voted to drop the name of the Confederate general from the east Orlando school. The middle school — opened 55 years ago as a Whites-only school but now with a majority Hispanic student population — was the only campus in Central Florida still named for a Confederate general. The board voted unanimously to adopt the Clemente name for the school. “Definitely aye!” said school board member Kat Gordon as she cast her vote. “This is history in the making.”

Top opinion
Yes, airborne transmission is happening. The CDC needs to set the record straight.” via Joseph G. Allen and Linsey C. Marr of The Washington Post — There’s something odd going on at the CDC. For a moment, it seemed that the agency had finally waked up to an important fact: The novel coronavirus is airborne. On Friday, the CDC updated its website with guidance on “how COVID-19 spreads.” For the first time, they mentioned aerosols, the tiny particles that can stay airborne for hours and travel beyond 6 feet. Per the guidance, the virus travels “through respiratory droplets or small particles, such as those in aerosols, produced when an infected person coughs, sneezes, sings, talks or breathes. These particles can be inhaled into the nose, mouth, airways, and lungs and cause infection.” It ended with this kicker: “This is thought to be the main way the virus spreads.” But on Monday, the CDC removed this information from its website, bizarrely explaining that it “does not reflect our current state of knowledge.”
Opinions
What impact will Amendment 2 really have?” via the Port Charlotte Sun editorial board — Florida Amendment 2, $15 Minimum Wage Initiative could have a negative impact on the state’s economy even though many low-wage workers are pleading for help. We can’t imagine anyone making less than $15 an hour won’t vote Nov. 3 for Amendment 2. If a 60% majority of those voting approve the amendment, the state’s minimum wage of $8.46 an hour will increase by $1 a year until reaching $15 an hour in 2026. There are plenty of people pulling for this amendment to pass. But, at the same time, business owners are screaming that it will have a negative impact and will not be the cure-all for poverty its sponsors hope for. It’s difficult not to feel empathy for so many Florida workers who are dealing with high rents and a lack of benefits while trying to make ends meet. But employers, especially those in the restaurant business. make a good case for this amendment being a bad idea.
Instagram of the day
Aloe
Disney: 8 in 10 resort guests say safety protocols are ‘just right’” via Robert Guaderrama of FOX 35 Orlando — Walt Disney World says it’s getting positive reviews from guests, despite all the safety protocols in place due to the coronavirus pandemic. Temperature checks, masks, social distancing and hand sanitizer are just some of the measures the Mouse House has taken to keep guests healthy. In a recent Disney World survey, 8 out of 10 guests said the protocols are “just right,” according to Disney. “They also shared that they are grateful for the health and safety measures we’ve put in place across our resort,” said Paula Verkuylen, with Disney Parks, Experiences and Products. Disney also says guests are happy they are able to enjoy more of the attractions because of the capacity limits.

Most Walt Disney World Resort guests say they feel safety protocols are ‘just right.’ Image via Disney.

Universal brings back 2 new haunted houses, trick-or-treating in the park as Halloween offerings” via WTSP — Following the success of two new haunted houses it tested last weekend, Universal Orlando announced the houses will return as seasonal offerings. Starting Sept. 26 and 27, then daily from Oct. 3 through Nov. 1, park guests can visit Universal Monsters: The Bride of Frankenstein Lives and Revenge of the Tooth Fairy at the Universal Studios Florida park. The two houses were originally pop-up experiences so the theme park could gauge the demand following the cancellation of Halloween Horror Nights. They’re designed to be HHN-level scary, so they’re not recommended for kids under 13. Universal will continue its family-friendly Halloween events, including letting guests wear costumes and offering trick-or-treating for those 12 and under at Islands of Adventure.

Happy birthday
Happy belated birthday to the next state Senator from Northeast Florida, Jennifer Bradley. Celebrating today are U.S. Rep. Al LawsonNicole Hagerty of HCA, John FoxJeff FrederickLisa Greer, Hillsborough Property Appraiser Bob Henriquez, and Kimberly Diaz Scott.

JUDICIAL WATCH


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Google accused of censoring conservative videos, pushing right-leaning news low in search results

“[C]onservative websites like the Daily Caller, Breitbart, they’ve just been zeroed out” from Google search results, said Maxim Lott, creator of ElectionBettingOdds.com.

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New York ‘Climate Clock’ highlights decades of premature prophecies of global warming doomsday


Democrat Senator: ‘We’ll use every tool at our disposal’ to slow Trump’s court nomination


Republicans to take Pennsylvania mail-in voting case to Supreme Court


Just the News launching TV initiative, partnering with Real America’s Voice network


Democrat-led House passes short-term budget through Dec. 11 after Senate GOP opposed earlier version


Senator Joe Manchin says no Supreme Court vote before election


Majority of voters take relatively relaxed approach to mask-wearing in public


Trump criticized China with virtual United Nations address, says U.N. must hold China accountable


Senate Judiciary Chairman Graham says Republicans have the votes to confirm new justice


Trump meets with Judge Coney Barrett, a top nominee to fill Justice Ginsburg seat


Utah GOP Sen. Romney backs Trump filling Justice Ginsburg seat this year


Dozen of wildfires still burning in California with 18,000 firefighters battling blazes


Justice announces feds seized 270 kilos of opioid drugs in two-year, darknet ‘Operation DisrupTor’


United States coronavirus death toll passes grim 200,000 marker


CDC issues COVID-related warning for trick-or-treating, holiday gathering, drinking


Three NFL teams issued fines totaling more than $1 million after coaches fail to wear masks at games


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Wednesday, September 23, 2020

China

“President Donald Trump urged world leaders to hold China accountable for the spread of the coronavirus, in a video address to a scaled-down U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday.” AP News

“A U.S. judge early Sunday blocked the Trump administration from requiring Apple Inc and Alphabet Inc’s Google to remove Chinese-owned messaging app WeChat for downloads.” Reuters 

“President Donald Trump said Saturday he’s given his ‘blessing’ to a proposed deal that would see the popular video-sharing app TikTok partner with Oracle and Walmart and form a U.S. company… TikTok said Oracle and Walmart could acquire up to a cumulative 20% stake in the new company in a financing round to be held before an initial public offering of stock, which Walmart said could happen within the next year. Oracle’s stake would be 12.5%, and Walmart’s would be 7.5%, the companies said in separate statements.” AP News

From the Right

The right is critical of China’s behavior and supports banning the apps.
“As the Communist Party chairman offered [a] noble rallying cry for the democratic rule of law, the Second Intermediate People’s Court of Beijing was simultaneously proving the boss a total liar. The court did so by announcing that Ren Zhiqiang has been sentenced to 18 years in prison. What was Ren’s crime, you might ask? Calling Xi a ‘clown.’…

“Ren’s sentence proves only that Xi is an increasingly paranoid leader unable to tolerate questions. Xi certainly wants to make clear to his population that Ren is an example of what happens when citizens ask questions. Ren is 69 years old, so his 18-year incarceration is a de facto death sentence. Tuesday showed two Xi’s: the Xi who smiles as he lies to the world and the Xi who enforces tyranny at home.”
Tom Rogan, Washington Examiner

“A new bill introduced by Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) would give the United States important leverage in halting Beijing’s rampant abuses

“The senator’s proposal would replace China’s permanent trade status with a variant of the annual review that prevailed before 2001. Under that system, the president must extend China’s trade status each year, subject to Congress’s disapproval. The president would also have to review China’s behavior across a host of areas, including human rights, the use of slave labor and whether it engaged in or condoned industrial spying and intellectual property theft…

“Cotton’s bill establishes a carrot-and-stick relationship with China. If it wants the economic benefits of trading with the United States, and by extension with the West, it must adhere in some fashion to Western norms. If it does, then the threat to the United States is diminished. If it doesn’t, we should not finance our own destruction.”
Henry Olsen, Washington Post

“For years, Beijing has been all too happy to fill the regional void left by the United States [in the Pacific], having recognized the immense value of the area’s resource rich oceans, as well as how a permanent Chinese presence in the Western Pacific could complicate America’s ability to respond to potential crises in Asia…

“While denigrating China may feel good in the moment, it alone is unlikely to move the proverbial needle. Instead, members of the U.S. delegation should be prepared to humbly listen to Pacific Island leaders’ genuine concerns about climate change, unfair global trade practices, and the impact of China’s illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishing on their economies and coastal waters…

“Successful political outcomes will depend on regular, high-level outreach to these countries, as well as prioritizing American diplomatic and economic engagement at important multi-lateral bodies such as the Pacific Island Forum and Association of Southeast Asian Nations.”
Craig Singleton, Washington Examiner

Regarding the apps, “Trump has unnecessarily complicated his handling of TikTok. His administration identified a series of concerns that could only be resolved by a sale to U.S. investors, and ByteDance now says that a total sale of the app, due to Chinese government export regulations, is off the table. By the president’s own standard, the right course of action is simple: Ban TikTok. It’s entirely possible that Trump eventually rejects the Oracle deal, but the sweeteners written into it — such as the 25,000 U.S.-based jobs that TikTok says it would create — have persuaded him to seriously weigh, and approve ‘in concept,’ a significantly flawed proposal.”
Jimmy Quinn, National Review

“While some users have found creative ways to evade algorithms that automatically block content, WeChat serves as a Communist Party tool at home and abroad… Many have complained about being censored and blocked for sharing politically sensitive content. ‘Communications conducted entirely among non-China-registered accounts are subject to pervasive content surveillance that was previously thought to be exclusively reserved for China-registered accounts,’ Canadian research outfit Citizen Lab reported in May…

“By the way, criticisms from the left that the Trump Administration is bifurcating the internet are a little late. Beijing already bans Facebook, Twitter and any messaging app it can’t control. The Administration’s straightforward handling of WeChat stands as a striking contrast to the political auction it has conducted over TikTok. Issues of national security should be addressed on the merits, not used as leverage for meddling in business decisions.”
Editorial Board, Wall Street Journal

From the Left

The left is critical of Trump’s speech and policies, and skeptical of banning the apps.
“There were many inaccuracies, as well as one comically misleading claim, in [Trump’s] speech. First, while U.S. and Kurdish military forces did wipe out the ISIS caliphate (accelerating a strategy developed under President Barack Obama), an estimated 18,000 ISIS fighters remain in Syria and Iraq, and U.S. forces are still battling against them. Second, the accords he cited were not ‘peace’ agreements. Serbia and Kosovo normalized economic relations (their peace deal was signed in the 1990s); ditto for Israel’s deals with Bahrain and the UAE (countries with which it was never at war)…

“Trump was correct that, last year, the U.S. lowered carbon emissions more steeply than any other nation, but he failed to explain why. It had nothing to do with Trump’s policies. It was due entirely to market forces—the rising demand for natural gas (and, to some extent, renewable sources of energy) displacing the demand for coal. The irony is that Trump has lashed out at renewables (claiming, for instance, that wind turbines cause cancer) and has called for a revival of the coal industry (fruitlessly because of the aforementioned market factors).”
Fred Kaplan, Slate

“‘If I’m elected… you won’t lose one plant, I promise you that,’ [Trump] told Michigan voters at a rally in October 2016… Fiat Chrysler, General Motors, and Ford have all closed plants [in Michigan] since Trump’s brash campaign trail commitments. Auto companies as a whole reduced their investment in the state by 29% over the three full years of Trump’s presidency, compared with the previous three years under Obama…

“In manufacturing-heavy Ohio, Trump’s tit-for-tat tariff battle with China was a major factor in the drop in annual job growth from 36,200 in 2016 to 3,700 in 2019… Where were U.S. manufacturing companies investing? China… In 2019, U.S. firms invested $14 billion in China — more than in 2016, the year Trump was elected… Trump’s brute force tactics with China have backfired.”
John Cavanagh, USA Today

“When the United States walks away from cooperative bodies — from the Paris climate accord to the WHO — it leaves behind a vacuum. China has hastened to fill it, and that, more than anything, is bolstering Beijing’s rise and influence. It gives China a chance to be a good guy — say, pledging $30 million to the WHO when the US threatened to withdraw, a fraction of the money the US provides annually. The Trump administration, in abandoning institutions for being too China-centric, is allowing them to become just that

“The Trump administration isn’t wrong to call out China [for] its misdeeds… But the US also failed to offer an alternative vision of global leadership other than everyone looking out for themselves.”
Jen Kirby, Vox

Regarding the apps, “If ByteDance retains 80 percent control over [TikTok], as it asserts, that would undermine the stated purpose of the deal — which was to, you know, force ByteDance to give up control of TikTok. On the other hand, if ByteDance is forced to give up control, China seems likely to block the deal…

“If you thought that Trump’s negotiations with ByteDance were about producing some specific outcome, you might imagine that he would blanch at the terms the company has reached with its investors. But if you assume, as I did, that his negotiations were primarily about projecting power and influence, whatever reality lurked in the details, then all of this is proceeding more or less to plan.”
Casey Newton, The Verge

“WeChat has always been under greater threat of a ban in the United States than TikTok, and it also poses a greater threat. Where surveillance carried out via TikTok appears so far to be a hypothetical, on WeChat it is a documented reality — with the privacy of Chinese Americans in greatest danger… Authorities back home in China have knocked on the doors of U.S. users’ family members, evidently after observing critical comments on the app…

“A U.S. ban, however, would mimic this bad behavior, and implicitly accept it as a model for the rest of the world that has not yet determined what kind of global Internet it will help build: a splintered system of national cyber-sovereignty, or one as open as the Web’s architects had hoped… Ad-hoc bans of individual properties whenever a president wants to score political points aren’t productive; objective security and anti-censorship criteria for foreign companies, with full-scale bans only as a measure of last resort, might be.”
Editorial Board, Washington Post

On the bright side…

26 Of The Most Breathtaking Underwater Photographs Of The Year 2020 Have Just Been Revealed.
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AXIOS

Axios AM

By Mike Allen
Mike Allen
Mike Allen

🌞 Good Wednesday morning. Today’s Smart Brevity™ count: 1,170 words … 4½ minutes.

💣 “Editorials published by several Chinese state media groups signaled Beijing may not sign off on a deal that could put control of [TikTok] in the hands of Americans,” the Financial Times reports (subscription).

  • State media denounced ByteDance’s deal with Oracle and Walmart as “dirty and unfair,” saying Beijing had “no reason” to approve the agreement backed by President Trump.
1 big thing: Wall Street fears election meltdown
Featured image

Illustration: Aïda Amer/Axios

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death, and the fight over her replacement, are amplifying Wall Street worries about major volatility and market losses ahead of — or even after — the election, Axios Markets editor Dion Rabouin writes.

  • The 2020 election is the most expensive event risk on record, per Bloomberg — with insurance bets on implied volatility six times their normal level, according to JPMorgan analysts.
  • “Not getting the election results in a timely manner will be destabilizing,” Lou Brien, rates strategist at DRW Trading, tells Axios.

The Supreme Court fight will compound partisanship and division in the event of a contested election, analysts at TD Securities say in a note to clients.

  • “[W]e should be putting in a greater probability of a blue wave,” which would leave Democrats with control of the presidency and both chambers of Congress, Priya Misra, TD’s head of global rates strategy, tells Axios.

Wall Street is also closely watching the Senate.

  • “[T]he tilt of the Senate, especially if [Joe] Biden wins, will allow him to make much bigger changes in policy than we’ve seen in the past,” says Stephen Dover, head of equities for Franklin Templeton.

A repeal of President Trump’s tax cut could have immediate stock market implications.

  • With a Democratic Congress, Biden would be expected to increase spending on health care, new jobs programs and renewable energy.

Share this story.

  • 💰 Sign up for Dion Rabouin’s weekday newsletter, Axios Markets.
2. America marks 200,000 lost
Photo: Chen Mengtong via Getty Images

Flags near the Washington Monument memorialize the 200,000+ Americans who have lost their lives to COVID-19.

  • That’s equivalent to a 9/11 attack every day for 67 days. It is roughly equal to the population of Salt Lake City or Huntsville, Ala.

U.S. deaths are averaging 770 a day, AP reports.

3. 🗳️ FBI warns about delayed election results
Via Twitter

The FBI warned that “[f]oreign actors and cybercriminals” could try to take advantage of a delay in election results, and urged Americans to depend on authorities for results, and to verify social-media posts before sharing them.

  • Why it matters: As President Trump calls for a quick result and says the election is “rigged,” his own experts are saying we may need patience.

“State and local officials typically require several days to weeks to certify elections’ final results in order to ensure every legally cast vote is accurately counted,” the bulletin says.

  • “The increased use of mail-in ballots due to COVID-19 protocols could leave officials with incomplete results on election night.”
  • “Foreign actors and cybercriminals could exploit the time required to certify and announce elections’ results by disseminating disinformation that includes reports of voter suppression, cyberattacks targeting election infrastructure, voter or ballot fraud, and other problems intended to convince the public of the elections’ illegitimacy.”
  • Read the bulletin.

🇷🇺 A top-secret CIA assessment dated Aug. 31 concludes that Vladimir Putin is “probably directing” a Russian foreign influence operation to hurt Joe Biden, WashPost columnist Josh Rogin scoops.

  • The document’s hard-hitting lead: “We assess that President Vladimir Putin and the senior most Russian officials are aware of and probably directing Russia’s influence operations aimed at denigrating the former U.S. Vice President, supporting the U.S. president and fueling public discord ahead of the U.S. election in November.”
4. Musk’s big battery bet
Featured image

Elon Musk takes a piece of paper from a Tesla fan in Berlin on Sept. 2. Photo: Fabian Sommer/picture alliance via Getty Images

“Elon Musk laid out a plan for Tesla Inc. to build a cheap electric car using drastically lower-cost batteries to make a $25,000 vehicle and potentially turn the company into the world’s largest auto maker,” The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).

  • Musk said he’s “targeting eventual annual production of 20 million vehicles, or almost twice as many as Volkswagen sold last year as the world’s bestselling individual auto company.”

Why it matters: “Battery technology is the secret sauce behind today’s electric vehicle revolution,” The Journal reports in a separate story.

  • “As more car makers compete in the market and try to persuade customers to abandon their gas guzzlers, companies are pushing to overcome two hurdles to the mass appeal of electric vehicles — price and performance.”
5. GOP appears to have votes for court
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) speak yesterday. Photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham “is looking at scheduling a confirmation hearing for the week of Oct. 12 and a committee vote near the end of the following week, with a vote on the floor before Halloween,” the WashPost reports.

“Icons,” by Bob Staake for The New Yorker
6. Tweet du jour
Via Twitter
7. Election clues, county by county

Ipsos and U.Va.’s Center for Politics are out with an interactive U.S. map that goes down to the county level to track changes in public sentiment that could decide the presidential election, Axios’ Hans Nichols reports.

How it works: The 2020 Political Atlas tracks President Trump’s approval ratings, interest around the coronavirus, what’s dominating social media and other measures, with polling updated daily — enhancing UVA’s “Crystal Ball.”

  • Larry Sabato, director of U.Va.’s Center for Politics, says understanding swing states means knowing “what’s being discussed in their local papers and nightly news, and how much the candidates are spending there.”

Explore the atlas.

8. World’s most influential
Courtesy TIME

The TIME 100, the magazine’s annual list of the 100 most influential people, is unveiled with eight worldwide covers:

  • Top row from left: Dr. Anthony Fauci … Black Lives Matter founders Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi and Patrisse Cullors … COVID frontline nurse Amy O’Sullivan … Megan Thee Stallion.
  • Bottom row from left: Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai … The Weeknd … Dwyane Wade and Gabrielle Union … Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen.

See the full list.

9. Time capsule: How Hillary prepped for debates
Courtesy Philippe Reines

This exclusive photo shows Philippe Reines playing Donald Trump during Hillary Clinton’s debate prep.

  • Senior-will-style, Reines has bequeathed the costume to Ron Klain, Joe Biden’s debate prep guru.
  • The package included a blue suit, red tie, dress shoes with 3.25-inch lifts, Trump-branded watch and cuff links sourced from eBay, and flag lapel pin.

Philippe tells Axios’ Alexi McCammond he won’t be wearing the suit again:

  • “[T]he 42 pounds I’ve lost in 2020 took it from an authentically tailored, too-baggy Trump fit to what would be wearing a Trump tent big enough for two.”
10. Hollywood starts shooting again
Illustration by Mattias Adolfsson for The Hollywood Reporter. Used by permission

As film and TV production resumes in earnest after the coronavirus lockdown, “uncertainty about industrywide safety protocols has led to chaos,” The Hollywood Reporter’s Bryn Elise Sandberg writes.

  • “There’s the film that told its cast and crew they couldn’t leave the Motel 6 where they were staying, only to realize there that there was no restaurant on the property — a logistical ‘nightmare,’ according to one source.”

The state of play … “All the major studios are said to have projects in various stages of production, and it’s beginning to add up: Los Angeles has seen a 40 percent increase in film permit requests from July to August”:

To protect against an outbreak, sets are now often divided into specific ‘zones’ that correspond to the level of protection they require, depending on their proximity to the mask-less actors. Many refer to them as the A, B and C zones, though Netflix calls them the red, yellow and green zones. …

The A/red zone is the strictest area on set because it’s wherever the mask-less actors are, so the greatest amount of personal protective equipment is required.

Keep reading.

Mike Allen
Mike Allen

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THE WASHINGTON FREE BEACON

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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2020
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President Donald Trump turns to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of California, as he delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, as Vice President Mike Pence watches, Tuesday, Feb. 5, 2019. (Doug Mills/The New York Times via AP, Pool) ** FILE **
‘All-time low’: Trump-Pelosi toxicity trickles down, contaminates Capitol HillRarely have relations between a president and a speaker been this toxic. Indeed it’s even making it difficult for House … more
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Senate GOP moves ahead with upper hand as Trump readies SCOTUS nomination
Officials stand on the Supreme Court steps on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020, as preparations take place for a private ceremony and public viewing in remembrance of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
Biden mum on expanding Supreme Court: ‘It will shift the focus’
Democratic presidential candidate former Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Wisconsin Aluminum Foundry in Manitowoc, Wis., Monday, Sept. 21, 2020. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)
EXCLUSIVE: Pompeo rejects ‘appeasement’ as U.S. counters Chinese military activities
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo listens during the third annual U.S.-Qatar Strategic Dialogue at the State Dept., Monday, Sept. 14, 2020 in Washington. (Erin Scott/Pool via AP)
Trump slams Beijing at U.N. for spread of ‘China virus’
In this photo provided by the United Nations, U.S. President Donald Trump, is on video screens as his pre-recorded message is played during the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020, at U.N. Headquarters in New York. The U.N.'s first virtual meeting of world leaders started Tuesday with pre-recorded speeches from some of the planet's biggest powers, kept at home by the coronavirus pandemic that will likely be a dominant theme at their video gathering this year. (U.N. Photo/Rick Bajornas via AP)
Trump signs executive order barring critical-race theory training by federal contractors
President Donald Trump speaks to reporters on the South Lawn of the White House, Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020, before leaving for a short trip to Andrews Air Force Base, Md., and then onto Pittsburgh for a campaign rally. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
Al-Shabab negotiations eyed as path to end fighting in Somalia
An armed member of the militant group al-Shabab attends a rally on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia. (AP Photo, File)
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Opinion  Read More >
Democrats are the real hypocrites in latest Supreme Court saga
President Barack Obama embracing Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg prior to his State of The Union speech in January of 2016. (Associated Press) ** FILE **
Trump creates jobs. Biden destroys them. It’s not complicated.
Illustration on Trump's job creation by Linas Garsys/The Washington Times
Similarities between Germany’s Nazis and America’s ‘peaceful protesters’
An anti-Nazi poster circa 1932 Associated Press photo
Politics  Read More >
Pelosi, Republicans reach deal on emergency stop-gap government funding bill
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., speaks during a news conference on Capitol Hill, Friday, Sept. 18, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Eric Holder: Removing Barr is ‘why we have to make sure’ Trump is defeated
Former Attorney General Eric Holder attends a ceremony to unveil the new Gwen Ifill Black Heritage Commemorative Forever Stamp during a Postal Service ceremony at the Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church, Thursday, Jan. 30, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Michael A. McCoy) **FILE**
Chuck Schumer heckled at press conference: ‘You ain’t doing s—t’
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., holds a press briefing on the Supreme Court vacancy created by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, outside the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
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Justice Department: 179 arrests in darknet opioid crackdown
Illegal immigrant released by police 10 times under N.Y. sanctuary policies now in federal custody
ICE mug shot for Jhonny Alejandro Soto-Ubaldo. (ICE.gov)
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Defending World Series champion Nationals never found their groove
Washington Nationals starting pitcher Stephen Strasburg, right, walks with a member of the training staff as he heads to the dugout after leaving the game during the first inning of a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles, Friday, Aug. 14, 2020, in Baltimore. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez) **FILE**
FedEx’s Smith brushes off ‘Redskins’ question at stockholder meeting
A view of FedExField before an NFL match against the Philadelphia Eagles and the Washington Football Team on Sunday, September 13, 2020 in Landover, Md. (AP Photo/Daniel Kucin Jr.) **FILE**
Hernandez’s walkoff home run helps Nationals sweep Phillies
Washington Nationals' Yadiel Hernandez, top, is welcomed after his game-ending, two-run home run during the eighth inning of the second baseball game of the team's doubleheader against the Philadelphia Phillies, Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2020, in Washington. The Nationals won 8-7. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

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THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

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BY HUGO GURDON AND DAVID FREDDOSO
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HIGHLIGHTS

‘The dogma lives loudly’: Amy Coney Barrett emerges as top contender for Trump Supreme Court pick

'The dogma lives loudly': Amy Coney Barrett emerges as top contender for Trump Supreme Court pick

Judge Amy Coney Barrett, whose Catholic faith came under fire from Senate Democrats three years ago, has emerged as the favorite as President Trump seeks to fill the Supreme Court vacancy following the death of liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

Exclusive: Pompeo warns Turkey that Huawei threatens US military presence

Exclusive: Pompeo warns Turkey that Huawei threatens US military presence

Turkey’s growing reliance on Huawei and other Chinese companies could complicate U.S. military cooperation with the major NATO ally, according to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

America’s violent crime is intertwined with its forgotten gang problem, experts say

America's violent crime is intertwined with its forgotten gang problem, experts say

The gang wars of the 1980s and 1990s may seem like a thing of the past, but crime experts say neighborhood gangs are thriving and involved in violent crime that has rocked American cities this year.

Biden would rather not talk about the open Supreme Court seat

Biden would rather not talk about the open Supreme Court seat

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has made obligatory statements addressing Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death but is leaning away from the focus of the election that is shifting to a process he is powerless to stop: President Trump’s move to push through a replacement for Ginsburg as soon as possible, dramatically changing the ideological bend of the Supreme Court.

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Grudge match: Supreme Court nomination fight to take place in the shadow of Kavanaugh, Ginsburg, and Garland

Grudge match: Supreme Court nomination fight to take place in the shadow of Kavanaugh, Ginsburg, and Garland

The looming battle over President Trump’s third Supreme Court nominee will be colored by lingering bad blood over past confirmation fights, as both Democrats and Republicans have been radicalized by perceived slights to previous nominees.

‘Spending it at a furious clip’: Trump campaign fundraising woes compounded by high cost of raising money

'Spending it at a furious clip': Trump campaign fundraising woes compounded by high cost of raising money

Some Republicans fear that President Trump’s failure to outraise Democratic nominee Joe Biden in August will limit his reach in crucial states, adding that massive spending by the campaign in earlier months is limiting resources with which to engineer a turnaround.

Religious liberty advocates have high hopes for Supreme Court cases, even if Ginsburg isn’t replaced

Religious liberty advocates have high hopes for Supreme Court cases, even if Ginsburg isn't replaced

Senate Republicans are aiming to confirm President Trump’s Supreme Court nominee before the election, but even if they fail, religious liberty advocates expect favorable decisions from what could be an eight-man court.

What the Democrats’ Ginsburg windfall means and where it matters

What the Democrats' Ginsburg windfall means and where it matters

Mississippi Democrat Mike Espy raised $1.4 million during the first 18 months of his long-shot bid to unseat incumbent Republican Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith. In the three days since Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died, Espy raised $1 million.

How the Supreme Court nomination can navigate troubled political waters

Unlike 2016, Republicans want to fill a Supreme Court vacancy ASAP, and Democrats insist on waiting until after inauguration — as usual, both sides seem like hypocrites, and everybody’s playing politics.

Joan Larsen, judge in running for Trump’s Supreme Court nomination, once volunteered for Joe Biden

Joan Larsen, judge in running for Trump's Supreme Court nomination, once volunteered for Joe Biden

Like the other judges in the running for the vacant Supreme Court seat, Joan Larsen is a woman and a conservative.

‘How was your country doing?’: Trump jabs Ilhan Omar over criticisms of US

'How was your country doing?': Trump jabs Ilhan Omar over criticisms of US

President Trump asked whether Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar should be criticizing the United States given that she arrived in the country after fleeing Somalia.

THE ROUNDUP

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CHICAGO TRIBUNE

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VIEW IN BROWSER SEPTEMBER 23, 2020 CHICAGOTRIBUNE.COM

DAYWATCH

Good morning, Chicago. On Tuesday, Illinois public health officials reported 1,531 newly diagnosed coronavirus cases and 30 more deaths, as Wisconsin was added back to the city’s quarantine list. Here’s a reminder of what you need to know about Chicago’s quarantine order to avoid getting fined.
Meanwhile, in the U.S., we hit a grim milestone on Tuesday: the death toll of the pandemic surpassed 200,000, by far the highest in the world. The Tribune has been working to chronicle those who have lost their lives in the Chicago area or who have connections to our region.
And, last night, President Trump interviewed on WGN America’s “NewsNation.” The Tribune’s Steve Johnson called it “a 15-minute primetime opportunity for the president to repeat campaign talking points.” Read his full review here.
Here’s more coronavirus news and other top stories you need to know to start your day.

1

Gov. Pritzker puts Illinois National Guard ‘in a state of readiness’ ahead of Kentucky announcement in Breonna Taylor case

Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration said Tuesday night that it “is putting the (Illinois National) Guard in a state of readiness” to ensure members are available as Kentucky’s attorney general is expected to announce whether he’ll file charges in the police killing of Breonna Taylor.

The Louisville woman’s death has been a central theme for protests in several U.S. cities this summer against police brutality. Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot met Tuesday morning and discussed the issue, the governor’s office said in a statement.

2

Appellate Judge Amy Coney Barrett’s record in Chicago could be focus if Trump nominates her to replace Ginsburg

When Amy Coney Barrett last appeared on President Donald Trump’s shortlist of Supreme Court nominees, she was only months into her first turn as a judge on Chicago’s 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and had a very slim record of rulings.

This time, as she finds herself a front-runner to be nominated for the seat vacated with the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Barrett, a favorite of social conservatives, brings to the national spotlight more than 100 written opinions and dissents authored over the past 2½ years. They range from writings on mundane issues to lengthy dissents on hot-button topics including gun control and immigration.

 

 

3

Illinois residents can now apply for up to $400 from massive Facebook privacy settlement

Illinois Facebook users can apply to get between $200 and $400 from the social media company as part of a $650 million class-action settlement over alleged violations of a state privacy law. Users will be notified of the settlement beginning Wednesday via email and on Facebook, according to court documents.

4

From tabletop air purifiers to ultraviolet wands for sterilizing glassware, restaurants are investing in safety. But will diners come inside during a pandemic?

Restaurants hoping to see the other side of the pandemic are pouring money into air quality upgrades and other safety features even as business remains devastated by COVID-19. As they burn through cash, they are counting on customers taking comfort in the changes and filling seats. But, it’s a gamble for customers as well as restaurants.

 

 

5

More ‘lip service,’ or is this a real moment of change for inclusion in Chicago arts and culture?

The pandemic has brought about many changes. For the Chicago arts organizations, now is the time to rethink inclusion. But is this just lip service? Or does it mean real change is coming?


CHICAGO SUNTIMES

In debate over where cops should patrol in Chicago, ‘no one wants to lose’

Chicago Sun-Times Morning Edition
As about 1,000 cops have been posted this year on new citywide teams to combat gun crime, looting and rioting, Chicago police officials are trying to figure out the best way to staff the city’s 22 police districts that aldermen say are being drained of manpower. Frank Main and Fran Spielman have the story…
Pfleger, activist Ja’Mal Green call for dropping charges against Dread Head Cowboy

The choices are in the mail? Nearly a quarter of a million ballots to start hitting Chicago mailboxes

In debate over where cops should patrol in Chicago, ‘no one wants to lose’

Pritzker readies Illinois National Guard ahead of possible announcement in fatal police shooting of Breonna Taylor

Wisconsin re-joining Chicago’s 14-day travel advisory

Illinois Facebook users can apply for up to $400 settlement as part of privacy lawsuit

New marijuana dispensary licenses stalled again

Lightfoot to ComEd: End shutoffs, commit to ethics reform and clean energy to keep city franchise

City to build new $1.8M field for Hancock College Prep on Southwest Side

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PRO TRUMP NEWS


THE HILL

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Welcome to The Hill’s Morning Report. It is Wednesday! 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 co-creators, and readers can find us on Twitter @asimendinger and @alweaver22. Please recommend the Morning Report to friends and let us know what you think. CLICK HERE to subscribe!

Total U.S. coronavirus deaths each morning this week: Monday, 199,512; Tuesday, 199,884; Wednesday, 200,814 (The Hill).
Senate Republicans steamrolled ahead with plans to move forward on a Supreme Court nominee to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, with President Trump announcing that he will unveil his choice for the seat on Saturday evening.

 

McConnell moved closer to notching the needed support from his conference to move forward with the president’s choice on Tuesday when Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), the lone Republican to support Trump’s impeachment, announced that he supports confirming a nominee before the Nov. 3 election. The revelation dealt a major blow to Democrats and their hopes that any nominee would be selected by the winner of the general election and subsequently confirmed, potentially avoiding a 6-3 advantage for conservatives on the court.

 

“The Constitution gives the President the power to nominate and the Senate the authority to provide advice and consent on Supreme Court nominees. Accordingly, I intend to follow the Constitution and precedent in considering the President’s nominee. If the nominee reaches the Senate floor, I intend to vote based upon their qualifications,” Romney said in a statement (The Hill).

 

Only two Republicans — Sens. Susan Collins (Maine) and Lisa Murkowski (Alaska) — have signaled support for allowing the winner of the general election to choose the nominee. McConnell can afford to lose only one more member of his conference.

 

“I guess we have all the votes we’re going to need,” Trump told WJBX Fox 2 in Detroit. “I think it’s going to happen” (The Associated Press).

 

According to The Hill’s Alexander Bolton, Senate Republicans view a potential pre-Election Day confirmation vote as a big political boost that could help hold their majority in November. GOP lawmakers are holding out hope that the vote could help the same way Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation fight did in 2018, when Republicans knocked off four Democratic incumbents in the midterm elections despite losing the House.

 

“Very honestly, we think the Democrats are in the wrong spot on this particular issue,” said Sen. Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), arguing that Democratic calls to kill the legislative filibuster or add seats to the Supreme Court if the party takes power have played into the GOP’s hands. “We think when they start talking about their threats, about what they would do if we continue to proceed with this, we don’t think that’s the spot where they’re going to want to be in.”

 

Politico: Senate Republicans bet it all on the Supreme Court — again.

 

The Hill: Collins says she will vote “no” on Supreme Court nominee before election.

 

The New York Times step-by-step guide: How a Supreme Court justice is (usually) appointed, and how Republicans may look to speed things up.

 

Meanwhile, Trump made it official on Tuesday, telling reporters that he will announce his pick to replace Ginsburg on the court on Saturday evening at 5 p.m. Judge Amy Coney Barrett, considered a favorite on the list, met with officials at the White House for the second day in a row on Tuesday. She met with the president on Monday.

 

Trump may speak with potential pick Barbara Lagoa, a judge in South Florida, but is not likely to do so during his scheduled campaign visit there on Friday, according to White House chief of staff Mark Meadows. Meadows told Axios that any meeting with prospective Supreme Court nominees will take place at the White House.

 

“I’m getting very close to having a final decision made, very close,” Trump told reporters before departing for a campaign event in Pennsylvania on Tuesday. “We need nine justices. …  Doing it before the election will be a very good thing … because what they’re doing is trying to sow confusion.”

 

The Washington Post: The Senate Judiciary Committee may hold confirmation hearings for Trump’s court pick during the week of Oct. 12, with a committee vote the following week.

 

Politico: Trump world clashes over Barrett vs. Lagoa for Supreme Court.

 

The Associated Press: Not so hush-hush search: Trump airs his thinking about a court seat.

 

The Hill’s Jordain Carney reports that Senate Democrats are limiting the ability to hold committee hearings in retaliation for Republicans’ decision to try to fill Ginsburg’s seat with less than five weeks to go until the November election, the first action in what is likely to be an increasingly combative battle over procedure in the Senate.

 

A Democratic aide confirmed to The Hill that Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) invoked the so-called two-hour rule, which can be used to limit the ability to hold committee hearings after the Senate has been in session for more than two hours. The ability to hold committee hearings is routinely granted with little fanfare on the Senate floor.

 

“Because the Senate Republicans have no respect for the institution, we won’t have business as usual here in the Senate,” Schumer said from the Senate floor.

 

The Hill: Pelosi: Trump hurrying to fill SCOTUS seat so he can repeal ObamaCare.

 

The New York Times “Sway” podcast with host Kara Swisher: Pelosi: “If the election were held today, we would win it all” (52 minutes).

 

© Getty Images

 

A MESSAGE FROM FACEBOOK
Visit Facebook’s Voting Information Center today

 

Facebook is building the largest voting 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.

 

Visit our new Voting Information Center now

LEADING THE DAY
2020 POLITICS & ELECTIONS: There is no shortage of Democratic advice lobbed into Joe Biden’s campaign. The latest hand-wringing follows the former vice president’s studied silence about liberals’ agitation to possibly add justices to the nine-member Supreme Court and some Democrats’ enthusiasm to change Senate rules to end the filibuster once and for all.

 

Biden, who reveres the Senate and considers himself an institutionalist, is focused on Trump and his own determination to speak to voters about what matters to them. He has appealed to Republicans to drop their rush to confirm another justice before Election Day by saying “we need to de-escalate, not escalate.” Biden rejected Trump’s call to release a list of his potential Supreme Court nominees, calling it a “game” meant to “gin up emotions and anger,” report The Hill’s Jonathan Easley and Amie Parnes.

 

Biden may be listening to some of his former Democratic colleagues in the Senate, who are tamping down talk of expanding the Supreme Court through what’s called “court packing.” Congress determines how many justices sit on the high court, which has had nine since 1869. Progressives, including some lawmakers, like the idea. But several Democratic senators, including senior members of the caucus, think the court-expansion conversation is a distraction from the more immediate battles to win the elections and make the Supreme Court confirmation process tougher for Senate Republicans to jam through in just 40 days (The Hill).

 

© Getty Images

 

 

Trump, during rallies and remarks this week, focused on the Supreme Court vacancy, criticism of China and the economy. He was in Ohio on Monday and Pennsylvania on Tuesday (pictured below), and he told reporters that the coronavirus death toll of more than 200,000 people in the United States was “a shame” and “a horrible thing,” but would have been “substantially more” if the administration “didn’t do it properly and didn’t do it right.”

 

The president, who appeared to refer to worldwide projections for coronavirus fatalities, said deaths were estimated to rise to 2 million or 2-½ million “if you didn’t do it right.” As of this morning, global confirmed coronavirus deaths exceed 971,000. In polls conducted in a handful of key swing states, Biden consistently leads Trump when voters are asked who they trust to handle the pandemic.

 

The Hill: During an outdoor rally in Pennsylvania, Trump on Tuesday mocked reporters who were hit this summer by rubber bullets and roughed up by police while reporting on demonstrations for racial justice.

 

The Hill: After striking a bird in New Hampshire, Air Force Two with Vice President Pence aboard returned to the Manchester Airport as a precaution on Tuesday. Pence later returned to Washington in a cargo plane.

 

The Hill’s Max Greenwood reports that in battleground Pennsylvania, election officials and voting rights advocates are sounding an alarm over a court ruling ordering officials to toss out “naked ballots.” They warned on Monday that the court decision could cause widespread voter disenfranchisement and a massive legal controversy following the November elections. The controversy could have sweeping electoral ramifications for a state that Trump won in 2016 by 44,000 votes and where Biden, who was born there, hopes to seed an Electoral College path to the White House.

 

Meanwhile, Republicans plan to ask the Supreme Court to review a major state court ruling on mail voting in Pennsylvania in the first test of the high court following Ginsburg’s death last week (The Hill).

 

In swing-state ArizonaThe Hill’s Reid Wilson explains why the once-staunchly conservative state is projected by political analysts to vote blue this year.

 

The Washington Post: The Trump team knocks on doors. Biden’s supporters dial phones. Voters in North Carolina see two very different campaigns, each risky.

 

The Wall Street Journal: Senate Republicans’ probe of Joe and Hunter Biden nears completion.

 

> Endorsements: 13 Nobel Prize economists endorse Biden for president (The Hill). … Cindy McCain, widow of Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) announces she backs Biden (The Hill).

 

The Hill: On Tuesday, Big Tech and other groups mobilized on National Voter Registration Day, urging U.S. residents to create their plans to cast ballots. Voter registration numbers in recent months have been lower in many states because of caution about COVID-19 transmissions.

 

> Debates: Trump and Biden will meet in Ohio on Tuesday at 9 p.m. for the first of three face-offs. Moderator Chris Wallace of Fox News selected topics for the debate, subject to last-minute news and events. He wants to ask questions about the Trump and Biden records, the Supreme Court, COVID-19, the economy,  race and violence in U.S. cities, and the integrity of the election. … The campaign team working with Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) is trying to manage expectations about her debate skills as former presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg stands in for Pence during debate prep (Bloomberg News).

 

The Associated Press: Maine will become the first state to use ranked-choice voting in a presidential race under a ruling by the Maine Supreme Court on Tuesday. Under the ballot system, voters are allowed to rank all candidates listed. If no one wins a majority of first-place votes, then there are additional tabulations, aided by computers, in which last-place finishers are eliminated and votes are reallocated based on those supporters’ second-place choices. Additional tabulations delay results for about a week. In Maine, the presidential ballot will feature five names, including Trump and Biden. Ranked voting will also be used in U.S. House races and the closely watched Collins Senate race against Democrat Sara Gideon, the Maine House Speaker. The voting system adds another wrinkle to the presidential contest in Maine, which — as one of two states that divide electoral votes — already does things differently.

 

The Atlantic cover story: “The election that could break America,” by Barton Gellman.

 

© Getty Images

 

IN FOCUS/SHARP TAKES
CONGRESS: The House on Tuesday passed on legislation that would avert a government shutdown and fund the government until mid-December after last-minute haggling with Republicans over a provision to include funding for an assistance program for farmers.

 

The House was initially slated to vote Tuesday afternoon on a clean funding package that did not include $30 billion to refill the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC), which is opposed by most Democrats. However, after Republicans indicated that they would not approve any spending bill without it and some farmland Democrats called for the funding, the bill was revised and passed overwhelmingly on Tuesday night, 359-57. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) voted “present.”

 

“We have an agreement that will keep the government functioning for the people,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said on the House floor. “There was a lot of to and fro-ing, a lot of people wanted this, a lot of people wanted that, a lot of people didn’t want this… This is the best we have, so we need to take it.”

 

As part of the deal, the package will include an additional $8 billion in nutrition assistance and “increase accountability” for the use of CCC funds to prevent funds intended for farmers “from being misused for a Big Oil bailout,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a statement.

 

The Senate is expected to take up the bill as soon as this week.

 

The Hill: House lawmakers reach deal to avert shutdown.

 

The Washington Post: House overwhelmingly passes bipartisan spending deal to avert government shutdown.

 

The House vote took place only eight days before funding for the government is set to run out and trigger a partial government shutdown if no deal is passed. Earlier Tuesday, McConnell criticized Democrats for not including the funding for farmers in their initial bill, saying that it was a “message to farm country to drop dead.”

 

© Getty Images

 

OPINION
Filling the Supreme Court vacancy: Four scenarios, by D. Benjamin Barros, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3hTSfaV

 

As goes the filibuster, so goes cooperation in Congress, by John R. Kasich, opinion contributor, The Hill. https://bit.ly/3hURnCL

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

 

Learn about these efforts and more

WHERE AND WHEN
The House will meet at 9 a.m.

 

The Senate convenes at 10 a.m. and resumes consideration of the nomination of John Hinderaker to be a judge with the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona. The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee at 10 a.m. will get a COVID-19 update from members of the president’s coronavirus task force, including Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC); and Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn (the administration recently blocked Hahn from testifying before a House panel).

 

The president will speak to veterans of the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961, a CIA operation that sought to overthrow Fidel Castro in Cuba. Trump will participate in a discussion with Republican state attorneys general about revising a key law that shields social media companies from liability for content posted by their users and allows them to remove lawful but objectionable posts (Reuters).

 

The Supreme Court: Thousands of people are expected to honor Ginsburg beginning today, flocking to the court building to pay tribute to a woman who evolved into an unlikely icon in her 80s (The Associated Press). Ginsburg will lie in repose at the court today and Thursday. Her casket will be moved to the portico at the front of the building and remain there rather than in the traditional Great Hall as a precaution during the pandemic. Members of the public can pay respects from approximately 11 a.m. until 10 p.m. today, and from 9 a.m. until 10 p.m. on Thursday.

 

👉INVITATION: Today, The Hill Virtually Live hosts “Work Redefined,” with sessions at 11 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m., where employers, economists, innovators, policymakers and futurists discuss what lies ahead for America’s workforce and economy. Guests include Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester (D-Del.), co-chair of the House Future of Work Caucus; Rep. Susan Brooks (R-Ind.), a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee; and Austin, Texas, Mayor Steve Adler (D). RSVP HERE.

 

📺 Hill.TV’s “Rising” program features news and interviews at http://thehill.com/hilltv or on YouTube at 10:30 a.m. ET at Rising on YouTube.

ELSEWHERE
 CORONAVIRUS: The Food and Drug Administration is poised to announce tougher standards for any COVID-19 vaccine. The standards make it unlikely a vaccine could be cleared by the government as safe and effective for distribution by Election Day, as Trump has suggested was a possibility (The Washington Post). … The CDC set Oct. 16 as a deadline for states to submit vaccine distribution plans (Reuters). …The CDC is plagued by a crisis of confidence. Employees tell The Hill in interviews that they feel mistrust for agency leaders and the president. … Would a second wave of the virus in October effectively end the president’s chances of winning a second term? That’s the question The Hill’s Niall Stanage explores in his latest Memo. The number of daily confirmed cases in the United States has risen more than 15 percent in the past 10 days. Other nations, including the United Kingdom, are grappling with a second wave and new lockdown restrictions (The Hill). … Ralph Lauren Corporation announced on Tuesday plans to cut 15 percent of its workforce worldwide after incurring a significant drop in revenue tied to the economic hit from COVID-19. The fashion company is expected to lay off roughly 3,700 employees in an effort to cut costs and ride out problems presented by the pandemic. As of March, Ralph Lauren employed 24,900 people across the world, including 13,800 in the U.S. (Reuters). … The coronavirus-induced lockdown in South Africa has produced one positive development: a decrease in rhino hunting. With the country closed off to tourists since March, the number of South African rhinos slain by poachers dropped by more than 50 percent from 2019. However, South African officials are concerned that the number could start to rise again once the country reopens to international tourists in October (The Associated Press). … NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said on Tuesday that the upcoming season is not expected to start until January at the earliest — nearly three months later than usual due to the league’s restart in Orlando, Fla., and the novel coronavirus (NBC Sports).

 

 ADMINISTRATION: The United States is reimposing a “public charge” wealth test for green card recipients. A 2019 rule, which gave officials more power to deny permanent residency to immigrant applicants deemed by the government to be too reliant on public assistance or aid, was blocked in late July by a federal judge who found it hampered efforts to contain the coronavirus (CBS News). … Trump on Monday accused Chinese President Xi Jinping of human rights abuses, trade violations and environmental harm during a speech to the United Nations General Assembly, which was delivered virtually. Trump repeated his assertion that China is to blame for allowing international air travel that transmitted COVID-19 at a time when Beijing knew how infectious the coronavirus was in Wuhan (The Hill). … The president selected a climate change skeptic, Ryan Maue, to become the chief scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which is part of the Commerce Department (The Washington Post).

 

 STATE WATCH: Policymakers in New York are debating whether to raise state taxes on wealthy residents to address budget shortfalls caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Neighboring New Jersey has taken steps in that direction. New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D) has resisted calls for higher taxes on the rich, concerned that the state’s taxes are already substantial and further increases could cause wealthy residents to move out of the state (The Hill).

 

 INTERNATIONAL: Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was released from Berlin’s Charite Hospital on Wednesday after 32 days of treatment, with a “complete recovery” possible after being poisoned with Novichok, a nerve agent, according to the hospital. Navalny’s physicians said that it is too early “to gauge the potential long-term effects of his severe poisoning” (The Associated Press). The Kremlin said shortly after that Navalny is “free to return home to Russia (AFP).

THE CLOSER
And finally … is nothing safe from COVID-19?  🎃 Even while wearing witch masks and superhero gloves, Halloween trick-or-treating door to door is not recommended during a pandemic, according to the guidance ghouls at the CDC, who divided the Oct. 31 holiday into a list of “lower-risk” and “higher-risk” activities.

 

Leave it to Halloween revelers to try to have their social distancing and candy handouts too. One Ohio man made headlines last week because he dreamed up a six-foot chute and “touch-free,” anti-viral precautions to dispense safely wrapped goodies to trick-or-treaters far below his front door (Fox 8).

 

YouTube DIYers already have demonstrations and instructions for the candy chute contraption HERE. Beware the city or community officials who try to lock down Halloween!

 

© Getty Images

 

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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ROLL CALL

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Morning Headlines

ImageOnly one House Democrat in the caucus’s 14-member elected leadership team is exiting the chamber next year, but that opening has created a competitive race for assistant speaker and cleared opportunities for other ambitious Democrats to run for the lower-ranking positions those candidates are vacating. Read More…

ImageSome Democrats are fretting over polls suggesting that Joe Biden’s presidential campaign isn’t reaching Latino voters, missing an opportunity to connect over the response to the coronavirus pandemic that the group identifies as its biggest campaign issue. Or just to connect. Others are telling the worriers to relax. Read More…

House passes stopgap funding bill shortly after bipartisan deal

 

ImageThe House on Tuesday swiftly passed a stopgap funding measure needed to avert a partial government shutdown in eight days after top congressional leaders reached a deal resolving a fight over farm payments. Read More…

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There is nothing civil about intimidation

 

ImageOPINION — With the U.S. now an ideological tinderbox, the last thing we need are leaders adding fuel to fire with intemperate words and their apparent decision to inflame the streets. We need leaders who will turn down the temperature, reject the calls of Twitter celebrities and resist the temptation to exploit an already explosive environment. Read More…

The cooling saucer and other Senate hooey

 

ImageOPINION — Despite its reputation for being locked in amber and quaint fustiness, the Senate is an institution that has changed quite a bit in the history of the republic. But that doesn’t stop the pearl-clutching when the prospect of change comes along. The latest debate about the future of the filibuster revolves around the role of the Senate. Read More…

Supreme Court fight underscores campaign trail focus on health care

 

ImageThe upcoming Senate battle over a Supreme Court nomination is sharpening the focus on the 2010 health care law on the campaign trail before a high-stakes oral arguments hearing to determine the law’s future, which will be held just a week after the election. Read More…

She was selling RBG greeting cards. Then she heard from RBG

 

ImageAt first Janie Velencia thought she was in trouble. The former journalist, who was running her own greeting card company, had just received a message from an assistant to Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. “I panicked,” says Velencia, who’d been making greeting cards with Ginsburg’s likeness for a couple years. Read More…

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POLITICO PLAYBOOK

POLITICO Playbook: Just like that, the drama on Capitol Hill recedes

Presented by Amazon

DRIVING THE DAY

THIS IS KIND OF RARE.

AT THE BEGINNING OF THIS WEEK, it seemed like the drama in Washington had ratcheted up to code-red levels: The government was on the brink of shutdown, RUTH BADER GINSBURG had recently died, and Congress was facing the prospect of a brutal election-season confirmation fight.

BUT ALL OF A SUDDEN …

— IN ONE DAY, CONGRESS and the TRUMP ADMINISTRATION struck a deal to fund the government until Dec. 11, removing the threat of a shutdown. THE HOUSE cleared the bill Tuesday night. Sarah Ferris, Caitlin Emma and Heather Caygle with the details

— SENATE MAJORITY LEADER MITCH MCCONNELL corralled the support of 50 of his colleagues to leave Republicans on the brink of a floor vote to confirm a Supreme Court justice just weeks before an election. SEUNG MIN KIM — who owns the judges beat for the WaPo — says Judiciary Chair LINDSEY GRAHAM (R-S.C.) is looking at holding hearings the week of Oct. 12. Anne Gearan, SMK, Josh Dawsey and Bob Costa’s WaPo piece

— CONGRESS HAS BASICALLY ABANDONED Covid relief talks, with 200,000 people dead, thousands sick and the economy teetering. No back and forth between the White House. No shuttle negotiations. Mostly a recognition that it probably won’t get done.

THE DRAMA, for the moment, at least, has faded to black. … But just wait until the confirmation hearings.

Good Wednesday morning. SPOTTED: Rep. ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ (D-N.Y.) and boyfriend Riley Roberts eating outside at Joselito Casa de Comidas on Tuesday evening.

41 DAYS until Election Day. #41, by the Dave Matthews Band with Warren Haynes, for Jake Tapper and Sopan Deb

THE CORONAVIRUS CONTINUES TO RAGE … AP: “200,000 dead as Trump vilifies science, prioritizes politics,” by Jason Dearen … WSJ: “Thousands of American Troops to Take Part in Covid-19 Early-Detection Study”

SUPREME COURT CORNER …

— ALEX ISENSTADT and MARC CAPUTO: “Trump-world clashes over Barrett vs. Lagoa”“Donald Trump’s looming Supreme Court decision is dividing the president’s political orbit between the pragmatists and the purists.

“One camp is dominated by the GOP operative class overseeing the party’s electoral efforts, including the president’s own campaign advisers and donors. The imperative is to do anything possible to win the election, and Barbara Lagoa would be an undeniable boon, they say: a Florida-based, Cuban-American jurist from a must-win state, who might also help the president in Hispanic-heavy Arizona and Nevada.”

“The other, led by White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, consists of religious and movement conservatives. They want a can’t-miss pick — someone who carries the lowest possible risk of becoming the next John Roberts or, worse, David Souter. The obvious choice to them is Amy Coney Barrett, an acolyte of former Justice Antonin Scalia who’s been groomed for decades to ascend to the high court and is seen as having the inside track.

“The two sides aren’t openly warring; instead, disagreements are surfacing in their attempts to bend the president’s ear and generate favorable media coverage for their preference. But the discord reflects the GOP’s conflicting priorities six weeks out from an election that Trump could well lose.”

ONE THING WE KEEP HEARING is that LAGOA can’t be too good for conservatives, since she was confirmed by the Senate in a bipartisan 80-15 vote in 2019. BARRETT was confirmed 55-43 in 2017 — a party-line vote.

— BURGESS EVERETT and ANDREW DESIDERIO: “Senate Republicans bet it all on the Supreme Court — again”“With their majority increasingly in peril and Joe Biden demonstrating a durable lead over President Donald Trump, GOP senators are trying to make 2020 a sequel to their surprising win four years ago. In 2016, Republicans credited Mitch McConnell’s decision to block Merrick Garland’s appointment with delivering Trump the presidency — as well as saving the Senate GOP majority. …

“‘A Supreme Court debate right before an election is good for us,’ said Senate Judiciary Chairman Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), who is facing a surprisingly strong challenge from Democrat Jaime Harrison. ‘It’s a right-of-center nation, certainly in South Carolina it is. It’s an event that will matter in these races.’”

— NYT, NEWS ANALYSIS, A19, by PETER BAKER: “With Nothing Else Working, Trump Races to Make a New Supreme Court Justice the Issue”“To a president lagging in the polls, the chance to fill a Supreme Court vacancy has become a political lifeline, a chance to mobilize supporters and talk about something, anything, other than the coronavirus that has killed 200,000 Americans. …

“With the future of Roe v. Wade presumably on the line, the confirmation fight will certainly inject abortion into a race that had not focused on it until now. Anti-abortion voters have long been a bedrock of the Republican coalition and often more devoted to casting ballots on that issue than their counterparts. But polls show the broader electorate supports retaining Roe v. Wade, and Democrats hope that if the ruling appears to be threatened it will activate voters who support abortion rights.”

— CNN’S MANU RAJU: “Democrats weigh how to handle Trump’s potential Supreme Court pick after past flap over Barrett’s faith”

— HEATHER CAYGLE, MEL ZANONA and SARAH FERRIS: “Pelosi wrestles with House factions ahead of Supreme Court confirmation fight”: “The California Democrat is under pressure to placate an animated liberal base eager to battle Republicans over filling the seat of the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in the waning weeks before the election.

“Pelosi also must attempt to appease a coalition of vulnerable moderate Democrats, desperate for a coronavirus relief deal they see as key to their reelection. These centrist Democrats are worried the Supreme Court fight could overshadow any negotiations, not to mention make the party seem extreme.

“Both factions see their priorities as key to delivering Democrats sweeping power in the House, Senate and White House next year. Whether Pelosi can keep her sprawling caucus from splintering in the month before the election will be critical.”

— JOHN HARRIS column: “McConnell Is On The Losing Side of History — And He Knows It”

FASCINATING READ … NYT’S MAGGIE HABERMAN, DANNY HAKIM and NICK CORASANITI: “The Green Party’s Biggest Fan? In Some States, It’s the G.O.P.”“In Wisconsin, a G.O.P. elections commissioner and lawyers with ties to Republicans tried to aid attempts by Howie Hawkins, the current Green Party presidential candidate, to get on the ballot there, which were ultimately unsuccessful. In Montana, state regulators found that the Republican Party violated campaign finance laws as part of an effort to boost the Greens in five down-ballot races, including for senator and governor.

“And in Western Pennsylvania, petitioners from Florida and California were brought in to gather signatures for Mr. Hawkins by an outside firm whose actions Mr. Hawkins and the party said they could not account for. Mr. Hawkins also did not make the ballot there. …

“Republican efforts to aid the Green Party are not new. In 2016, a billionaire backer of President Trump, Bernie Marcus, the co-founder of Home Depot, provided support to Jill Stein, the Green candidate, according to people with knowledge of the strategy, who said the effort was done with the knowledge of some officials at the Trump campaign and its chairman at the time, Paul Manafort. (Mr. Manafort was subsequently convicted of eight counts in an unrelated financial fraud trial.)”

THE NEW HANGING CHAD … HOLLY OTTERBEIN in Philadelphia: “Pennsylvania election officials warn of 2000 Florida redux”: “‘Naked ballots’ are fast shaping up as 2020’s equivalent of hanging chads. After the state Supreme Court ruled Thursday that mail-in ballots sent without a proper envelope — known as naked ballots — cannot be counted, Pennsylvania election officials are sounding the alarm that upwards of 100,000 votes could be tossed out in November in this key battleground state.

“In 2016, Pennsylvania saw one of the closest finishes in the nation: Donald Trump defeated Hillary Clinton here by only 44,000 votes. Now, the prospect that more than twice that number of ballots might be disqualified is sending shudders through the Democratic establishment in a state where recent polls show Joe Biden’s lead is within single digits.” POLITICO

ESSENTIAL DAVE WEIGEL READING … WAPO: “The 50 political states of America”

WSJ: “Cindy McCain Formally Endorses Biden,” by Tarini Parti: “Cindy McCain, the wife of the late GOP Sen. John McCain of Arizona who was a frequent critic of President Trump, officially endorsed Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden Tuesday night.

“‘My husband John lived by a code: country first,’ Mrs. McCain said in a statement and in a series of tweets. ‘We are Republicans, yes, but Americans foremost. There’s only one candidate in this race who stands up for our values as a nation, and that is Joe Biden.’ Mrs. McCain added that although she and Mr. Biden didn’t always agree on issues, ‘he is a good and honest man. He will lead us with dignity.’”

NYT’S JONATHAN MARTIN interviewed MCCAIN: “Asked whether she had considered Mr. Trump’s reaction to her endorsement of Mr. Biden, Ms. McCain said she would just ‘laugh it off’ if the president attacked her in one of his ‘5 in the morning’ tweets. … Ms. McCain, asked whether she would support Ms. McSally, who has consistently trailed in the polls behind Mark Kelly, the Democratic challenger, flatly said no. ‘I have no interest in it,’ she said.”

— @jmartNYT: “The lineup of prominent Ariz Repubs poised to stand w @JoeBiden in the state: @cindymccain, @JeffFlake, Jim Kolbe, @GrantWoods. No other state has such big-name current and former Rs for Biden.”

AP’S WILL WEISSERT in Wilmington, Del.: “‘Bidin’ his time’: Joe Biden battles being chronically late”: “Joe Biden was running late. Again.

“On a recent Friday, he’d already apologized for the delayed start to a speech, then taken more questions than expected at a subsequent press conference. When it was finally over, Biden’s motorcade sped away quickly enough to leave behind one of the journalists traveling with it.

“But as the line of armored, black SUVs reached Biden’s home in suburban Wilmington, it suddenly reversed course and headed back out — this time to a nearby M&T bank branch. Biden’s next event was already supposed to be underway, a virtual fundraiser with National Democratic Finance Chair Chris Korge. Instead, he lingered at an ATM. The former vice president later told the donors gathered online that he was sorry to have been waylaid by a ‘significant press conference.’ He omitted the stop to withdraw pocket money.”

DEPT. OF MEASURING THE DRAPES? — “Left wing organizes to stop Biden from being Obama 2.0,” by Alex Thompson: “In 2008, the left wing of the Democratic Party felt shut out of the Obama transition effort. Amid an historic financial crisis, Barack Obama filled key jobs with holdovers of the moderate Clinton economic team like Larry Summers and Tim Geithner, who liberals felt were more focused on rescuing big banks than the people losing their homes.

“‘The progressive approach to the transition in 2008 was not organized,’ said Jeff Hauser, the director of The Revolving Door Project, which he founded in 2015 to dig deep on executive branch appointees in anticipation of the next Democratic administration. ‘It was a defeat.’ So for the last decade, Hauser and a small group of liberal activists have been quietly organizing in the wonky world of transition politics to prevent a repeat of 2008.

“Their goal in 2020: make a prospective Biden administration look more like a Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren administration. And they see an opportunity to get some of their agenda enacted through the 4,000-plus appointees Biden would need to pick should he win.” POLITICO

— ELENA SCHNEIDER: “The RNC is wiring cash to Texas. Is it a 2020 battleground?”

TRUMP’S WEDNESDAY — The president will deliver remarks to honor veterans of the Bay of Pigs at 11 a.m. in the East Room. Trump will participate in a discussion with state attorneys general about protecting consumers from social media abuses at 3 p.m. in the Cabinet Room.

ON THE TRAIL … BIDEN will travel to Charlotte, N.C. He will attend a Black economic summit in the afternoon.

PLAYBOOK READS

RUSSIA WATCH … NATASHA BERTRAND and DANIEL LIPPMAN: “CIA clamps down on flow of Russia intelligence to White House”: “The CIA has made it harder for intelligence about Russia to reach the White House, stoking fears among current and former officials that information is being suppressed to please a president known to erupt in anger whenever he is confronted with bad news about Moscow.

“Nine current and former officials said in interviews that CIA Director Gina Haspel has become extremely cautious about which, if any, Russia-related intelligence products make their way to President Donald Trump’s desk. Haspel also has been keeping a close eye on the agency’s fabled ‘Russia House,’ whose analysts she often disagrees with and sometimes accuses of purposefully misleading her.

“Last year, three of the people said, Haspel tasked the CIA’s general counsel, Courtney Elwood, with reviewing virtually every product that comes out of Russia House, which is home to analysts and targeters who are experts in Russia and the post-Soviet space, before it ‘goes downtown’ to the White House. One former CIA lawyer called it ‘unprecedented that a general counsel would be involved to this extent.’” POLITICO

AP/BERLIN: “Alexei Navalny released from German hospital after 32 days”

POLITICO’S THE FIFTY … BEYOND THE BELTWAY — “7 reasons Gavin Newsom has the worst job in politics,” by Jeremy White, Debra Kahn, and Alexander Nieves in Sacramento

FASCINATING FED READ … NYT’S JEANNA SMIALEK in Fredericksburg, Va., and EMILY COCHRANE: “Embattled Fed Nominee Celebrates Free Markets, but Not in Her Backyard”“Judy Shelton has spent her career pushing for free markets and criticizing the far-reaching power of the Federal Reserve — an institution she may join as a governor and could one day lead, given the right chain of events.

“Yet Ms. Shelton’s track record is packed with incongruities, ones that have raised eyebrows among Senate Republicans, imperiling her nomination to take one of seven seats on the Fed’s board in Washington. … Those inconsistencies extend to her private life, where she has failed to apply her public view that markets and businesses should operate unencumbered and free of government interference to her own backyard.

“Over the past several years, Ms. Shelton and her husband have gone to court to block mining projects near their home — a manor on a former plantation outside Fredericksburg, Va., that once served as the Confederate general Stonewall Jackson’s winter camp. While the would-be miners argued that their operations would be good for the local economy, the Sheltons and their neighbors seized on zoning rules to try to block them, arguing they would provide too little benefit to outweigh added truck traffic, lost property value, environmental damage and disruptions to the local peace.”

PLAYBOOKERS

Send tips to Eli Okun and Garrett Ross at politicoplaybook@politico.com.

TRANSITION — Harold Fox is joining Honigman as managing partner for the firm’s D.C. office. He previously was a partner at Steptoe & Johnson.

BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Julia Ainsley, NBC News correspondent. How she got started in journalism: “One summer in college, I wrote for the newsletter of a nonprofit that repairs homes for people in Appalachia. My job was simply to sit on the porch with these families, hear their stories and write about how they’d been helped by this organization. I’ll never forget that summer or the people I met. But I soon realized I wanted the bigger picture. I wanted to know about their education system, health care access, local economy, politics, not just about their leaky roof. That realization ultimately led me to interning at the Charlotte Observer my last year of college and then to Medill from there.” Playbook Q&A

BIRTHDAYS: Rep. Al Lawson (D-Fla.) is 72 … Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.) is 55 … Kristen Silverberg (h/t Dina Powell McCormick) … Elise Jordan (h/ts Ben Chang) … Todd Ricketts is 51 (h/t Brian Baker) … Helen Tolar, principal at Mehlman Castagnetti (h/t husband Mac) … Nick Everhart of Content Creative Media and Medium Buying … NYT’s Mike Schmidt … Richard Viguerie is 87 … POLITICO’s Bernie Becker and Emily Martin … Sean Spicer is 49 (h/t Katie Armstrong) … WaPo’s Meredith Kirsch … Ana Marie Cox … PwC’s Todd Metcalf … Amanda Cox … Tom Martin, president and CEO of the American Forest Foundation (h/t Jon Haber) … Abbey Watson … Darryl Nirenberg, partner at Steptoe (h/t Kathy King) … Ralph Hellmann is 59 … CNN producer Greg Wallace … Joshua Foer is 38 … David Harris, CEO of the American Jewish Committee, is 71 … Kelly Sackley … Kyle Wiley, senior adviser at DOE … Saunji Fyffe … Karen Czarnecki, VP of outreach for the Mercatus Center at George Mason … Serenety Hanley, social media director for 43 Alumni for Biden (h/t Kris Purcell) …

… former Rep. Jason Lewis (R-Minn.), who’s running for Senate, is 65 … Siraj Hashmi, commentary video editor and writer at the Washington Examiner … Brooke Brogan is 32 … Annie Hsu, senior producer for “Face the Nation” (h/t Hugo Rojo) … Naomi Seligman (h/t Tim Burger) … POLITICO Europe’s Santa Silapētere … Kyle Cotner … Jonathan Peled, acting director for the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs … SoRelle Wyckoff Gaynor … Mike Davis … Izabela Teixeira … Armaan Pai … Gabriella Schwarz … Kyle Inan … Julius Niyonsaba … Victoria Zarella … Lincoln Ferguson … James Howard Fitzgerald … Maura O’Brien … former U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay is 79 … Maria Karl … John Tamny is 51 (h/t Juleanna Glover) … Dan Conley … Ryan Shucard, VP of media relations at 720 Strategies … Ken Rynne … Blair Fowler … Dustee Tucker Jenkins … Matt McAlvanah … Corey Tellez … Loretta Solon Greene … Matt Hirsch … Neil Schoolnik is 49 … Thomas Daley … Katrina Mendiola … Stan Davis … Dale Leibach (h/ts Teresa Vilmain) … Cherie Blair

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American Minute with Bill Federer
“Whatever strikes at the root of Christianity, tends manifestly to the dissolution of civil government”-Justice James Kent
Chief Justice James Kent explained in People v. Ruggles, 1811, what made OATHS effective:
“In Taylor’s case … the court … said, that Christianity was parcel of the law, and to cast contumelious reproaches upon it, tended to weaken the foundation of moral obligation, and the efficacy (effectiveness) of OATHS.”
This view was held by President and Commander-in-Chief George Washington, who stated in his Farewell Address, September 19, 1796:
“Let it simply be asked where is the security for prosperity, for reputation, for life, if the sense of RELIGIOUS obligations desert the OATHS, which are the instruments of investigation in the Courts of Justice?”
Yet this is exactly what Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James announced September 17, 2014, that the U.S. Air Force OATH need no longer include the mention of GOD.
James Kent was appointed Chief Justice of the New York Supreme Court by New York Governor John Jay in 1804.
At that time in early U.S. history, the New York Supreme Court was more influential than the United States Supreme Court. This was due in part because New York City had been the capital of the United States from 1785 to 1790, and it was the largest city in the nation.
From 1793 to 1798, James Kent served as the first professor of law at Columbia College in New York, which was the oldest institution on higher learning in the state, being founded in 1754 as King’s College.
Kent is considered the premier jurist in the development of the legal practice in the United States, known for compiling Commentaries on American Law, 1826-1830.
Earlier in his career, 1796-1797, James Kent was as a member of New York’s Legislature where he opposed a regulation requiring African Americans own property before they could vote.
Kent was responsible for enunciating what would become the Cherokee doctrine, where American Indian peoples were considered sovereign nations.
After his death, James Kent was elected to the American Hall of Fame, 1900.
Named for him are:
  • Kent County, Michigan;
  • Kent City, Michigan;
  • Chicago-Kent College of Law;
  • Columbia Law School’s Kent Hall;
  • Chancellor Kent Professorship at Columbia Law School;
  • Chancellor Kent Professorship at Yale Law School.
A bronze statute of Chancellor James Kent is in the Library of Congress’ Main Reading Room in the Thomas Jefferson Building.
Chief Justice James Kent wrote in People v. Ruggles, 1811:
“In the case of Rex v. Woolston … the court said … whatever strikes at the root of Christianity, tends manifestly to the dissolution of civil government.
… The same doctrine was laid down in the late case of The King v. Williams …
The authorities show that blasphemy against God, and contumelious reproaches and profane ridicule of Christ or the Holy Scriptures … are offenses punishable at common law …
because it tends to corrupt the morals of the people, and to destroy good order … They are treated as affecting the essential interests of civil society …
… We stand equally in need, now as formerly, of all the moral discipline, and of those principles of virtue, which help to bind society together.
The people of this state, in common with the people of this country, profess the general doctrines of Christianity, as the rule of their faith and practice;
and to scandalize the author of these doctrines is not only, in a religious point of view, extremely impious, but, even in respect to the obligations due to society, is a gross violation of decency and good order …”
Chief Justice Kent continued:
“Nothing could be more offensive to the virtuous part of the community, or more injurious to the tender morals of the young, than to declare such profanity lawful.
To use the words of one of the greatest oracles of human wisdom (Lord Bacon), ‘profane scoffing doth by little and little deface the reverence for religion;’
and who adds, in another place, ‘two principal causes have I ever known of atheism — curious controversies and profane scoffing’ …
Things which corrupt moral sentiment, as obscene actions, prints and writings, and even gross instances of seduction, have, upon the same principle, been held indictable …
… The free, equal, and undisturbed, enjoyment of religious opinion … is granted … but to revile, with malicious and blasphemous contempt, the religion professed by almost the whole community, is an abuse of that right.
Nor are we bound … to punish indiscriminately the like attacks upon the religion of Mahomet or of the grand Lama … for this plain reason … that we are a Christian people, and the morality of the country is deeply ingrafted upon Christianity, and not upon the doctrines or worship of those impostors …”
Chief Justice Kent stated further:
“It is sufficient that the common law checks upon words and actions, dangerous to the public welfare … whose morals have been elevated and inspired with a more enlarged benevolence, by means of the Christian religion.
Though the constitution has discarded religious establishments, it does not forbid judicial cognizance of those offenses against religion and morality … punishable because they strike at the root of moral obligation, and weaken the security of the social ties …
… The (New York) Constitution … declaring that
‘the free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship, without discrimination or preference, should for ever thereafter be allowed within this state, to all mankind’ …
(was) never meant to withdraw religion in general, and with it the best sanctions of moral and social obligation from all consideration and notice of the law …
… To construe it as breaking down the common law barriers against licentious, wanton, and impious attacks upon Christianity itself, would be an enormous perversion of its meaning.
… The proviso guards the article from such dangerous latitude of construction, when it declares, the
‘the liberty of conscience hereby granted, shall not be so construed as to excuse ACTS OF LICENTIOUSNESS (sexual immorality) …'”
Chief Justice Kent added:
“Christianity, in its enlarged sense, as a religion revealed and taught in the Bible, is not unknown to our law.
… The statute for preventing immorality (Laws, vol. 1. 224. R. S. 675, s. 69, et seq.) consecrates the first day of the week, as holy time, and considers the violation of it as immoral.
This was only the continuation, in substance, of a law of the colony which declared, that the profanation of the Lord’s day was ‘the great scandal of the Christian faith.’
… The act concerning OATHS, (Laws, vol. 1. p. 405., 2 R. S. 407, s. 82) recognizes the common law mode of administering an OATH, ‘by laying the hand on and kissing the Gospels …'”
Chief Justice Kent concluded:
“Surely, then, we are bound to conclude, that wicked and malicious words, writings and actions which go to vilify those Gospels, continue, as at common law, to be an offense against the public peace and safety.
They are inconsistent with the reverence due to the administration of an OATH, and among their other evil consequences, they tend to lessen, in the public mind, its religious sanction.”
Addressing the topic of oaths, President Calvin Coolidge told the Holy Name Society in Washington, D.C., SEPTEMBER 21, 1924:
“More than six centuries ago … there was much ignorance, much wickedness…the common people appeared to be sunk in hopelessness …
The speech of men was too often profane and vulgar, until the earth rang with the tumult of those who took the name of the Lord in vain …
The foundation of this day was laid in the formation of the Holy Name Society …
It sought to rededicate the minds of the people to a true conception of the sacredness of the name of the Supreme Being.
It was an effort to save all reference to the Deity from curses and blasphemy, and to restore the lips of men to reverence and praise …”
In affirmation of Proverbs 9:10 “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, Coolidge continued:
“This is the beginning of a proper conception of ourselves, of our relationship to each other, and our relationship to our Creator. Human nature cannot develop very far without it.
The mind does not unfold, the creative faculty does not mature, the spirit does not expand, save under the influence of reverence …
It is only by a correct attitude of mind begun early in youth and carried through maturity that these desired results are likely to be secured.
It is along the path of reverence and obedience that the race has reached the goal of freedom, of self-government, of a higher morality, and a more abundant spiritual life …
He who gives license to his tongue only discloses the contents of his own mind.
By the excess of his words he proclaims his lack of discipline …”
Coolidge added:
“The worst evil that could be inflicted upon the youth of the land would be to leave them without restraint and completely at the mercy of their own uncontrolled inclinations.
Under such conditions education would be impossible, and all orderly development intellectually or morally would be hopeless.
I do not need to picture the result. We know too well what weakness and depravity follow when the ordinary processes of discipline are neglected …”
President Coolidge continued:
“The very first paragraph of the Declaration of Independence asserted that they proposed
‘to assume, among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature’s God entitle them.’
And as they closed that noble document … they again revealed what they believed to be the ultimate source of authority by stating that they were also ‘appealing to the Supreme Judge of the World for the rectitude of’ … their ‘intentions.’
… When finally our Constitution was adopted, it contained specific provision that the President and members of the Congress and of state legislatures, and all executive and judicial officials, should be qualified for the discharge of their office by OATH or affirmation.
By the statute law of the United States … such OATHS are administered by a solemn appeal to God for help in the keeping of their covenants …”
Coolidge added:
“I scarcely need to refer to the fact that the Houses of Congress, and so as I know the state legislatures, open their daily sessions with prayer.
The foundation of our independence and our Government rests upon basic religious convictions.
Back of the authority of our laws is the authority of the Supreme Judge of the World, to whom we still appeal for their final justification …”
Coolidge stated further:
“All liberty is individual liberty …
The principle of equality is recognized. It follows inevitably from belief in the brotherhood of man through the fatherhood of God.
When once the right of the individual to liberty and equality is admitted, there is no escape from the conclusion that he alone is entitled to the rewards of his own industry …”
President Coolidge concluded:
“It seems to me perfectly plain that the authority of law, the right to equality, liberty and property, under American institutions, have for their foundation reverence for God.
If we could imagine that to be swept away, these institutions of our American government could not long survive.”
Schedule Bill Federer for informative interviews & captivating PowerPoint presentations: 314-502-8924 wjfederer@gmail.com
American Minute is a registered trademark of William J. Federer. Permission is granted to forward, reprint, or duplicate, with acknowledgment.
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CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS

 

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“Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a worker who has no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth,” (2 Timothy‬ ‭2:15,‬ ‭ESV‬‬).

Targeted Christian Group at the University of Iowa Seeks Justice

By Shane Vander Hart on Sep 22, 2020 05:26 pm
University of Iowa officials back in court before the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals for targeting Business Leaders in Christ because of its religious beliefs.
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Dueling Ads Released in Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District

By Shane Vander Hart on Sep 22, 2020 01:21 pm
Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District race has three new ads, two released by Democrat incumbent Cindy Axne and one from Republican challenger David Young.
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CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS

 

CDN’s Daily News Blast delivers the day’s news first!
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CDN Daily News Blast

09/23/2020

Excerpts:

Rubio Says Schumer Threw ‘Temper Tantrum’ To Block Intel Briefing On Election Interference

By Chuck Ross –

Sen. Marco Rubio accused Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of throwing a “temper tantrum” on the Senate floor Tuesday by canceling an intelligence briefing on election interference because of a standoff over Republican efforts to vote on a Supreme Court justice. Rubio, the acting chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, noted that Schumer and other …

Rubio Says Schumer Threw ‘Temper Tantrum’ To Block Intel Briefing On Election Interference is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Analysis: Joe Biden Keeps Touting The Auto Bailout As A Success. Here’s The Full Story

By Thomas Catenacci –

Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has touted President Barack Obama’s orchestration of the auto bailout as a major success during his campaign, but some say that story is exaggerated. The Obama administration intervened in the bankruptcy proceedings of Chrysler and GM after the companies faced a major crisis during the Great Recession, but some experts …

Analysis: Joe Biden Keeps Touting The Auto Bailout As A Success. Here’s The Full Story is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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President Trump to Hold Campaign Rally in Florida, Thursday – 9/24/20

By R. Mitchell –

President Donald Trump travels to Jacksonville, Florida, Thursday to hold a Great American Comeback event at Cecil Airport. The doors open at 4:00 p.m. EDT and the president is scheduled to speak at 7:00 p.m. If you are local, you can get your tickets HERE, otherwise, we will post a live stream of the event …

President Trump to Hold Campaign Rally in Florida, Thursday – 9/24/20 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Wednesday, September 23, 2020

By R. Mitchell –

President Donald Trump will honor veterans of the Bay of Pigs Wednesday then discuss social media abuses with state attorneys general. Keep up with Trump on Our President’s Schedule Page. President Trump’s Itinerary for 9/23/20 – note: this  page will be updated during the day if events warrant Keep up with Trump on Our President’s …

President Donald Trump’s Schedule for Wednesday, September 23, 2020 is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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A.F. Branco Set to Release New Book: Keep America Laughing (at the left)

By A.F. Branco –

A.F. Branco’s NEW Coffee table book “Keep America Laughing (at the left). This is Volume 3 of Branco’s Comically Incorrect Cartoons. Set for release on October 25, 2020. See more Branco toons HERE

A.F. Branco Set to Release New Book: Keep America Laughing (at the left) is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Nearly 90% Of NYC Eateries, Bars Couldn’t Pay Last Month’s Rent Amid COVID Regulations

By Jake Dima –

Nearly 90% of restaurants and bars throughout New York City failed to pay their rent in full during August as a result of lost business due to strict coronavirus regulations, a Monday study found. Eighty-seven percent of eateries and bars in the city failed to cover their full rent in August, according to a NYC …

Nearly 90% Of NYC Eateries, Bars Couldn’t Pay Last Month’s Rent Amid COVID Regulations is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Joe Biden Won’t Release SCOTUS List Because ‘They Would Be Subject To Intense Criticism

By Mary Margaret Olohan –

Former vice president Joe Biden said Monday that he has not released his list of Supreme Court Justices yet because potential nominees would be “subject to intense criticism for a long time.” The 2020 presidential candidate discussed President Donald Trump’s pending announcement of his Supreme Court justice nominee to replace former Supreme Court Justice Ruth …

Joe Biden Won’t Release SCOTUS List Because ‘They Would Be Subject To Intense Criticism is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Sugarcane Jane Calls Out Leftist Violence in New Rock Video

By Hanna Heller –

American rock duo Sugarcane Jane just released a new song centered on the violence erupting in American cities. The rock ‘n roll pair features Neil Young guitarist Anthony Crawford and his wife, Savana. “Waking Up America,” from the couple’s new album Ruffled Feathers; Songs in the Key of Me was inspired by the riots in …

Sugarcane Jane Calls Out Leftist Violence in New Rock Video is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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EPA Chief Threatens To Move NYC Office If Cuomo, De Blasio Can’t ‘Maintain Order’

By Jake Dima –

The head of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) threatened to move the agency’s New York City office if elected officials will not control ongoing riots, according to the New York Post. Andrew Wheeler said New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio have failed to “maintain order” in a letter …

EPA Chief Threatens To Move NYC Office If Cuomo, De Blasio Can’t ‘Maintain Order’ is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Trump Slaps China Joe, Sets Date for SCOTUS Nomination at Dual Friendly Protest Rallies in Ohio

By Jim Clayton –

Since Labor Day two weeks ago President Trump has entertained over 117,000 supporters at his rallies and speeches. During the same period, former Obama Vice President Joe Biden has entertained less than 70 supporters at his events. On Tuesday Trump held two what he calls “friendly protests.” Friendly protest because, “You can’t go to church …

Trump Slaps China Joe, Sets Date for SCOTUS Nomination at Dual Friendly Protest Rallies in Ohio is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Maskless Flash Mob at Target!

By Karen Kataline –

How dare they? What evil people! No rioting, no looting, no burning and no assault. How dare they remove their own mask! They’re reminding people that they are Americans. Walking around with a rag on your face because you think some Leftist politician can force you, is NOT American. People have had the power all …

Maskless Flash Mob at Target! is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Union Members Are Supporting Donald Trump Despite Unions Endorsing Joe Biden

By Thomas Catenacci –

Rank-and-file union members in swing states have remained steadfast in their support for President Donald Trump, according to local labor leaders in key Midwestern states. Although almost every major union has endorsed Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden for president, they have been dismayed by their members’ support for Trump, Politico reported. Trump won many union …

Union Members Are Supporting Donald Trump Despite Unions Endorsing Joe Biden is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Betsy DeVos Reportedly Being Investigated For Possibly Violating Hatch Act In Fox Interview

By Mary Rose Corkery –

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos is reportedly under investigation for possibly violating the Hatch Act during an interview with Fox News, Politico reported Monday. The Office of Special Counsel (OSC) reportedly started the investigation after DeVos criticized former Vice President Joe Biden during the interview, according to Politico. An OSC Hatch act attorney told the executive …

Betsy DeVos Reportedly Being Investigated For Possibly Violating Hatch Act In Fox Interview is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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What Is A Color Revolution?

By Gina Marie –

It is hard to know what is fact and what is fiction these days. The media, all of the media, including local & national t.v. as well as Fox are controlled, biased, and provided with talking points to sell the American people on.  (There are a few exceptions of journalists on national Fox) So, what is …

What Is A Color Revolution? is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Your Mission Should You Choose To Accept It: Vote Red To Save The Republic – Senate Round-Up

By Bekah Lyons –

What is truly at stake this November? Forty-two days out, it is time all Americans examine this question. If President Trump wins a second term, but the House remains in the Democrats control and Republicans lose the US Senate – successful impeachment is a given. Under that same scenario with the variation that Republicans win …

Your Mission Should You Choose To Accept It: Vote Red To Save The Republic – Senate Round-Up is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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NYPD Releases Illegal Alien to Commit Crimes After Failing to Honor 10 ICE Detainers

By R. Mitchell –

NEW YORK – U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) lodged 10 immigration detainers during the past two years on an illegally present Dominican national after he was arrested on 10 separate occasions by the New York Police Department (NYPD). After each arrest, he was released into the community to reoffend with active immigration detainers in …

NYPD Releases Illegal Alien to Commit Crimes After Failing to Honor 10 ICE Detainers is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Public Schools Across Country Promote Black Lives Matter, Organize Protests

By Peter Hasson –

Public schools across America have endorsed the Black Lives Matter movement.  Black Lives Matter has been linked to 91% of riots across America over three months, one study found.  Buffalo Public Schools incorporated Black Lives Matter into its elementary school curriculum.  Some public schools organized their own Black Lives Matter protests and encouraged students to …

Public Schools Across Country Promote Black Lives Matter, Organize Protests is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

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Here Are 7 Things You Need To Know About Amy Coney Barrett

By Mary Margaret Olohan –

Judge Amy Coney Barrett is a Catholic mother of seven who tells her law students: “your fundamental purpose in life is not to be a lawyer, but to know, love and serve God.” President Donald Trump is reportedly considering Barrett to fill the Supreme Court vacancy left by the passing of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.  Abortion …

Here Are 7 Things You Need To Know About Amy Coney Barrett is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

President Trump Meets With Amy Coney Barrett Ahead Of SCOTUS Decision: Report |

By Mary Margaret Olohan –

President Donald Trump reportedly met with Amy Coney Barrett Monday at the White House, ahead of his expected announcement on who will fill the Supreme Court vacancy. Sources familiar with the meeting told multiple outlets, including Axios and USA Today, that the president met with Barrett Monday. Barrett was appointed to the 7th Circuit Court of …

President Trump Meets With Amy Coney Barrett Ahead Of SCOTUS Decision: Report | is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

Swindler’s List – A.F. Branco Cartoon

By A.F. Branco –

There is probably a good reason Biden hasn’t made public his list of Supreme Court justice nominees this close to the election. Political cartoon by A.F. Branco ©2020.

Swindler’s List – A.F. Branco Cartoon is original content from Conservative Daily News – Where Americans go for news, current events and commentary they can trust – Conservative News Website for U.S. News, Political Cartoons and more.

Read on »

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PJ MEDIA

The Morning Briefing: Kamala Harris Will Remind Everyone How Awful She Is During Confirmation Hearing

Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Pool via AP
Democrats May Regret Harris Being Back in the Confirmation Hearing Spotlight

Hump Day is here and we plod on into the end of the week as best we can. I’ll be plodding with a bit of whiskey. I hope you’re all having a wonderful start to your day, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends.

One big plot twist to this David Lynch movie that we’re calling 2020 is that the Democrats’ nominee for vice-president also sits on the Senate Judiciary Committee. Kamala Harris will have to take some time off of the strange, mostly virtual campaign trail that she and Grandpa Gropes have been on so she can attend to her day job. It’s not like Biden will be able to pick up the slack with Harris in Washington for several days.

We’re in campaign crunch time and the stakes have been raised since the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg last Friday. This is when candidates are wearing themselves out to make their cases. On Tuesday, Biden officially called it a day before noon for the second time in four days.

He’s gassed and there is more than a month to go. If Harris is pulled away from covering for this drooling idiot there’s a chance that the water-carrying press may not be able to gloss over his extended nap time.

Some on the Left think that the confirmation hearing could be a golden campaign opportunity for Kamala Harris.

Axios:

President Trump’s Supreme Court plans have created a major opportunity for Sen. Kamala Harris to go on offense, Axios’ Alexi McCammond reports.

Why it matters: A confirmation fight puts Harris back in the spotlight thanks to her role on the Senate Judiciary Committee.

  • Allies still point to her grilling Justice Brett Kavanaugh in 2018 (clips of which have racked up millions of views on YouTube) and they laugh at her “suggested … hinted … inferred?” exchange with Attorney General William Barr in May regarding the Mueller report.
  • These exchanges with Harris often go viral and they usually showcase a moment where she’s riffing or offering a snap reaction to the person she’s questioning.
  • Those are the electric moments that you can’t always learn during debate prep, and allies say they show that Harris is meticulous and skilled at the clapback — arguing both will serve her well in the Oct. 7 debate against VP Mike Pence.

I think there’s a lot of mental revisionist history going on there, unless what they are hoping for is that Harris gets another opportunity to remind everyone what shrill shrew she is.

As we have noted many times before, Kamala Harris is so off-putting that her own party decided that she was the first of the “top tier” candidates in the Democratic primary race who needed to go. Increased exposure to the public doesn’t really go well for Harris.

Harris
 (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Since it’s a given that President Trump is going to nominate a woman, Harris’s Kavanaugh antics almost certainly won’t play as favorably as the Axios writer thinks.

If, as noted in yesterday’s Morning Briefing, Amy Coney Barrett or Barbara Lagoa are nominated, Harris may be exposed for the anti-Catholic bigot that she is:

In 2018, Kamala Harris suggested that Judge Brian Buescher was unfit to serve on the bench because he is a member of the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic fraternal organization and charitable group with millions of members.

“Since 1993, you have been a member of the Knights of Columbus, an all-male society comprised primarily of Catholic men,” Harris began. “In 2016, Carl Anderson, leader of the Knights of Columbus, described abortion as ‘a legal regime that has resulted in more than 40 million deaths.’ Mr. Anderson went on to say that ‘abortion is the killing of the innocent on a massive scale.’ Were you aware that the Knights of Columbus opposed a woman’s right to choose when you joined the organization?”

A Catholic organization opposing abortion? Who knew?

The optics of Harris teeing off on a Roman Catholic mother with a shrieking progressive “Gender traitor” rant won’t really help Team Harris-Biden win over any hearts and minds in swing states where the polls are tight.

It really doesn’t matter that the people who were already going to vote for the Democrat Trojan Horse ticket will be thrilled with whatever Harris does during the hearing. The people she needs to reach will see her for what she is.

And that’s terribly unpleasant.

Enjoy Your New Insurance Premium, Psycho

 

Oh No, Burn It Down Boy Is Back

 

If They’re So Desperate for $$$ Maybe They Should Start Serving Alcohol In the Main Cabin Again

 

PJM Linktank

CNN: Yeah, McConnell Is About to Go 3-0 With Trump SCOTUS Picks

Trump’s Middle East Peace Deals Continue to Pay Dividends

And I will. Chuck Schumer Gets Heckled and Doesn’t Enjoy It. But You Can.

Biden will be missing come debate day. We Now Know the Topics for the First Trump-Biden Debate, But a Few Things Are Missing

LA County Rushes to Slap Hefty Fines on John MacArthur for Going to Church Amid Lockdown

War for the White House #11: War for the Supreme Court Edition

A Mob Hunts Down Judiciary Chair Senator Lindsey Graham Over RBG. He Deftly Flips It On Them

Treacher: Alyssa ‘#DefundThePolice’ Milano Calls the Cops

The New York Times Just Gave Definitive Proof the ‘1619 Project’ Is a Fraud

This should go swimmingly…Seattle to Pay Ex-Pimp $150,000 to Come Up With ‘Alternatives to Policing’

Oh. Don Lemon: Democrats Should ‘Blow Up the Entire System’ if Trump Confirms a Justice

Treacher, the Sequel: No, Amy Coney Barrett Doesn’t Belong to a Catholic Group That Inspired ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’

Chicago Postal Workers Threaten Strike After Several Mail Carriers Shot

Here’s Why Justice Ginsburg Is Being Laid to Rest at a Military Cemetery

Democrat Senate Candidate Called Police Gangsters, Thugs, Bullies, a ‘Danger’ to Children

Here’s What You Need to Understand About That Amish Trump Parade in Ohio

This Obama-Biden Administration Failure Killed More Americans (and Veterans!) Than COVID-19

Support For Trump Among Rank-and-File Union Members Remains Strong

Wisconsin Judge Rules Absentee Ballots Can Be Counted Up to Six Days After Election

His brain cells. What Is He Hiding? Biden Says ‘I’m Not Going to Answer’ Whether He’d Pack the Supreme Court

Trump Introduced Pro-Masking GOP Gov. Mike DeWine at His Ohio Rally and It Did Not Go Well. At All.

Harry Potter and the Transphobic Author

VIP

The Kruiser Kabana Episode 69: I Hate the Fall and Granny Boxwine Is Drunk

No, Rush Limbaugh, We Do Need a Hearing for Trump’s Supreme Court Pick. Here’s Why.

VIP Gold

Schlichter: Democrats Need Practice Making Threats

Even In D.C. More Residents Are Embracing Their 2A Rights

Shove It, Democrats. Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Seat Is Ours…And There’s Nothing You Can Do About It

From the Mothership and Beyond

The ‘Trump train’: ‘I’m tired of people putting down our president’

Two Co-Hosts from ‘The View’ Admit Political Defeat

Why CPAC Chair Matt Schlapp Says ‘Being a Republican Is Going to Be Illegal Soon’

WATCH: Even Michigan Teamsters Are Showing Up to Support the President

Pence Says Trump Is Planning Executive Action to Protect Pre-Existing Conditions

BREAKING: House Passes a Bipartisan Stopgap Bill to Prevent a Government Shutdown

Exclusive: Sen. Loeffler Introduces Legislation Further Protecting Women’s Sports Under Title IX

Ellen Addresses Toxic Work Environment in First Monologue of New Season

I don’t believe the wish ever happened. McConnell Reacts to Reporter’s Suggestion He Listen to RBG’s ‘Dying Wish’

Musk: Cheaper Tesla ready ‘in about three years’

Albuquerque City Council Shoots Down Gun Control Bills

Employee Of Philly Violence Prevention Program Busted For Carrying Gun

Dem Lawmaker Smears Bar Owner Who Committed Suicide

The medieval carpentry techniques used in Notre Dame cathedral rebuild

April Ryan Fangirls Kamala Over Her Spot On Ticket: “It Sends Chills Through Me” 

Polls: Biden Still Underperforming With Hispanic Voters Nationally And In Miami-Dade County

Today Is ‘Battery Day’ At Tesla And The Company Is Expected To Announce Some Impressive New Tech (Update)

Old TV set interfered with village’s DSL Internet each day for 18 months

Good. Time to start treating the lawbreakers like the scum that they are: Florida Governor Ron DeSantis Just Made Mobbing Motorists a Dangerous Affair

Company Gives Up Its NBA Suite, Fires Off Letter to Franchise Owner Over the Ruining of Sports

Kayleigh McEnany Tears Into Pelosi, AOC, and Schumer Over ‘Impeachment’ Talk, Schools Them on the Constitution

Look At How Democratic Officials Are Misusing Federal Coronavirus Aid

NYT Discovered Protesters/Antifa Are Harassing Residential Neighborhoods, Even Threatening to Burn Down Couple’s Home

Shocking: Hollywood’s Elite Revolt Against an Aristocratic School’s Woke Revolution

Atlanta Fed Forecasts a Thirty Two Percent Growth Rate in the Third Quarter, with the GDP Numbers to be Released Right Before the Election, October 29

American Sign Language Bible now complete after 39 years

Florida sheriff breaks out photos to educate the press on peaceful protests vs. riots and looting 

‘Pay your staffers, dirtbag’: Evan McMullin’s big bad dunk on Trump over filling RBG’s seat backfires spectacularly

#EnemyOfThePeople Update: So very BUSTED! ABC News masqueraded anti-Trump activists as ‘uncommitted voters’ at Trump’s Town Hall

Ben Shapiro has a field day with grownup version of Woke Toddler who’s putting Principles First™ by voting for Joe Biden

We SEE YOU! Twitter caught censoring Tucker Carlson’s expose on Soros funding anti-police prosecutors as ‘sensitive content’

As Joe Rogan’s Platform Grows, So Does the Media and Liberal Backlash. Why?

BINGO. Feehery: Trump landslide is only way to save the republic as we know it

The Newest Addition to Denmark’s Happiness Museum: Tomato Seeds

Bee Me

 

The Kruiser Kabana

 

OK, this clip from Bad Lip Reading really isn’t that different from reality when it comes to Biden.

I’ve been asked to be a body double on Dancing With the Stars.

___

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PJ Media Senior Columnist and Associate Editor Stephen Kruiser is the author of “Don’t Let the Hippies Shower” and “Straight Outta Feelings: Political Zen in the Age of Outrage,” both of which address serious subjects in a humorous way. Monday through Friday he edits PJ Media’s “Morning Briefing.” His columns appear twice a week.


WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER

 

Cut to the News
Cut through the clutter to today’s top news
September 23, 2020
Good morning
Welcome to today’s top news.
Leading the News . . . 
Trump bans federal contractors from performing “critical race theory” training . . . President Trump signed an executive order Tuesday barring federal funds from any contractors who conduct critical race theory diversity training, saying it promotes a “destructive ideology.” Expanding on action the White House took earlier this month with federal agencies, the president said the administration won’t allow “race or sex stereotyping or scapegoating in the federal workforce” and won’t permit contractors “to inculcate such views in their employees.” The president said: “Research also suggests that blame-focused diversity training reinforces biases and decreases opportunities for minorities.” Washington Times
Unfortunately, Trump is one of the few conservative leaders with the guts to actually do something about the spread of identity politics in the U.S. Such leftist theories only hurt the people they are meant to help by dividing – and destroying – the country. He will be accused of opposing “diversity” training. But he doesn’t care, while so many other Republicans are fearful they’ll get tagged as racist.
Coronavirus
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Health regulators to require strict review for Covid-10 vaccine . . . U.S. health regulators have drafted guidelines that would require a Covid-19 vaccine to meet rigorous standards to gain a speedy clearance for use, according to people familiar with the matter, an effort to ensure the shots work safely before they are widely distributed. Among the proposed requirements is that a coronavirus shot reduce the rate of infections by 50% compared with a placebo, which the regulators have already required for a regular approval of any Covid-19 vaccines. The regulators’ plans have been caught up in partisan fighting over the safety and timing of a Covid-19 vaccine, and they are unfolding amid concerns the Trump administration is putting politics ahead of science while interfering in the decisions of federal health agencies. Wall Street Journal
Deaths pass 200,000 but daily toll declines . . . More than 200,000 Americans have now died from COVID-19 – a bleak milestone reached on Tuesday that comes even as the national death rate continues to decline. The number of Americans dying from coronavirus per day, based on a weekly average, is now at just over 760. It is down from the peak 2,000 deaths being reported per day back in April. Daily Mail
Halloween is canceled . . . The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has released guidelines for Americans celebrating Halloween during the coronavirus pandemic. In the recommendations published on Monday, the CDC advised against trick-or-treating, attending a costume party or going to an indoor haunted house. ‘Many traditional Halloween activities can be high-risk for spreading viruses,’ a statement on the website reads. Daily Mail
Politics                       
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Matt Gaetz says Bloomberg bribery probe may be underway . . . House Judiciary Committee member Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., told “Hannity” Tuesday that he has spoken with Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody about potentially launching a bribery investigation into former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg. Bloomberg has reportedly raised more than $16 million for the Florida Rights Restoration Coalition. Under the Florida state constitution, convicted felons can regain their voting rights after having served their time. However, a law enacted by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis states that felons must pay all fines, restitution, and other legal financial obligations before their sentences could be considered fully served. Under Florida law, “it’s a third-degree felony for someone to either directly or indirectly provide something of value to impact whether or not someone votes,” Gaetz explained. Fox News
Trump mocks Biden for wearing face masks after alleged plastic surgery . . . President Trump on Tuesday mocked Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden for allegedly getting plastic surgery — and then covering it up with a mask. “I mean, honestly, what the hell did he spend all that money on the plastic surgery [for] if he is going to cover it up?” Trump jeered at a campaign rally in Pittsburgh. “Seriously — the whole deal!” he said of Biden’s alleged makeover. New York Post
Watchdog finds 350,000 dead registered voters . . . An election watchdog has found that there may be as many as 350,000 dead individuals on voter rolls across 42 states. The Public Interest Legal Foundation, an Indiana-based election integrity group, conducted a nationwide study to identify the hundreds of thousands of deceased individuals on voter rolls. During its analysis, the group also found that nearly 40,000 likely duplicate registrants “appear to have cast second votes in 2018 from the same address.” Washington Free Beacon
I’m a little concerned about this dead voter suppression thing. They have enough problems.
First presidential debate will cover coronavirus and Supreme Court . . . President Trump and Democratic nominee Joe Biden will face questions about the novel coronavirus, the Supreme Court and their respective records in elected office when they meet for the first 2020 presidential debate next week. Fox News anchor Chris Wallace, the moderator of the first debate, announced the list of topics on Tuesday. The debate will also cover the economy, race and violence in U.S. cities, and the integrity of the election, according to Wallace. The Hill 
Biden refuses to take a position on packing the Court . . . Biden is refusing to say whether he supports packing the Supreme Court, labeling the question a distraction, even though adding more justices has emerged as a top item on his liberal base’s wish list. The former vice president explicitly refused to take a position this week. He called it “a legitimate question” but said giving an answer would hurt his ability to complain about President Trump’s attempt to speed a nominee to the high court. Washington Times
He refuses to campaign, and he refuses to take positions. But he won’t refuse the presidency.
Cindy McCain endorses Biden . . . Praising Joe Biden as a longtime family friend and an ally to military families like hers, Cindy McCain, the woman Republicans wanted to make first lady in 2008, is endorsing the Democratic presidential nominee. McCain on Tuesday avoided directly criticizing President Donald Trump, who had a stormy rivalry with her husband, the late Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., that lingered even after his death in 2018. USA Today
I mean, of course.
House passes bill funding government until December 11 . . . The House Tuesday passed a stopgap spending bill that will keep the government funded through Dec. 11 after working out a deal with Republicans on agriculture aid and food stamps. The measure now heads to the Senate, where it is expected to pass this week. The year’s funding expires on Sept. 30, and the emergency bill is needed to keep government departments and agencies running “on autopilot” at 2020 funding levels while lawmakers work out a yearlong deal. Washington Examiner
Pence plane forced to return to airport after striking bird . . . Vice President Mike Pence’s plane was forced to return to a New Hampshire airport on Tuesday night soon after takeoff because it struck a bird, the White House said. Pence was on his way back to Washington, DC, after campaigning at an airport hangar in Gilford, New Hampshire, earlier in the day. The vice president and others aboard were in no danger after the bird strike. New York Post
National Security     
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Philippines President Duterte moves closer to US amid China threat . . . After years of shifting the Philippines closer to China, President Rodrigo Duterte appears to be leaning back toward the U.S. The 75-year-old leader on Tuesday gave his most forceful defense yet of the Permanent Court of Arbitration’s 2016 ruling in favor of the Philippines that said Beijing’s expansive territorial claims in the South China Sea breached international law. Addressing the United Nations General Assembly, Duterte said the decision “is now part of international law, beyond compromise and beyond the reach of passing governments to dilute, diminish or abandon.” Bloomberg
International                
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Kremlin critic Navalny discharged fro hospital . . . Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny made his first public appearance on Wednesday after being discharged from a Berlin hospital where Germany said he was being treated for poisoning by a potentially deadly nerve agent. Navalny was flown from Russia to Berlin last month after falling ill on a domestic flight in Siberia. The West has demanded an explanation from the Kremlin, which has denied any involvement in the incident and said it has yet to see evidence of a crime. Reuters

Money                           
Image
Tesla value plunges $50B after battery delay . . . Investors slashed $50 billion from Tesla’s market value on Tuesday despite Elon Musk’s promise to cut electric costs so radically that a $25,000 self-driving electric car will be possible – but not for at least three years.  Musk shared that the firm is currently producing the cell, dubbed 4680, at its pilot Fremont gigafactory that will reduce cost and lower the sales price of its electric vehicles closer to gasoline-powered cars. Daily Mail
Wells Fargo CEO under first for saying there are not enough qualified minorities . . . Wells Fargo & Co.’s top executive created a firestorm on social media over comments that the bank has had trouble meeting its diversity goals because there isn’t enough minority talent. Charles Scharf exasperated some Black employees this summer when he made the comments in a virtual meeting. “While it might sound like an excuse, the unfortunate reality is that there is a very limited pool of black talent to recruit from,” Scharf added. Bloomberg
Uncle Ben is canceled . . . The Uncle Ben’s rice brand is getting a new name: Ben’s Original. Parent firm Mars Inc. unveiled the change Wednesday for the 70-year-old brand, the latest company to drop a logo criticized as a racial stereotype. Packaging with the new name will hit stores next year. Fox Business
You should also know 
Image
Seattle pays former pimp $150K to work as “street czar” . . . A pimp turned activist who once vowed to ‘go to war’ with Seattle is being paid $150,000 by the city to work as a ‘street czar’ and come up with ‘alternatives to policing’ because he said he can talk to ‘gang members, pimps and prostitutes who won’t sit down with anybody else’. Andrè Taylor, who set up nonprofit Not This Time after his brother Che Taylor was shot dead by Seattle cops in 2016, signed a deal with the city on July 27 to work as its community liaison. Daily Mail
As they say, you can’t make this up.
Ann Arbor decriminalizes psychedelics . . . The Ann Arbor, Mich., City Council unanimously voted this week to essentially decriminalize a wide range of psychedelic drugs, including psilocybin mushrooms, mescaline, and ayahuasca. Much of the resolution is framed around the potential for psychedelic plants to treat disorders such as “substance abuse, addiction, recidivism, trauma, post-traumatic stress symptoms, chronic depression, severe anxiety, end-of-life anxiety, grief, cluster headaches, and other debilitating conditions.” Fox News
Okay. I’ve heard cocaine helps with depression.
Convicted NYPD cop killer to be released . . . The last of three convicted Black Revolutionary Army members behind bars for murdering two NYPD cops nearly 50 years ago is set to be freed on parole in October, police union officials said Tuesday. Anthony Bottom, who has spent more than 43 years in prison for his role in the assassinations of Officers Joseph Piagentini and Waverly Jones in 1971, will be sprung by Oct. 20, a source told WPIX-TV. The board’s decision infuriated Piagentini’s widow, Diane Piagentini. Fox News
RBG returns to the Court for the last time . . . The casket of the 87-year-old justice was to be escorted up the stairs to the Supreme Court’s Great Hall, just outside the courtroom – its entrance draped in black – where she served for 27 years. After a brief ceremony, it will be returned to the front portico of the court for two days of public viewing, with appropriate social distancing to guard against the coronavirus pandemic that has claimed more than 200,000 lives. USA Today
Guilty Pleasures        
Image
Defund the Police activist Alyssa Milano calls 911, gets massive police response . . .  Actress and ‘Defund the police’ activist Alyssa Milano was quick to call cops when she believed an armed gunman was on her Bell Canyon property on Sunday morning. The call ignited a response that included seven Ventura County Sheriffs’ vehicles, one K-9 unit, a police helicopter and one Los Angeles Fire Department team that sat down the street on standby. ‘It turned out it was a neighborhood teen with an air gun shooting at squirrels,’ a resident said. Daily Mail
Sex improves chances of heart attack survival over following two decades . . . It’s been portrayed in movies as a way of triggering a heart attack. But experts now say lovemaking can actually boost the chances of survival. The 2003 Jack Nicholson film Something’s Gotta Give showed his music mogul character rushed to hospital after suffering an attack as he began to make love. However, a study has found having an active sex life in the months after a heart attack is linked with a 35 per cent lower risk of death over the next two decades. Daily Mail
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Keith Koffler
Editor, White House Dossier and Cut to the News
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THE DISPATCH

The Morning Dispatch: How Democrats Could Shake Up the Senate If They Win

A brief history of court packing and the filibuster.

Happy Wednesday! We’ve got a special bonus Dispatch Live on tap tonight. Our Advisory Opinions team will be answering your questions about the coming Supreme Court confirmation battle, and Sarah Isgur will talk to David French about his new book. The only catch? You have to be a Dispatch member. But check out details about the event here, and check out our 30-day free trial on annual memberships here.

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Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The United States confirmed 60,864 new cases of COVID-19 yesterday per the Johns Hopkins University COVID-19 Dashboard, with 7.8 percent of the 771,155 tests reported coming back positive. An additional 912 deaths were attributed to the virus on Tuesday, bringing the pandemic’s American death toll to 200,724.

  • Sen. Mitt Romney announced yesterday he intends to “follow the Constitution and precedent” and vote on President Trump’s coming Supreme Court nominee “based upon their qualifications.” His support for moving forward with the process increases the likelihood that President Trump’s nominee—set to be announced Saturday evening—will be confirmed to the court.
  • Slightly more than a week away from a potential government shutdown, the House approved a bipartisan short-term spending bill negotiated by Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin that will fund the government through December 11. President Trump is expected to sign the bill into law once it passes the Senate.
  • The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ordered state election officials on Thursday to throw out “naked ballots” received by the election deadline, meaning any ballot not encased by the requisite “secrecy envelope” will automatically be invalidated. Lisa Deeley, the Democratic chair of the Philadelphia city commissioners, warned that the court’s ruling may require election officials to throw out more than 100,000 ballots, causing “significant postelection legal controversy, the likes of which we have not seen since Florida in 2000.”
  • The GOP plans to challenge the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s September 17 extension of the state’s mail in voting deadline, marking the first case the Supreme Court will likely hear in a post-Ruth Bader Ginsburg court. The Republican party of Pennsylvania filed court documents Monday night and Tuesday morning, setting the stage for a bitter election fight in the battleground state that Trump won by 44,000 votes in 2016.

The Norms, They Are A Changin’

When Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell made clear on Friday Republicans would be moving ahead with filling the Supreme Court vacancy left by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death, Democrats were—predictably—furious. “McConnell is cementing a shameful legacy of brazen hypocrisy,” Sen. Bernie Sanders said. Sen. Martin Heinrich called Republicans confirming a new justice “hypocrisy at its worst” and “a grave injustice to the American people.”

Minority Leader Chuck Schumer escalated the rhetoric on a Democratic caucus call the following day. “Let me be clear,” he said. “If Leader McConnell and Senate Republicans move forward with this, then nothing is off the table for next year.”

Well, by all accounts, Leader McConnell and Senate Republicans are moving forward with this, so it’s worth taking a look at the procedural maneuvers Schumer says are now on the table if Democrats reclaim the Senate in November. Neither are entirely without precedent, but both would usher in dramatic—and perhaps irreversible—change to our political system.

Packing them in.

The most direct path to vengeance for Democrats would be to pack the Supreme Court. Proposals that would do so have thus far taken two basic tacks: Ostensibly nonpartisan reform or straightforward score-settling in response to “stolen” seats of Justice Gorsuch and whoever replaces Justice Ginsberg. The plan Pete Buttigieg ran on in the Democratic primary, for example, falls into the former camp. He would expand the court from nine members to 15, with five associated with the Republican Party, five associated with the Democratic Party, and the remaining five having to be chosen unanimously by the first 10. New York Times columnist Jamelle Bouie, by contrast, has argued for a more straightforward, “eye-for-an-eye” approach. “Add two additional seats to account for the extraordinary circumstances surrounding the Gorsuch and Kavanaugh nominations,” he wrote in 2019.

“Court packing,” the colloquialism for Congress using its (yes, entirely constitutional) power to add seats to the Supreme Court, isn’t new to U.S. politics. Congress has intervened to add—and subtract—justices under partisan conditions several times in American history. But the Supreme Court has stood at nine justices since 1870.

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Worth Your Time

  • Does the debt matter? According to Peter Wehner and Ian Tufts, neither party seems to think so. For decades, both Republicans and Democrats have piled trillions of dollars onto our national debt with little regard for how such fiscal irresponsibility will affect future generations. In National Affairs this week, Wehner and Tufts endeavor a solution out of this fiscal crisis we’ve found ourselves in: “Everything needs to be on the table — entitlement reforms, a restructuring of the tax code (including tax increases), changes to the federal budget process, etc. — to ensure that the United States can gradually bring the public debt down to more sustainable and safer levels.”
  • The U.S. coronavirus death toll officially surpassed 200,000 people this week, and the elderly accounted for the vast majority of those deaths. Research shows that “globally, people don’t value elderly lives as much as they do young people’s,” Olga Khazan writes in a piece for The Atlantic, citing a giant trolley problem-esque psychology study called the Moral Machine game. “When it comes to deciding who lives or dies, there’s a disregard for the elderly, even among the elderly.” This trend, Khazan argues, has made it far easier for the public to grow numb to the staggering loss of life we as a society have experienced these past six months.
  • Joe Rogan has one of the largest political followings in the country, with Spotify reportedly paying $100 million in May for the exclusive rights to broadcast his show. Rogan brands himself as a moderate liberal, but earlier this year he faced a tidal wave of backlash from Democratic elites after Bernie Sanders publicly acknowledged Rogan’s quasi-endorsement of his candidacy. “The argument was that Rogan’s views are so repellent, bigoted, and anathema to liberalism that no Democratic candidate should be associated with him,” explains Glenn Greenwald in The Intercept, citing Rogan’s history of questioning the modern trans-activist movement on his show. “If the standard is that anyone who even entertains debates over the maximalist and most controversial questions in this very new and evolving social movement is to be cast out as radioactive, liberalism and the Democratic Party will be a very small group.”

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Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • It’s become trendy on the American populist left and the nationalist right to blame the country’s problems on the alleged domination of libertarian elites in Washington. In his latest Capitolismnewsletter, Scott Lincicome argues this claim is utter nonsense—and he has a zillion charts to prove it. From trade policy to the administrative state, “our current, mishmash system reflects the divided and often frustrating mix of views and procedures that is the United States.” This reality, Lincicome argues “is far more complicated (and boring) than the populist caricature, and it certainly doesn’t lend itself to easy solutions like purging Friedmanesque ideologues from the government.”
  • Over at the site today, Andrew has a piece breaking down the CDC’s recent head-scratching decision to publish new guidance calling the coronavirus an “airborne disease” spread via aerosols—and then to walk that guidance back, claiming it was published in error.
  • Also on the site today, Gregg T. Nunziata provides a brief history lesson and tutorial on the Senate confirmation process for Supreme Court justices. Did you know that on a few occasions in the past, the Senate confirmed the president’s nominee in an afternoon?
  • The SCOTUS wars are back in session and hypocrisy abounds on the political left and right. In yesterday’s French Press (🔒),David walks readers through the history and political norms surrounding election year Supreme Court nominations. “The decision to turn on a dime and reject clearly stated political principles when a presidential election is so close that voting is actually underway represents an escalation of the SCOTUS wars,” he writes. To save our country from irreparable political enmity, David argues Trump should make his pick and the Senate should wait to confirm until after the election. “If Trump wins, they confirm the pick. If Trump loses, they also confirm the pick unless key Democrats (including Joe Biden) pledge not to pack the court.”
  • David is back on The Remnant again, but this time as a guest, not a guest host! He and Jonah discuss his new book, Divided We Fall, and how we can knit together our social fabric back again. Don’t worry, they talk TenetThe Boys, and Dune, too.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Audrey Fahlberg (@FahlOutBerg), James P. Sutton (@jamespsuttonsf), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

Photograph by Alex Wong/Getty Images.


LEGAL INSURRECTION

Share This

Prof Suggests Trump Supporters Who Refuse to Wear Masks Are White Supremacists

Online Student Suspended Indefinitely From NYU for Attending Party

UC-Riverside Profs Unhappy With Kamala Harris as Choice of Biden Running Mate

 

  • William Jacobson: “We didn’t set out to find cancel culture, it found us, and that experience has shaped so much of what will do in the future.”
  • Kemberlee Kaye: “‘Don’t miss out on our next (and last before the election) virtual event! Registration is free!”
  • Mary Chastain: “TDS is real.”
  • Leslie Eastman: “When I saw how nasty several of the participants were to President Donald Trump during ABC town hall, I predicted research would uncover #NeverTrumpers and potential Democrat activists.  Turns out I was right!”
  • Stacey Matthews: “ESPN “First Take” co-host Max Kellerman joined media gaslighters across America this week by declaring, without evidence, that ‘extremist right-wing agitators’ are responsible for ‘a big percentage’ of the Antifa/BLM-led violent riots that have been happening in Democrat-run cities since George Floyd’s death.”
  • Vijeta Uniyal: “Less than a week after the signing of the Israel-Arab peace accords, Bahrain has reported a foiled Iranian terrorist plot against diplomats and foreign nationals on its soil. Several suspects have been rounded up for planning attacks backed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Bahrain’s Interior Ministry confirmed.”
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Wednesday, September 23, 2020

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Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2020

Do you talk race with your children? You’re not alone

Should teachers or firefighters get a vaccine first? 

Utah billionaire exits electric truck company under fire

Surprise! Families have grown stronger during COVID-19, not weaker

Pope offers high praise for BYU’s newcomers like Haarms, George, Lohner

American couples in 2020: More political talk, less sex

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THE FEDERALIST

Your daily update of new content from The Federalist
Be lovers of freedom and anxious for the fray
09/23/2020
Both Are In The Same Church, But Media Love Joe Biden’s Faith And Hate Amy Coney Barrett’s
Elle Reynolds
Biden’s faith has been celebrated, but potential SCOTUS nominee Amy Coney Barrett is already facing questions and criticism about her faith in the exact same religion.
Their Brutal Kavanaugh Smear Operation Disqualifies Democrats’ Demands About Next Nominee
Margot Cleveland
Media and Democrats’ decision in 2016 to collude with the criminally minded has rendered today’s discussion of power plays meaningless.
Democrats’ Arguments For Confirming Merrick Garland In 2016 Support Confirming Trump’s Nominee Now
Thomas Jipping
Democrats have advocated different sets of rules for handling nominations of Democrat and Republican presidents, and therefore, their lectures about what to do now are not exactly credible.
Shattered Norms Started With Democrats’ Fanatical Devotion To Roe v. Wade
Nathanael Blake
Continued escalation of the judicial wars will not end until Roe is overturned and abortion policy is handed back to the people and their representatives.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg Enabled An Atrocity Equal To Slavery, And Andrew Cuomo Wants To Build Her A Statue
Cheryl Magness
It’s possible to esteem and appreciate the contributions of those who don’t share all our values or adhere perfectly to our own standards of morality.
After Bishop Knelt To Black Lives Matter, A Vandal Decapitated A Statue Of Jesus In His Church
Carina Benton
Bishops must take a stand, not a knee, and unanimously condemn the attacks against Christianity, and the Marxist, anti-Catholic vitriol that Black Lives Matter has been relying on to foment this seething hatred.
Senate Report Accuses Hunter Biden Of Paying For Hookers Who May Have Been Trafficked
Tristan Justice
This is not the first time Hunter Biden’s infidelity has promised headaches for his father’s 2020 presidential campaign.
DC’s New Eisenhower Memorial Looks Like A Careless Politburo Designed It
William Newton
The fact that the Eisenhower memorial fails to inspire either admiration or ire raises the question of what was the point in having North America’s most prominent ‘starchitect’ involved.
Senate Report: Burisma Bribed Officials To Shut Down Investigation 7 Months After Hunter Biden Joined Board
Tristan Justice
Hunter Biden joined the firm and raked in excess compensation despite no prior experience in the industry just weeks after his business partner met with Joe Biden at the White House.
Senate Report: Hunter Biden’s Chinese Payments Raise Criminal Concerns, Extend To James Biden
Tristan Justice
Senate investigators released an earth-shattering report Wednesday outlining a long list of the Biden family’s conflicts of interest conducting shady business activity with foreign adversaries.
The History Of Contentious SCOTUS Fights And How A New Justice Transforms The Court
Ilya Shapiro is a senior fellow in constitutional studies at the Cato Institute, and author of the…
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Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Except it’s less hilarious and more disturbing in real life.  Read more…


The Clinton blame game – the next generation
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Like mother, like daughter.  Read more…


Trump strikes a second, massive blow against Critical Race theory
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Those who want federal money must immediately stop promoting anti-white racism.  Read more…


What happened to Kyle Rittenhouse that night in Kenosha?
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
A politicized prosecutor has charged Kyle Rittenhouse with intentional and reckless homicide, but can he make that case?  Read more…


At one New Jersey synagogue, God had to make way for Ginsburg
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
For leftist Jews, the Torah and ancient prayers are an afterthought.  Read more…


Pittsburgh boilermakers union endorses President Trump
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
“Joe Biden is a disaster.”  Read more…


Social media fact-checkers are destroying good science
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Today, Facebook’s faceless fact-checkers screech into the faces of science at every turn. Their shrill cacophonies influence the narrative.  Read more…


There are no Obama judges or Trump judges, except when there are
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Chief Justice John Roberts of the Supreme Court is living in a fantasy world.  Read more…


Kimberly Klacik is back with an ad better than the first one
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Klacik is the young black Republican who’s running for Baltimore’s House seat, and she’s hitting Baltimore’s failed politics hard.  Read more…


The mysterious battle raging over fintech, or non-bank banks
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
A financial tempest is brewing under the surface in our nation’s courts.  Read more…


Keep Don Lemon talking and he’ll blow up himself
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Don Lemon explains it all for you.  Read more…


Making sure your vote gets counted
Sep 23, 2020 01:00 am
Three good ways that all of us can ensure that our votes are counted.  Read more…


The parallels between today’s leftist mob and China’s Red Guard are uncanny
Sep 22, 2020 01:00 am
We may talk about the BLM and Antifa mob as the “Red Guard,” and refer to their assaults as struggle sessions, but a Paul Joseph Watson video puts it all together.  Read more…


Knowing what’s at stake, Trump-supporters increasingly refuse to hide in the shadows
Sep 22, 2020 01:00 am
A curious thing is happening in America, and you’d have to work pretty hard to ignore it.  Read more…


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Wednesday, September 23, 2020

It’s the People’s Seat
There’s really only one story that matters in Washington, D.C. right now (where your humble correspondent writes to you with chants of “all cops are bastards” ringing in her ears), and that’s the vacant Supreme Court seat left by Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s passing.

While there have been many lovely tributes to the trailblazing RBG, the mourning has at times had a strange religious edge with phrases like “rest in power” and “may her memory be a revolution,” twisting the more traditional expressions of grief.

Katya Sedgwick writes at The Spectator USA:

“Although there is a corresponding Judaic expression, ‘rest in peace’ is originally a Christian adage that began appearing on gravestones in Europe in the 8th century. It was simply a wish for the departed to attain eternal peace in Heaven. Over time, it entered secular observances, even becoming the standard obituary in the militantly atheist Soviet Union. It appeals to those who, like me, do not believe in an afterlife by evoking a romantic notion of solace after the tumult of earthly existence. Mourners remind each other that the departed is now released from the temporal passions.

To rest in power is an impossible proposition because those who crave power can never truly be at peace. Only an unhealthy society is so preoccupied with politics that it is unable to let go of the dead. Think, for instance, of Vladimir Lenin’s shriveling body, forever restless and on display at the Red Square Mausoleum.”

As politics waits for nothing these days, yesterday, Senator Mitt Romney announced he would vote to confirm a qualified nominee, signaling that the President does have enough votes to get his pick through the Senate and onto the Court.

Meanwhile, the media is getting a head start on smearing the likely nominees. Reuters and Newsweek both ran pieces suggesting that Amy Coney Barrett, the presumptive front-runner for the spot, is a member of a religious cult and that her decisions on the Court would be controlled by her husband or her church.

Barrett is a Catholic.

From John Daniel Davidson:

“The media has wasted no time casting aspersions on Barrett for her Catholic faith. On Monday, the Washington Post ran a kind of explainer on Barrett, which included an out-of-context quote from a talk she apparently gave years ago, that a ‘legal career is but a means to an end… and that end is building the Kingdom of God.’

The statement itself, even without context, is an altogether ordinary expression of sincere religious belief that any devout person, whether Catholic, Protestant, Jewish, or Muslim, would readily affirm. Yet the Post’s Ron Charles highlighted it in a tweet Monday, as if to warn us that Barrett might try to usher in a Catholic theocracy if she gets onto the Supreme Court.

Also Monday, Newsweek published a somewhat hysterical piece about how Barrett is affiliated with a Christian religious group, People of Praise, that served as the inspiration for “The Handmaid’s Tale”—as if Barrett, a woman on the president’s short list for the Supreme Court, somehow exemplifies the oppression of women by a religious patriarchy. (Update: Newsweek posted a correction to this piece Tuesday, saying Margaret Atwood never mentioned People of Praise as an inspiration for “The Handmaid’s Tale,” which calls into question the entire point of the article. The social media headline, however, remains unchanged.)

Elected Democrats have been even more frank about their antipathy towards Catholics, even to the point of appearing to support an anti-Catholic religious test for nominees to the federal bench. It was during Barrett’s 2017 confirmation to the federal appellate court that Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein admitted openly that the judge’s Catholic faith was a problem for her, infamously telling Barrett, ‘the dogma lives loudly within you, and that’s of concern.’”

BLM and the 1619 Project Misleadingly Backtrack in Face of Backlash
From The Federalist:

Somewhere along the line, Black Lives Matter and the 1619 Project both edited their websites to remove controversially radical statements about their beliefs. This should be recognized as merely a public relations concession, not an ideological one. Both BLM and 1619 will continue to be propelled by fringe leftists and their hapless corporate sponsors…

Under “What We Believe,” BLM used to say, “We disrupt the Western-prescribed nuclear family structure requirement by supporting each other as extended families and ‘villages’ that collectively care for one another, especially our children, to the degree that mothers, parents, and children are comfortable.” That language has been scrubbed, as the Washington Examiner reported on Monday.

The group’s philosophy on family structure is not without consequence.  Just last week, Tucker Carlson reported that a Buffalo school district, relying on lesson plans crafted by a council of the city’s public school system, approvingly taught fourth and fifth graders to understand “the disruption of Western nuclear family dynamics and a return to the ‘collective village’ that takes care of each other” as a “guiding principle” of BLM.

The New York Times’ 1619 Project, at its inception, was openly an effort to “reframe the country’s history, understanding 1619 as our true founding.” That was its central assertion. It is now gone from the project’s website.

The project’s Pulitzer-winning architect Nikole Hannah-Jones continues to beclown herself, this time by claiming the project “does not argue that 1776 was not the founding of the country” when a graphic that literally crossed out “July 4, 1776” and replaced it with “August 20, 1619” was the banner photo on her Twitter profile when the essay collection launched and the website explicitly said it was an effort to “reframe the country’s history” to “[understand] 1619 as our true founding.” It’s a sad joke made even sadder by the fact that the project has been integrated into curriculum in the school districts of three major cities.”

Oh, and never miss anything from Emily Jashinsky: a tip from me to you.

Fashion Moment of the Week
I don’t usually shop based on the politics of the outlet, but when I read last week’s news that major budget retailer H&M had cut ties with Xinjiang over their use of Uyghur slave labor, I immediately headed over to their website to surf for some fall items. Now, to be honest, I’ve mostly outgrown H&M both style and price-point wise, but some of their basics are surprisingly high quality.

I particularly like their cozy sweaters, which I pick up one or two of each fall/winter season, and this blazer, which has now served me well for over five years without falling apart (you can see it better in pics two and three of the post). Here are a few things that caught my eye from H&M fall this year:

  1. This universally-flattering dress with a delicate neckline detail in the ultimate fall color. Runner up was this easy turtleneck dress that will make for the easiest of fashionable weekend looks with boots and a blazer or coat.
  2. This chic midi skirt in leopard print that will pair perfectly with sweaters (as shown), and most importantly, has an actual waistband and zipper, as I cannot stand elastic waists and they are so common on these kinds of skirts.
  3. This classic plaid wool coat in a color that works with browns and grays alike, which is convenient.
  4. This inexpensive waist belt in a classic shade of cognac.
  5. And finally, my favorite piece is this puff-sleeve sweater, a trend I cannot get enough of this season. The fall beige color isn’t in stock yet, but I picked it up in black.

Wednesday Links
Heather Mac Donald: blue truth matters. (American Mind)

Private schools put kids on the track to stable marriage better than public schools. (National Review)

Elite private school in LA struggles between the meritocracy of its own academic standards and its new Woke religion. (Daily Wire)

Ben Domenech and Ilya Shapiro chat about the history of SCOTUS battles and how we got here. (Radio Hour)

Lindsey Graham reminds Democrats about how what they did during the Kavanaugh hearings is coming back to bite them. (Townhall)

Related: the Kavanaugh Effect. (RealClear Politics)

A must-read on the social science of female happiness in the age of feminism. (American Mind)

And a cute moment from the First Couple. I’m still confused how these block-heel boots finally threw Melania when I’ve been watching in awe as she’s strolled across that lawn in stilettos for the last three years with nary so much as a stuck heel. (Twitter)

BRIGHT is brought to you by The Federalist.
Today’s BRIGHT Editor

Inez Feltscher Stepman is a senior policy analyst at the Independent Women’s Forum and a senior contributor to The Federalist. She is a San Francisco Bay Area native with a BA in Philosophy from UCSD and a JD from the University of Virginia. She lives in Washington, D.C. with her husband, Jarrett Stepman, her puggle Thor, and her cat Thaddeus Kosciuszko. You can follow her on Twitter at @inezfeltscher and on Instagram (for #ootd, obvi) under the same handle. Opinions expressed on this website are her own and not those of her employers. Or her husband.
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NOQ REPORT

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Link to NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes

Danielle D’Souza Gill fights for the pre-born by discussing ‘The Choice’

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 06:15 PM PDT

Young women in America are arguably the most under-served portion of the population by the Trump campaign. It’s not for lack of trying, but the demographic is one that isn’t easily reached through the channels the Trump campaign works the most. Thankfully, they’re taking advice from certain young women, including Danielle D’Souza Gill, who are recommending better ways to reach young female voters.

Gill isn’t just a member of the Women for Trump advisory board. She’s also a published author whose new book, “The Choice: The Abortion Divide in America,” is currently available for pre-order with a release date of October 6. In it, she takes on the talking points of the pro-abortion left by addressing it through a lens they claim to understand: Choice. Gill believes it does come down to choice and she’s hopeful that people will make the right one for pre-born babies.

In this interview on NOQ Report with our EIC, JD Rucker, Gill breaks down what’s happening in the world of Women for Trump as well as how her fight against abortion is a universal one for men and women across America. She positions the debate as one that’s empowering for those who choose life. It’s a different angle that should be considered by all pro-life activists in America today.

 

One of the things that makes America great is our right to choose. Danielle D’Souza Gill understands that choice is important, which is why she named her pro-life book “The Choice.” More Americans need to make the right one.



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.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

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 post Danielle D’Souza Gill fights for the pre-born by discussing ‘The Choice’ appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Supreme Court myths and absurdities from Democrats

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 05:09 PM PDT

With Pavlovian predictability, leftist Democrats have gone into full lunacy mode in the immediate aftermath of the announcement of Ruth Ginsburg’s passing. And just as predictable is the universally fraudulent nature of absolutely everything they are proclaiming. Their goal is singular: Prevent President Trump at all costs from nominating a pro-Constitution jurist to the High Court. But they’re Democrats. So of course they cannot afford to be honest about it.

Still, in all of their lies and posturing, they inadvertently reveal who they are, and what their despicable agenda portends for the nation if they ever get into power. So the ugliness lurking behind all of their grandstanding needs to be exposed and considered in its true light.

Perhaps the most ghoulish fraud (so far) has been the purported letter from Ginsburg, in which she ostensibly claimed that she wanted her successor to be named by someone other than President Trump. This transparent effort to “tug at the heartstrings of America” has already been endorsed by none other than the embodiment of phony moralizing himself, Barack Obama.

Even if this scam were real, it would only serve to spotlight the abhorrence of Ginsburg’s actual “legacy.” It is wholly without merit, or any basis in the Constitution, and in fact would represent a gross departure from that founding Charter of our nation if anyone were so unprincipled and foolish as to actually abide by it. But more significantly, it represents the exact manner in which Ginsburg actually conducted herself (and in the process disgraced her oath of office) during her time on the Court.

From the moment of her confirmation in 1993, Ginsburg showed flagrant and continual contempt for the Constitution of the United States, and instead was the most reliable leftist activist on the Court. Her decisions, based not on any constitutional principle but solely on political ideology, were virtually 100% predictable before even a single oral argument was heard. Clearly she saw her station not as a guardian of the American ideal, but as an autocratic post with zero accountability, much more akin to “royalty” than to the preservation of the principles of our Republic. So it stands to reason that as her last effort in this life, she might try to manipulate the system in order to determine her successor.

Concurrent with that sad parody, the panic and hysterics of the leftist Democrats and their dutiful minions in the Fake News has been just as unsurprising, and just as transparently pathetic. In textbook leftist Alinksy fashion, every Democrat with access to a microphone has been attempting to make the claim, with effusive self-aggrandizing “virtue,” that preventing President Trump from picking the nominee is somehow in the best interests of our great nation. It isn’t! Such a course would only benefit the abhorrent and dangerous leftist agenda.

Leftist Democrats tout the supposed need for a mythical “balance” on the Court. But they never truly reveal the nature of that “balance,” or between which contrasting governing ideologies it should bridge. If the Court were to function as intended by the Founders, there would be no “balance” in it whatsoever. It would stand above anything political, as the arbiter and protector of the integrity of the Constitution as ratified and amended. The nominees from both parties should rightly be devoted to this end above any other motivation.

Sadly, reality paints a far less noble picture, particularly among the Democrats. While a pro-Constitution Court is intended to be the guarantor of the rights and freedoms of all Americans, on that basis alone it is an obstacle to the leftist Democrat agenda. In recent years, the Court has degenerated into a Democrat weapon (when dominated by leftist activist “justices”) by which to circumvent the law, and trample the rights and freedoms of decent Americans. So when the Democrats speak of “balance,” they actually seek to establish sufficient political clout from the Court, in order to bypass the rest of the legislative process. And that presents the gravest of dangers to our Nation’s future.

Ultimately, all of the hysterics and grandstanding of the leftist Democrats do not reflect positively on them, and can actually be a huge liability if Republicans respond properly to all of it. Those on the right should, as loudly as possible, make the case that their intent is to uphold the Constitution as written and ratified, and to oppose any leftist Democrat effort to undermine that defining principle of our nation. From that point forward, every Democrat rant against the effort to install a new, pro-Constitution jurist on the Court should be just as loudly characterized as an attack on that effort to preserve, protect, and defend our Constitution against all enemies, both foreign and domestic.

Certain Democrat players are already wary of the liability this poses to them. Public recognition of where they actually stand would be hugely detrimental to their efforts to paint themselves as paragons of patriotism and virtue. It is precisely for this reason that the Biden puppet-masters have no intention of releasing any list of prospective nominees. Doing so would instantly unmask their leftist activist objectives for the Court.

Thankfully, President Trump is already framing the debate in just such terms. In response the rancor and venom of leftist Democrats is increasing. And that can ultimately be used for the good of our nation. Let the Democrats hurl their accusations that upholding the Constitution is “divisive” and “partisan.” Given the flagrant animosity of the leftist Democrats towards the greatness of our America in recent years, fighting for America is indeed a “partisan” mission. And they are on the wrong side of it.


Bio

Christopher G. Adamo is a lifelong conservative from the American Heartland. He has been involved in grassroots and state-level politics for years. His recently released book “Rules for Defeating Radicals,” subtitled “Countering the Alinsky Strategy in Politics and Culture,” is the “Go To” guide to effectively overcoming the dirty tricks of the political left. It is available at Amazon.



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.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

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 post Supreme Court myths and absurdities from Democrats appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Shut up, they explained: The left now wants to ban free speech because of the COVID crisis

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 02:46 PM PDT

  • First, we had to stay at home [unless violently rioting and looting for BLM ]
  • Then we had to social distance [unless violently rioting and looting for BLM ]
  • Later on, the left demanded that we wear masks [helping conceal their identities while violently rioting and looting for BLM ]

Along the way, whole swaths of the bill of rights were being infringed upon as never before in the history of the nation. Now that they have that under their hobnail boots, they are going for another: Free speech.

Actual video title: Can Shutting Up Stop the Spread of Covid-19?

That title from Bloomberg should grab everyone’s attention. The whole mask mandate scam is wearing thin, given that states with these mandates are now seeing an uptick in cases. Sweden showed the way by protecting the vulnerable and allowing the rest of the population to develop herd immunity, as is taking place where there are no mask mandates and Farr’s law shows a decline at a mathematically predictable rate.

The left isn’t satisfied with merely destroying the economy and micromanaging everyone’s life down to the most basic of details. They have their eyes set on goals that are more ambitious than forcing us to wear face placebos. They’ve already talked about how they can parlay this ‘serious crisis’ into a discussion of climate change. Now they want to use it to literally shut people up.

The bottom line: The left has only one priority, and that’s the attainment of power

Those of us who have studied the socialist left for decades foresaw how they would again use another crisis to enhance their power. It’s never about the crisis itself, but how they can assert more control over everyone else.

Many on the left are ‘LARPing’ [Live Action Role-Playing] as socialist revolutionaries, thinking that all of this will lead to them being installed as the ruling elite of their new socialist Utopia. The problem for the tyrannical ten percent is that the rest of us want to be left alone. We know where they are going with this, that is why everyone is arming up and ammo is nowhere to be found.

You can guess this won’t be the last draconian demand based on the COVID crisis. They’ve exploited the crisis to suppress most of the 1st amendment. As soon as they figure out how to connect guns with germs, that will be their next priority.



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.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

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 post Shut up, they explained: The left now wants to ban free speech because of the COVID crisis appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

George Soros is verboten on Fox News. Tucker Carlson doesn’t care.

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 09:24 AM PDT

Fox News doesn’t like people talking about George Soros on their network. They even stifled former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich from truthfully reporting on Soros during an episode of Outnumbered. Rumors have circulated that even the name “George Soros” is verboten on the network, never to be uttered by anyone who ever wants to be on the air again.

Host Tucker Carlson apparently doesn’t care. During last night’s interview of Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, the popular conservative host immediately mentioned Soros without flinching. Following a few clips from crime-ridden cities, Carlson spoke out against Soros.

“Most living Americans have never seen scenes like that,” he said. “Now they’re common all over the country. What happened? Well they tell us it’s about police brutality, but police brutality has not increased. In fact, federal statistics show it’s down.

“What’s changed in many places is the nature of the prosecutors, the people whose job it is to keep you safe are instead making it easier for criminals to terrorize your family. That’s not an accident. Left-wing mega-donors like George Soros realized it’s easier to install radical DA’s than it is to convince the public to let their own cities burn.

“Soros has worked hard to elect district attorneys who will nullify laws against rioting and violence by failing to enforce them. In Portland, Oregon, where violence has become a way of life, a Soros-funded political action committee funneled $20,000 to Mike Schmidt’s campaign this year. Schmidt in turn has announced he won’t prosecute any of the rioters who’ve turned Portland into a war zone. He’s already dismissed charges against rioting suspects, hundreds of them. In fact, at one point Schmidt said the unrest in Portland was ‘beautiful.’

“But it’s not just Portland. Entities bankrolled by George Soros have spent more than $13 million in district attorney races in a total of 17 states. Over the past few years, this unfolded in Florida, California, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Virginia. In 2017, Soros spent roughly $1.7 million getting a single man elected, Larry Krasner in Philadelphia. He’s the district attorney, and as expected Krasner presided over a dramatic rise in crime. Soros is now trying to do the same in Los Angeles. There’s a DA race underway there now.”

It is demonstrable that George Soros has funded radical leftist district attorneys despite many Fox News claims to the contrary. It’s good to know Tucker Carlson is willing to speak the truth instead of quashing it as verboten.



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.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

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 post George Soros is verboten on Fox News. Tucker Carlson doesn’t care. appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Don’t bank on Mitt Romney just yet

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 08:44 AM PDT

I don’t trust Mitt Romney. Nobody should. The left doesn’t trust him now that he has said he will vote for a Supreme Court nominee. The right seems to temporarily trust him as a result, but this could be a mistake. We should consider the strong possibility that he will, indeed, vote on the nominee but will side with Democrats in opposition.

The key is in the way he worded it. According to Newsmax (with the key line highlighted):


Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney said Tuesday he supports voting to fill the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat on the Supreme Court, all but ensuring President Donald Trump has the backing needed to push the nomination over Democrats’ objections that it’s too close to the November election. Romney issued a statement saying he would support moving forward.

“If the nominee reaches the Senate floor, I intend to vote based upon their qualifications,” Romney said.

Trump , meanwhile, said he would announce his choice to replace the late Ginsburg on Saturday, setting off a Senate battle with Democrats.

The Senate Judiciary chairman who will shepherd the nomination through the chamber said Republicans have the votes they need for confirmation — even hough no nominee has been announced.


From anyone else, the line would be an innocent, politically correct way of saying they will be fair and give every opportunity to the Supreme Court nominee to win his vote. But this isn’t anyone else. It’s Mitt Romney. I can picture him using this opportunity as a way to further embarrass the President just as he did during the impeachment hearings in the Senate when he voted to remove President Trump from office.

Until Mitt Romney votes in favor of confirming the Supreme Court nominee, we shouldn’t count him as being on the right side of the debate. Saying that he will “vote based on their qualifications” could mean he’s planning the ultimate snake-like move.



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.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

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 post Don’t bank on Mitt Romney just yet appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

When is the mask madness going to end?

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 08:14 AM PDT

Note something on the opinion screed that once was the Associated Press. In the middle of dragging out the plaudits of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and making her irreplaceable, along with other leftist hobby horses, the pandemic panic has gone by the wayside.  Oh sure, they still push the ever-popular ‘grim milestone’ stories while ignoring the fact that Beijing Biden thinks that 61% of Americans will be dead when he’s done misreading his teleprompter.

Other sites still try to maintain the panic, but now they are down to talking about how tiring it all is. The Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center (CRC) is showing that places that have achieved herd immunity aren’t seeing an increase in cases while those that insist on maintaining the COVID tyranny are on the increase.

Even the media has to admit to Sweden’s success in avoiding a surge in virus cases but they can’t bring themselves to change course in giving up control – especially on the subject of face placebos.

CDC chief says masks better at stopping coronavirus than a vaccine – seriously?

It doesn’t help that the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Dr. Robert Redfield made the bizarre claim that face masks may ultimately be better than a much-hoped-for vaccine:

A recent article in the New England Journal of Medicine suggested that “since masks can filter out some virus-containing droplets” but not all viral particles, a mask could act as a kind of exposure therapy, prepping the body to fight the coronavirus without actually sickening the subject.

So now they are moving the goalposts once again, even though states that avoided draconian mask mandates are approaching herd immunity.

John Ziegler made a very good point in Mediaite in an article entitled: The Conservative Argument Against Mask Mandates is Stronger than the Media Pretends on the substantive reasons for our resistance to wearing masks that have little to do with wanting to deal with the hassle of wearing one:

1. In order to justify the extraordinary step of the government forcing the universal use of a mask, the burden of proving that masks are so effective, and the emergency so dire, as to validate such an extreme action is very high. Far higher, on both counts, than the data/evidence from this pandemic has so far substantiated.

2. If the government can force you to wear a mask, under penalty of law, what exactly can’t they, in this nation once founded on the concept of liberty from tyranny, make you do?

3. What is the end date for this mandate? If we are forced to wear them now when only slightly more are dying per day than at the height of flu season, why would this edict ever be lifted?

4. Joe Biden’s promise of a “federal mask mandate” if he is elected has been downplayed because it could not be technically enforced, but it would cause profound problems in large parts of the country. Imagine being in a “red” state with no mandate but having the “federal mandate” hanging over everyone’s head and giving every business, school, sporting event the moral authority to effectively make their own rules in a way which would likely cause chaos and division.

The first point being very important – it’s up to those wanting to force us to wear these placebos to prove that it’s worth the risk and the damage to liberty. So far, the burden has been falsely transferred to those who object to this intrusion on our liberty.

When is this going to end?

Time was, the left at least tried to sugar-coat its tyrannical dictates. The ongoing lock-down was at least put forward as ’15 days to slow the spread’ 6 months ago. They at least tried to sell the rest of it with appeals to the collective good.

The face placebo mandates were different, it was ‘you are going to wear them and you’re going to like it –even if we can’t tell if you’re smiling’. That was it, even worse, they didn’t even bother with talking about the metrics for determining when it would all end.

The bottom line: It’s going end because we say it’s ending

Of course, many embraced this idea because they were all on board with prolonging the panic. These are the folks walking around with the black face masks, just to make sure you notice. These are also the people who wear them outdoors even when it’s not necessary. This has become a political issue with the implication from the press that placebo pundits advocates care about science and others while resisters are anti-science and selfish.

As time goes on, more and more people will care less and less about being afraid and pretending to be virtuous. Even now, we’re seeing less than 100% masking up. There will of course be those still want to make a political statement, but for the rest of us, we’re going to gradually go about our lives, getting back to a mask-less normal, and there is nothing the mask Nazis will be able to do about it.



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.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

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 post When is the mask madness going to end? appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

Run on accomplishments, not promises. Fill the seat.

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 07:45 AM PDT

The death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg presents the opportunity of a lifetime to shift the balance of the Supreme Court. Despite what the media will almost always insist, there are not five conservatives on the Supreme Court. In fact, I would only count Alito and Thomas as conservatives. Gorsuch has proven not to be a conservative on the bench in his first three years, and Kavanaugh is perhaps an improvement from Kennedy but nowhere near Alito. And if John Roberts betrays us on every issue of significance, how can it be said he is one of us. Previously, the court was four Leftists, three swing votes, and two solid conservatives. Now the communists on the Supreme Court are reduced to three with their intellectual heavyweight gone. President Trump is left with a predicament. He must choose between political expedience or political decorum. And with the nation in the midst of a cold civil war, the choice could not be clearer. Fill the seat. And do so before the election.

This election could go down a number of ways and shenanigans and Tomfoolery are to be expected with the chaos of mail-in ballots. This election, like 2000, could be decided by the Supreme Court and a gridlocked decision would leave the appellate ruling in place. The next president is not something to gamble on an appellate court ruling should it come to that.

But, as I stated before, this is a once in a lifetime opportunity to shift the balance of the Supreme Court, one we have not had in several decades. Not only is it imperative to replace the intellectual heavyweight of our adversaries, but it is most necessary and beneficial to do so prior to the election.

We are losing the fight for the soul of our country and fake conservatives like David “Vichy” French and Jonah Goldberg argue that we should take a knee on 1st and goal instead of driving the ball in for a touchdown. This idea of negotiating against yourself could be a generational blunder.

In 2016, Republicans were stupid in claiming we should not confirm Merrick Garland in an election year, when the reality is that we should not be allowing Antonin Scalia be replaced with a Marxist. But Lindsay Graham, I suppose, needed to appeal to some nonsense to cover up the fact he would have voted to confirm Merrick Garland just as he had Obama’s other two Justices. But Republicans should confirm Trump’s nominee before the election precisely because of the election.

The consultant class of Republicans will argue that we need to dangle the nominee like a carrot to drive turnout. But this is obvious manipulation. It’s clear Trump’s base wants the replacement confirmed ASAP. 2016, like 2012 and 2008 were base election. Trump turned out his base and Hillary Clinton did not. If Trump wants to turn out his base, score big by replacing their idol with a conservative.

I should not have to remind anyone that Trump is an incumbent. He cannot simply run on promises. He must run on accomplishments. And to date, there have been too few for my liking. The wall is in progress, but Obamacare remains. The swamp needs massive draining, which includes handcuffs. And I am not enamored with Trump’s two SCOTUS appointees; neutering John Robert’s ability to be the swing vote on the highest court in the land will solidify Trump’s legacy and service to our cause.

Many conservatives reluctantly voted for Trump to ensure Scalia and any other justice would be replaced with someone who revered the Constitution. We knew the possibility of Trump being able to appoint three or four to the Supreme Court in his first term. Now, we finally have an open slot to shift the balance of the court in our favor. This is more imperative than the election. The Prime Directive of our cause is to save our country. And so with Vulcan shrewdness we must fill this vacancy. And the irony is this will not come at a great cost, Trump can campaign on his SCOTUS appointees and Americans his base will turn out ecstatic on election day.



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.


Check out the NEW NOQ Report Podcast.


American Conservative Movement

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 post Run on accomplishments, not promises. Fill the seat. appeared first on NOQ Report – Conservative Christian News, Opinions, and Quotes.

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Pelosi Panics, Coming Together, Washington Prayer March

Posted: 23 Sep 2020 12:46 AM PDT

 

by Gary BauerPelosi Panics
Like many progressives, Speaker Nancy Pelosi is in full-blown panic mode over the reality that President Trump is going to replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court.

During an interview on MSNBC yesterday, Pelosi preemptively attacked the president’s nominee, declaring what “horrible” things will happen with another conservative justice on the Supreme Court. She said:

“They are on a path to undo the Affordable Care Act. They’re on a path to undo a woman’s right to choose. And there are many more issues that relate to the LBGTQ community, clean air, clean water, pollution. They’re coming after your children. Protect your children from what they are trying to do in this Court.

“They’re coming after your children”?! That’s rich coming from her, one of America’s leading advocates of abortion.

Pelosi and her party are sitting on the corpses of unborn children who have been sacrificed to the god of abortion on demand! Everyone knows abortion is THE issue driving the left. Yet she says conservatives are the ones coming for children!

But that’s not all.

Pelosi is also raising the specter of impeachment yet again, telling a New York Times reporter yesterday, “Well, we can impeach him every day of the week for anything he does.”

Not to be outdone, socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wants to impeach Attorney General William Barr too!

Meanwhile, CNN’s Don Lemon is calling on leftists to “blow up the entire system.” He is telling Democrats that if Joe Biden wins, they must “[pack] the Supreme Court” and “get rid of the Electoral College.”

My friends, the left is serious about “fundamentally transforming” America. It’s not just a talking point. It’s not an empty threat. They mean it.

This isn’t just another election. The constitutional republic our Founding Fathers created is at risk this November.

Please stand with me as we stand with President Trump!

Coming Together
We will soon know who President Trump intends to nominate for the Supreme Court. The president tweeted this morning that he will announce his nominee on Saturday.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has been clear that the president’s nominee will get a floor vote. Here’s some additional history bolstering the case for why this president and this Senate should fill this vacancy:

  • 15 times in U.S. history, a Supreme Court vacancy arose in a presidential election year and the president nominated someone that year.
  • 7 of those 15 times, voters had put in place an opposite-party Senate. Only 2 of these 7 nominations were confirmed, the last in 1888.
  • 8 of those 15 times, voters had chosen a Senate majority of the same party as the president. 7 of those 8 nominations were confirmed.
  • Historical precedent supported the Senate majority’s decision in 2016 and historical precedent supports the Senate majority’s decision in 2020.

Meanwhile, Sen. McConnell has been working to ensure that his caucus is committed to getting this vacancy filled, and his efforts are paying off.

Senators Grassley and Ernst of Iowa support moving forward with the nomination process. Other senators in tough reelection battles, including Senators Gardner (CO), McSally (AZ) and Tillis (NC) are all on record in favor of President Trump and the Senate filling this appointment sooner rather than later.

Even Senator Mitt Romney is on board to proceed.

And last night, Sen. Lindsey Graham, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, told Sean Hannity, “We’ve got the votes to confirm the justice on the floor of the Senate before the election. And that’s what’s coming.”

While I appreciate Senator Graham’s enthusiasm, we remember what happened with the Kavanaugh confirmation battle. We know the left will do anything it can to smear this nominee in order to drag out and delay the process.

We must be ready. But this fight won’t be over once the nominee is confirmed.

We must finish this fight at the ballot box this November by reelecting President Trump, maintaining the GOP Senate majority and electing a conservative House majority!

To Pack Or Not To Pack?

Incredibly, Joe Biden refuses to give the American people a list of his Supreme Court nominees. He also refuses to stand up to the left-wing flank of his party by clearly stating whether he supports packing the Supreme Court. Biden said yesterday that addressing those issues “will shift all the focus.”

Well, guess what, Joe? There’s an open seat on the Supreme Court. This isn’t a trick question or some minor distraction. This is the huge issue right now.

The Democrat chairman of the House Judiciary Committee wants to increase the size the Supreme Court by adding four or five more seats to the court and then filling every new position with far-left, pro-abortion, anti-religious liberty and anti-Second Amendment justices.

By refusing to say whether he supports that, Biden is in fact answering the question. He will support it.

My friends, here’s what you need to understand about the left’s threats to pack the court. This has nothing to do with Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death. They were promising to pack the court before she died.

Last year, the Washington Post identified 11 Democrat presidential candidates who favored packing the court with additional left-wing justices. Kamala Harris was one of them.

Remember the threats to impeach Justice Brett Kavanaugh? Some radicals even want to impeach Justice Gorsuch because he’s occupying a “stolen seat.”

They will try to do it if they can, which is why every single one of these Senate races is so critically important.

National Voter Registration Day

Today is National Voter Registration Day. If you aren’t registered to vote yet, now is a good time as voter registration deadlines start closing in the days ahead.

Everything is at stake in this election – the White House, the Congress, the Supreme Court – and every vote matters. But you can’t vote if you aren’t registered to vote.

Please register now at Vote.gov. And make sure all your friends and family members are registered to vote too.

Washington Prayer March
As I just noted, everything is on the line in this election. While I believe it is critically important for every American to vote in this election, I also know it is critically important for every man and woman of faith to be in prayer for our nation as we battle the pandemic and strive to overcome racial and political divisions.

That’s why I am honored to join Reverend Franklin Graham this weekend for his Washington Prayer March on the National Mall. The march will take place this Saturday at 12:00 PM and will begin at the Lincoln Memorial. If you are interested in attending the Prayer March, click here for additional information.

And if you cannot join us physically, I encourage you to make a special effort to join us in prayer this weekend.

Values Voter Summit

The 2020 Values Voter Summit begins today!

American Values, my non-profit public policy organization, is a proud co-sponsor of the Values Voters Summit. I am pleased to announce that President Donald Trump has joined the lineup of all-star speakers! And the first of my two appearances at the Summit airs tonight.

Register now and join us online tonight at 8:00 PM ET.


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Democrats Would Pack Court Regardless, Given The Chance

Posted: 23 Sep 2020 12:07 AM PDT

 

by Mike Huckabee: “Nine seems to be a good number. It’s been that way for a long time…I’ve heard that there are some people on the Democratic side who would like to increase the number of judges. I think that was a bad idea when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt tried to pack the Court.”

So said Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg in an NPR interview on July 24, 2019.

Democrats are now threatening to pack the Court with as many as four more justices; it seems they have no problem going against RBG on this, while using her name as a pretext for doing it.

As reported by NPR, she also dictated a statement to her granddaughter in her last days saying it was her “most fervent wish” that she “not be replaced until a new President is installed.” Ah, but this time, Democrats consider RBG’s wishes sacrosanct.

And they ignore something she’d previously said: “…the President is elected for four years, not three. So the powers that he has in year three continue into year four…and that’s how it should be.”

Never mind the confusion created by these very different versions of what she said she wanted, let alone the idea that someone’s deathbed wish should override the Constitution. And what did she mean by “new President”? “New,” as in “different”? Did she mean that if Trump is re-elected, we should hold her seat open till the “new” President takes office in 2025? That sure is a long time to struggle on with a tie-prone 8-member court. Just getting through the next few months that way would be a nightmare, given the inevitable election challenges.

Times sure have changed. As I said on Sean Hannity’s TV show Monday night, it was Sen. Harry Reid who “threw the match in the gas can” in 2013, when he killed the filibuster for judicial appointments. He was told at the time that it would come back to bite, and now it has. Thank God we have a President who won’t be intimidated and will do his duty, and I pray the Senate will do the same. I also wish we had some real journalism going on; then people would know that proceeding with nomination and confirmation of a new justice under these circumstances is constitutional and customary.

Andrew C. McCarthy, writing in NATIONAL REVIEW, makes the same point I did over the weekend — that what happens now really all comes down to politics. One party will do what it calculates it has the power to do, given the anticipated political fallout.

As McCarthy points out, there was nothing wrong with President Obama nominating Merrick Garland for Supreme Court Justice, just as there was nothing wrong with Sen. Mitch McConnell’s Senate majority blocking that nomination. It’s all constitutional. The rest –- all the “outrage” –- is pure politics.

McCarthy worries, though, that Republicans’ push to confirm before the election may make it harder for Trump to win against enraged Democrats, as it motivates them even more. I don’t know about that. At the risk of sounding like Chandler Bing from FRIENDS, could Democrats BE more enraged? Republicans could smile and nod and confess to deep-seated racism and capitalist greed and cave to everything the left wanted, no matter how insane and unconstitutional, and they’d still move the goalposts and find more reasons to be enraged. It would never end. Republicans have the opportunity to make this appointment, it’s perfectly constitutional, and they must take advantage of it, just as the Democrats absolutely would. Case closed.

Sen. Lindsay Graham said on Hannity’s show that “we’re gonna move forward in the [Judiciary] committee, we’re gonna report the nomination out of the committee to the floor of the United States Senate, so we can vote before the election. That’s the constitutional process.”

Why so determined? “After Kavanaugh, everything changed with me,” he said. “They’re not gonna intimidate me, Mitch McConnell or anybody else…We’re gonna have a process that you’ll be proud of, a nominee who’s gonna be supported by every Republican in the Judiciary Committee, and WE’VE GOT THE VOTES TO CONFIRM THE JUDGE [emphasis mine] on the floor of the Senate before the election. And that’s what’s coming.”

Trump says he’ll announce his choice on Friday or Saturday. Senators know it’ll be Judge Amy Coney Barrett, who reportedly met with the President on Monday, or one of several other women on his shortlist (which he, unlike Biden, has revealed).

So this is apparently happening. Get ready to hear a lot more threats about packing the Court as “payback” for doing what the Senate absolutely has the constitutional right and, arguably, obligation to do.

REASON has a must-read (cautionary) article that outlines the various power-grabs the Democrats intend to make as soon as they are able. What everyone needs to understand is this: IF THEY GAIN POWER, THEY WILL DO THESE THINGS WHETHER TRUMP WAS ABLE TO GET HIS NOMINEE CONFIRMED OR NOT. For this reason, no matter what else happens, Biden and the Democrat ticket absolutely must not win. I cannot say this strongly enough. If they do, the America we love will be largely over. Republicans have to win in such a landslide that there’s nothing Democrats can do after November 3 to upset the process and the will of the electorate.

Author Josh Blackman agrees with Jeffrey Toobin in the NEW YORKER that these changes are not only good payback but “good policy as well.” He’s all for 1) the complete elimination of the filibuster, 2) statehood for DC and Puerto Rico, with two new senators for each (“an appropriate rejoinder”), 3) adding to the number of lower-court judges, and 4) adding to the number of SCOTUS justices (“the greatest and most appropriate form of retribution”).

“If Republicans succeed in stealing two seats,” he writes (note his choice of the word “stealing”), “the Scalia and Ginsburg vacancies, the Democrats could simply pass a law that creates two or three more seats on the Supreme Court. He likens this to playing a game of hardball.

See how the “game” is rationalized? (Again, they really don’t care what RBG would think of adding seats.) I brought up this article to get you into leftists’ heads and show you what they have planned. Clearly, they intend to do these things whether Trump gets his way on a new justice or not.
—————————–
Mike Huckabee Morning Edition.


Tags: Nike Huckabee, Democrats Would Pack Court, Regardless, Given The ChanceTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Biden Anti-Business Agenda Would Wreck the Economy

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 11:39 PM PDT

Stephen Moore, Economist

by Stephen Moore: The Democrats are rewriting history, celebrating the Obama record on the economy as if these were the salad days for America. In Washington parlance, that is called “misremembering.” The reality is that the Obama tax-and-regulate agenda led to the weakest economic recovery from a recession since the Great Depression.
This week, the Census Bureau released its economic report — the gold standard of measuring the finances of American families.

In President Donald Trump’s first three years in office, real median family income for Americans rose by more than $6,400. In Obama’s EIGHT years in office, the increase in incomes was closer to $4,000. Black Americans made more income gains in three years under Trump than eight years under Obama.

But Biden’s agenda is to return to a regulation binge — in banking, finance, environment, consumer affairs and health care.

The rumors are swirling that Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a leading Biden economic policy adviser and confidant, could be Treasury secretary or regulatory czar.
The radical Warren policy proposals that Biden has now adopted, including entirely carbon emission-free electricity (with a loss of up to 5 million blue-collar jobs) and the strictest financial regulations ever. Stocks and retirement portfolios could take a beating.

For example, Warren and many Biden economists are advocating adding to the Fed’s current dual mandate of promoting stable prices and maximum employment. Now they want a mandate that will use the Fed monetary policy to equalize incomes. How? By printing money? Forcing companies to pay a superminimum wage?

Retirement savings of American mom-and-pop investors and financial traders of all shapes and sizes could be at risk if independent analyses of credit rating agencies are compromised by government mandates. The Biden Democrats want the feds to intervene in these bond ratings to promote social justice, environmentalism and other goals that may be worthy but that steer retirement and other investment funds away from the highest returns.

Trump wants health care freedom that gives patients and doctors more say of what kind of insurance they can buy and what kind of procedures are best for them. Biden wants to double down on the Affordable Care Act, which has driven up health costs and prohibited Americans from purchasing more affordable health plans.

The costs of all these “consumer protections” fall hardest on the lowest-income families. Casey Mulligan of the University of Chicago estimates that the Biden regulatory stranglehold and his ban on fracking would reduce the incomes of the poorest households by about 15%. The average household would see losses of about 4% by going back to the Obama regulatory regime.

Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders has suggested that the Biden administration would be the most progressive and radical in history if it takes office. He may be called “Lunch Bucket Joe,” but for blue-collar America, the Biden agenda would be a real blow to the wallet.
——————–
Stephen Moore, (@StephenMoore) is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation and an economic consultant with Freedom Works. He is the co-author of “Fueling Freedom: Exposing the Mad War on Energy.” Moore encouraged the ARRA News Service editor at SamSphere Chicago 2008 to blog his articles. His article was in Rasmussen Reports.


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Last Best Chance to Capture Supreme Court

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 11:20 PM PDT

 

by Patrick BuchananAre there Republicans who would really walk away from this last, best chance to secure the court, simply because the process offends their sense of proper procedure? This may be a hard vote for Murkowski, Collins and a few other Republicans. But to vote down a qualified conservative nominee, on the eve of a presidential election, would amount to a crippling blow to their party and to their reputations within that party.

President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell are on the cusp of making history.

With Trump having named two justices to the U.S. Supreme Court, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, they have an opening to elevate a third justice to fill the seat of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, thereby securing the constitutionalism of the court for a generation.

Trump and McConnell need only persuade 50 of the 53 Senate Republicans to vote to confirm the nominee Trump says he will send up at week’s end, following the days of mourning for Ginsburg.

Two Republican senators, however, Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, have said that they will not vote to confirm a justice nominated this close to a presidential election.

Yet, if Trump appoints a qualified female jurist, as he has pledged to do, and she passes muster in the Judiciary Committee, would four GOP senators really collude with Chuck Schumer’s Democratic Caucus to kill that Republican nominee and risk having President Joe Biden fill the seat?

A Senate vote to reject a Republican nominee, in which Republican senators cast the decisive votes, would demoralize and divide the party on election eve and betray a cause for which some have fought for 50 years. It is hard to conceive of a greater act of political treason.

Many Republican presidents made strides toward recapturing the court after the radical rampage of the Earl Warren era. None achieved it. Three of Richard Nixon’s four picks went south on Roe v. Wade, and Justice Harry Blackmun authored the abominable decision.

Gerald Ford’s lone nominee, Justice John Paul Stevens, went left as soon as he went up. While Ronald Reagan nominated Antonin Scalia, his other choices, Sandra Day O’Connor and Anthony Kennedy, became “swing votes.” George H. W. Bush picked David Souter and Clarence Thomas, with the latter’s constitutionalism canceled out by the former’s liberalism.

But today, the hour of Trump’s triumph may be at hand, and the stark panic on the left testifies to it.

Mobs are forming outside McConnell’s home in Kentucky. Former Attorney General Eric Holder threatens that if Republicans confirm a justice this year, a Democratic Senate will cancel out its victory by “packing” the courts. Rep. Joe Kennedy III says that if McConnell prevails in 2020, “We pack the court in 2021.” Radicals are threatening to take to the streets and burn the country down if a Trump nominee is elevated.

Let them try.

When FDR, after his landslide reelection, sought to pack the court by increasing the number of justices in 1937, the result was a national recoil and a political rout that cost him 72 House seats in 1938.

Republican senators have to bite the bullet on this one and vote on whomever Trump nominates before this session of Congress ends.

And, in this battle, there is no room for conscientious objectors.

Even “Never Trumpers” and Republicans for Biden have to take a stand. For if they play a role in killing Trump’s nominee, and Biden wins in November, they will have helped to turn the Supreme Court over to leftist Democrats who will fill both the Ginsburg seat and that of Justice Stephen Breyer, 82, and hold the court for years.

Consider the issues that the new nominee will decide.

The cause of right to life. Affirmative action. Religious freedom. Immigration. Gun rights. All could be lost if the opportunity to fill the Ginsburg seat is forfeited by Republican defectors. The 50-year struggle to recapture the Supreme Court would be over.

Are there Republicans who would really walk away from this last, best chance to secure the court, simply because the process offends their sense of proper procedure?

This may be a hard vote for Murkowski, Collins and a few other Republicans. But to vote down a qualified conservative nominee, on the eve of a presidential election, would amount to a crippling blow to their party and to their reputations within that party.

It is said there is not time enough to get the vote done responsibly.

Nonsense. Gerald Ford’s choice of John Paul Stevens went through in 19 days. Only 49 days lapsed between the nomination of Ginsburg and her confirmation.

Of the nominees to the Supreme Court, those who have been brutalized worst in the last 50 years were all Republican appointees: Clement Haynsworth in 1970, Robert Bork in 1987, Clarence Thomas in 1991 and Brett Kavanaugh in 2018.

No Democratic nominee has been savaged like these four federal court judges. And for Biden to condone a relentless partisan attack on a qualified female judge would seem to be risking the women’s vote in 2020.

Assume that Amy Coney Barrett, Catholic jurist and mother of seven, is nominated. Would fellow Catholic Joe Biden demand that his Democratic colleagues reject Barrett because she might be a vote against Roe v. Wade, which Joe now enthusiastically champions?
———————-
Patrick Buchanan (@PatrickBuchanan) is currently a blogger, conservative columnist, political analyst, chairman of The American Cause foundation and an editor of The American Conservative. He has been a senior adviser to three Presidents, a two-time candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, and was the presidential nominee of the Reform Party in 2000.


Tags: Patrick Buchanan, conservative, commentary Last Best Chance, to Capture, Supreme CourtTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Short List

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 11:06 PM PDT

. . . There is probably a good reason Biden hasn’t made public his list of Supreme Court justice nominees this close to the election.

 


Tags: Editorial Cartoon, AF “Tony” Branco, Short ListTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Worms for Early Bird Voting?

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 10:45 PM PDT

by Paul Jacob, Contributing Author Election Day is six weeks away. Yet, in my home state of Virginia, voting began last week.

Is it responsible to cast a ballot so early?

You may know with metaphysical certainty how you’re voting for president — even in the event of some major cataclysm — but have all the state rep and city council and ballot measure campaigns also played out fully enough for you?

Here in Virginia, we get few candidate races in our split-up state and federal elections, much less ballot issues to decide. I could have made all my (very few) choices months ago. But I trust that in a more competitive and healthy representative democracy we would more want to hear out the candidates.

A lot can happen in six weeks. And you cannot change your vote once it’s cast.*

The new Democratic-controlled Legislature — in reaction to the pandemic, to prevent crowding at the polls — expanded the early voting period this year. It started September 18 and ends October 31.**

There are costs to expanding early voting — including making campaigns more expensive to run and win. Disabled from marshaling advertising into a two-or-three-week period before the vote, campaigns are forced to sustain publicity for a month. Or longer.

While better-funded incumbents have little difficulty with the added cost, it cripples challengers. It especially handicaps grassroots ballot initiative proponents battling public employee unions or the Chamber of Commerce.

Make the voting process comfortable and easy for citizens. But let’s be certain not to make it comfortable and easy for incumbents and special interests.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.

* In Sweden, you can change your early vote, informs my friend Bruno Kaufmann, a journalist and direct democracy advocate. They call it “second voting.”

** Though several other states routinely allow more than six weeks of early voting.

———————-

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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Judge Barrett is the Answer to Ginsburg’s Legacy of Death

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 10:00 PM PDT


by Cliff Kincaid
: The late Howard Phillips, chairman of the Conservative Caucus, opposed the nomination of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a former general counsel for the ACLU, to the Supreme Court. “Instead of defending the humanity and divinely imparted right to life of pre-born children,” Howard Phillips had warned, “she would simply be another vote for the proposition that our unborn children are less than human and that their lives may be snuffed out without due process of law, and with impunity.”

“Today, we fight for her legacy,” says Democratic Party Vice-Presidential candidate Kamala Harris.

By any objective assessment, a big part of Ginsberg’s legacy was continuing abortion on demand, which has now taken 60 million unborn lives since the Roe v. Wade decision of 1973. “RIP to the more than 30 million innocent babies that have been murdered during the decades that Ruth Bader Ginsburg defended pro-abortion laws,” said Rep. Doug Collins, who is also a military chaplain.

But only three Republican Senators voted to oppose the confirmation of this pro-abortion radical back in 1993. The three Senators, in that 96-3 vote, were Senators Jesse Helms (R-NC), Don Nickles (R-OK), and Bob Smith (R-NH).

Helms called her “a pleasant, intellectual liberal” but denounced her “outrageously simplistic and callous position” in favor of abortion and against the sanctity of human life. He said she spoke of “no qualification whatsoever” in support of abortion, saying it was a matter of “personal autonomy” and “the right to be let alone and to make basic decisions about one’s life’s course.” Helms went on, “Why…in the name of God did someone not ask, ‘But Mrs. Ginsburg, what about the unborn innocent and helpless child’s right to be left alone, that child who is about to be destroyed because of specious reasoning by people like Ruth Bader Ginsburg?’”

Her service to the abortion industry has been ignored by many commentators, including some on Fox News, who want to honor her personal career choices as a feminist. It’s truly terrible that she went through many difficult health struggles. But she lived a long life and it’s also apparent that she tried to hang on to her seat on the Court for political reasons. She despised Trump.

Her long career stands in contrast to the unborn lives, mostly female, that were snuffed out by abortionists in a painful procedure that she personally sanctioned.

Worldwide, thanks to Ginsburg and others, the U.S. is third in abortions, behind Russia with 218 million and China with 401 million. Abortion was the leading cause of death in the world in 2019, killing 42 million.

The late Phyllis Schlafly noted that Ginsburg was so extreme that she even wanted to write taxpayer funding of abortion into the Constitution.

Ginsburg also found another “right” that was in reality nowhere in the Constitution – gay marriage. Helms saw this coming, too, when he said that Ginsburg during her confirmation hearing that she was “likely to uphold the homosexual agenda.”

But it was mostly left to conservative leaders like Howard Phillips and Phyllis Schlafly – not Senate Republicans – to raise these concerns.

Looking at Ginsberg’s confirmation hearing, Phyllis Schlafly asked, “How does it happen that a Supreme Court nominee whose only experience in private law practice was seven years as general counsel to the ACLU came to be praised by almost everyone as a ‘moderate’ and a ‘centrist’”? She answered, “My theory is: This just proves how easily men are fooled by a skirt. They deduced that Ruth Bader Ginsburg is ‘moderate’ because she isn’t a loud-mouthed, frizzy-haired, bra-burning street demonstrator.”

The failure to recognize the danger of her nomination and legacy is relevant to what the Senate will do as President Trump nominates a successor. The propaganda barrage against the Republicans for moving ahead with Ginsburg’s replacement has already begun. Phillips and Schlafly have passed away, to be replaced by establishment conservative organizations like the Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation to recommend judicial nominations.

Will they endorse a strong pick like Judge Barrett? Or will go for some “moderate” nomination, arguing this is the only way to get someone confirmed?

But Amy Coney Barrett was already confirmed by the Senate in a 55-43 vote to be a United States Circuit Judge for the Seventh Circuit. That means the vetting process can be shortened considerably. What’s more, Republican Senators Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski voted for her. So did Democrats Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Tim Kaine of Virginia, and Joe Manchin of West Virginia.

It’s true that Barrett came under attack by Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein because she is a faithful Catholic. But this is the kind of fight Republicans should welcome. It would be interesting to watch the “Catholic” Democratic Party presidential candidate Joe Biden oppose Barrett’s nomination.

For conservatives, Barrett is a woman who could serve as a real role model, in direct contrast to the radical feminism and ACLU activism that Ruth Bader Ginsburg will always be remembered for. This fight will offer the public an alternative to the notion that Ginsburg represents American women.

The oldest of seven children, Barrett and her husband, Jesse, a former federal prosecutor, have seven children, including two adopted Haitian children.

In a story about her life in Louisiana, a local paper noted that “her former New Orleans high school, St. Mary’s Dominican High School, named her their alumna of the year, recognizing Barrett ‘as a woman who instills Christian moral values while urging the practice of ethical behaviors as demonstrated through her dedication to family, public service or career.’”

One can anticipate Barrett being attacked by bigots opposed to her Christianity. For example, she will be attacked for her affiliation with People of Praise, described as a “tight-knit group” of conservative Christians.

Fox News, which was recently caught censoring a discussion of the role of billionaire George Soros in violent crime, ran a >story about how Barrett had been “criticized” for her ties to the group when she was nominated by Trump for the Seventh Circuit. But it was the New York Times that led the criticism of Barrett based on her Christianity.

In terms of liberal and left-wing advocacy groups, the so-called Alliance for Justice will lead the opposition. the AFJ has received funding from the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation associated with billionaire investor Warren Buffett and his family, and the Open Society Foundations associated with atheist George Soros.

Intervening in the unfolding contest, as if he’s the real presidential nominee, former president Barack Hussein Obama says Ginsburg “was a warrior for gender equality – someone who believed that equal justice under law only had meaning if it applied to every single American.”

But as Howard Phillips testified, Ginsberg’s belief in “the extinguishment of innocent unborn human lives, without due process of law,” was not only inconsistent with “the plain language of the Constitution” but with “the revulsion toward abortion which prevailed at the time when our Constitution was drafted and ratified.”

The issue is straightforward and simple: does the Constitution protect our God-given right to life? Ginsburg was on the wrong side of this fundamental question. She did not in fact, believe the Constitution applied to “every single American.”

After 60 million abortions, it’s time to put human life in perspective in contemplating the legacy of “the legendary RBG.” In terms of killing, abortion makes coronavirus look mild by comparison. The abortion industry has spawned serial killers such as abortionist Kermit Gosnell and is so powerful that pro-life citizen journalists like David Daleiden have been investigated and prosecuted by politicians such as Kamala Harris for exposing the sale of aborted baby parts.

Perhaps in the afterlife, Ginsburg will be held accountable for the pain and suffering she inflicted on the innocent unborn. In the meantime, the Court needs a Christian judge willing to be guided by moral values. The choice is clear.
————————–
Cliff Kincaid is president of Cliff Kincaid


Tags: Cliff Kincaid, Judge Barrett, is the Answer, to Ginsburg, Legacy of DeathTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Do Democrats Really Believe Biden Is Winning?

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 09:25 PM PDT

by William L. Gensert: Once it was the “big lie.” Now it is many little lies — riots are peaceful; he is she is they; Biden is not doddering; Trump will steal 2020. Told often enough and given enough time, little lies become truth.

Today we live in the “age of lies” told to steal an election in November and control a populace who refuses to do as they are told. All Americans should stop at least once before Election Day and take a hard look at the Democrat candidate, “King of Aphasia” Joe Biden. When they do, they will understand what the left is planning.

Ignore his 47 years in elected office without accomplishment, save for the 1994 Crime Bill, which he has since disavowed. Ignore that, as Robert Gates, former defense secretary under Obama, said, he has been wrong on every foreign policy issue facing the United States in the last 40 years. Dismiss the serial corruption of his family as they traded on his political office to become wealthy. Ignore the gaffes and the serial plagiarism. Ignore his long association with politicians associated with the Ku Klux Klan. Ignore his penchant for the unwanted touching of women and children and his creepy fondness for the smell of their hair.

Concentrate on the man and who he is today. Look at the comparison of the Joe Biden who debated Paul Ryan in 2012 with the Biden of today, hoping to trade his basement for the White House cellar. His mumbling and the many times he seems lost even when reading prepared answers off a teleprompter to prearranged questions from reporters pre-picked by his staff should force even the casual observer to admit he has lost much more than a step.

His mental decline from even just a few years ago is pronounced. He did, after all, undergo not one, but two brain surgeries in his life. The blank stares and when he loses his train of thought halfway through sentences along with the bouts of anger and his spontaneous streams of logorrheic gibberish show he is losing the battle to maintain his mental acuity.

What serious voter would pick this man for the most important job on Earth? Who sincerely believes that a man who is losing his faculties should be put in a position where he might control the fate of humanity?

No, in a normal world, the media would have already dispensed with moldering Joe. Yet today, the left controls the Democratic Party, corporate media, social media, Big Tech, and the bureaucracy — and Biden is their candidate. A candidate like Joe, who in a fair and free election would lose by a landslide regardless, of his opponent, combined with the fact that they genuinely believe they deserve the reins of power and thus Trump is illegitimate, makes their coming coup not only predictable, but also inevitable.

The Democrat-media claque have soiled themselves with the soul-staining perfidy of their onanistic pursuit of total and everlasting control of everything in a “fundamentally transformed” United States of America. Constructing a nationwide virtual echo chamber, they have convinced themselves that the “tired old man they elected [their] king” is not only worthy of the presidency, but also actually in the lead in the two-way race for America’s executive office.

They seek to create a belief in people that Biden is not only winning, but way ahead because when Trump wins by a landslide on the evening of November 3, they will be justified in deploying their 1,000-lawyer legal team to prevent his win through lawfare while party hacks work in the days and weeks following Election Day to create or find enough ballots to steal Trump’s victory.

All this while, Antifa and Black Lives Matter soldiers take to the streets as the “voice of the people” in “organic” riots as they strive to impose the “will of the people” to overthrow a duly re-elected Trump.

Those on the left have convinced themselves that if not for Trump, we would be living in a nation they would diligently be making perfect. Yet Trump is incidental. Leftists have been walking down this path for a long time, and the Obama presidency was the ego boost they needed to progress from theory to action, allowing them to believe that any victory not won by the left must be outright theft and therefore should justifiably be fought and reversed.

They need people to think Biden was robbed. They must convince voters that Trump stole the election. It is the same strategy they used with Hillary but failed. With the benefit of hindsight and almost four years of planning, they have marshaled their forces and are determined to succeed this time.

There is no more honest polling. Biden will always be winning, no matter how bad he is really losing. There are no more unbiased media figures. Talking heads between now and November will constantly explain to people just how much of a guaranteed bet Biden is to win the presidency. When he loses, they will call for, and help organize, the “rebellion.” Google will skew search results, and Twitter, always willing to censor conservatives, will suspend Trump’s account because that is how he bypasses the left and talks directly to Americans. Facebook will follow suit. Trump must not be allowed to speak to the people, lest he speak the truth.

Democrats are all in on stealing this election. For them to succeed, they need to make people believe that Trump, when he wins, has stolen it first.

Americans do not have to allow this. People need to organize and confront the Democrat-Antifa-BLM tough guys trying to suppress Republican voters at the polls and give Trump a resounding victory. He must win the majority vote and the Electoral College by margins that make the election impossible for the left to steal and give the president a mandate to confront the rioters who will surely surge to violence and destruction to depose the president in the aftermath.

America is the greatest, most successful nation ever to have existed. It is a republic, and only Americans can do what needs to be done to keep it.
————————–
William L. Genser writes at the American Thinker.


Tags: William L. Genser, American Thinker, Do Democrats Really Believe, Biden Is WinningTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Some Reasons I Support Donald Trump

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 09:10 PM PDT

Received this from a local fishing and hunting buddy who spent considerable time putting the list together, but I think it covers the bases nicely, and thought you would enjoy perusing it.

1. Legal immigration only – the wall to stop drugs and illegal immigrants,
 2. Making NATO countries pay their fair share,
 3. Negotiating trade deals with Canada and Mexico and China,
 4. Moving the Embassy in Israel to Jerusalem,
 5. Supporting Israel,
 6. Reducing government regulations,
 7. Reducing government bureaucracy,
 8. Bringing back jobs and industry to the USA with tax incentives,
 9. Signing a new prison bill for minor offenses reducing incarcerations,
10. Signing a bill against Jewish discrimination in schools,
11. Policies that reduce black unemployment,
12. Policies that increase women in the workforce,
13. Fighting for law and order in the cities,
14. Having ICE round up criminals for deportation,
15. Promoting charter schools and school choice,
16. Reducing taxes,
17. Supporting states’ rights during the pandemic,
18. Extending benefits during the pandemic when Congress failed to act,
19. Signing of evection extensions during the pandemic,
20. Committing billions to pandemic research,
21. Supporting the Second Amendment,
22. Supporting religious freedom and God in America,
23. Supporting the right for life and to live,
24. For balancing the trade deficit with policies and tariffs,
25. Reducing government tax burden,
26. Working on reducing the cost of prescription medicines,
27. Court appointments that follow the founding principles not revisionist, progressive policies,
28. Protecting the Constitution,
29. Promoting capitalism not socialism,
30. Spending billions on state parks and stopping the Alaskan mining,
31. Promoting American values,
32. Putting America first,
33. Fighting liberal progressives every day,
34. For getting troops out of the Middle East Wars and elsewhere – Germany, Korea etc.,
35. Working to heal the racial divide by not excepting the liberal derelict solutions,
36. Fighting off Dems attacks to overthrow the legitimate government,
37. Confronting the lying and distorting liberal press,
38. Working to stop liberal control of information by censorship in social media,
39. A populist president for the people not for the elite Globalists at the expense of American technology and jobs,
40. Working harder and getting more done than anyone before him for middle America,
41. Equalizing tariffs that promote fair trade,
42. To stop Biden taxes on income on the wealthy on dividends and capital gains,
43. Putting a stop to racial identity Democrats are dividing us,
44. Stop the war on Christianity,
45. Stop the oppressor and the oppressed democratic syndrome,
46. Put nationalism over tribalism,
47. Promote the Protestant work ethic,
48. Promote American culture stop non-English documents, ballads, signs etc.,
49. Stop socialized medicine,
50. Stop tax subsidies to illegal aliens,
51. Making American energy independent,
52. End hiring diversity- hire by talent and not promoting groups,
53. Stop race-based privileges,
54. Promote American culture and sovereignty,
55. Stop Sharia law,
56. Do not allow international legal authorities to dictate American law at the United Nations,
57. Recognize and except that the black culture is a failed culture, no other race or color has these failed morals and cultural values so a solution can be forged,
58. Combat liberal intolerance,
59. Outlaw sanctuary cities and prosecute city officials,
60. Deport illegal aliens who cannot support themselves rather than putting them on Government substance,
61. Stop Dems from fanning the flames of cultural class warfare,
62. Promote the values and virtues of capitalism,
63. Oppose Dems collectivism and destroying individual liberties,
64. Reducing government debt during prosperous years not now,
65. Reconstruct welfare policies with proper incentives and training with mandatory government- work programs,
66. Combat Dems racist rants,
67. Oppose the progressive Multi-Culturalism,
68. End sedition of sanctuary cities and civil disobedience prosecute officials,
69. Defund Planned Parenthood – not something the government should be doing,
70. Reduce US corporate tax,
71. Fund infrastructure spending along with the wall at our southern border,
72. A pragmatist not an ideologue,
73. Willing to fight for what he believes in even at his political expense,
74. Takes power away from technocrats,
75. Reduce the unelected bureaucrats who want to run the country,
76. Streamline government agencies,
77. Believes in natural, unalienable, rights of mankind,
78. Trump’s fast-paced style,
79. Talks frequently to the ordinary people in the country,
80. Quick to change positions if he sees it that it is not getting the results desired,
81. Always pushing ahead and personally involved,
82. Works on 10 things at once,
83. Prefers areas of commission rather than errors of omission,
84. Strong leader tireless energy,
85. Deals with highly educated individual intellectuals who have no practical experience, never worked in the industry, and don’t have a lick of common-sense and favors people with practical knowledge over academic knowledge,
86. Takes on China’s intellectual theft,
87. Fighting the left that oppose assimilation and promotes race baiting,
88. Fighting the media that portray racial violence and LGBT over Law and order and over real concern of the working workers
89. Stop the out of touch elites from running the agencies —Trump says out loud what normal Americans are thinking,
90. The left rejects American ideals and has abandoned the principal of liberalism that is in opposition to the Judeo -Christian Foundations of this country,
91. Trump is committed to stopping the liberal indoctrination in our schools,
92. The Dems are amoral stealing from one to give to another and to spend others’ money and to teach dependence is better than the Protestant work ethic,
93. Stopping Dems attempt to overthrow the government and the level of contempt displayed,
94. The primary role of the federal government is to keep America safe from all threats both domestic and foreign and Trump does that,
95. Renegotiate trade agreements to benefit America,
96. Giving incentives for reparations of US money in foreign countries,
97. His focus on jobs – jobs and job creation,
98. Trumps works to streamline government,
99. Healthcare reform not addressed yet,
100. To stop Dems race baiting and class division and identity divisive policies,
101. Make Sharia law illegal,
102.He restored military funding and might,
103. He improved veterans’ healthcare,
104. He has total focus on economy improvement as a businessman knows how to do it,
105. Promotes the moral religious values and convictions fights atheist dogma that undermines capitalism,
106. Trump rejects nations building,
107. Trump fight censorship by Apple – Google – Amazon – Facebook and other social media,
108. Fights the insurrection – impeachment and resistance,
109. Believes liberalism is a war with Christianity and Judaic-Christian morality is the heart of America’s the first amendment,
110. Liberalism believes that rights come from government and can be taken away if in conflict with progressive agenda,
111. State is stealing the culture upon which America was founded,
112. He wants to put on an end to class warfare,
113. He substantially changed the Republican Party to represent the American middle-income American worker not the money and power interests of multinational corporate interests,
114. Presented an alternative economic view that benefits the workers at the expense of big corporate America to those who believed they were not being told the truth,
115. Labeled the media the opposition party against nationalism and for globalism,
116. Trump is disarming – directness – unafraid – down to earth – without pretense – courage of convictions – a happy warrior – genuine – a person who ignores the political Washington class advice,
117. Has faith in the American people, not afraid to offend the status quo, a man of vision and believes that the workingman is crucial to a strong America,
118. Spoke about important issues that were not politically popular and never discussed before,
119. An expert in mass communication and controlling the dialogue or narrative and refocusing to the important issues,
120. An agent of change with a populist message,
121. Electrifying charisma like that of Clinton and Reagan,
122. Trump was not a polished Political man and not part of the establishment number,
123. Willing to be a disruptor of the status quo,
124. Trump’s an optimist,
125. His wish is to end catch and release,
126. Wants to enforce the nation’s laws,
127. Trump wants safe streets, good schools, and great jobs,
128. He Follows the 10th amendment regarding states’ rights over the national government intervention,
129. He works at stopping the diminishing liberty and growing central government,
130. He is fighting the threat to undermine our values erase the bonds of culture, faith, and tradition,
131. He has the vision and clarity to put into understandable words the cause of western civilization,
———————————-

HT McIntosh Enterprises.


Tags: Some Reasons, I Support, Donald Trump/b>To share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

 

Debunking Demo Objections to President Trump’s Third SCOTUS Nominee

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 08:57 PM PDT

“It will be a woman — a very talented, very brilliant woman.” Calling Amy Coney Barrett…

by Mark Alexander: “There is not a syllable in the plan under consideration which directly empowers the national courts to construe the laws according to the spirit of the Constitution.” —Alexander HamiltonFederalist Papers No. 81 (1787)
Apparently, all the Democrat Party operatives and their legions of useful idiots got the Demo memo and are singing the same chorus line: “Let the people decide!” They insist that, so close to a presidential election, only the candidate who wins that election should put forth the next nominee to the Supreme Court, filling the seat vacated by Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death
That is their layup for opposition to a nomination by President Donald Trump to fill RBG’s seat.
First, a couple questions.
In regard to SCOTUS nominations in the fourth year of a presidential term, who said: “There’s nothing in the Constitution that says the president stops being president in his last year”?
That was Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 2016, after then-lame duck Barack Obama nominated Merrick Garland to fill the vacancy after the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, the Supreme Court’s most articulate and faithful advocate of Liberty and Rule of Law. (This despite a Leftmedia claim that Ginsburg told her granddaughter just before her death, “My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed.”)
And regarding SCOTUS nominations before an election, who said: “I made it absolutely clear that I would go forward with the confirmation process as chairman even a few months before a presidential election”?
That was then-Vice President Joe Biden in 2016objecting to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s refusal to take up Obama’s Garland nomination.
So, what would Senator Chuck Schumer have done with Obama’s nominee if he was majority leader in 2016? Obviously, he would have done exactly what McConnell is doing now.
Senator McConnell has been clear regarding his consistent standard for election-year nominations and votes.
In a statement on the passing of Associate Justice Ginsburg, McConnell affirmed he will call for a vote on a SCOTUS nominee: “In the last midterm election before Justice Scalia’s death in 2016, Americans elected a Republican Senate majority because we pledged to check and balance the last days of a lame-duck president’s second term. We kept our promise. Since the 1880s, no Senate has confirmed an opposite-party president’s Supreme Court nominee in a presidential election year. By contrast, Americans reelected our majority in 2016 and expanded it in 2018 because we pledged to work with President Trump and support his agenda, particularly his outstanding appointments to the federal judiciary. Once again, we will keep our promise. President Trump’s nominee will receive a vote on the floor of the United States Senate.”
Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX), responding to Demo objections, provided them a quick lesson on the history of SCOTUS nominations“Twenty-nine times there has been a vacancy in a presidential election year. Presidents have made nominations all 29 times.” Cruz added that a significant factor in Trump’s election was the Scalia vacancy, to ensure the appointment of “a principled constitutionalist on the court.” Cruz noted, “And it’s a big part of the reason why we have a Republican majority elected in 2014, reelected in 2016, grown even larger in 2018. A major issue in each of those elections is the American people voted and said we want constitutionalist judges.”
Indeed, as President Thomas Jefferson noted in 1804, “The opinion which gives to the judges the right to decide what laws are constitutional and what not, not only for themselves, in their own sphere of action, but for the Legislature and Executive also in their spheres, would make the Judiciary a despotic branch.” And it is that tyrannical despotism that will completely undermine the principles upon which our Republic was founded.
The SCOTUS appointment is not about Right v. Left. It’s about Liberty v. Tyranny. Furthermore, as for McConnell’s actions in 2016, better obstruction than destruction of Rule of Law regarding “the advice and consent of the Senate” on nominations. The Constitution’s mandate for the nomination process is straightforward.
Again, Trump is not a lame-duck president as was Obama in 2016, and he does not have a Senate controlled by the opposition party, as did Obama in 2016.
President Trump’s response to first hearing about the death of RBG was very humble, as was his Presidential Proclamation
He then made clear: “We were put in this position of power and importance to make decisions for the people who so proudly elected us, the most important of which has long been considered to be the selection of United States Supreme Court Justices. We have this obligation, without delay!”
He noted that his nominee would “be a woman — a very talented, very brilliant woman,” whom we believe will be Louisiana native Amy Coney Barrett, now serving on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in Indiana. Judge Barrett has been on Trump’s short list for two years. In fact, he reportedly told numerous people, “I’m saving her for Ginsburg.”
Trump has nominated and the Senate approved 205 federal judges over the course of his first term. His appointments of Justice Neil Gorsuch and Justice Brett Kavanaughthe latter being confirmed after a disgraceful obstructionist effort by Democrats, have moved SCOTUS back to center.
This nomination will help ensure the majority of SCOTUS judges will abide by their solemn oaths “to support and defend” our Constitution, which is precisely why the Democrats object. They prefer “despotic” jurists who will do their bidding by judicial diktat
Of course, whether Trump’s nomination will get through the Senate is another matter, given opposition from Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) and Susan Collins (R-ME). The nominee may face opposition from Senator Mitt Romney (R-UT) but he indicates he would support the vote
Then there is the question of whether Republicans can break through all the Democrat obstacles between now and election day. If not, and in Arizona, Mark Kelly defeats incumbent Republican Martha McSally in that special election, that would take away her vote before the end of November
Of course, in a tie, Vice President Mike Pence will step in.
As for the amount of time required to consider a nomination, Justice Ginsburg, despite her clear leftist leanings, was confirmed by the Senate on 22 June 1993, just 42 days after her nomination by Bill Clinton, and with a 96-3 vote. There are 43 days until the presidential election.
That rapid approval is because Republicans uphold their constitutional duty, unlike Democrats who, two years earlier, made a spectacle out of George H.W. Bush’s nomination of Clarence Thomas, which resulted in a 52-48 affirmation. Those hearings were the Democrat model for the Kavanaugh debacle, during which one of the most vociferous of his opponents was Kamala Harris.
Some further observations: 
Democrats spent three years using deep-state operatives to, in effect, attempt a coup d’état to take down Trump’s presidency. That charade was based on a fake dossier funded by Trump’s 2016 opponent, Hillary Clinton. (As it turns out, there are Obama and Biden fingerprints all over the coup crime scene.)
After that direct assault on our Constitution, Democrats now believe they have the moral authority to insist that President Trump not nominate an RBG replacement in an election year?
When their coup attempt failed, Demos attempted to take Trump’s presidency down with an impeachment farce — in a presidential election year.
Again, after that direct assault on our Constitution, they believe they have the moral authority to insist that President Trump not nominate an RBG replacement in an election year?
As RBG said correctly, “There’s nothing in the Constitution that says the president stops being president in his last year.”
And on the subject of frivolous impeachments, Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) hinted that the House might impeach Trump again to distract from the nomination, saying, “Well, we have our options. We have arrows in our quiver that I’m not about to discuss right now.” And in a bizarre response to leftist George Stephanopoulos, who asked, “But to be clear, you’re not taking any arrows out of your quiver? You’re not ruling anything out?” Pelosi responded with an answer that only Joe Biden could understand: “Good morning. Sunday morning. The, uh, we have a responsibility, we take an oath to protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. We have a responsibility to meet the needs of the American people, uh, that, uh, is, uh, when the, we weigh the equities of protecting our democracy requires us to use every arrow in our quiver.”
For the record, whenever Pelosi mentions the Democrats’ “oath to protect and defend the Constitution,” you have permission to laugh out loud!
Pelosi added, “They’re coming after your children.” The irony of that statement is rich. 
Of course, one of her “quivers” is the plan Democrats revived last February – FDR’s court-packing agendaNow they are threatening to act on it. Mitch McConnell declared: “The American people are about to witness an astonishing parade of misrepresentation about the past, misstatements about the present [from] the same people who have already been saying for months they want to pack the court.”
The Constitution stipulates that Congress has the responsibility to set the number of justices on the court. Article III provides Congress the discretion to “determine the shape and structure of the federal judiciary.”Historically, there have been as few as six Justices, but since 1869, the Chief Justice has served with eight associate Justices.
When Chuck Schumer was asked about how he would respond, including adding the number of Justices so Democrats could move the court back to the Left, he said, “Let me be clear: if Leader McConnell and Senate Republicans move forward with this, then nothing is off the table for next year. Nothing is off the table.”
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler (D-NY) was more direct, saying if Democrats take the Senate and presidency, congress “should immediately move to expand the Supreme Court,” adding, “Congress would have to act and expanding the court would be the right place to start.” And then: “If Leader McConnell presses forward, the Republican majority will have stolen two Supreme Court seats four years apart. … We can’t have business as usual when Republicans are destroying the institution as they have done.”
That’s “stolen two Supreme Court seats.”
Recall that 11 of the Democrat primary presidential candidates favored packing the court with leftist judges, including Kamala Harris.
As for Biden, who has thus far refused to release a list of his prospective SCOTUS nominees, also refused to answer the court-packing question: “I’m not going to answer that question.”
Regardless of the Trump nomination, I believe the Democrats, if they take control of the Senate and Executive Branch, are going to pack the courts. One of the Demos’ most vociferous Leftmedia propagandists, CNN’s Don Lemon, summed up the Left’s objective, noting Democrats should “blow up the entire system.” He insists they must “[pack] the Supreme Court” and “get rid of the Electoral College.”
Now, leftists are threatening more violence on the streets when Trump advances a nomination. I would add, now is the time when Republican senators should ALL have additional security, given the history of Democrat supporters attempting to murder Republicans. The Marxists will start targeting senators. 
Finally, allow me to end this column with a few words of praise for Justice Ginsburg.
When asked about the Democrat efforts to “pack the court” by adding justices under a future Democrat president, RBG chastised them, calling it a “bad idea” and “partisan.” She said: “Nine seems to be a good number. … I think it was a bad idea when President Franklin Roosevelt tried. … I am not at all in favor of that.”
And reflective of the national sentiments of even the most leftist SCOTUS judge, regarding the anti-American antics of celebrity athlete Colin Kaepernick and his refusal to stand for the national anthem, RBG said: “I think it’s dumb and disrespectful. I would have the same answer if you asked me about flag burning. I think it’s a terrible thing to do, but I wouldn’t lock a person up for doing it. I would point out how ridiculous it seems to me to do such an act.” 
Footnote: Reflective of threats being posted by emotionally incontinent leftist adolescents regarding the upcoming court nomination… “If they even TRY to replace RBG we burn the entire f—–g thing down.” “If McConnell jams someone through, which he will, there will be riots.” “If McConnell gets another justice, we need to burn down the f—–g Senate.” “We’re shutting this country down if Trump and McConnell try to ram through an appointment before the election.” And…
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Mark Alexander writes for The Patriot Post.

Tags: Mark Alexander, Patriot Post, Debunking Demo Objections, to President Trump’s, Third SCOTUS NomineeTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

The Cancellation of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 07:17 PM PDT

Dr. Martin Luther King: ” I had a dream.”

by Pem Schaeffer: You may think the words of this title are harsh, and they are for an America rapidly disappearing. But I submit that the cancellation has already happened; hear me out.

I work at staying informed by a variety of means in this period of existential crisis for the country I grew up in; it is incredibly discouraging. I read from many sources, including those friendly to the primary provocateurs and terrorists of our time. Like many these days, I also sit in on Zoom based webinars from a variety of sources. This week I’ve been following one in which learned academics are discussing the fallacies and distortions of the 1619 Project created by the New York Times. This unproven, widely challenged narrative has spread like wildfire into the curriculum of public schools nationwide without so much as a public airing. It is a startling policy departure from the norms of American History.

In one of the sessions, reference was made to Dr. Martin Luther King, perhaps the best known and most revered leader in America’s reformation in civil rights. I realized that while I’ve always been moved by the brief video clips from his “I Have A Dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial in 1963, I had never actually read the entire speech.

So I looked it up and read it all, and I shall do it over and over in the next few days. I was stunned by the majesty of his words; the human dignity; the eloquence; and the glorious way in which he expounded on why and how “black (Negro) lives must matter” if the American dream is to fulfill its glorious promise. I implore you to read it too in its entirety. In the chaos of today’s violence and rioting and shouted demands of all sorts, it takes on a new and profound energy and relevance.

Reading it reminded me that I have lived believing that “a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character” was the essence of civil rights.

Letting the words sink in will make it clear that the Black Lives Matter movement, only seven years old, but seeking overthrow of the American system and culture and replacement with a Marxist regime, sneer at that essential MLK conception. BLM, and its leaders and followers, and their words, demands, behavior, and actions, have intentionally shredded every word, non-violent impulse, inspiration, and hope of Dr. King. They defile every thought he so sonorously echoed across the Mall to the throngs there in person, and those hearing it live on radio and TV. Today’s crumbling societal fabric makes that moment all the more powerful.

The simple, unavoidable truth is that BLM has completely inverted the thoughts and sentiments that Dr. King embodied that day. To use today’s vernacular, BLM has summarily canceled not only his speech, but Dr. King himself.

Simply put, BLM and Dr. King are polar opposites.

How long will it be before BLM “activists” tear down the signs on every street, avenue, boulevard, hospital, school, Church, and other entities named in MLK’s honor? When will his statues and other tributes to his legacy be covered with graffiti and other shameless acts of profane dishonor?

Even worse, when will the leaders of BLM, who clearly despise the very principles and civility on which Dr. King founded his life, and surrendered it to a hater’s rifle, issue formal declarations of their hatred and disagreement for everything King and his followers stood for and worked for so diligently? How long will it take before the progress made since that historic day is reversed and permanently erased from the “woke history” that fills our classrooms from this day forward? When will they publicly confess this is what they stand for, and unleash waves of sorrow like we’ve never seen?

Sadly, as I pondered these thoughts, a disturbing image came to mind. Mount Rushmore stands defaced, shelled, and left in ruins. A huge “Black Lives Matter” banner has been strung across its huge face.

At the base of this historic and symbolic shrine, in the resulting rubble, three crosses have been erected. On the tallest one, in the center, a tattered and burned vestige of Old Glory is nailed. On another, set lower, frayed and charred copies of The Declaration of Independence and Constitution are nailed. The third has Dr. King’s image and the text of The “I Have a Dream Speech” nailed haphazardly to it, each showing signs of abuse and burning.

Spanning the three crosses is a banner of frayed and tattered cloth, bearing the mournful words “It Is Finished.
———————–
Pem Schaeffer is a retired engineer who progressed to a position in business development leadership in defense electronics. He lives and writes in Brunswick, Maine, and blogs at The Other Side of Town.


Tags: Pen Schaeffer, blogger, The Cancellation of,  Rev. Dr. Martin Luther KingTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Protecting Senior Votes

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 06:41 PM PDT

by Penna Dexter: Here’s good advice for everyone to remember as we enter election season:

“Never trust a stranger with your ballot.” This comes from Ken Blackwell, the former Mayor of Cincinnati.

It’s particularly timely because, this November, universal Vote By Mail will take place in more than the few states where it’s already practiced. This differs from absentee voting in which a voter requests a ballot to mail back by election day. Universal Vote by Mail means ballots are sent to addresses without being requested. Countless ballots will land at addresses where residents have moved or passed away.

Of the risks posed by such a system, the worst distortions can occur in institutional settings, like nursing homes and assisted living facilities. The average stay for a resident of senior housing is just 24 months.

In an article for The American Spectator, Ken Blackwell points out that “It would be easy for dishonest staff or party-affiliated vote harvesters to fill out and return ballots of former residents with their own preferred candidate marked.” He says, “There are many documented cases of such fraud.”

Ballot harvesters collect ballots and deliver them to polling stations or mail them in. Even where ballot harvesting is legal, the opportunities for its abuse are obvious.

The American Constitutional Rights Union has launched a needed initiative: www.protectelderlyvotes.org The organization has sent letters to nursing home directors in seven key states and another 1000 facilities across the country explaining the need to ensure that the votes of their residents should not be suppressed or stolen. These directors will receive follow-up phone calls.

This is urgent. Currently, the ACRU is acting on a tip that the League of Women Voters and the ACLU are attempting to ballot harvest at assisted living facilities across the state of Florida.

To protect your loved ones and the facilities they live in there’s a voter fraud hotline at 877-730-ACRU.

Check out protectelderlyvotes.org.
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Penna Dexter is an author, lecturer, visiting professor and radio host and contributor on nationally syndicated Point of View and the “Probe” radio programs.


Tags: Penna Dexter, Viewpoints, Point of View, Protecting Senior VotesTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

Will Biden Propose A Mask Mandate Penalty Tax, Too?

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 06:22 PM PDT

 

by I & I Editorial Board: Joe Biden can’t seem to make up his mind about whether he supports a national mask mandate. First, he was for it. Then he said it was unconstitutional. Now he’s saying he thinks he could do it through an executive order.

Well, here’s an idea. If Biden is so determined to impose a national mask mandate, he should just follow the path laid out by Obamacare, that “big f–-ing deal” which, for the first time ever, forced Americans to buy something millions didn’t want or need – government-approved insurance.

The justification for the Obamacare insurance mandate was that it was good for society as a whole to have everyone insured because it would improve the nation’s health and save money. That’s why Democrats officially labeled the Obamacare mandate penalty on the uninsured – we are not kidding about this – the “shared responsibility payment.”

When that flagrant violation of the Constitution’s limits on federal intrusion into our lives went before the Supreme Court, Justice John Roberts defended the Obamacare mandate by saying that, because of the way it was structured, it fell under the government’s taxing authority.

In other words, the government wasn’t mandating that you buy insurance, just taxing those who couldn’t prove to the IRS that they had “qualifying coverage.”

Thankfully, the Obamacare mandate penalty went away when Republicans set the amount at zero, but the mandate to buy insurance is technically still on the books.

So why doesn’t Biden, while he’s busy reviving the Obamacare mandate penalty, simply add another requirement: that every American buy and wear a government-approved mask or pay a penalty. Sorry, make a “shared responsibility payment.”

He can use the same argument as he and Barack Obama did for the individual mandate – that it will improve public health and save money.

Now, we know what you are going to say: “What about those who can’t afford a mask?”

Fear not. Obamacare shows us the way.

All that’s required is the creation of Mask Exchanges, either run by states or the federal government, and a Mask.gov site. There you will be able to choose from several government-approved masks.

After selecting the mask, you enter your projected income for the year, your marital status, and the number of children you have. Depending on your answers to those questions, a mask subsidy would kick in. For a married couple with two children making $50,000 a year, for example, a $2 mask might cost something like $1.25.

Then the government would pay the mask manufacturer the difference.

There would, of course, have to be a new regulatory agency to make sure that mask manufacturers weren’t taking advantage of the subsidies to jack up mask prices.

And we’d need a new federal department to certify that the masks being sold meet the government’s standards. Maybe Biden can have his “Board of Scientists” do that while they are approving a coronavirus vaccine.

To be fair, there would have to be exemptions to the mask mandate for those who meet a specified set of criteria which, like the Obamacare mandate exemptions, would include spousal abuse. All they’d have to do to qualify for the exemption is go to their local Mask Exchange and fill out the necessary paperwork.

At tax time, you’d simply need to provide proof that you purchased a mask, and wore it per the Biden mask mandate guidelines. Those who can’t show they met the mandate would make a “shared responsibility payment,” with the penalty amount based on their adjusted gross income.

As to what proof would be required to show compliance, surely the IRS could come up with a set of instructions that are simple and easy to follow.

Oh, and one more thing. If your income was higher or lower than you predicted when you enrolled in the Affordable Mask Program, you’d have to either pay back the excess subsidy money (if you made more money) when you file your taxes, or get a larger tax refund (if your income was lower).

Now, what could be simpler and more effective than that? Image Note: Joe Biden violates his own mask mandate.(C-SPAN)
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Written by the I&I Editorial Board.


Tags: I & I Editorial Board, Will Biden Propose, Mask Mandate Penalty TaxTo share or post to your site, click on “Post Link”. Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and “Like” Facebook Page – Thanks!

What You Need to Know About Supreme Court Confirmation Process, and Trump’s Top Picks

Posted: 22 Sep 2020 05:55 PM PDT

by Katrina Trinko: What steps are involved in a Supreme Court confirmation process and are any optional? What do we know about Amy Coney Barrett and Barbara Lagoa, reportedly two of the top contenders to be nominated? Can Democrats pack the Supreme Court? And what lessons did the left and right learn from the Kavanaugh hearings? John Malcolm, who heads the Meese Legal Center at The Heritage Foundation, joins the podcast to discuss all this and more.
We also cover these stories:

  • President Donald Trump pledges to announce a Supreme Court nominee Friday or Saturday.
  • Democrats won’t rule out impeaching Trump as a way to slow down Supreme Court confirmation process.
  • Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of San Francisco says the city’s rules on religious services during COVID-19 are discriminatory.

Kate Trinko: Joining me is John Malcolm, vice president of the Institute for Constitutional Government and head of the Meese Legal Center at The Heritage Foundation. John, thanks for joining us.

John Malcolm: No, it’s my pleasure, Kate. Good to be with you.

Trinko: So, I do want to discuss the legacy of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, but this being Washington, D.C., people did move very quickly away from mourning the late justice to discussing what’s next.

First off, we’re obviously close to the next election. Is there anything in the Constitution or in precedent that makes it problematic for the president and the Senate to confirm a new Supreme Court justice before the election?

Malcolm: No, there’s nothing in the Constitution about that. The Constitution basically says that the president nominates, the Senate gives its advice and consent, although they can decide to withhold their advice and consent. And then once somebody is confirmed, the president appoints them. It’s a three-step process and that’s all it says.

Now, people are citing precedent of what we did in 2016 and what we’re doing now and in other confirmation fights.

And there are an awful lot of senators on both sides of the political aisle that I believe are eating the words that they said in 2016, but there was certainly no constitutional impediment or Senate rule or precedent that would prevent the president from getting his nominee confirmed if the Senate decides to conform that nominee.

Trinko: OK. So, on a practical level, you’ve watched a lot of Supreme Court confirmations. What actually needs to be part of the process and how short could this process actually be?

Malcolm: Well, the process has lengthened over time in part because there are courtesy calls that the nominees make on senators and the FBI does more extensive background checks and provides reports to the senators, but the process can go very quickly.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg, when she was confirmed, I think it was something like 96 to 3. These were very different times. Antonin Scalia was confirmed, I think it was 98 or 99 to nothing.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg was confirmed in six weeks. Sandra Day O’Connor, I looked this up, was confirmed in 33 days. Franklin Delano Roosevelt nominated one justice, James Byrne, who was confirmed the day he was nominated. His next nominee, Harold Burton, he struggled. I mean, it took a whole day from the time he was nominated until he was confirmed. So that was a different time and things are more contentious, but it can happen very quickly.

Trinko: So really it sounds like the only thing that’s absolutely essential is the Senate vote. It sounds like the courtesy calls and all that maybe it would be unwise to skip them, but it sounds like that could be done.

Malcolm: Yes, that’s right. I mean, the president could nominate somebody this week and the Senate Judiciary Committee could hold the hearing next week.

I think the only procedural rule that I am aware of is, and I suppose this could even be waived, the Senate Judiciary Committee typically schedules a meeting for a vote a weekend after having its hearing.

As a matter of course, if the minority party requests an additional week before a vote, that is just granted. So there should be a vote within two weeks after the hearing concludes for the nominee. And then it goes to the Senate floor where it could be fast-tracked.

Trinko: President [Donald] Trump has said he intends to pick a female justice. He’s mentioned two women contenders by name, Amy Coney Barrett and Barbara Lagoa. So let’s start with Barrett. What do we know about her? What do we know about her judicial philosophy?

Malcolm: Well, we know a lot more about Amy Coney Barrett than we know about Barbara Lagoa. So Amy Coney Barrett, an exceptionally bright woman, not that Barbara Lagoa isn’t, graduated from Notre Dame Law School, clerk for Judge Laurence Silberman of the D.C. Circuit, and then Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court.

[She] spent a brief time in private practice, worked for the Republicans in the Bush v. Gore dispute, and then spent most of her time in academia and most of that time at University of Notre Dame Law School.

I mentioned that because she wrote, she published in many prestigious law reviews around the country on a whole host of issues that judges deal with and that the conservative legal community cares about.

She wrote a lot about originalism. She wrote about a lot about textualism. She wrote a lot about how judges ought to approach precedent and when they should adhere or depart from precedent. She was quizzed on all of those things and of course her Catholic faith during her confirmation hearing.

Most memorably, Sen. Dianne Feinstein from California, talking to her about Roe v. Wade, said that the dogma lived loudly in her. And she held up with tremendous grace and poise under fire. I think that Sen. Feinstein probably regretted at the end of that hearing having asked her that question.

And since she’s been on the court, which was in 2017, she’s written over a hundred opinions, both majority opinions, dissents, and concurrences, and has shown that she is a committed textualist and a committed originalist.

She said during her confirmation hearings, for instance, that she would set aside her personal beliefs and her faith to rule according to the law.

Certainly as a devout Catholic, which I believe she is, I don’t know this for a fact, but I would suspect that maybe she does not like the death penalty on a personal basis, yet she has joined opinions that have upheld capital sentences.

As far as I know, she hasn’t ruled in any cases involving abortion. And my guess is the nominee, whoever she is, since we know it’s going to be a she, will follow what Ruth Bader Ginsburg did during her confirmation hearing and just say that it would be inappropriate for her to offer any hints or suggestions about how she might rule in a case that would be likely to come before the court.

As to Barbara Lagoa, people I know who know her like her a lot. She’s Cuban American. She went to Columbia, Columbia Law School, in private practice for a little while. She did pro bono work for the Miami family of Elian Gonzalez. She was an assistant US attorney, federal prosecutor in Miami for a few years.

She has been a judge for quite a long period of time. She was appointed to an intermediate appellate court in Florida by Gov. Jeb Bush in 2006. She served on that intermediate appellate court until January 2019 when Gov. Ron DeSantis named her as the first Cuban American to the Florida Supreme Court.

She did not stay long on the Florida Supreme Court because President Trump plucked her off of that court and nominated her to the 11th Circuit where she actually was confirmed quite handily. I think the vote was 82 to 15, but she’s only been on that court since December of 2019.

She hasn’t issued rulings in these significant number of cases. Although recently she did join an en banc majority. It was a 6 to 4 ruling upholding Florida’s felon voting law, which required felons to serve their entire sentence, including paying all fines and restitution before they’re eligible to have their voting rights restored.

She joined the majority opinion that was written by Chief Judge Bill Pryor of the 11th Circuit and one thing, which I took great part in—so, Judge Pryor not only wrote the majority opinion, he wrote a one-page concurring opinion that was quite bold in which he said:

The role of the judge is not to be on the right side of history. The role of the judge is to follow the law, be a good judge—whether it is popular or not—and stand on adherence to the law and the strength of one’s convictions and not bend to the popular whims of the day.One other judge joined that concurrence, Judge Barbara Lagoa.

Trinko: Interesting. So of course the most recent confirmation hearing was Brett Kavanaugh’s and that was, to put it mildly, very ugly and divisive.

Do you think conservatives learned lessons from the confirmation of Kavanaugh? Do you think the left learned lessons? And how do you think that the Kavanaugh hearing or its shadow could affect this upcoming confirmation process?

Malcolm: I have a variety of answers to that. I’m not sure the right learned much because these were lessons they had already learned through the Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas confirmation hearings, which also involved, certainly in the case of Thomas and Kavanaugh, the politics of character destruction.

So, these vacancies don’t come up very often. There were only nine of these justices. The Supreme Court considers all sorts of issues, statutory cases, important constitutional cases that define our rights, separation of powers, etc.

Indeed, the court takes on a lot of issues that I personally think they shouldn’t take on and should leave to the democratic process, but because they take on these hot-button issues, senators want to know the personal beliefs of these.

They want to get guarantees as to how these judges or nominees are going to rule in individual cases and they get frustrated when they don’t get answers that they want to hear. And sometimes they reach out for more personal attacks in order to try to damage or defeat a nominee.

This is going to be tough. I don’t think that it will be very credible to accuse either Barbara Lagoa or Amy Coney Barrett if one of them is the nominee of having attempted to rape somebody in college, which was the allegation against Brett Kavanaugh.

I think that both of these women, they’re charming and quite poised, who have been through a confirmation process recently. I think the Democrats are going to have to think very long and hard about how they attack these nominees because if they’re viewed as having overplayed their hand, that could have an effect on how the electorate and how undecided voters view them.

It will be particularly interesting, I believe, to watch how vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris, who is on the Senate Judiciary Committee, approaches this hearing.

Trinko: You brought up the nine justices, which in most of our lifetimes that’s been the status quo, but what is the history of how many justices there have been in the Supreme Court? Have there been court-packing attempts?

The reason I asked this, of course, is because Reps. Joe Kennedy and Jerry Nadler, who’s chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, both tweeted over the weekend comments that indicated that they think the Democrats should add more Supreme Court justices if a Trump nominee gets through.

So is this a viable proposition and how does it fit into the larger picture?

Malcolm: Let] me go over the history of that and then I’ll tell you whether I think it’s a viable proposition. There is nothing in the Constitution. It just says that there shall be a Supreme Court and such inferior courts as Congress may establish.

The number of Supreme Court justices is established by statute and it has changed over time. Although there have been nine justices for a long time, there was one serious attempt in our nation’s history to try to pack the court.

President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was very frustrated that a majority on the Supreme Court were issuing rulings striking down large portions of his New Deal. He didn’t like this. So he proposed a plan to basically pack the court—a number of the justices were elderly—that basically said that he would get to name another justice for every justice who was over 70.

That did not happen. It did not happen for a couple of reasons. One is he could not get enough democratic support. They controlled the Senate at that time, fairly substantial majority. He couldn’t get enough of the democratic senators to go along with that plan.

One of the reasons why he couldn’t garner that kind of support—and this has been referred to historically as “the switch in time that saved nine”—is that after Franklin Delano Roosevelt put forth his court-packing plan, one of the justices, I think it was Justice Owen Roberts, started changing his votes and started voting with what had been the four dissenters to uphold large portions of the New Deal.

And once Justice Roberts changed his vote and the New Deal was being upheld and not being struck down, I think some of the air went out of that balloon in terms of that effort to pack the court.

Now, I think it is likely that if the Democrats keep the House and take control of the Senate and win the presidency, that they will pack court, not just the Supreme Court, by the way. They’ll probably add additional slots to the lower federal courts of appeals and additional district court judges too.

The last time that happened on any kind of a broad basis, not the Supreme Court, but lower courts, was under Jimmy Carter. So I think it’s highly likely that they may do it anyway.

But certainly if President Trump pushes through a nominee and he loses and the Senate is retaken by the Democrats, I think it’s a virtual certainty that they will pack the court.

The biggest impediment to them at the moment is that while the filibuster has been done away with—nuke is the phrase that was used, the nuclear option was used to do away with the filibuster or nominations—the filibuster still lives for legislation.

And again, you’d have to pass a statute to change the number of justices on the court. But I think the Senate has Democrats that have already made it quite clear that they are fully prepared to go nuclear on the legislative filibuster, too. And if they do that, all they need is for the House to pass something, 51 senators to pass it, and for a president to sign it.

Trinko: To change tack, many conservatives have been frustrated with the recent decisions by Chief Justice John Roberts. Justice Neil Gorsuch also disappointed some conservatives with his decision in a recent ruling on Title VII and gender identity. We also have Republican Sen. Josh Hawley proposing that it’s time for a litmus test on abortion for judicial candidates.

So, do you think conservatives need to vet Supreme Court nominees any differently than they did in the past or how should conservatives approach this?

Malcolm: Well, it is certainly true that there have been rulings, obviously, the Bostock case, which you alluded to that was written by Neil Gorsuch, several cases, the two Obamacare cases, the DACA case, the citizenship question on the census, the June Medical, the abortion where Chief Justice Roberts —

Trinko: John, you’re just putting me in a bad mood at this point.

Malcolm: Well, I’ll say this, look, even your friends, even people who you like and admire who will rule the way you like 90-plus percent of the time are occasionally going to disappoint you.

I mean, even Antonin Scalia—and no conservative would say that Antonin Scalia was anything other than a fantastic justice—joined in an opinion that held that burning an American flag was protected speech under the First Amendment. And he wrote an opinion called Employment Division v. Smith that people of faith believed really watered down the Free Exercise Clause of the Constitution.

So, even great justices whom you like and admire will occasionally disappoint you. These are independent-minded men and women, and you look to see whether they are issuing opinions with fidelity, even if you think they got it wrong, or whether they are really tacking to the left, which many Republican appointees—John Paul Stevens, David Souter, certainly Earl Warren and William Brennan—have done.

Now, I understand that frustration. And I understand the desire of some to say, “The vetting process has not worked well. We need to have a litmus test.”

I am not a fan of litmus tests for a variety of reasons. One is I think that judges take an oath that they are not going to pre-judge cases until they are presented with a case and consider the arguments of the lawyers in any amicus curiae that weigh in on an issue. And I think that that is something that judges should take very, very seriously.

The other thing is that Josh Hawley said, “Well, I want to have a litmus test on Roe v. Wade. And … anybody has to have said before they were nominated what their views were.”

Well, if you went with that, then there are some justices like David Souter who probably get through. And there are other justices like Clarence Thomas—who was asked about this in his confirmation hearing, he said, “Look, I focused on other issues. I haven’t spent a lot of time thinking about Roe v. Wade”—who do not get through. And far as I’m concerned, any rule that would keep Clarence Thomas off of the Supreme Court is a bad rule.

Trinko: Let’s switch to Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s legacy. She served nearly 30 years on the Supreme Court and before that obviously had a long career as a lawyer. How will she be remembered in the legal world?

Malcolm: Well, she was a giant in the legal world in a way that actually very, very few lawyers can reach. She is the equivalent for women’s rights that Thurgood Marshall was in terms of the rights for African Americans.

She graduated from Columbia Law School. She was at Harvard for three years and then she transferred to Columbia because her husband had gotten a job in New York, finished, tied for first in her class when she was at Harvard. I think she was the first woman on the Harvard Law Review. She struggled to get a job because she was a woman. Then she became a professor.

And then she started in 1972 the American Civil Liberties Union’s Women’s Rights Project. And she mapped out a strategy, a very successful one, to advance women’s rights. She argued six seminal cases, winning five of them before the U.S. Supreme Court and lots of cases in the lower court. So in terms of advancing women’s rights, she is clearly a legend and deservedly.

She then served with distinction for a number of years in the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals and 27 years on the Supreme Court where she was certainly a liberal icon.

So while she certainly left her mark as a judge on the D.C. Circuit and a justice on the Supreme Court, where she really left her mark was as the lawyer.

To show how much respect she had in the legal community and how different times were, even though she had started this ACLU women’s project where a lot of Republicans did not like the positions that she advocated for, I think she was confirmed something like 96 to 3. And on the flip side, Antonin Scalia was confirmed … either 98 or 99 to nothing. But those times are long gone now.

Trinko: Speaking of those times in your op-ed for The Daily Signal with Elizabeth Slattery, you guys talked a lot about what great friends she and Scalia were. And it really does seem to be the sort of friendship that is a little baffling in 2020. And also, sadly, it seems to be going out of vogue in Washington, D.C. So why were these two such pals?

Malcolm: I think they knew … the importance and impact that they had had on the law. They served together on the D.C. Circuit before they were justices on the Supreme Court. I think they admired each other’s writing abilities and legal acumen, and they shared a lot of common interests.

Mos>t prominently, I suppose, that everyone knows about is they both loved the opera. And actually I love the opera too. And I would see them at the opera together. They were in operas, the Washington National Opera, on occasions. And they obviously enjoyed each other’s time.

I remember speaking and not with Justice Scalia, but with Mrs. Scalia, Maureen Scalia, and she would just wax rhapsodic about what wonderful people Ruth and Marty Ginsburg were.

At one point I remember the two of them were being interviewed and were asked about the friendship—which many, many people consider very bizarre—and Justice Scalia looked at her and said, “Other than her legal opinions, what’s not to like?” And they fortunately were able to have respect and admiration for each other.

Clearly they disagree without being disagreeable and could put aside their political and legal differences to forge this great friendship. And you are right, those sorts of relationships are now going the way of the dinosaur.

Trinko: Last question. We are seeing a ton of interest in the Supreme Court nomination. And in recent years, interest seems to have only grown. A lot of donations flow into both sides. And while that’s great for you, you’re head of the Legal Center, do you think it’s good for America that we care this much about who’s on the Supreme Court? Is this what the Founders had in mind?

Malcolm: Well, I think the reason it’s not great for America is also the reason why the Founders would have been befuddled, which is the Supreme Court, by expanding areas of the Constitution—so just in my opinion—finding a right of privacy, expanding the Commerce Clause so that they not only consider commerce that happens in-between states, but they get into a lot of issues about things that happen totally within one state that had the most minor of economic impact.

They’ve expanded things like the General Welfare Clause. Instead of saying that a law has to apply to the general welfare, it now applies to bridges to nowhere in Alaska. That’s good enough to pass the general welfare test.

Because the Supreme Court has expanded the Constitution in this sort of way through living constitutionalism, the Supreme Court now gets involved in so many issues that the Founders would have believed should have been left to the democratic process.

And because the court gets involved in all of those issues, the public comes to view them as super legislators. And if you view them as super legislators, then they kind of care about how they vote on the issue that you care about. And that’s why these things become blood feuds.

Trinko: Well, John, thank you so much for making the time to talk to us today.

Malcolm: Good to be with you.

———————–

Katrina Trinko is editor-in-chief of The Daily Signal.


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September 23, 2020 – Having trouble viewing this email? Open it in your browser.
Morning Rundown
US reaches grim milestone of 200,000 lives lost due to COVID-19: It’s been six months since coronavirus was declared a national emergency, and yesterday, the nation reached a grim milestone: 200,000 Americans have died from the disease, according to Johns Hopkins University’s tracker. To memorialize the lives lost, 20,000 flags were installed in front of the Washington Monument facing the White House. The U.S. remains the country hardest hit by the virus, with more than 200,000 deaths and 6 million cases, which disproportionately sickened and killed front-line workers and people of color. That’s nearly twice as many Americans as the 116,516 who died in World War I, the third-deadliest conflict in the nation’s history. It’s equal to all the American lives that were lost in the Vietnam War and the Korean War, combined with a year’s worth of deaths to guns and drug overdoses in the U.S. COVID-19 is now the third-leading cause of death in the U.S. this year, behind heart disease and cancer. The virus has also taken a toll on the American psyche. Mental health experts have called the pandemic a kind of “perfect storm,” because in addition to creating an overwhelming sense of hopelessness, it has also led to unemployment, financial instability and isolation. Health experts say it may be a while until a safe and effective vaccine can be widely distributed, but here’s what they expect to happen over the next six months.
Romney supports election year Senate vote on Trump’s Supreme Court nominee: Utah Republican Sen. Mitt Romney said he will support a vote on President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee this year, possibly before the Nov. 3 presidential election. The senator had been seen as a possible vulnerability for Republicans, as he was the only GOP senator who voted to convict Trump during his impeachment trial. “If the nominee reaches the Senate floor, I intend to vote based upon their qualifications,” Romney said in a statement. Romney also maintained that this situation is different from what happened in 2016, when, nine months before Election Day, the Republican-held Senate blocked the Supreme Court appointment of Judge Merrick Garland, President Barack Obama’s nominee to fill a Supreme Court vacancy, arguing it was too close to the election. Romney’s announcement is a major boost to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s effort to lock down GOP support for a nomination vote over angry objections from Democrats. Currently, only two of four needed Republicans have joined efforts to block the nomination, which may be announced this weekend, giving Democrats very few means to stop McConnell from moving forward.
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NBC MORNING RUNDOWN

Image

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Good morning, NBC News readers.

 

President Donald Trump appears to have secured enough Senate support to push a vote on his Supreme Court nominee. “Zombie” storm Paulette has come back to life and Covid-19 claims another victim: Halloween.

 

Here’s what we’re watching this Wednesday morning.

White House gets behind idea of pushing Supreme Court nominee vote before the election

A consensus has formed within the West Wing to push for a vote on President Donald Trump’s coming Supreme Court nominee before the election, with aides and advisers saying they are increasingly optimistic that they will be able to pull off the speedy confirmation, three NBC News White House correspondents report.

 

Some outside advisers had initially argued that waiting to hold a vote until after Election Day could be the most politically advantageous strategy, said a person familiar with the thinking. Having the seat vacant could motivate conservatives to turn out for Trump to ensure that it got filled and save senators in tight races from having to make a controversial vote so close to the election.

But the momentum in the past 48 hours has swung toward getting a vote done as soon as possible, with those inside and outside the White House arguing that the quicker the process, the more likely they are to fill the seat, senior administration officials said.

 

Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, added to GOP confidence Tuesday when he threw his support behind Trump’s push to fill the seat vacated by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg quickly.

 

All eyes had been on Romney, often a Trump critic who voted to convict the president during the Senate impeachment trial earlier this year, as someone who could join Democrats to block the confirmation vote.

 

Trump even expressed appreciation toward his frequent foe during a rally in Pennsylvania Tuesday, saying: “Thank you, Mitt.”

 

To date, only two Republican senators have said it is too close to the presidential election to consider a court nomination, not enough to block it.

 

The president promised to “reveal” his nominee at the White House at 5 p.m. on Saturday.

 

Meantime, Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden punted on the hypothetical question of how Democrats should retaliate if Republicans manage to secure their nominee. Asked if he’d be open to expanding on the number of Supreme Court seats if given the opportunity, he demurred.

 

“It’s a legitimate question. But let me tell you why I’m not going to answer that question. Because it will shift the focus,” Biden said.

 

The former vice president also won an interesting endorsement Tuesday: Cindy McCain threw her support behind Biden in a stinging rebuke of Trump by the widow of the GOP’s 2008 presidential nominee.

 

Trump has had a fraught relationship with members of John McCain’s family since he disparaged the Arizona senator during his 2016 campaign. But the McCains have stopped short of endorsing Trump’s rivals until now.

 

Cindy McCain’s backing could help Biden appeal to Republicans disaffected with Trump and give him a boost the crucial swing state that McCain represented in Congress for 35 years.

‘No way in hell’: Wary parents won’t vaccinate kids, setting up future school showdowns

As pharmaceutical companies race to manufacture a Covid-19 vaccine, many people are wary of a shot that is working its way through the approval process at record speed during a highly politicized pandemic.

 

While some professions could require employees to get the vaccine, experts say schools almost certainly will require students to — potentially setting the stage for a showdown between reluctant parents and education officials.

 

“This is going to be a huge issue, and I don’t think most people understand that yet,” said one education law attorney.

 

Meantime, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new warnings about Covid-19 that will make Halloween more frightful and may dash any would-be trick-or-treaters dreams.

Image

DHS gave millions in contracts to firm where acting chief’s wife works

The consulting firm where the wife of acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf is an executive has been awarded more than $6 million in contracts from the Department of Homeland Security since September 2018, according to records on the federal government website USA Spending.

 

Wolf became chief of staff at the Transportation Security Administration, a DHS agency, in 2017 and chief of staff to Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen in 2018.

 

He took over as acting secretary in November and has been nominated to become secretary. His confirmation hearing before the Senate is scheduled for 10 a.m. Wednesday.

 

Wolf’s wife, Hope Wolf, is vice president of professional staff operations at Berkeley Research Group, a consulting firm. Although the company has a long history of federal contracts, it did not do work for DHS until after Wolf became the TSA’s chief of staff in 2017.

 

Image

Acting Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf’s confirmation hearing before the Senate is scheduled to begin this morning.

(Photo: Oliver Contreras / Sipa USA via AP file)

Four issues that must be resolved for Afghan peace talks to succeed

Taliban militants and delegates appointed by the Afghan government are meeting in Qatar in an attempt to end decades of war that have torn Afghanistan apart and left it reliant on foreign aid.

 

And as the sheen of the opening ceremony begins to fade, the huge task remains of resolving one of the world’s deadliest conflicts.

NBC News has spoken to Taliban commanders, an Afghan government negotiator and a former high-level diplomat to find out what barriers could prevent the cycle of conflict being broken.

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Afghan Taliban militants and villagers attend a gathering in March 2020. (Photo: Noorullah Shirzada / AFP – Getty Images file)

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The exercise bike brand Echelon developed its latest exercise bike alongside Amazon to hit the right mix of tech, style and price. Here’s what to know about the Prime Bike.

One fun thing 

From book reports to Halloween costumes to law school inspiration, young women are speaking out about how Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg impacted and motivated them.

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Thanks for reading the Morning Rundown.

 

If you have any comments — likes, dislikes — send me an email at: petra@nbcuni.com 

If you’re a fan, please forward it to your family and friends. They can sign-up here.

 

Thanks, Petra Cahill


NBC FIRST READ

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From NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Carrie Dann and Melissa Holzberg

FIRST READ: Here’s how Biden passed Trump last month in the 2020 money race

Augusts often have played pivotal roles in our modern presidential contests.

 

Think 2004 (when John Kerry’s disastrous August put him in hole from which he never climbed out) or 2008 (hello, Sarah Palin).

 

Well, three weeks after it ended, we know Joe Biden clearly won August – at least on the financial front.

Alternate text

Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Not only did Team Biden (campaign + DNC + joint fundraising accounts) emerge with $141 million more in the bank per last month’s filing than Team Trump did (campaign + RNC + JFAs), $466 million to $325 million.

 

They did it after starting in a nearly $200 million cash-on-hand hole when Biden essentially wrapped up the Democratic nomination at the end of the March – that’s when the pandemic was beginning in this country.

 

Here’s a cash on hand comparison by month that NBC’s Ben Kamisar put together for us, per FEC filings and campaign releases:

 

As of March 31

Team Trump: $244 million

Team Biden: $62 million

Difference: Trump +$182 million

SOURCE: FEC reports

 

As of June 30

Team Trump: $296 million

Team Biden: $238 million

Difference: Trump +$58 million

SOURCE: FEC reports

 

As of July 31

Team Trump: $300 million

Team Biden: $294 million

Difference: Trump +$6 million

SOURCE: Campaign statements

 

As of Aug. 31

Team Biden: $466 million

Team Trump: $325 million

Difference: Biden +$141 million

SOURCE: Campaign statements

 

So Biden and the Democrats went from a cash-on-hand deficit of $182 million after March, to an advantage of $141 million after August.

 

That’s some kind of swing.

Biden improves his standing with younger voters

Biden passing Trump in the money race isn’t the only notable change for the Democrat since the summer.

 

He’s also improved his numbers among young voters, per the latest NBC News and Quibi analysis of young voters from the NBC News/WSJ polls.

 

“Voters under 40 now view Joe Biden more favorably than they did earlier this year, and they’re now even more likely to choose him over Trump,” one of us writes.

 

“The September data [from the NBC/WSJ poll] show that 38 percent of voters who are either members of Generation Z (ages 18-23) or millennials (ages 24-39) have positive views of Biden, compared with 40 percent who have negative views.”

 

“The numbers come one week after NBC News and Quibi released a comprehensive analysis of about 2,000 younger voters reached by pollsters at Hart Research and Public Opinion Strategies from January to August. In that group, just 28 percent of young voters had positive views of Biden, while 41 percent had negative views.”

 

Trump’s best state poll numbers in weeks

Two new WaPo/ABC polls of Florida and Arizona represent President Trump’s best state numbers in weeks.

 

In Arizona, Trump is up among likely voters, 49 percent to 48 percent, though that’s well within the poll’s margin of error. (Among registered voters, it’s Biden 49 percent, Trump 47 percent.)

 

And in Florida, it’s Trump 51 percent among likely voters to Biden’s 47 percent. (Among registered voters, it’s Biden 48 percent to Trump 47 percent.)

 

But caveat: This notable difference between LVs and RVs isn’t what we’re seeing in other surveys this presidential season – with turnout expected to be sky-high.

 

Another caveat: This is the first Arizona poll in quite a while that’s had Trump ahead. So take that into consideration.

 

As CNN’s Harry Enten tweets, “Honestly think these are the best polls Trump has had in 6 months? Of course, we’ve had a lot of polls in these states & these are… well they’re unique.”

 

DATA DOWNLOAD: The numbers you need to know today

6,927,827: The number of confirmed cases of coronavirus in the United States, per the most recent data from NBC News and health officials. (That’s 36,527 more than yesterday morning.)

 

202,063: The number of deaths in the United States from the virus so far. (That’s 945 more than yesterday morning.)

 

96.61 million: The number of coronavirus tests that have been administered in the United States so far, according to researchers at The COVID Tracking Project.

 

More than 36,500: The number of Latinos who have died of the virus, according to CDC data analyzed by the Washington Post.

 

10 points: The jump in younger voters’ positive ratings for Joe Biden in our September poll, according to a new analysis from NBC and Quibi comparing the latest results to merged data from January-August.

 

359 to 57: The House vote last night on a spending bill that will fund the government through December 11.

 

$6 million: The amount in contracts that DHS has awarded since September 2018 to a consulting firm where acting secretary Chad Wolf’s wife is an executive.

 

As many as 100,000: The number of ballots that could be rejected in Pennsylvania due to the state’s requirement that all mail ballots arrive with a “secrecy envelope,” according to one official’s projections.

TWEET OF THE DAY: What has changed since March (and what hasn’t)

Image

2020 VISION: Did someone say “Shenanigans”? 

President Trump continued attacking the integrity of mail in ballots during his rally in Pennsylvania last night:

 

“They have these fake ballots. Millions and millions of ballots. By the way when you — when, not if, when you see shenanigans please report it to your authorities, okay? The real authorities. They’re watching. And the authorities are watching. But please report it.”

 

But in Pennsylvania, there are concerns over hundreds of thousands of mail-in votes being counted.

 

Based on the state Supreme Court’s ruling last week, “naked ballots” in Pennsylvania – ballots sent in without a secrecy envelope – can be rejected.

 

And Philadelphia city commissioner Lisa Deely said that based on the error rate in prior elections, she believes this ruling can lead to more than 100,000 mail-in ballots being rejected.

 

President Trump won Pennsylvania by just over 44,000 votes in 2016.

 

On the campaign trail today: Joe Biden stumps in Charlotte, N.C… And one of us moderates a VA-SEN debate between incumbent Mark Warner and GOP challenger Daniel Gade.

Ad Watch from Ben Kamisar

Today’s Ad Watch take a look at some rough new GOP ads in Georgia that hem tight to the crime/rioting message Republicans are pushing in the hopes to win back suburban voters.

 

This recent spot from Republican Sen. David Perdue uses footage of the recent ambush of Los Angeles police officers before tying Democrat Jon Ossoff to the “Defund the Police” movement.

 

And this one from the NRCC in Georgia’s 6th District hits Democratic Rep. Lucy McBath on a part of the House Democrats’ coronavirus aid plan. The ad says the bill would “release criminals from prison — murderers, rapists” and that her support for it proves McBath can’t “protect our neighborhoods.”

 

Meanwhile, recent ads from the Democrats in those races center on health care, the issue that helped Democrats flip the House in 2018. That year, Republicans leaned heavily on the security argument down the stretch, warning that the Democrats’ immigration policies would make the nation unsafe. But ultimately, the health care message won out. It looks like we’ll see if anything’s changed in November.

 

THE LID: Are you ready for some football?

Don’t miss the pod from yesterday, when we looked at how Americans are viewing the return of college football during a pandemic.

ICYMI: What ELSE is happening in the world?

United States of Care (USofCare) has released its 2020 Voter Action Guide ahead of the election.

 

Cindy McCain has endorsed Joe Biden.

 

A consensus is growing in the White House to hold a Supreme Court confirmation vote before the November election.

 

Would Biden expand the Supreme Court if Republicans jam through the new nominee? He’s punting on the question for now.

 

Activists are taking aim at Trump’s TPS policies, which could affect hundreds of thousands of immigrants.

 

The UK is facing a new round of coronavirus restrictions.

 

The New York Times does a deep dive into how the 2020 race is playing out in Milwaukee’s suburbs.

Thanks for reading.

If you’re a fan, please forward this to a friend. They can sign up here.

 

We love hearing from our readers, so shoot us a line here with your comments and suggestions.

 

Thanks,

Chuck, Mark, Carrie and Melissa 


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Eye Opener

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MANHATTAN INSTITUTE

 September 23, 2020
Featuring the latest analysis, commentary, and research from Manhattan Institute scholars

POLICING

Manhattan Institute Launches Policing and Public Safety Initiative

For 30 years, the Manhattan Institute has pioneered policing innovations—most notably the theory of “broken windows” as an element of a community policing strategy—that have improved both safety and quality of life across American cities. Now, MI will expand upon this work with the launch of a new initiative on policing and public safety.

CIVIL SOCIETY

Photo: Massimo Giachetti/iStock

Do Democrats Hate Charity?

Negotiations on another round of Covid-19 relief from Congress reveals a larger philosophical difference between the parties when it comes to charity.
By Howard Husock
Washington Examiner
September 22, 2020

POLITICS

Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Hispanic Voters May Provide the Margin in November

Will Trump’s improving poll numbers be enough to neutralize Biden’s natural advantage?
By Jason L. Riley
The Wall Street Journal
September 23, 2020

Photo: Drew Angerer/Getty Images

When Is the Election?

How off-cycle election timing distorts local democracy.
By Sarah F. Anzia
City Journal Online
September 22, 2020

PUBLIC HEALTH

Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty Images

The Moral Case for Reopening Schools—Without Masks

Achieving herd immunity in this pandemic should be society’s goal right now.
By John Tierney
City Journal Online
September 22, 2020

UPCOMING EVENTS

A Conversation with Governor Charlie Baker: Leading Through Crisis

On Thursday, September 24, Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker joins the Manhattan Institute to discuss the lessons he has learned from leading the commonwealth during these daunting times and, more broadly, from his efforts to transform government services and improve the ability to live, work, and learn in Massachusetts.

DJ Jaffe’s Legacy and the Future of Mental Illness Policy Reform

On Thursday, September 24, join the Manhattan Institute for a virtual discussion on the legacy of DJ Jaffe and the future of mental illness policy reform.

PODCAST

Photo: master1305/iStock

The Covid-19 Recession, Revisited

Amity Shlaes joins Brian Anderson to discuss a classical liberal perspective on the coronavirus shutdown, the similar responses of U.S. mayors to violent disorder in both the late 1960s and in 2020, and the shift in what’s considered acceptable economic thought in journalism.

NEW YORK CITY & STATE

New York City: Reborn

The Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent economic crisis have sent New York City—not to mention the country at large—into a recession, put millions out of work, and crippled public services, inviting questions about the city’s future. But Gotham will bounce back—and the Manhattan Institute, which this month launches its New York City: Reborn initiative, will be there to help spark its renaissance.

FEATURED BOOK

The Unelected: How an Unaccountable Elite Is Governing America

America is increasingly polarized around elections, but as James R. Copland explains, the unelected control much of the government apparatus that affects our lives. In this timely new book, The Unelected, Copland discusses how unelected actors have assumed control of the American republic―and where we need to go to chart a corrective course.

ORDER NOW

FEATURED EVENTS

Energy, Geopolitics, and the New Map: A Book Talk with Daniel Yergin and Mark P. Mills

On September 22, Manhattan Institute senior fellow Mark P. Mills interviewed energy expert and IHS Markit vice chairman Dan Yergin about his new book, The New Map: Energy, Climate, and the Clash of Nations.

James Q. Wilson Lecture 2020: The Survival of Cities

Harvard professor and Manhattan Institute senior fellow Edward Glaeser delivers the annual James Q. Wilson Lecture. In this year’s lecture, he addresses the implications of the Covid-19 pandemic on city life in America, the connection between urban density and contagious disease, how to prepare for the threat of future outbreaks, and the economic-policy response of leaders in Washington.  

Young Leaders Circle with Christopher Rufo

On September 17, Manhattan Institute president Reihan Salam interviewed City Journal contributing editor Christopher Rufo on the disorder afflicting America’s cities and the negative consequences of sometimes well-intentioned progressive policies designed to address homelessness, opioid addiction, incarceration, and other urban problems.

A Conversation on The Unelected

On September 15, James R. Copland and National Review senior writer Dan McLaughlin discussed Copland’s new book—The Unelected—and the work that lies ahead to repair the rule of law and restore the constitutional design.

Malls & Main Street: The Challenge of Retail Vacancies

On September 14, the Manhattan Institute held a virtual discussion on the state of our storefronts, how key players are adapting to changes, and what innovative solutions are arising out of this challenging time.

HAMILTON AWARDS

2020 Alexander Hamilton Award Dinner

For 20 years, the Alexander Hamilton Award Dinner has been the Manhattan Institute’s signature event. We look forward each year to gathering with our generous donors and friends to celebrate MI’s core values and the individuals who work to advance them. While we are disappointed that we will not be together in-person this year, we hope that you will join us at 5 p.m. EDT on October 20, 2020 for our virtual Hamilton Award Dinner.

As before, the dinner will feature remarks from our chairman, Paul E. Singer; our president, Reihan Salam; and our three distinguished honorees: Leonard Leo and Eugene Meyer of the Federalist Society, and Daniel S. Loeb, investor and philanthropist. 

CIVIL SOCIETY AWARDS

Photo: Jamie Meggas/Manhattan Institute

2020 Civil Society Awards

Civil society efforts continue to be critical—even life-saving—forces in communities all over the country. This is why the Manhattan Institute’s Tocqueville Project is committed to hosting our annual Civil Society Awards as a virtual event this fall. While we are unable to celebrate our truly inspirational 2020 awardees in person, we hope that you will be able to join us online at 5 p.m. EDT on Thursday, October 29, 2020, to recognize them.

SUPPORT
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

09/23/2020
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Carl Cannon’s Morning Note

Senate ‘Circus’? No Respect; Fighting Words; Attend Our Virtual Briefing

By Carl M. Cannon on Sep 23, 2020 09:02 am
Good morning, it’s Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2020. On this the date in 1806, the Lewis and Clark expedition returned to St. Louis after three years in the wilderness. This is also a notable date in American law enforcement (Billy the Kid was arrested for the first time in 1875); in U.S. elective politics (Republican vice presidential nominee Richard Nixon saved his political career with his famous “Checkers Speech” in 1952); and in race relations (nine black students who had enrolled at Little Rock’s Central High School were forced to withdraw by a threatening white mob in 1957).

Sept. 23 is also a notable day in American music: John Coltrane was born on this date in Hamlet, N.C., in 1926 and four years later to the day, Ray Charles was born in Albany, Ga. On Sept. 23, 2019, poet, singer, and Grateful Dead lyricist Robert Hunter died at his home in San Rafael, Calif.

Hunter, along with lead singer and guitarist Jerry Garcia, wrote many of the Grateful Dead’s iconic songs, including my favorite, “Uncle John’s Band.” The third verse of that upbeat tune begins with an interesting U.S. historical reference.

Goddamn, well, I declare, have you seen the like?
Their walls are built of cannonballs, their motto is “Don’t tread on me”

That motto was actually flown on some of the earliest ships in the United States Navy, which reminds me that today’s date is also when American naval officer John Paul Jones was asked by his British counterpart if he was striking his colors — that is, surrendering his sinking ship.

“I have not yet begun to fight!” Jones replied. Or did he?

I’ll explore that question in a moment and weave in Robert Hunter’s perspective. First, let me point you to RealClearPolitics’ front page, which presents our poll averages, videos, breaking news stories, and aggregated opinion pieces spanning the political spectrum. We also offer original material from our own reporters and contributors, including the following:

*  *  *

A “Circus” Senate Hearing? GOP Sees Gain if Dems Act Up. Phil Wegmann explores whether Judiciary Committee theatrics on par with those during the 2018 confirmation process could repeat when the new Supreme Court nominee faces tough questioning.

The Kavanaugh Effect. Susan Crabtree revisits the 2018 midterms, in which four Democratic senators who opposed the high court nominee lost their reelection races.

Trump Won’t Respect the Dead or the Grieving. A.B. Stoddard assails the president for a lack of solemnity and graciousness when those qualities are called for most.

RBG Was a Leader in Protecting Intellectual Property Rights. Terry Camp explains in RealClearMarkets.

Empowering Lawyers, Not Voters. In RealClearPolicy, Adam Brandon laments a Pennsylvania Supreme Court decision extending the deadline for acceptance of absentee ballots to three days after Election Day.

It’s Not About Climate Change. In RealClearEnergy, David W. Kreutzer argues that carbon-neutral electricity mandates will not reduce the frequency or intensity of wildfires — only forest-thinning will do that.

The Founders’ Understanding of Equality. At RealClear’s American Civics portal, Robert Curry explains that for the nation’s Founders, equality cannot be “alienated” or traded away.   

*  *  *

The Sept. 23, 1779 naval battle that made Scottish-born John Paul Jones an American hero took place just off the English coast near Yorkshire. A thousand British subjects lined the shore watching, although none of them heard the auspicious words attributed to the brave young captain.

Jones was the skipper of the large and lumbering Bonhomme Richard, a ship given to him by the French upon the request of Benjamin Franklin, America’s man in Paris. (Bonhomme Richard is the French translation of “Poor Richard,” the pen name Franklin used when writing “Poor Richard’s Almanac,” then being published in France.)

“I intend to go in harm’s way,” Jones told the French, before doing exactly that — pillaging and pirating along the British coast.

The man entrusted with stopping him was Royal Navy Capt. Richard Pearson, who headed a small fleet sent to intercept Jones. Pearson’s boat — a smaller, faster, and better armed warship called Serapis — led the British convoy.

During the fateful battle that followed, Jones’ ship collided with Serapis. Jones quickly ordered his men to lash the two together, leading to a deadly scene in which the two crews fired, point-blank, at each other for two hours.

As nightfall overtook them, the Americans’ situation was desperate. A full moon and fire from the Bonhomme Richard’s burning masts revealed a scene of carnage; meanwhile seawater poured through gaping holes in the ship’s hull.

Two of Jones’ officers, thinking him dead, tried to surrender. This enraged Jones, who was very much not dead. Above the din, Pearson appeared on the rail of his own ship and asked Jones if he wished to strike his colors. What exactly did Jones answer? Nobody knows for sure, although everyone who was there reported that Jones refused to surrender and did so with valorous aplomb.

“I answered him in the most determined negative” is what Jones wrote vaguely to Ben Franklin days later.
One contemporaneous account in British newspapers quotes Jones as replying, “I may sink, but I’m damned if I’ll strike.”

A London Evening Post account goes further, reporting that Jones said that he wouldn’t dream of surrendering, and was intent on making Pearson strike his own colors. A midshipman aboard Jones’ ship recalled that his captain answered Pearson this way: “Yankees do not haul down their colors until they are fairly beaten.”

A deserter from Jones’ ship, then aboard the Serapis, thought he heard the captain say something like “Whenever the devil was ready to take him, he would rather obey his summons than strike to anyone.”

The words we recall today were furnished by none other than Capt. Pearson, who qualified his account (at his own court-martial) by saying he didn’t hear it personally, but that one of his midshipmen heard and relayed it to him.

“It was to the effect that he was just beginning to fight.”

“History,” noted naval scholar Rick Beyer, “had its quotable quote.”

As for the outcome of that famous battle, the Bonhomme Richard eventually sank beneath the waves, but not before Jones captured the Serapis, which he sailed to the Netherlands for repairs. Perhaps more significantly, the feisty captain’s never-say-die spirit convinced the French to support the colonists’ quest for independence. Perhaps equally important, both Jones’ bravery and bravado — the two traits aren’t always the same — embedded itself in the American psyche.

But at this time of pandemic, lockdown, and racial division in our country, I’d point out that although wartime valor helped create this country and keep it safe in the ensuing 244 years, it’s not the only national ethos worth celebrating. At this time in our history, I find myself often playing the song “Uncle John’s Band” as I write in the morning, humming along to the more pacific opening stanza:

Well the first days are the hardest days, don’t you worry any more
‘Cause when life looks like easy street, there is danger at your door
Think this through with me, let me know your mind
Whoa-oh, what I want to know, is “Are you kind?”

Carl M. Cannon
Washington Bureau chief, RealClearPolitics
@CarlCannon (Twitter)
ccannon@realclearpolitics.com

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REALCLEARPOLITICS TODAY

09/23/2020

RCP Poll Averages & Election 2020

As of Sep 23, 2020 @ 09:30AM EST

As of Sep 23, 2020 @ 09:30AM EST

RCP Front Page

Latest on Coronavirus (COVID-19)

As of Sep 23, 2020 @ 09:30AM EST

Unemployment is Improving Far Faster Than Projected – Unlike After the Great Recession

President Trump Won’t Respect the Dead or the Grieving

Don’t Muzzle Scientists Investigating COVID-19

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CENTER FOR SECURITY POLICY

It takes no imagination today to recognize the Chinese Communist Party as a present and growing danger. It’s now blindingly obvious that the CCP has long used “unrestricted warfare” techniques to subvert, undermine, displace – and, if necessary, destroy – the USA.

The Wall Street Journal contends that both President Trump and Vice President Biden would be tough on China. That seems unlikely, but our times certainly require a robust and truly bipartisan opposition to the PRC – and a mandate to our next Commander-in-Chief to deliver one.

Click here to sign up.

Russia policy has been a volatile issue since the 2016 election cycle, when Democrat presidential nominee Hillary Clinton accused Donald Trump of “collusion” with the Kremlin. That allegation set off a chain of events that led to Trump’s impeachment, yet were found to be specious and fabricated.

Item #7 on the Center for Security Policy’s 2020 National Security Voter Guide is how each candidate would defend America against the Putin regime in Russia.

Click here to read more.

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Highlighted Articles/Interviews

Stop Chinese Communist Party oppression, don’t finance it

Yesterday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo commendably called attention to the Chinese Communist Party’s brutal oppression of Christians and other people of faith. He decried as well the Han-supremacism – which really is “systemic racism” – that has long enslaved the Captive Nations of East Turkistan, Southern Mongolia, Tibet and Manchuria. It is also animating Xi Jinping’s effort to enslave many more countries via his Belt and Road Initiative.

Such oppression is being greatly enabled by the CCP’s “social credit system” – a comprehensive security state surveillance capability that surpasses Orwell’s worst nightmares. Incredibly, Ant Technology Group which helped build this enabler of totalitarianism is about to be infused with $30-40 billion dollars thanks to “Beijing’s Bankers” on Wall Street through an upcoming initial public offering in Hong Kong and Shanghai.

Americans must stop funding our enemy – and making it more dangerous.

This is Frank Gaffney.

CHRISTINE DOUGLASS-WILLIAMS, Nine-Time International Award-Winning Journalist and Television Producer, Federally Appointed Director with the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, Author of The Challenge of Modernizing Islam:

  • The current state of immigration in the EU
  • What is the UN Migration Pact?

KEVIN FREEMAN, Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy, Host of Economic War Room on TheBlaze TV, Author of “Game Plan” and “Secret Weapon”:

  • Why the US needs to take strong measures against TikTok
  • The upcoming IPO of Ant Group Technology
  • The ongoing conflict between China and Taiwan

TREVOR LOUDON, Creator of The Enemies Within (out September 2016), Author of Barack Obama and the Enemies Within (2011) and The Enemies Within: Communists, Socialists and Progressives in the U.S. Congress:

  • Various socialist organizations in the United States
  • Are these organizations connected to the Chinese Communist Party?

CLAUDIA ROSETT, Foreign Policy Fellow with the Independent Women’s Forum, Blogs at “The Rosett Report” at PJMedia.com:

  • President Trump’s upcoming speech to the UN
  • China’s brainwashing of their own citizens
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BERNARD GOLDBERG

A new post from Bernie.

Off the Cuff: Force the Democrats to Qualify Schumer’s SCOTUS Threat

By Bernard Goldberg on Sep 23, 2020 02:00 am

Below is a sneak peek of this content! Chuck Schumer says “everything is on the table” if the Republicans push through Trump’s Supreme Court nominee. There’s a smart way for the Republicans to respond. That’s the topic of my Off the Cuff audio commentary this week. You can listen to… CONTINUE
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About Bernie

Bernard Goldberg, the television news reporter and author of Bias, a New York Times number one bestseller about how the media distort the news, is widely seen as one of the most original writers and thinkers in broadcast journalism.  He has covered stories all over the world for CBS News and has won 13 Emmy awards for excellence in journalism.  He won six Emmys at CBS, and seven at HBO, where he now reports for the widely acclaimed broadcast Real Sports[Read More…]

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Desperate Dems: Bloomberg Raised $16 Million So Felons Could Vote In Florida

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Seattle city council votes to override mayor’s veto of police funding cuts
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Biden on court-packing: Allow me to punt on this “legitimate question” 
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“Cries for help” as Minneapolis residents wonder where the police went
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Too good to check: Did Biden blow the Pledge of Allegiance in Wisconsin?
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NYPD officer charged with spying on Chinese citizens in New York and reporting to the PRC
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Morning Consult on ground game: I hear you knocking but you can’t come in 
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Ruth Bader Ginsburg will be first woman to lie in state at U.S. Capitol
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Rush to McConnell: Skip confirmation hearings and go right to SCOTUS vote
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AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMIC RESEARCH

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September 23, 2020
The Banning of WeChat and TikTok Is Unbearably Dangerous …

By John Tamny | In 2013 Amazon founder Jeff Bezos purchased the Washington Post. Does anyone with a reasonable understanding of U.S. commerce, along with U.S. commerce’s historical relationship with the political class, think this purchase was…

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We Must Choose: Liberty or Lockdown

By George Gilder | “So let’s stop pretending that our policies have been rational and need to be phased out, as if they once had a purpose. They should have been reversed summarily in March and acknowledged to be a mistake, perpetrated by…

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www.aier.org

Disease Panic Put Us on a Dangerous Course

By Jenin Younes | “Our civilization is threatened not by this virus, but by deeply flawed reasoning in how it ought to be managed. Unless we make clear to our politicians and our fellow citizens that they are wrong, and that our ability to engage…

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Coase and Covid: The Spectrum

By Lyle D. Albaugh & Donald J. Boudreaux | “When we take account of the full costs of lockdowns and related mandates, including the pernicious precedents these inevitably set, it’s clear that the lowest-cost – the best – source of protection…

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Covid Fail by Elites and Stooges

By Daniel B. Klein | A powerful video viewed more than 1 million times has drawn intense Twitter activity but not among Twitter users with blue-check validation. Maybe the video is too powerful, too truthful. The video, by Ivor Cummins, of Ireland…

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It’s the small things that we use daily in life that reveal our loyalties. This is precisely why we made an AIER coffee mug. It suggests stability, dignity, and determination. It has personalized a matte-finish exterior with a shiny lip and interior. It has a 17-oz capacity. It says everything it needs to say!
Jeffrey Tucker is well known as the author of many informative and beloved articles and books on the subject of human freedom. Now he’s turned his attention to the most shocking and widespread violation of human freedom in our times: the authoritarian lockdown of society on the pretense that it is necessary in the face of a novel virus.
Learning from the experts, Jeffrey Tucker has researched this subject from every angle. In this book, Tucker lays out the history, politics, economics, and science relevant to the coronavirus response. The result is clear: there is no justification for the lockdowns.
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NATIONAL REVIEW

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WITH JIM GERAGHTYSeptember 23 2020
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Get Your Facts Right

 

On the menu today: Another reminder that “People of Praise” and “People of Hope” are not the same group, and proof that “People of Hope” did not inspire Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale; wondering what Joe Biden is doing with his time these days; and two Senate committees release their investigation of Hunter Biden.

No, the ‘People of Hope’ Group Did Not Inspire The Handmaid’s Tale

One more time for the slow learners in the media: People of Praise and People of Hope are two different Christian religious groups.

Amy Coney Barrett is reportedly a member of People of Praise, but she has never confirmed this or discussed it publicly. Reuters calls her a “purported” member. …   READ MORE

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Woke Progressivism Comes for David Hume

The University of Edinburgh has canceled David Hume. In response to an online petition portraying Hume as “a man …

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Data Dispel Keynesian Economics — Again

At best, redistribution from workers to the unemployed reallocates demand rather than increasing its …

NEWS

Louisville Declares State of Emergency Ahead of Breonna Taylor Decision

The mayor’s declaration is in preparation for the potential for civil unrest as the city braces for a decision on …

DAN MCLAUGHLIN

Supreme Court Fights Are What Republican Majorities Are For

If there ever was a time to do what’s right, this is …

RICK SANTORUM

Liberal Bias and All, Social Media Is Still Conservatives’ Best Electoral Tool

Republicans should see Democrats’ attempts to tear up the tech industry for what they are: a politics of envy, …

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Seattle City Council Votes to Cut Some Police Jobs and Funding, Overriding Mayor’s Veto

Public comments during an hour-long session preceding the vote were mostly in favor of the Council’s cuts. 

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YOU CAN’T READ EVERYTHING ON ZEROHEDGE. HERE’S WHAT YOU MISSED
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Hunter Biden Raised 'Counterintelligence And Extortion' Concerns, May Have Participated In Sex Trafficking: Senate Report
Hunter Biden Raised ‘Counterintelligence And Extortion’ Concerns, May Have Participated In Sex Trafficking: Senate Report

A long-awaited Senate report on Hunter Biden’s financial dealings with Ukrainian, Chinese and Russian businesses created potential ” criminal financial, counterintelligence and extortion concerns ,” and alarmed US officials who perceived…

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FBI Agent Who Discovered Hillary's Emails On Weiner Laptop Claims He Was Told To Erase Computer
FBI Agent Who Discovered Hillary’s Emails On Weiner Laptop Claims He Was Told To Erase Computer

Authored by Rusty Weiss via The Political Insider blog, FBI agent John Robertson, the man who found Hillary Clinton’s emails on the laptop of Anthony Weiner, claims he was advised by bosses to erase his own computer. Former FBI Director…

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Why Is The Mainstream Media Suddenly Signaling That A Much Larger Stock Market Decline Is Coming?
Why Is The Mainstream Media Suddenly Signaling That A Much Larger Stock Market Decline Is Coming?

Authored by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog, Why would the mainstream media want all of us to believe that stock prices are about to fall dramatically? Just like we witnessed earlier this year at the beginning of the pandemic…

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Matt Gaetz Calls On Florida AG To Investigate Mike Bloomberg
Matt Gaetz Calls On Florida AG To Investigate Mike Bloomberg “For Potentially Engaging In Bribery And Vote Buying”

Update (1815ET): Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) has called on the state’s Attorney General to investigate Bloomberg for “Potentially Engaging In Bribery And Vote Buying.” #BREAKING : I’m calling on the Florida Attorney General to launch an investigation…

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“No Medical Justification For Emergency Measures” – Open Letter From 100s Of Doctors, Health Pros Urges End To Lockdowns

AIER reports that the following letter has made an impact on public health authorities not only in Belgium but around the world. The text could pertain to any case in which states locked down their citizens rather than allow people freedom…

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New Jeffrey Epstein Flight Log Subpoena To Reveal Every Passenger On
New Jeffrey Epstein Flight Log Subpoena To Reveal Every Passenger On “Lolita Express”

Rich associates of deceased pedophile Jeffrey Epstein are about to receive some (or more) unwanted attention , after the Attorney General for the US Virgin Islands, Denise George, subpoenaed the logs for every single flight made by Epstein’s…

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“You Ain’t Doing Sh*t! Stop Lying to the People!” – Schumer Rattled As Hecklers Disrupt His Presser on Ginsburg’s Replacement (VIDEO)
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) was rattled after hecklers interrupted his presser on Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s replacement. Senator Lindsey Graham Monday night said the… Read more…
Body Language Expert Insists Joe Biden Is Using Earpiece Assistance During CNN Town Hall –VIDEO
Body Language Expert BombardsBodyLanguage.com analyzed Joe Biden’s performance during his town hall on CNN. Bombard, like many Americans, believes Joe Biden is a victim of… Read more…
“Defund the Police” Activist Alyssa Milano Calls the Cops Claiming Gunman Was on Her Property – But it Was a Teen Shooting Squirrels with Air Gun
“Defund the police” activist and washed up actress Alyssa Milano and her husband called the police Sunday morning when they believed they heard gunshots near… Read more…
‘They’re Coming After Your Children’: Pelosi Rips Republicans For Moving Ahead With Supreme Court Nomination
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is using every arrow in her quiver to try to thwart President Trump and Republican lawmakers from replacing Justice Ruth Bader… Read more…
JUST IN: Maine Supreme Court Allows Use of Ranked-Choice Voting For 1st Time in Presidential Race
The highest court in Maine decided on Tuesday to allow use of ranked-choice voting for the first time in a presidential race. In 2018, Maine… Read more…
MUST WATCH VIDEO: Kyle Rittenhouse — The Truth in 11 Minutes
The #FightBack Foundation has published an eleven minute video explaining the Kyle Rittenhouse case with brand new details. The… Read more…
McCloskeys Get Harassed as They Pick Up Their Christmas Cards, Which Feature Photos of Them Defending Home, So They Give One to Harasser (VIDEO)
Mark and Patricia McCloskey, the couple that infamously defended their beautiful St. Louis home from a Black Lives Matter mob, was harassed as they picked… Read more…
Tim Tebow and His Wife Demi-Leigh Join Bill Barr and Ivanka Trump to Battle Scourge of Human Trafficking
Former football star Tim Tebow and his wife Demi-Leigh joined Attorney General Bill Barr and Ivanka Trump on Monday at a forum to denounce human… Read more…
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A daily digest of analysis and commentary by Hoover fellows. Problems viewing this email? View this email in your browser
hoover daily report
Wednesday September 23rd, 2020
FEATURED
‘Strategic Empathy’: H.R. McMaster On Foreign Policy And China
by H. R. McMaster via The Christian Science Monitor

U.S.-China developments can change by the day. But that’s exactly why standing back to take in the long view matters. Here, historian, decorated general, and former national security adviser H.R. McMaster takes stock.
The Case For Urban Charter Schooling
by David Griffith, Michael J. Petrilli via National Affairs

A decade ago, the charter-school movement was moving from strength to strength. As student enrollment surged and new schools opened in cities across the country, America’s first black president provided much-needed political cover from teachers’ union attacks. Yet today, with public support fading and enrollment stalling nationwide — and with Democratic politicians from Elizabeth Warren to Joe Biden disregarding, downplaying, or publicly disavowing the charter movement — the situation for America’s charter schools has become virtually unrecognizable.

Is California “Falling Down”-Again?
by Bill Whalen via California on Your Mind

I first moved west to California in February 1994, about a month after the Northridge Earthquake struck Los Angeles and four months before O. J. Simpson’s ride up the 405 became a live-televised national spectacle.

The Threat From North Korea And The Future Of The South Korean – American Alliance
via Battlegrounds: International Perspectives On Crucial Challenges To Security

H.R. McMaster in conversation with Ho-Young Ahn, President of University of North Korean Studies on Tuesday, September 22, 2020 at 9:00 AM PT.

Disarming the Atom: The Race To Stop Nuclear Proliferation
via Hoover Institution Library & Archives

The world first witnessed the enormous destructive power of nuclear weapons in August 1945, when the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. In the following decades, the Cold War spurred an arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States that created enormous nuclear arsenals.
ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY
The Classicist: The Embers Of California
interview with Victor Davis Hanson via The Classicist

The Golden State’s recent spate of wildfires represents a broader trend of dysfunctional governance.

Law Talk With Epstein & Yoo #138: “Supreme Court: Ragnarok”
interview with Richard A. EpsteinJohn Yoo via Law Talk With Epstein, Senik & Yoo

The death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the bruising confirmation battle to come.

Area 45: Foreign To This Election
interview with Markos Kounalakis via Area 45

Markos Kounalakis discusses unrest in Egypt and Iran – and offers a few foreign policy questions in advance of next week’s presidential debate.

A Hole In The Market
by David R. Henderson via Econlib

“When markets fail, use markets.” The above is a quote from Arnold Kling, the person who started this blog. I thought of that when reading Sally Satel, “Rethink Crisis Response,” Reason, October 2020. The whole October issue, by the way, is focused on fixing the police, and it’s excellent.

INTERVIEWS
Gen. H.R. McMaster Weighs In On Trump’s Middle East Agenda
interview with H. R. McMaster via Fox News

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses the Abraham Accords and the Trump Administration’s Middle East strategy.
The US Senate Has A ‘Responsibility’ To Fill SCOTUS Seat: Kiron Skinner
interview with Kiron K. Skinner via Yahoo Finance

Hoover Institution fellow Kiron Skinner discusses the responsibility of the senate to pick the next justice of the Supreme Court.

Bruce Thornton On The John Batchelor Show
interview with Bruce Thornton via The John Batchelor Show

Hoover Institution fellow Bruce Thornton discusses his FrontPage Magazine article “Don’t Go Wobbly, Senate Republicans.”

H.R. McMaster On The Victor Davis Hanson Podcast
interview with H. R. McMaster via The Victor Davis Hanson Podcast

Hoover Institution fellows H. R. McMaster and Victor Davis Hanson discuss McMaster’s new book, Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World. VDH also talks about his new NRO essay on the dangers of conventional wisdom.

H.R. McMaster: Goal Of Changing Putin Is A ‘Delusion’ Suffered By 3 Presidents
interview with H. R. McMaster via KCRW

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses Russian President Vladimir Putin and says he sought to help President Trump recognize the need for a tougher suite of policies against Russia after its aggression in Eastern Europe.
H.R. McMaster: Trump Urges World Nations To Hold China Accountable For Coronavirus Toll
interview with H. R. McMaster via Fox News

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses China’s inability to take responsibility for the spread of COVID-19.

FMR. Trump NSA H.R. McMaster Claims Trump Is Tough On Russia
interview with H. R. McMaster via MSN

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster says President Trump is tough on Russia.

H.R. McMaster: Putin ‘Happy’ That Trump Won’t Condemn Russia For The Poisoning Of Alexei Navalny
interview with H. R. McMaster via CNN

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses President Trump’s relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

IN THE NEWS
‘Strategic Empathy’: H.R. McMaster On Foreign Policy And China
featuring H. R. McMaster via The Christian Science Monitor

U.S.-China developments can change by the day. But that’s exactly why standing back to take in the long view matters. Here, historian, decorated general, and former national security adviser H.R. McMaster takes stock.

The Perfect Weapon
quoting Amy Zegart via TechCrunch

Amy Zegart discusses China and the perfect weapon on TechCrunch.

Xi’s Zeal Spells Trouble For World Order
quoting Elizabeth Economy via Tribune India

By stifling debate and dissent, Xi has made China’s system rigid and fear-ridden. Xi’s centralisation of power and controls on information flows has slowed decision-making, as was evident in the handling of the Covid-19 outbreak in January, when the authorities wasted a full fortnight in getting Xi’s approval before imposing the quarantine on Wuhan.

ECB Faces Uphill Struggle In Efforts To Talk Down The Euro
quoting Melvyn B. Krauss via Financial Times

 [Subscription Required] US Fed’s dovish shift risks ‘beggar-thy-neighbor’ devaluation battle with Frankfurt.

Iranian Maestro Blasts Artists Serving Politics
quoting Abbas Milani via Radio Farda

Artists at the “service of politics” are “despicable and untalented” individuals longing for power, the master of classical Iranian music Mohammad Reza Shajarian recently claimed.

Innovation Is The Way To Fight EU Palm Oil Ban
quoting Bjorn Lomborg via Free Malaysia Today

In 2016, I went back to my home country, Italy, for a longer period than usual. Forced to watch Italian TV again, I was quite stricken by a pretty unique fact: at the end of their advertisements, the most popular Italian snack brands were proudly announcing that their products did not contain palm oil. Similarly, at the supermarket, the label “senza olio di palma” (without palm oil) was displayed on the packaging. This was not the case five years earlier, in 2011, when I left Italy for Malaysia.

Donald Trump On H.R. McMaster
quoting H. R. McMaster via Twitter

Our wonderful General blew up Scarborough’s FAKE two year narrative. Thank you General H.R. McMaster. Look forward to reading your book, “Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World.”

Ex-Trump National Security Adviser Says US Leaders ‘Making It Easy For Putin’ To Meddle
featuring H. R. McMaster via The Hill

President Trump’s former national security adviser H.R. McMaster said that Trump and other U.S. leaders are “making it easy” for Russian President Vladimir Putin to meddle in the U.S. election when they echo divisive messages.

Trump Blasts China In Video Speech To U.N. General Assembly
mentioning H. R. McMaster via CBS News

President Trump delivered a pre-taped speech to the U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday and said the world must hold China “accountable” for the coronavirus. Rebecca Lissner joins CBSN to discuss that plus her new book, “An Open World: How America Can Win the Contest for Twenty-First-Century Order.”

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The Hoover Institution occasionally links to stories that, for some readers, may require a subscription.Copyright © 2020 by the Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University, Hoover Institution, Stanford University

434 Galvez Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-0610 Ι Phone: 650-723-1754 Ι Hoover.org

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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HOOVER INSTITUTE

A daily digest of analysis and commentary by Hoover fellows. Problems viewing this email? View this email in your browser
hoover daily report
Wednesday September 23rd, 2020
FEATURED
‘Strategic Empathy’: H.R. McMaster On Foreign Policy And China
by H. R. McMaster via The Christian Science Monitor

U.S.-China developments can change by the day. But that’s exactly why standing back to take in the long view matters. Here, historian, decorated general, and former national security adviser H.R. McMaster takes stock.
The Case For Urban Charter Schooling
by David Griffith, Michael J. Petrilli via National Affairs

A decade ago, the charter-school movement was moving from strength to strength. As student enrollment surged and new schools opened in cities across the country, America’s first black president provided much-needed political cover from teachers’ union attacks. Yet today, with public support fading and enrollment stalling nationwide — and with Democratic politicians from Elizabeth Warren to Joe Biden disregarding, downplaying, or publicly disavowing the charter movement — the situation for America’s charter schools has become virtually unrecognizable.

Is California “Falling Down”-Again?
by Bill Whalen via California on Your Mind

I first moved west to California in February 1994, about a month after the Northridge Earthquake struck Los Angeles and four months before O. J. Simpson’s ride up the 405 became a live-televised national spectacle.

The Threat From North Korea And The Future Of The South Korean – American Alliance
via Battlegrounds: International Perspectives On Crucial Challenges To Security

H.R. McMaster in conversation with Ho-Young Ahn, President of University of North Korean Studies on Tuesday, September 22, 2020 at 9:00 AM PT.

Disarming the Atom: The Race To Stop Nuclear Proliferation
via Hoover Institution Library & Archives

The world first witnessed the enormous destructive power of nuclear weapons in August 1945, when the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan. In the following decades, the Cold War spurred an arms race between the Soviet Union and the United States that created enormous nuclear arsenals.
ANALYSIS AND COMMENTARY
The Classicist: The Embers Of California
interview with Victor Davis Hanson via The Classicist

The Golden State’s recent spate of wildfires represents a broader trend of dysfunctional governance.

Law Talk With Epstein & Yoo #138: “Supreme Court: Ragnarok”
interview with Richard A. EpsteinJohn Yoo via Law Talk With Epstein, Senik & Yoo

The death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and the bruising confirmation battle to come.

Area 45: Foreign To This Election
interview with Markos Kounalakis via Area 45

Markos Kounalakis discusses unrest in Egypt and Iran – and offers a few foreign policy questions in advance of next week’s presidential debate.

A Hole In The Market
by David R. Henderson via Econlib

“When markets fail, use markets.” The above is a quote from Arnold Kling, the person who started this blog. I thought of that when reading Sally Satel, “Rethink Crisis Response,” Reason, October 2020. The whole October issue, by the way, is focused on fixing the police, and it’s excellent.

INTERVIEWS
Gen. H.R. McMaster Weighs In On Trump’s Middle East Agenda
interview with H. R. McMaster via Fox News

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses the Abraham Accords and the Trump Administration’s Middle East strategy.
The US Senate Has A ‘Responsibility’ To Fill SCOTUS Seat: Kiron Skinner
interview with Kiron K. Skinner via Yahoo Finance

Hoover Institution fellow Kiron Skinner discusses the responsibility of the senate to pick the next justice of the Supreme Court.

Bruce Thornton On The John Batchelor Show
interview with Bruce Thornton via The John Batchelor Show

Hoover Institution fellow Bruce Thornton discusses his FrontPage Magazine article “Don’t Go Wobbly, Senate Republicans.”

H.R. McMaster On The Victor Davis Hanson Podcast
interview with H. R. McMaster via The Victor Davis Hanson Podcast

Hoover Institution fellows H. R. McMaster and Victor Davis Hanson discuss McMaster’s new book, Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World. VDH also talks about his new NRO essay on the dangers of conventional wisdom.

H.R. McMaster: Goal Of Changing Putin Is A ‘Delusion’ Suffered By 3 Presidents
interview with H. R. McMaster via KCRW

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses Russian President Vladimir Putin and says he sought to help President Trump recognize the need for a tougher suite of policies against Russia after its aggression in Eastern Europe.
H.R. McMaster: Trump Urges World Nations To Hold China Accountable For Coronavirus Toll
interview with H. R. McMaster via Fox News

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses China’s inability to take responsibility for the spread of COVID-19.

FMR. Trump NSA H.R. McMaster Claims Trump Is Tough On Russia
interview with H. R. McMaster via MSN

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster says President Trump is tough on Russia.

H.R. McMaster: Putin ‘Happy’ That Trump Won’t Condemn Russia For The Poisoning Of Alexei Navalny
interview with H. R. McMaster via CNN

Hoover Institution fellow H. R. McMaster discusses President Trump’s relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

IN THE NEWS
‘Strategic Empathy’: H.R. McMaster On Foreign Policy And China
featuring H. R. McMaster via The Christian Science Monitor

U.S.-China developments can change by the day. But that’s exactly why standing back to take in the long view matters. Here, historian, decorated general, and former national security adviser H.R. McMaster takes stock.

The Perfect Weapon
quoting Amy Zegart via TechCrunch

Amy Zegart discusses China and the perfect weapon on TechCrunch.

Xi’s Zeal Spells Trouble For World Order
quoting Elizabeth Economy via Tribune India

By stifling debate and dissent, Xi has made China’s system rigid and fear-ridden. Xi’s centralisation of power and controls on information flows has slowed decision-making, as was evident in the handling of the Covid-19 outbreak in January, when the authorities wasted a full fortnight in getting Xi’s approval before imposing the quarantine on Wuhan.

ECB Faces Uphill Struggle In Efforts To Talk Down The Euro
quoting Melvyn B. Krauss via Financial Times

 [Subscription Required] US Fed’s dovish shift risks ‘beggar-thy-neighbor’ devaluation battle with Frankfurt.

Iranian Maestro Blasts Artists Serving Politics
quoting Abbas Milani via Radio Farda

Artists at the “service of politics” are “despicable and untalented” individuals longing for power, the master of classical Iranian music Mohammad Reza Shajarian recently claimed.

Innovation Is The Way To Fight EU Palm Oil Ban
quoting Bjorn Lomborg via Free Malaysia Today

In 2016, I went back to my home country, Italy, for a longer period than usual. Forced to watch Italian TV again, I was quite stricken by a pretty unique fact: at the end of their advertisements, the most popular Italian snack brands were proudly announcing that their products did not contain palm oil. Similarly, at the supermarket, the label “senza olio di palma” (without palm oil) was displayed on the packaging. This was not the case five years earlier, in 2011, when I left Italy for Malaysia.

Donald Trump On H.R. McMaster
quoting H. R. McMaster via Twitter

Our wonderful General blew up Scarborough’s FAKE two year narrative. Thank you General H.R. McMaster. Look forward to reading your book, “Battlegrounds: The Fight to Defend the Free World.”

Ex-Trump National Security Adviser Says US Leaders ‘Making It Easy For Putin’ To Meddle
featuring H. R. McMaster via The Hill

President Trump’s former national security adviser H.R. McMaster said that Trump and other U.S. leaders are “making it easy” for Russian President Vladimir Putin to meddle in the U.S. election when they echo divisive messages.

Trump Blasts China In Video Speech To U.N. General Assembly
mentioning H. R. McMaster via CBS News

President Trump delivered a pre-taped speech to the U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday and said the world must hold China “accountable” for the coronavirus. Rebecca Lissner joins CBSN to discuss that plus her new book, “An Open World: How America Can Win the Contest for Twenty-First-Century Order.”

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The Hoover Institution occasionally links to stories that, for some readers, may require a subscription.Copyright © 2020 by the Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University, Hoover Institution, Stanford University

434 Galvez Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-0610 Ι Phone: 650-723-1754 Ι Hoover.org

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.

Thank you for subscribing to the Hoover Daily Report.
This email was sent to: rickbulow1974@gmail.com

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